Huh? Japanese (and I assume Chinese) typists don't need monster keyboards. Standard 104-key units will do, assuming the OS taking in the keys provides a simple IME/autocomplete dictionary. I've typed in Japanese using romaji , rendering a mix of Kanji and kana far faster than 3 characters per minute.
Just in case you're interested, using such an IME, you type watashi and at first you get , then space move through Kanji matches, and I stop on.
Aaaand now I see the need for Unicode support on/.
Here's my datum. Saw it Saturday afternoon. Expected a lot of CGI. No glaring cases of cringey animation I can recall. Mouths seemed to be in sync.
BUT - at no time did I expect 100% CGI. Several times I looked at an animal - mainly the wolves - and said to myself the bodies were likely real wolves, with the heads CGI-ed for acting purposes. The hair, musculature, movements, etc. were just... wolfy. When Bagheera (panther) chases Mowgli through the trees, I assumed most of the running action was a stunt animal, and the up-close conversation was CGI.
I guess my "review" is that, unless you're there just to nit-pick, most everything just looks... natural. Oh, and the story? You already know it. But it's a fine implementation of the reference spec. A little more savage than I expected honestly!
Is there a better, more elegant, informative or succinct way to state the idea of a corporate identity displayed through the visual and structural engineering choices made in their products? Or across a range of related products?
Say you forget to turn off Wi-Fi on your device, and you walk into a cafe[...]
This is one of the two reasons I have my phone set to disable WiFi as soon as I leave my house. I don't have to worry about my phone trying to connect to every open AP it comes across.
The other reason I auto-disable WiFi is to minimize store tracking which seeks to ID me when I enter their building.
Would you mind elaborating? What sorts of things do you cron? I'm assuming you do this to minimize reliance on third-party apps or because some function is not otherwise doable?
Hey there! Not sure if you use your iPhone to do this, but you seem like you might be the kind of useer I need to ask:
Can/do you you your iPhone for remote server admin? Both SSH terminal logins and MS Remote Desktop access (preferably over VPN)? I ask because in my new job I work remotely full-time, with a Linux laptop as my daily driver. Their network is 98% Microsoft though, so I have to RDP often. I have a Samsung Note 3 which I can use to VPN in then open a server with RDP or in the case of the lone Linux box, SSH. Is this scenario possible with Apple devices?
Aside from crappy security implementations which I blame mostly on Google, I don't get this attitude of yours.
Anyone who in 2016 doesn't understand how the exchange of a "free' phone OS for personal data works needs to grab a refresher from the many excellent sources of economic theory available.
Meanwhile, I *know* I'm the product, but in exchange I get great web searches, kick-ass navigation, YouTube, handy email and calendar integration with work, and more.
Jacksonville, FL. Unless something changed in the last year, Comcast has the cable-based broadband franchise monopoly. Don't get me started on AT&T UVerse/DSL as an alternative. There were stories in the local news from last year about a group lobbying to remove their monopoly status at the Public Service Commission, but I can't seem to find any links.
Someone send me a Hangouts request or add a launch date to my Calendar whenever I can use Android Pay (or Samsung Pay) as a rooted user. I've subscribed to feature updates on my Gmail and am ready to Map my way to stores where I can use this!
How is this any different than a regular ICE car having remote start? Those have been pitched as "get the car warmed up inside and out before stepping outside!" deals for ages now.
That's a perfectly accepted use case now. The problem is the app/IoT side. Currently, it uses your keyfob to "authenticate" the request.
I know Lucas, then Disney seem hell-bent on releasing "new" versions of these films every few years. What I want, and would pay dearly for, is a DVD Trilogy set (no flames; I just don't do Blu-Ray) where the first thing you get is a list of checkboxes.
These control the edits. Want original empty Mos Eisley streets + Han shoots first^wonly + CGI hangar Jabba + Ghost Hayden? Knock yourself out.
But that's the point, at least to me. I expect my cell carrier to know how to reach me, because I pay them to. Ditto for my credit card company. "Everyone knows" you're sharing your purchase identifiers every time you swipe.
But at no point do I expect my phone calls or credit transactions to be swept up in broad LEO activities unless I'm on a warrant or watch list.
...pretty sure there are some sharks in that river.
That entire setpiece was just awful. Overlong, overwrought, and just too much of everything. Move the sliders to 50 or 60 percent and we have a deal...
I get that Mr. Patt may have had no way to know his work had been appropriated, but once D&D became the national craze it did, why didn't he wonder to himself at the similarities?
Honestly dumb question: I understand the point you're making, but isn't a "pure" YouTube version of the 1928 film considered format-shifting?
Yes, I understand that the version placed on YouTube may not have been the exact original 1928 version, but wouldn't it have to be sufficiently transformed to be considered a derivative work and thus on a fresh copyright clock?
Huh? Japanese (and I assume Chinese) typists don't need monster keyboards. Standard 104-key units will do, assuming the OS taking in the keys provides a simple IME/autocomplete dictionary. I've typed in Japanese using romaji , rendering a mix of Kanji and kana far faster than 3 characters per minute.
.
/.
