I always thought that you got your rights from being natural or born under our law; the theistist, wanted rights confered at conception; and compromise we got makes everybody militant.
IANAL either, but it seems that these are situations that an escrow account would be a good fit for. If eBay had to put a reasonable licensing fees in escrow until the case is settled and MercExchange had to pony up a reasonable cost-of-lost-opertunity on the money eBay put in; I bet the case wouldn't be dragging ass through the court system.
Actualy we don't realy know the number, there is some discrepencies between the various translations, and the people who wrote the book were not very good with numbers. The translators certainly were not well educated by todays standards and didn't innclude translator's notes in their works, for example the armaic work for "inn" means either an inn as in a hotel, but also means a living space for people above where livestock lived, similar to having an appartment in a hayloft in our modern barns. This puts a different spin on the circumstances of Christ's birth.
Personally I don't believe that Revelations even belong in the Bible, it just doesn't fit.
One of the better instructors I've had used to say "put down your pens and pencils, this is important" durring lectures; of course after that he'd say "write this down verbatim". This technic realy drove home important concepts. I had another instructor in his class merely staying awake and paying attention would get you an A, two of us got an A out of thirty; I stood up in the back of the room for most lectures, it's hard to fall asleep standing up:)
Nah they wouldn't fire him. maybe chain him to his chair in the deepest, darkest, and dankest dungeon er I mean OSS lab that the evil wizards of Redmond have, but never fire him. Plenty of PR can be had by being able to say MS clients work better with Linux servers than Linux clients do, MS server work better with Linux clients than Linux servers do and MS clients realy rock with MS servers
Why would environmentalism be against technology and developing? it's not environmentalist as in people seeking reasonable ways to protect our mutual environment from damaging changes; but environmentalists as in a quasi-religion with Gaian/Vegan/Wiccan overtones where anything involveing humans are unnatural and tending toward evil, humans with any technology strongly tending toward evil and male WASPs in the US being evil incarnate.
The deferal of procreation is doing more to limit population, than the number of children is. When a couple has 2 kids by 20, then 4 grand kids by 40, then 8 great-grand kids by 80; then the population has increased by 14 people in the span of one generation, waiting till 35 increases the population by 6 people.
1. what would go under the proposed.XXX TLD is defined by the proposed law 2. what a CC TLD like www.hotgirls.co.uk would be up to the Brit 3. If I were a porn merchant, I'd keep both, the.com would point to the entry page with the obligatory I'm over 18 ect. then linked to the good stuff. This would be pretty trivial to do with PHP's HTTP_HOST variable and an extra apache virtual server, the same same would be seen as an entry splash page when called from $HTTP_HOST == www.hotgirls.com, and with the skin when called from $HTTP_HOST == www.hotgirls.xxx; if it's trivial in PHP I assume it's trivial in Perl, ASP and.net also. 4. Doing something like porn on a www.someisp.net/~hotgirls/ account is normaly forbidden by www.someisp.net's terms just for that reason, normaly you can't do porn on shared hosting either just icase some clueless bozo blocks the IP address instead of the domain name knocking out a server's worth of virtual hosts. 5. and 8. The united states is a democracy, so the nine hungry cannibals just vote to eat number ten, so I do; I assume from you sentence structure you probably wouldn't. 6. the gTLD is administer by Verisign, an american company so they could just force them; what a country does within it's own ccTLD is up to that country 9 and ten that's what they want,
"communication," image, article, recording or other "obscene" matter, including actual or simulated sexual acts and "lewd exhibition of the genitals or post-pubescent female breast." Today on the Today show (NBC) there was an article about a photogapher photographing topless models on the street in New York, which was legal under a court ruling because its also legal for men to be topless in public.
The.xxx tld namespace was administered by alternic.org, but their website is now placeholder and their domain name seems to be up for sale; openNIC reports that their namesever have fallen silent.
Mostly I think these bills, get passed because the title sounds good, if your a congress critter do you vote against "protecting innocent children" or do you vote for a bill that is unpalatable in the body but sounds good in the title knowing full well that the courts are going to void 90% of it? Beside these things make great tojan horses to carry admendments to other bills that would never fly on their own and pork-barrel funds for the home state.
