This is already true for the Gameboy DS. It uses WiFi but its incompatible with existing WiFi standards. Revolution will use the same standard. Not sure exactly why, but as I understand their controllers use the same system. So this standard is probably more inline with wireless USB than 811
I've worked with Europeans, and Middle Easteners, and they both have things you can't say to them because you might "trigger them off". Thats just how people are, they have their beliefs, wrong as they may be. That they hold onto and don't want messed with. Its a Human thing.
But whats really sick is the fact that the violent reaction against nuclear energy has in turn created a larger dependance on coal, which in turn emits far more radiation, and it much much worse for the environment. I've heard from many sources that if you break up nuclear waste and slowly spread it out into the air, it would actually be less than the radiation spewed from coal plants.
and you need a LOT of cells for a little power. I assume you'd need a ton of cells to power any signifigant hydrogen production.
Just so you know, most large scale solar energy collection is done through mirrors that direct light to a central point, that in turn heats water to drive a steam turbine. Slightly less efficent on a per area basis than individual cells, but tons cheaper, and generally pretty effective if you have a large enough area.
Resell bandwidth of course! Actually many DSL providers allow this, I guess as they are used to allowing their T1 customers to resell. Cable does NOT allow this, obviously as they are used to cable sharing being theft.
Sorry to respond to a troll. Did want to point out there most of these security holes can be taken care of by recent updates, or even a simple firewall. There is no spyware in the wild for linux though. Yes it certainly is possible though. Read my earlier post for thoughts on this.
Hate to tell you, but Macs are just as vurnerable. Getting one to avoid adware is just sucurity through obscurity. Eventually macs will get spyware, don't know why its taken so long though.
Actually we first need to decide on a standard, from my inital seaching there appears to be no RFC for such a standard. Definatly something we need to get done.
Seems in order to implement seemless torrents you would need to have some header information about the protocol it is intending to implement. This would allow torrent to replace not only http but other future protocols as well. This information could be contained in mime-type information. Though it could also be contained in the actual.torrent as they are fairly small and theoretically for seemless downloads all of the.torrent could be transmitted as part of the negotiaion session instead of through files downloads. Once the client has determined the file and protocol that the torrent is intended to replace, it could download the file treating it as it would any file of said type. Dynamically display html files, download.exe files etc. Though if its not already there mime-type information for the final files needs to be included in the.torrent for this.
Explain to me how connecting to a tracker, then connecting to peers is going to be faster than a single connection to an http server.
Well not ALL webtraffic would be helped, it greatly depends upon the traffic. But it would be nice if it became a standard, even something that apache used automatically when nessesary.
Just for note, times when torrents make a good idea.
A: if you have a very slow connection as a trackerless torrent could replace a persons static blog they are serving up through their cable modem. B: You have very large content (game downloads/ movies etc. this example is already becomming common)
Obviously A: is not possible right now (possible not not easy as the person would have to download to their computer and open as a local document). Sadly I don't think this opera integration is going to make A any easier as it seems to still require downloading to a location.
BZZZ sorry. The precendent set but the US Supreme Court states that if you create it FOR copyright infingment or openly market it as a tool for such. You are liable no matter how many legal uses it might also have. Bittorrent has openly from the beginning been aimed at legal downloads. It not more helps infringe copyright then FTP does, it just does it a bit faster.
Yes, but as a previous poster stated. When it comes to wireless bandwidth, and the internet in general permission has to be revoked. I can't just say, "You're not allowed to visit this website" and put no password or protections on it. Then prosecute everyone who enters my website. Now of course if they pass that special boundary, and attempt to alter my website, that may be a different story. Same as with the wireless, say I was using a walki-talki and someone kept on breaking into my conversations. As long as I'm not using a secure bandwidth I have no expectations of privacy.
That greatly depends upon adult/juvenile lockup. And which state or country you are talking about. Many juvenile lockups are very similar to boarding schools. Many are horrible places. There are some organizations working to fix this, but its a slow process.
Not nessesarly so. You forget that Supreme Court judges have been extremly strange in this manor. It seems that every judge that has been put into the SC has drastically changed their opinions and manors of conduct. I think its a matter of being safe from having to answer to political pressure.
I was wondering years ago why AMD didn't sue then. I'm thinking they waited till they guinuently were a superior product so that they couldn't be simply told they are complaining because they have an inferrior product.
Also to add to the other comments, generally Dumping is trying to destroy competition, so that you can sell at a higher price later. I seriously doupt Sony ever plans to up its price for the PS3.
The point is that Nintendo caters to the low-end market. The kind of people like me who still have their 1980's TVs and are just fine with them. A few people may have to get an analog to digital converter, though most people have cable or satallite by now which will do this for them.
This is already true for the Gameboy DS. It uses WiFi but its incompatible with existing WiFi standards. Revolution will use the same standard. Not sure exactly why, but as I understand their controllers use the same system. So this standard is probably more inline with wireless USB than 811
I've worked with Europeans, and Middle Easteners, and they both have things you can't say to them because you might "trigger them off". Thats just how people are, they have their beliefs, wrong as they may be. That they hold onto and don't want messed with. Its a Human thing.