Just in case you're interested, using such an IME, you type watashi and at first you get , then space move through Kanji matches, and I stop on
Aaaand now I see the need for Unicode support on
I'll have to check when I get back home, but my PS4 doesn't have DLNA support. And a lot of web streams fail due to a lack of Flash.
Here's my datum. Saw it Saturday afternoon. Expected a lot of CGI. No glaring cases of cringey animation I can recall. Mouths seemed to be in sync.
BUT - at no time did I expect 100% CGI. Several times I looked at an animal - mainly the wolves - and said to myself the bodies were likely real wolves, with the heads CGI-ed for acting purposes. The hair, musculature, movements, etc. were just... wolfy. When Bagheera (panther) chases Mowgli through the trees, I assumed most of the running action was a stunt animal, and the up-close conversation was CGI.
I guess my "review" is that, unless you're there just to nit-pick, most everything just looks... natural. Oh, and the story? You already know it. But it's a fine implementation of the reference spec. A little more savage than I expected honestly!
Is there a better, more elegant, informative or succinct way to state the idea of a corporate identity displayed through the visual and structural engineering choices made in their products? Or across a range of related products?
This is one of the two reasons I have my phone set to disable WiFi as soon as I leave my house. I don't have to worry about my phone trying to connect to every open AP it comes across.
The other reason I auto-disable WiFi is to minimize store tracking which seeks to ID me when I enter their building.
Would you mind elaborating? What sorts of things do you cron? I'm assuming you do this to minimize reliance on third-party apps or because some function is not otherwise doable?
Don't forget the teapots in the Pipes screensaver!
Hey there! Not sure if you use your iPhone to do this, but you seem like you might be the kind of useer I need to ask:
Can/do you you your iPhone for remote server admin? Both SSH terminal logins and MS Remote Desktop access (preferably over VPN)? I ask because in my new job I work remotely full-time, with a Linux laptop as my daily driver. Their network is 98% Microsoft though, so I have to RDP often. I have a Samsung Note 3 which I can use to VPN in then open a server with RDP or in the case of the lone Linux box, SSH. Is this scenario possible with Apple devices?
Aside from crappy security implementations which I blame mostly on Google, I don't get this attitude of yours.
Anyone who in 2016 doesn't understand how the exchange of a "free' phone OS for personal data works needs to grab a refresher from the many excellent sources of economic theory available.
Meanwhile, I *know* I'm the product, but in exchange I get great web searches, kick-ass navigation, YouTube, handy email and calendar integration with work, and more.
Jacksonville, FL. Unless something changed in the last year, Comcast has the cable-based broadband franchise monopoly. Don't get me started on AT&T UVerse/DSL as an alternative. There were stories in the local news from last year about a group lobbying to remove their monopoly status at the Public Service Commission, but I can't seem to find any links.
Clearly *you* my friend have never played Bamboozled! https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Someone send me a Hangouts request or add a launch date to my Calendar whenever I can use Android Pay (or Samsung Pay) as a rooted user. I've subscribed to feature updates on my Gmail and am ready to Map my way to stores where I can use this!
How is this any different than a regular ICE car having remote start? Those have been pitched as "get the car warmed up inside and out before stepping outside!" deals for ages now.
That's a perfectly accepted use case now. The problem is the app/IoT side. Currently, it uses your keyfob to "authenticate" the request.
I know Lucas, then Disney seem hell-bent on releasing "new" versions of these films every few years. What I want, and would pay dearly for, is a DVD Trilogy set (no flames; I just don't do Blu-Ray) where the first thing you get is a list of checkboxes.
These control the edits. Want original empty Mos Eisley streets + Han shoots first^wonly + CGI hangar Jabba + Ghost Hayden? Knock yourself out.
Tell me about it. Sourceforge had a couple as I recall but Download.com? Yikes!
But that's the point, at least to me. I expect my cell carrier to know how to reach me, because I pay them to. Ditto for my credit card company. "Everyone knows" you're sharing your purchase identifiers every time you swipe.
But at no point do I expect my phone calls or credit transactions to be swept up in broad LEO activities unless I'm on a warrant or watch list.
...pretty sure there are some sharks in that river.
That entire setpiece was just awful. Overlong, overwrought, and just too much of everything. Move the sliders to 50 or 60 percent and we have a deal...
I get that Mr. Patt may have had no way to know his work had been appropriated, but once D&D became the national craze it did, why didn't he wonder to himself at the similarities?
I went to that store's site... They told me you were their number-one seller. (Apologies to Seinfeld)
Honestly dumb question: I understand the point you're making, but isn't a "pure" YouTube version of the 1928 film considered format-shifting?
Yes, I understand that the version placed on YouTube may not have been the exact original 1928 version, but wouldn't it have to be sufficiently transformed to be considered a derivative work and thus on a fresh copyright clock?
Fair enough, but isn't CJK usually two bytes per character / ideogram in Unicode? So it's more like 5,000 words for a Chinese tweet?
I literally watched Ex Machina yesterday! I really liked it, and the way Nathan was portrayed. Gods with feet of clay, and so on. Nice, thinky film...
Mmmmm, pot stickers and mozzarella sticks...
*waits patiently for the rest of this Yorkshiremen skit*
Jacksonville, FL. 1. My family (nuclear & extended) 2. The beach (with family). 3. Movies & dining (with family). 4. Umm...