New Riders - Advanced Linux Programming No Starch Press - Programming Linux Games OReilly - Linux System Programming Prentice Hall - A Practical Guide to Linux Commands Editors and Shell Programming Prentice Hall - Linux for Programmers and Users Prentice Hall - The Linux Programmer's Toolbox Que - Linux Programming by Example Sams - Linux Programming 2007 UnLeashed Springer - Guide To Assembly Language Programming In Linux Wiley - Assembly Language Step-By-Step - Programming With DOS And Linux Wordware - Advanced Linux 3D Graphics Programming Wordware - Linux 3D Graphics Programming Wrox - Beginning Linux Programming Wrox - Professional Linux Programming
Give your manager 3 choices. The first choice won't quite solve the problem. The second choice costs way too much. The third choice is the one you want him to pick.
The Pinto was named after the horse (meaning painted, piebald, mottled). It was the smallest/slowest/cheapest in the line of Pony Cars: Mustang, Maverick, Pinto.
I thought Lost was just a re-hash of Gilligan's Island with just enough 90210 brooding and staring thrown in to make you think something is actually going to, eventually, advance the plot (assuming there is one, which I doubt).
Almost everyone will be in Beijing for the Olympics and only in Beijing. Any number of visitors you think are "LARGE" (I assume you're a US citizen, CAlifornia?) are not really large for them. The margin of error in their population count is about the same as the entire population of the US. Even 200,000 new visitors at any one time to Beijing is only about a 1.3% increase in population, not such a big deal. Most of the city wouldn't even notice because these visitors won't be using the same facilities as the locals.
The Chinese government isn't concerned about minor leakage around the Great Firewall, they know it happens. Heck, I was just involved with a project that needed a faster connection with lower latency to the Beijing office and we bought/leased a private fast connection from Malaysia or Hong Kong or some such place that entirely bypassed the government firewall. Totally legal, totally legit.
What the Chinese government seems to be concerned about is managing the volume of information influx so as to manage the rate of change that is occurring. It seems they see and accept change, they just want to manage the rate of change to forestall any catastrophic problems. Now, I'm not an apologist for the government of China, I think they're generally a bunch of despotic asses. But they do have a problem "upgrading" 1.4 billion people who have almost no concept of laissez faire economics.
No, in 2008 they'll either just open up the Great Firewall or open it to those connections used by foreigners. Then afterward it'll go back to normal. They already accommodate visitors so gratuitously that it's almost embarrassing. The locals know and understand the arbitrariness of the enforcement of laws and the deference shown foreigners even they know this will happen.
As probably one of the few people who've been in wrecks in both a Corvair and a Pinto I've go to tell you that neither car was as bad as people who've never driven them made them out to be.
Because they'll vote for Sarah Palin.
"If you kill me now I will be more powerful then you ever will be."
Sarcasm -->
You
It's crafted exactly like Microsoft wants it to look and behave.
New Riders - Advanced Linux Programming
No Starch Press - Programming Linux Games
OReilly - Linux System Programming
Prentice Hall - A Practical Guide to Linux Commands Editors and Shell Programming
Prentice Hall - Linux for Programmers and Users
Prentice Hall - The Linux Programmer's Toolbox
Que - Linux Programming by Example
Sams - Linux Programming 2007 UnLeashed
Springer - Guide To Assembly Language Programming In Linux
Wiley - Assembly Language Step-By-Step - Programming With DOS And Linux
Wordware - Advanced Linux 3D Graphics Programming
Wordware - Linux 3D Graphics Programming
Wrox - Beginning Linux Programming
Wrox - Professional Linux Programming
See, that's the difference between you and them. You think this article was meant to be humorous. They don't.
But the Geek Squad does exist and there is proof that they do steal music from their customers and share it.
Give your manager 3 choices. The first choice won't quite solve the problem. The second choice costs way too much. The third choice is the one you want him to pick.
>> ...atheism has 'determinism'.
No, atheism has no god. That's all.
*You* may think so, but do they?
Once again, why does anyone care what an employee of company says about a competitor?
It'd be news if he said something like "Hey, open source will eat our lunch."
Can someone explain why we care what CEO of Company B says about the products of Company A?
If they are partners they say "Greatest thing since sliced bread.".
If they are competitors they say "It'll be a bust, terrible.....".
The Pinto was named after the horse (meaning painted, piebald, mottled). It was the smallest/slowest/cheapest in the line of Pony Cars: Mustang, Maverick, Pinto.
Oooohh, bitter much?
The next change possible is scheduled for November 2008.
I thought Lost was just a re-hash of Gilligan's Island with just enough 90210 brooding and staring thrown in to make you think something is actually going to, eventually, advance the plot (assuming there is one, which I doubt).
Almost everyone will be in Beijing for the Olympics and only in Beijing. Any number of visitors you think are "LARGE" (I assume you're a US citizen, CAlifornia?) are not really large for them. The margin of error in their population count is about the same as the entire population of the US. Even 200,000 new visitors at any one time to Beijing is only about a 1.3% increase in population, not such a big deal. Most of the city wouldn't even notice because these visitors won't be using the same facilities as the locals.
The Chinese government isn't concerned about minor leakage around the Great Firewall, they know it happens. Heck, I was just involved with a project that needed a faster connection with lower latency to the Beijing office and we bought/leased a private fast connection from Malaysia or Hong Kong or some such place that entirely bypassed the government firewall. Totally legal, totally legit.
What the Chinese government seems to be concerned about is managing the volume of information influx so as to manage the rate of change that is occurring. It seems they see and accept change, they just want to manage the rate of change to forestall any catastrophic problems. Now, I'm not an apologist for the government of China, I think they're generally a bunch of despotic asses. But they do have a problem "upgrading" 1.4 billion people who have almost no concept of laissez faire economics.
No, in 2008 they'll either just open up the Great Firewall or open it to those connections used by foreigners. Then afterward it'll go back to normal. They already accommodate visitors so gratuitously that it's almost embarrassing. The locals know and understand the arbitrariness of the enforcement of laws and the deference shown foreigners even they know this will happen.
Just damn.
As probably one of the few people who've been in wrecks in both a Corvair and a Pinto I've go to tell you that neither car was as bad as people who've never driven them made them out to be.
Hcked across the local community college PDP-11 running RSTS/E back in 1977. (From the terminal at my high school!)
80's, 90's, bah, young kids.
Can an ad submitted as an article get any more obvious?
Maybe that should be: The distance between "Wouldn't it be cool if..." and a Darwin award can be measured in six-packs.
Don't they know that the difference between "Wouldn't it be cool if..." and a Darwin award is a couple of six-packs.
The cotton gin actually made the production of cotton profitable. ...and it was invented in 1793, there were no cars then.
:)
Your sentiments might have been good but your facts aren't, sort of like what Dan Rather claimed. Does this mean you have to resign?
That would be the "Red Win@Shield Of Death"