Sheldon is correct. A denial of cert means
nothing.
"...this [Supreme] Court has rigorously insisted that such a denial [to hear a case] carries with it no implication whatever regarding the Court's
views on the merits of a case which it has declined to review. The Court has said this
again and again; again and again the admonition has to be repeated."
(Justice Frankfurter, Maryland v. Broadcast Radio Sho, Inc. 338 US 912, 1950)
>There was one war where messages were encrypted by translating into an indian language (I think >Cherokee, not certain), and it was the only code not broken in that war. (Vietnam? Again, not certain).
I believe this originally occurred during WWII and it was the language of the Navajo (sp) tribe.
Well, the ballots may be ludicrous, but I thought it was interesting that a bunch of kids were able
to do the voting correctly.
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=\Poli tics\archive\200011\POL20001110o.html
Gee, that must have been a very simple payroll system ;-)
What version of RPG did it convert (RPGII, RPGIII,
RPGIV-ILE)? Probably RPGII since it had the
smallest feature-set.
Do you have an example RPG program that was
converted and its associated output? I'd love
to see it.
Terry
Sheldon is correct. A denial of cert means
nothing.
"...this [Supreme] Court has rigorously insisted that such a denial [to hear a case] carries with it no implication whatever regarding the Court's
views on the merits of a case which it has declined to review. The Court has said this
again and again; again and again the admonition has to be repeated."
(Justice Frankfurter, Maryland v. Broadcast Radio Sho, Inc. 338 US 912, 1950)
>There was one war where messages were encrypted by translating into an indian language (I think >Cherokee, not certain), and it was the only code not broken in that war. (Vietnam? Again, not certain).
:)
I believe this originally occurred during WWII and it was the language of the Navajo (sp) tribe.
(my first post to slashdot
Well, the ballots may be ludicrous, but I thought it was interesting that a bunch of kids were able to do the voting correctly. http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewPolitics.asp?Page=\Poli tics\archive\200011\POL20001110o.html