We have no Idea what google does or doesn't do when I click that delete button. On my personal computer deleteing a file simpley moves a link to a disk sector from the in use chain to the available chain; I wouldn't be surprised if google hasn't developed something like a filesystem with a fifo backup chain between the in-use and available chains. Could be that clicking delete just sets a flag making the email invisable to the user too.
if you route all mail into a storage area and back it up, you still have to purge old data continuously, or spend every corporate dollar on disks and tapes. In some industries old data, is 30 years old; right now I'm struggleing with how to make a resonable and and believable effort to meat a 30 years document rention requirement.
Depends on what you are doing I believe SOX imposes some serious data/document retention requirements on businesses, anything medical as patient care is 30 years (OSHA bloddborne pathogens), anything device or medication orientated is 30 years (FDA 501K). Patents are 20 years so you'd want to keep that stuff for that long, hell copyrights will outlive the physical documents at 90 years. We've got a company in Detroit Michigan that bought an abandoned salt mine to store papers in; and the Mormon church plans on keeping backups of the geniological database until doom's-day.
Get GPG, GNU Privacy Guard installed and set up on your system; and it runs on about everything. Then you generate a key pair one key is public and people who want to send you encrypted files or emails get it either from you or a keyserver (I think) and a private key that decrypt what the others have sent you and actually use it. If you need to know that the identity is really who you think they might be, then you need to set up a key signing party where you will;
1. Generate A Key Pair (already done)
2. Send Public Key To Designated Keyserver (or Coordinator)
3. Send Public Key Info To Coordinator
4. Show Up At The Party
5. Verify Your Key Info
6. Verify Everyone Else's Key Info
7. Verify Everyone Identify for IDs You Will Sign
8. Sign All The Verified IDs On The Verified Keys
9. Send The Signed Keys Back Up To The Designated Keyserver (or to the key owner)
as outlined at cryptnet.net. I've thought about telling people who send me email that my email filter thinks everything that's plain text is spam and to resend just to get to critical mass.
each node has to get data and coordinate with the other nodes, eventualy you get to a point where the computer power brought by a new node is equal to the communication overhead. Too many nodes can actualy make the whole thing slower, its a property of computer clusters in general. there is a point where it noticeable that its not scaling linearly.
It takes a _lot_ of simulations to really learn anything, still you have to do one before you can do a lot. Maybe those opterons would even exist with out people grand-standing on a super-computer a decade ago.
I always thought that you got your rights from being natural or born under our law; the theistist, wanted rights confered at conception; and compromise we got makes everybody militant.
IANAL either, but it seems that these are situations that an escrow account would be a good fit for. If eBay had to put a reasonable licensing fees in escrow until the case is settled and MercExchange had to pony up a reasonable cost-of-lost-opertunity on the money eBay put in; I bet the case wouldn't be dragging ass through the court system.
OOPs you're right, must be brain damage from trying to order 4 beers in the bar in binary!
since I converterd to base 2, I can count to 2047 on my fingers, neener neener neener!
Actualy we don't realy know the number, there is some discrepencies between the various translations, and the people who wrote the book were not very good with numbers. The translators certainly were not well educated by todays standards and didn't innclude translator's notes in their works, for example the armaic work for "inn" means either an inn as in a hotel, but also means a living space for people above where livestock lived, similar to having an appartment in a hayloft in our modern barns. This puts a different spin on the circumstances of Christ's birth.
Personally I don't believe that Revelations even belong in the Bible, it just doesn't fit.
Nope left Huntsville Al one year it was 33, and I was frezing my ass off there; got to Detroit Mi where it was 10 below and it felt much warmer.
Throw the old tests up there too, why let all the frat boys have the advantages?
One of the better instructors I've had used to say "put down your pens and pencils, this is important" durring lectures; of course after that he'd say "write this down verbatim". This technic realy drove home important concepts. I had another instructor in his class merely staying awake and paying attention would get you an A, two of us got an A out of thirty; I stood up in the back of the room for most lectures, it's hard to fall asleep standing up :)
Nah they wouldn't fire him. maybe chain him to his chair in the deepest, darkest, and dankest dungeon er I mean OSS lab that the evil wizards of Redmond have, but never fire him. Plenty of PR can be had by being able to say MS clients work better with Linux servers than Linux clients do, MS server work better with Linux clients than Linux servers do and MS clients realy rock with MS servers
Why would environmentalism be against technology and developing?
it's not environmentalist as in people seeking reasonable ways to protect our mutual environment from damaging changes; but environmentalists as in a quasi-religion with Gaian/Vegan/Wiccan overtones where anything involveing humans are unnatural and tending toward evil, humans with any technology strongly tending toward evil and male WASPs in the US being evil incarnate.