But whats really sick is the fact that the violent reaction against nuclear energy has in turn created a larger dependance on coal, which in turn emits far more radiation, and it much much worse for the environment. I've heard from many sources that if you break up nuclear waste and slowly spread it out into the air, it would actually be less than the radiation spewed from coal plants.
The cost for putting large scale solar in orbit it huge. Much cheaper just to put it in the middle of the desert on unused land.
and you need a LOT of cells for a little power. I assume you'd need a ton of cells to power any signifigant hydrogen production.
Just so you know, most large scale solar energy collection is done through mirrors that direct light to a central point, that in turn heats water to drive a steam turbine. Slightly less efficent on a per area basis than individual cells, but tons cheaper, and generally pretty effective if you have a large enough area.
Sorry Hawaii is much farther south. Though politically that wouldn't fly as Hawaii isn't exactly looking for handouts like Florida generally is.
There will for a very long time be rural areas that won't get broadband access. Their options will be wireless, satallite, or powerline.
In fact I believe all C++ compilers will compile C. Anyone care to correct me on this?
Resell bandwidth of course! Actually many DSL providers allow this, I guess as they are used to allowing their T1 customers to resell. Cable does NOT allow this, obviously as they are used to cable sharing being theft.
Sorry to respond to a troll. Did want to point out there most of these security holes can be taken care of by recent updates, or even a simple firewall. There is no spyware in the wild for linux though. Yes it certainly is possible though. Read my earlier post for thoughts on this.
Hate to tell you, but Macs are just as vurnerable. Getting one to avoid adware is just sucurity through obscurity. Eventually macs will get spyware, don't know why its taken so long though.
Ok but F'sh I seriously doupt thats real. Man the none cow eating world would go apeshit if they were feed F'sh.
Actually we first need to decide on a standard, from my inital seaching there appears to be no RFC for such a standard. Definatly something we need to get done.
.torrent as they are fairly small and theoretically for seemless downloads all of the .torrent could be transmitted as part of the negotiaion session instead of through files downloads. .exe files etc. Though if its not already there mime-type information for the final files needs to be included in the .torrent for this.
Seems in order to implement seemless torrents you would need to have some header information about the protocol it is intending to implement. This would allow torrent to replace not only http but other future protocols as well. This information could be contained in mime-type information. Though it could also be contained in the actual
Once the client has determined the file and protocol that the torrent is intended to replace, it could download the file treating it as it would any file of said type. Dynamically display html files, download
Explain to me how connecting to a tracker, then connecting to peers is going to be faster than a single connection to an http server.
Well not ALL webtraffic would be helped, it greatly depends upon the traffic. But it would be nice if it became a standard, even something that apache used automatically when nessesary.
Just for note, times when torrents make a good idea.
A: if you have a very slow connection as a trackerless torrent could replace a persons static blog they are serving up through their cable modem.
B: You have very large content (game downloads/ movies etc. this example is already becomming common)
Obviously A: is not possible right now (possible not not easy as the person would have to download to their computer and open as a local document).
Sadly I don't think this opera integration is going to make A any easier as it seems to still require downloading to a location.
BZZZ sorry. The precendent set but the US Supreme Court states that if you create it FOR copyright infingment or openly market it as a tool for such. You are liable no matter how many legal uses it might also have. Bittorrent has openly from the beginning been aimed at legal downloads. It not more helps infringe copyright then FTP does, it just does it a bit faster.
Just so you know the ipodder does support bittorrent downloads. Don't know why ipodderX doesn't.
Yes, but good admins will setup a page for when their database goes down. This page now now be more more complex than. "Sorry we are down".
Yes, but as a previous poster stated. When it comes to wireless bandwidth, and the internet in general permission has to be revoked. I can't just say, "You're not allowed to visit this website" and put no password or protections on it. Then prosecute everyone who enters my website. Now of course if they pass that special boundary, and attempt to alter my website, that may be a different story. Same as with the wireless, say I was using a walki-talki and someone kept on breaking into my conversations. As long as I'm not using a secure bandwidth I have no expectations of privacy.
That greatly depends upon adult/juvenile lockup. And which state or country you are talking about. Many juvenile lockups are very similar to boarding schools. Many are horrible places. There are some organizations working to fix this, but its a slow process.
Not nessesarly so. You forget that Supreme Court judges have been extremly strange in this manor. It seems that every judge that has been put into the SC has drastically changed their opinions and manors of conduct. I think its a matter of being safe from having to answer to political pressure.
The SC decision also heavily weighted the intent of the programs creator. Bittorrent was not created or advertised with this intent.
Wow, you actually looked at my other comments? Seriously dude, your anal. Anyways, thanks for the correction. But I doubt (grin) I'll ever change.
I was wondering years ago why AMD didn't sue then. I'm thinking they waited till they guinuently were a superior product so that they couldn't be simply told they are complaining because they have an inferrior product.
Also to add to the other comments, generally Dumping is trying to destroy competition, so that you can sell at a higher price later. I seriously doupt Sony ever plans to up its price for the PS3.
The point is that Nintendo caters to the low-end market. The kind of people like me who still have their 1980's TVs and are just fine with them. A few people may have to get an analog to digital converter, though most people have cable or satallite by now which will do this for them.