Anything on the BBC website is free for you to view. Same thing for listeing to any of the BBC radio channels. You only need a licence if you want to watch tv.
Been using their services for half a year now without any problems. They're licenced with the Russian equivalent of the RIAA, so I don't see where the problem is.
This is a great example of the free market combined with the internet. I'm able to buy goods and services from wherever it suits me.
Polar (http://www.polar.fi/), another finnish company besides Suunto makes some fairly interesting watches. Their speciality is heart rate monitors, but they've packed quite a lot of other functionality into their top of the range watches.
http://www.allofmp3.com/ - Run out of Russia, great service (online encoding for example) and great prices ($0.01/mb) but a question about legality when used from the US.
They're fully licenced with the local RIAA equivalent, but there doesn't seem to be any info available on American legislation.
Challenged the following patients for example; " -- A method for online music sampling, held by Intouch Group. -- A method controlling access to an event venue through alterable tickets, held by Walker Digital. -- Technology for database copying, held by Oracle. -- Technology for single-chip network routers, held by Cisco Systems." -http://www.businesswire.com/webbox/bw. 013001/2103 00397.htm
Another picure
on
Jaguar is Over
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· Score: 2, Informative
You want his phone number too? It's available at http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/aboutdw/staf f.html. I don't really feel like posting the poor guys # on/.
Name: Michael O'Connell (moc(a)us.ibm.com) Position: Editor-in-chief of DeveloperWorks Company: IBM
"Our mission is to help you be a better software programmer, a more productive (and perhaps more rested, less stressed) coder.
We hope to help you unleash the full power of hardware and operating systems, bridge multiple platforms, and be more successful through the use of open standards and cross-platform technologies such as Java, Linux, XML, and open source projects. developerWorks offers articles, sample code, tutorials, tools, news, discussion forums, emerging technologies -- virtually anything developers like you want and need to get your job done.
The developerWorks team is passionate about open standards and technologies. We tap into relevant expertise and perspective from both inside and outside IBM. We are developers, researchers, journalists, and business people critically seeking and leveraging the technical breadth and depth from the 100,000-person-strong technical community of IBM. (Note: IBM invests about $6 billion/year on research and is dedicated to helping customers integrate business systems through the use of open, cross-platform standards). We combine this collection of IBM talent and resources with a hand-picked assembly of independent industry-leading developers." -http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/aboutdw/
Anything on the BBC website is free for you to view. Same thing for listeing to any of the BBC radio channels. You only need a licence if you want to watch tv.
http://www.allofmp3.com/
Been using their services for half a year now without any problems. They're licenced with the Russian equivalent of the RIAA, so I don't see where the problem is.
This is a great example of the free market combined with the internet. I'm able to buy goods and services from wherever it suits me.
" All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the Poster. The Rest (C) 1997-2004 OSDN."
Google isn't quite a "top 1,000" company though.
oh yes, a good pubic image is always for the best.
Polar (http://www.polar.fi/), another finnish company besides Suunto makes some fairly interesting watches. Their speciality is heart rate monitors, but they've packed quite a lot of other functionality into their top of the range watches.
http://www.allofmp3.com/ - Run out of Russia, great service (online encoding for example) and great prices ($0.01/mb) but a question about legality when used from the US.
They're fully licenced with the local RIAA equivalent, but there doesn't seem to be any info available on American legislation.
A more in-depth discussion on the site can be found at http://www.museekster.com/allofmp3info.htm
http://www.kohina.com plays some great old school game tracks.
There used to be a site called BountyQuest.
. 013001/2103 00397.htm
Challenged the following patients for example;
"
-- A method for online music sampling, held by Intouch Group.
-- A method controlling access to an event venue through alterable tickets, held by Walker Digital.
-- Technology for database copying, held by Oracle.
-- Technology for single-chip network routers, held by Cisco Systems."
-http://www.businesswire.com/webbox/bw
Side view available here
picture available here
And if you're running AMD, you can get fried fish for dinner!
I believe that would be, "Ha ha ha, they are SCOOOO dead".
In terms of shipped computers, perhaps. In terms of revenue and mkt cap, no. Not even close.
... 5. Profit!!!
...as long as it isn't written with a capital S as you just did.
Can add that I'm suffering from the same problem using the Intel 82820(M). Went down from 32-bit now, so lets see what happens.
./ does it again...
The Guardian operates a few of these columns, and they usually seem to get pretty decent results, so it might be worth a shot.
no no no... Dollar sign Dollar sign Dollar sign Dollar sign SexyGal
Shouldn't that be MS/GNU/Linux?
You want his phone number too? It's available at http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/aboutdw/staf f.html. I don't really feel like posting the poor guys # on /.
Name: Michael O'Connell (moc(a)us.ibm.com)
Position: Editor-in-chief of DeveloperWorks
Company: IBM
"Our mission is to help you be a better software programmer, a more productive (and perhaps more rested, less stressed) coder.
We hope to help you unleash the full power of hardware and operating systems, bridge multiple platforms, and be more successful through the use of open standards and cross-platform technologies such as Java, Linux, XML, and open source projects. developerWorks offers articles, sample code, tutorials, tools, news, discussion forums, emerging technologies -- virtually anything developers like you want and need to get your job done.
The developerWorks team is passionate about open standards and technologies. We tap into relevant expertise and perspective from both inside and outside IBM. We are developers, researchers, journalists, and business people critically seeking and leveraging the technical breadth and depth from the 100,000-person-strong technical community of IBM. (Note: IBM invests about $6 billion/year on research and is dedicated to helping customers integrate business systems through the use of open, cross-platform standards). We combine this collection of IBM talent and resources with a hand-picked assembly of independent industry-leading developers." -http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/aboutdw/
I think it was less than 200k about a week ago.
exactly. The company probably even had a policy on "monitoring" the mail.