I've worked rather extensively with a Xerox DocuColor 252 over the last four years. Those yellow dots are anything but microscopic. I could plainly see the dots on most printouts under standard office-style fluorescent lighting. They always bugged the crap out of me.
It is impractical for pharmaceutical companies to test compounds on every combination of person and condition. Instead they perform tests on representative samples of people.
Fixed that for you. The whole idea of appointing a judge for life is to help ensure impartiality. They don't have to fear losing their job for making an unpopular decision.
TFA doesn't mention a source, and that bothers me. Is this information about Lion derived from the early developer test versions, or has someone at Apple stated that this is the way it is?
The reason specs progress slowly is because it takes lots of programmer-hours to implement them correctly. Most of HTML5 is fully specced and just awaiting implementation. Programming is expensive work.
Why does it have to be implemented before it can become a finalized specification?
I'm afraid I don't understand what your point is. Do you mean "working out" as in exercising or as in working out the details?
By what you're saying, I should infer that the writers of the HTML5 recommendation are creating the documentation to fit the existing browser implementations of HTML5? What does time to implement have to do with the writing of the recommendation? W3C writes the recommendation, and browser developers implement the recommendation in their software--that's how it (should) works.
The "WebP" versions may look murkier because whoever made those images forgot to add a colorspace profile to the PNG images (or, alternatively, remove the colorspace profile from the JPEG images).
Something is seriously wrong witht that first sentence. Remove the descriptors and it breaks down to this: "Nintendo DS Lite systems stolen when their shipment to Europe where the black DS Lites are launching on June 23rd"
Were they stolen on the ship by pirates? I don't understand.
The extra buttons on my MX510 work just fine for whatever I want them to in most native Linux games. There's a guide on Linux-Gamers.net that worked for me.
I think the point that AdroitOneX was trying to make is that Monad can't be removed from Vista (as the/. article's title suggests) since it was never going to be in Vista to begin with.
The photographer can do whatever the hell he or she wants to with the data, including decrypt it.
Nikon is not trying direclty to restrict photographers from doing that. They are restricting *indirectly* by preventing third parties from distributing the means to decrypt the raw data.
I never quite understood exclusive deals like this one. If you programmed the game in a platform-independent manner and sold it for more than one console, wouldn't you stand to gain more money than if you had released it only on a single platform?
I rather enjoy SC2 on my GC, but SC3 is not going to make me go out and buy a PS2.
I've worked rather extensively with a Xerox DocuColor 252 over the last four years. Those yellow dots are anything but microscopic. I could plainly see the dots on most printouts under standard office-style fluorescent lighting. They always bugged the crap out of me.
Why test EVERY combination of plane and gadget?
It is impractical for pharmaceutical companies to test compounds on every combination of person and condition. Instead they perform tests on representative samples of people.
Like a judge elected by citizens?
Fixed that for you. The whole idea of appointing a judge for life is to help ensure impartiality. They don't have to fear losing their job for making an unpopular decision.
Retracted. I must learn to read more carefully.
TFA doesn't mention a source, and that bothers me. Is this information about Lion derived from the early developer test versions, or has someone at Apple stated that this is the way it is?
Yes, I was noticing that. Very obviously a loop.
The reason specs progress slowly is because it takes lots of programmer-hours to implement them correctly. Most of HTML5 is fully specced and just awaiting implementation. Programming is expensive work.
Why does it have to be implemented before it can become a finalized specification?
I'm afraid I don't understand what your point is. Do you mean "working out" as in exercising or as in working out the details?
By what you're saying, I should infer that the writers of the HTML5 recommendation are creating the documentation to fit the existing browser implementations of HTML5? What does time to implement have to do with the writing of the recommendation? W3C writes the recommendation, and browser developers implement the recommendation in their software--that's how it (should) works.
What we need is "a day in the life of a W3C draft" article to figure out why these standards and recommendations take so long to mature.
The "WebP" versions may look murkier because whoever made those images forgot to add a colorspace profile to the PNG images (or, alternatively, remove the colorspace profile from the JPEG images).
With tools like that, do we really need math classes?
Terrorists will simply train themselves to remain calm and lower their heartrate.
Something is seriously wrong witht that first sentence. Remove the descriptors and it breaks down to this:
"Nintendo DS Lite systems stolen when their shipment to Europe where the black DS Lites are launching on June 23rd"
Were they stolen on the ship by pirates? I don't understand.
Yeah, except that:
The extra buttons on my MX510 work just fine for whatever I want them to in most native Linux games. There's a guide on Linux-Gamers.net that worked for me.
Ya know, that HUD setup sounds a lot like Red Orchestra for UT2004.
I think the point that AdroitOneX was trying to make is that Monad can't be removed from Vista (as the /. article's title suggests) since it was never going to be in Vista to begin with.
I'm rather surprised that they didn't set up a torrent.
I dunno. I think they'd get better results if they reversed the polarity on their trap coil couplers.
This is all AFAIK:
The photographer can do whatever the hell he or she wants to with the data, including decrypt it.
Nikon is not trying direclty to restrict photographers from doing that. They are restricting *indirectly* by preventing third parties from distributing the means to decrypt the raw data.
I never quite understood exclusive deals like this one. If you programmed the game in a platform-independent manner and sold it for more than one console, wouldn't you stand to gain more money than if you had released it only on a single platform?
I rather enjoy SC2 on my GC, but SC3 is not going to make me go out and buy a PS2.
Wasn't there a time when using/linking to/possessing DeCSS made you a felon? Despite that, it seemed popular enough then.
And once again, I screw up. Please ignore the parent and I'll stay away from the repy button.
The parent is replying to the parent of its parent, not its parent.
Pirating is as strong as ever in the Windows world, and people that use Microsoft products should be very used to shelling out cash for software.
Your stereotype that followers of the Open Source Initiative pirate software frequently is nothing but speculation.