The deferal of procreation is doing more to limit population, than the number of children is. When a couple has 2 kids by 20, then 4 grand kids by 40, then 8 great-grand kids by 80; then the population has increased by 14 people in the span of one generation, waiting till 35 increases the population by 6 people.
Will it work on gnome, and are you going to offer an upgrade so it'll work in KDE as well?
1. what would go under the proposed .XXX TLD is defined by the proposed law .com would point to the entry page with the obligatory I'm over 18 ect. then linked to the good stuff. This would be pretty trivial to do with PHP's HTTP_HOST variable and an extra apache virtual server, the same same would be seen as an entry splash page when called from $HTTP_HOST == www.hotgirls.com, and with the skin when called from $HTTP_HOST == www.hotgirls.xxx; if it's trivial in PHP I assume it's trivial in Perl, ASP and .net also.
2. what a CC TLD like www.hotgirls.co.uk would be up to the Brit
3. If I were a porn merchant, I'd keep both, the
4. Doing something like porn on a www.someisp.net/~hotgirls/ account is normaly forbidden by www.someisp.net's terms just for that reason, normaly you can't do porn on shared hosting either just icase some clueless bozo blocks the IP address instead of the domain name knocking out a server's worth of virtual hosts.
5. and 8. The united states is a democracy, so the nine hungry cannibals just vote to eat number ten, so I do; I assume from you sentence structure you probably wouldn't.
6. the gTLD is administer by Verisign, an american company so they could just force them; what a country does within it's own ccTLD is up to that country
9 and ten that's what they want,
"communication," image, article, recording or other "obscene" matter, including actual or simulated sexual acts and "lewd exhibition of the genitals or post-pubescent female breast."
Today on the Today show (NBC) there was an article about a photogapher photographing topless models on the street in New York, which was legal under a court ruling because its also legal for men to be topless in public.
The .xxx tld namespace was administered by alternic.org, but their website is now placeholder and their domain name seems to be up for sale; openNIC reports that their namesever have fallen silent.
Mostly I think these bills, get passed because the title sounds good, if your a congress critter do you vote against "protecting innocent children" or do you vote for a bill that is unpalatable in the body but sounds good in the title knowing full well that the courts are going to void 90% of it? Beside these things make great tojan horses to carry admendments to other bills that would never fly on their own and pork-barrel funds for the home state.
We have no Idea what google does or doesn't do when I click that delete button. On my personal computer deleteing a file simpley moves a link to a disk sector from the in use chain to the available chain; I wouldn't be surprised if google hasn't developed something like a filesystem with a fifo backup chain between the in-use and available chains. Could be that clicking delete just sets a flag making the email invisable to the user too.
I suspect that most ISP's have an official policy of not backingup purely for that reason.
if you route all mail into a storage area and back it up, you still have to purge old data continuously, or spend every corporate dollar on disks and tapes.
In some industries old data, is 30 years old; right now I'm struggleing with how to make a resonable and and believable effort to meat a 30 years document rention requirement.
Depends on what you are doing I believe SOX imposes some serious data/document retention requirements on businesses, anything medical as patient care is 30 years (OSHA bloddborne pathogens), anything device or medication orientated is 30 years (FDA 501K). Patents are 20 years so you'd want to keep that stuff for that long, hell copyrights will outlive the physical documents at 90 years. We've got a company in Detroit Michigan that bought an abandoned salt mine to store papers in; and the Mormon church plans on keeping backups of the geniological database until doom's-day.
Then you generate a key pair one key is public and people who want to send you encrypted files or emails get it either from you or a keyserver (I think) and a private key that decrypt what the others have sent you and actually use it. If you need to know that the identity is really who you think they might be, then you need to set up a key signing party where you will;
as outlined at cryptnet.net. I've thought about telling people who send me email that my email filter thinks everything that's plain text is spam and to resend just to get to critical mass.
each node has to get data and coordinate with the other nodes, eventualy you get to a point where the computer power brought by a new node is equal to the communication overhead. Too many nodes can actualy make the whole thing slower, its a property of computer clusters in general. there is a point where it noticeable that its not scaling linearly.
it seems to run any everything I can think of.
It takes a _lot_ of simulations to really learn anything,
still you have to do one before you can do a lot. Maybe those opterons would even exist with out people grand-standing on a super-computer a decade ago.
I tried to go there but the site was already slashdotted... just kidding, neat stuff there.