World of Goo was the only game I had heard of before, and this is the first time I've played it. Definitely worth more than the ~$7.14 the devs got from me!
This sounds like the "shortcut" feature that's been around since Win95. Have they actually implemented something new here, or just given some old junk a new name?
Like most of the big Chinese/Taiwanese hardware manufacturers, they have satellite offices in the US, the UK, Japan, and a couple European countries. You'd ship it to one of those.
What I'm waiting for is someone that offers a PAID service, say around $5-10 a month.
Not only would this eliminate any and all advertising in the interface and your outgoing mail, but it would invariably come with guaranteed availability. Y! and Gmail make no promises whatsoever that the mail stored on their servers won't get wiped due to a failure, upgrade or whatever.
Such a service would also probably include features that you'll never see from the free ones, like telnet/SSH access (perhaps with a pine-like interface), access via POP, IMAP and maybe even certain groupware suites (GMail has POP, but the terms suggest they might do away with it in the future), ability to use your own domain, and high-security storage (encrypted disks and such).
Re:A better way to avoid this problem
on
Source Code Escrow
·
· Score: 1
Ok, who's gonna be the first one to make some caffeinated beer?
You've never watched the Drew Carey show, have you?
According to this article, FAT32 can be up to 8 TB. However, due to limitations in Windows 2000 and XP's FAT driver, it can only create a FAT32 filesystem as large as 32 GB.
> Valve's Unreal engine
Valve made the Source engine. Epic made the Unreal engine.
This all seems strangely familiar to me. Would be interesting if Amazon could pull it off, though.
FWIW, we have an SLS machine at work and it doesn't produce fumes.
It does, however, spew that damn powder all over the place.
Laundering my phone usually means buying a new phone.
Paid $50, that was all I could muster.
World of Goo was the only game I had heard of before, and this is the first time I've played it. Definitely worth more than the ~$7.14 the devs got from me!
Haven't tried the others yet.
The crystal planet must be getting close.
(please tell me I wasn't the only one who thought of this as soon as they read the headline)
Two words:
Denny Crane
I didn't think there was such a thing as high-quality Microsoft software, pirated or otherwise...
When you post something like this anonymously, it does raise questions about your own affiliations and interests...
Or ABC, CBS... hell, even PBS will stoop to that level if they need cash...
Something about 640k of RAM...
So, they're shooting for about 10 years then?
This sounds like the "shortcut" feature that's been around since Win95. Have they actually implemented something new here, or just given some old junk a new name?
Certainly you mean suffix...
Like most of the big Chinese/Taiwanese hardware manufacturers, they have satellite offices in the US, the UK, Japan, and a couple European countries. You'd ship it to one of those.
Considering the early stage of the system's deployment, probably.
Freespace 2 was a commercial game, produced by the same people as Freespace 1. Several years later the source code to the engine was released.
What I'm waiting for is someone that offers a PAID service, say around $5-10 a month.
Not only would this eliminate any and all advertising in the interface and your outgoing mail, but it would invariably come with guaranteed availability. Y! and Gmail make no promises whatsoever that the mail stored on their servers won't get wiped due to a failure, upgrade or whatever.
Such a service would also probably include features that you'll never see from the free ones, like telnet/SSH access (perhaps with a pine-like interface), access via POP, IMAP and maybe even certain groupware suites (GMail has POP, but the terms suggest they might do away with it in the future), ability to use your own domain, and high-security storage (encrypted disks and such).
You've never watched the Drew Carey show, have you?
It lets you set up a temporary forwarding address, which can be very useful for those "free registration" things that just scream "SPAM!".
I give it 3 days.
According to this article, FAT32 can be up to 8 TB. However, due to limitations in Windows 2000 and XP's FAT driver, it can only create a FAT32 filesystem as large as 32 GB.
Nope. I haven't had problems with any hardware... yet.
Because in 64-bit mode, the size of long is 8 bytes. Some programes have a major problem with that, as I've so painfully discovered...
Now where is that Spike pr0n search plugin? Spike Lee sued the author.