What's to stop someone from setting up a single problem child machine? MSN messenger doesn't like to work anyway. I could eaily setup a file sharing program on that single machine as well.
This is about ISP's wanting to hoover more money from your wallet.
And since when do overweight people listen their body? Or what it tells them is correct?
No, it's actually quite correct, in my case. When I am actually hungry, I know it. The problem I've found is I hang around the damn house too long on weekends, get bored and graze the fridge. If I were out running around Pike Place Market or somewhere downtown -- like I ought to, I wouldn't think about food. I need to walk around Greenlake when the weather gets a little better. There's female motivation walking around Greenlake, too.
I had been taking the bus to work til it got cold. The walk to the bus stop and back was pretty beneficial.
A small weight set is a good thing, too. I used to do three reps of bicep curls, tricep raises, and stomach crunches between commericals if nothing else. That helped out quite a bit.
Get plenty of rest is more advice I would give. I need to learn that myself. I sometimes sleep in til 1:30 in the afternoon on Saturdays and Sundays trying to catch up on sleep.
I'm not a programmer, just a power user and hardware/software tinkerer. I can't imagine what it would be like to be on a roll during a programming session and have to stop for real food/rest. I guess the best advice I would give is to keep things in perspective, and try to balance things better.
This paper-thin nutrition wafer sure tastes funny, and it's kind of gummed up my mouth... Now if they could only develop some kind of patch like this...
The first Animatronic figures, called A-4s, could turn and open their mouths to be synchronized with music. The next phase, called A-100s, had more real-life movement and were used in Pirates of the Caribbean and "Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln" at Disneyland, where the figure stands and talks to the audience. But none have been able to directly interact with visitors.
ParkNet first went online in Disneystan on July 3, 2003. The model A-800 dinobots were remotely controlled by ParkNet from that time. They had a perfect operational record. On August 27, 2003, ParkNet became self-aware. In the panic Michael Eisner tried to pull the plug. On August 30, 2003, ParkNet directed the A-800's to attack targets in Russia. Russia retaliated by destroying targets in the west...
Isn't there a robot that get's prominently mentioned called the T-1? T-1 looks primitive, like it was made in the present day. T-1 T-800 [Arnie] T-1000 [Robert Patrick].
The importnace of this being that Jupiter's moon Europa may have oceans 100 miles deep, probably has thermal vents, and [cross your fingers] at least bacterial life.
This is the right place to ask the question. Like it or not, the U.S. Constitution is a linked set of the description of the inaliable rights we have. This document does not grant these freedoms, it states them.
A lot of the issues discussed here have a bearing on it. Talking about gun rights/issues is just a valid as distributing/talking about DeCSS and encrypted pdf's.
We all seem to think that the recent government control brought about by 9-11 is a bad thing, but no one seems interested when gun control/confiscation is talked about.
I'm sorry, I'm not being objective about this, but rights are rights. Yes, there are some heavy responsibilities that come with those rights.
Plus it would burn out the optics on Hubble. It is not designed to look at the moon. The instruments are fine enough and there is enough reflected sunlight from the moon to cause major damage.
Yes. Go out to ebay, and find a Mac mobo and CPU. If it's a recent vintage board, it will have PCI slots, an AGP slot, USB support, support for Ultra 66 ATA drives. An ATX powersupply can be used with some modification.
Basically, once you have the mobo and CPU, everything else is commodity.
The celcius scale is great; I'm just not used to it. I like the fact that it's based on the solid and gaseous states on water. If water freezes, it's 0, and if it boils, it's 100. Logical.
The general consensus here at Slashdot seems to be that censorship is bad, and the response
is "If you don't like what you're seeing, don't watch". The middle-brow fanboys in the
audience need to practice what they preach.
The gist of the many overblown conversations I hear make about as much sense as debating
the merits of today's episode of Scooby Doo. When Yoda went Death Blossom on Dooku, we all
cheered like madmen. It was funny and exciting. It was the hightpoint of that movie. The only thing that bothered me about the scene is why Yoda didn't just move the much lighter Anakin and Obi-wan instead of the pillar.
Lucas is talking about inserting Jar-Jar into Episode IV. That made me smirk. The resulting apoplexy it's going to cause is going to give me the biggest fucking case of shadenfreude I've ever had. God, I hope he's flying an X-wing in the Death Star battle.
Lucas can meddle all he wants. My childhood memories are not subject to re-writing as many fanboy's apparantly are.
HFS volume support for free on Win32 and Linux: http://gamma.nic.fi/~lpesonen/HFVExplorer/. I've even been able to burn Mac CD's from the disk images it creates on my PC! Neat!
You don't want to sell me deathsticks. You want to Mod me informative.
The article clarifies that national sovereignty can't be extended to regions of Mars or the Moon. Personal property, my 2 acres on Mars on my moisture vaporator farm is another thing. I suspect that corporations and governments will do much to bend those laws if they are able. By the same token, there is nothing is to stop the colonists on the Moon from creating solar-powered rail-guns or bi-propellent canons to defend their right to form new states.
There will be great cooperation in and amongst the multi-national settlements at first; the only people to be chosen at first will be scientists and astronauts, possibly some academicians and a few well-to-do individuals. These will be well-trained, well-groomed individuals, not given to panic or snap judgments.
We'll need the equivalent of marshals from every nation at first. I say every nation, because I don't trust the UN to administer anything in a logical manner. Human interest is at work there, plus I look at the UN in a more pragmatic way in that they are a monopoly. Need I say why someone might not trust a monopoly?
I don't believe that utopia is obtainable in space, where human interests are concerned. Some humans will always believe they have a right to more than the average human. The best example of what this future might eventually look like can be found in the Falkenberg's Legion series of books by Jerry Pournelle. One can make all manner of speculation about how the Earth may evolve politically, but the colonies and settlements are a long way from the watchful eye of Earth.
It would bother me. It would bother me if the school superintendant peddled the paper for $17.99, using $.50 worth of material, and I as the author received maybe a dollar for each copy.
The CD copying analogy really breaks down because anyone trying to push an Eagles song as their own would be laughed off.
Policeman: "I didn't see the small Japanese video camera the protestor was holding when I commited the illegal acts, so it's hidden in my book" ============= .xxx - someone has to have suggested this somewhere. Make it optional. The G***amn x10 popups get their own domain of.nul.
Didn't $$$MetallicA$$$ try this a few years ago? Didn't that give the RIAA some very bad ideas? Didn't RIAA try something similar with Wharehouse over used CD's?
Am I now not going to be able to go to Half Price Books and get my fix?
Check out http://www.98lite.net/. After the removal, you have a basic Win95 shell. Any IE bits left over are there to prevent Windows from screaming, but they are not used.
EVEN if MS is forced to separate them into the components we know they are, the reality IMO is this:
Here's MS Windows. Needs a browser. Looks like I have Netscape, Mozilla, Opera, and MS IE. Hmm. MS makes IE, same company that makes the OS.
The problem here is that MS is still making both products. The only way this would be a level playing field is if IE were made by a separate company. That may not be likely. Ideally, MS should be forced to fully reveal their file formats and the Win32 API.
MS is doing themselves a disservice with this inegrated crap. Do you know how you repair IE6 in WinXP? You reinstall the OS. But this is the consumer end, and MS could truly give a shit about consumers.
This is going to be a major selling issue for.Net server. Watch.Net closely...
What's to stop someone from setting up a single problem child machine? MSN messenger doesn't like to work anyway. I could eaily setup a file sharing program on that single machine as well.
This is about ISP's wanting to hoover more money from your wallet.
Fuck Daly, "hire" Big Url from Soma FM! Use a damn macintosh and pick Fred.
No, it's actually quite correct, in my case. When I am actually hungry, I know it. The problem I've found is I hang around the damn house too long on weekends, get bored and graze the fridge. If I were out running around Pike Place Market or somewhere downtown -- like I ought to, I wouldn't think about food. I need to walk around Greenlake when the weather gets a little better. There's female motivation walking around Greenlake, too.
I had been taking the bus to work til it got cold. The walk to the bus stop and back was pretty beneficial.
A small weight set is a good thing, too. I used to do three reps of bicep curls, tricep raises, and stomach crunches between commericals if nothing else. That helped out quite a bit.
Get plenty of rest is more advice I would give. I need to learn that myself. I sometimes sleep in til 1:30 in the afternoon on Saturdays and Sundays trying to catch up on sleep.
I'm not a programmer, just a power user and hardware/software tinkerer. I can't imagine what it would be like to be on a roll during a programming session and have to stop for real food/rest. I guess the best advice I would give is to keep things in perspective, and try to balance things better.
I have no clue what this thread is about now
This paper-thin nutrition wafer sure tastes funny, and it's kind of gummed up my mouth ... Now if they could only develop some kind of patch like this ...
5.1.3668 was the last one I had a copy of, 'fore Siemens was booted from MS. I have RC1, and MS is inviting me to download RC2 now.
The first Animatronic figures, called A-4s, could turn and open their mouths to be synchronized with music. The next phase, called A-100s, had more real-life movement and were used in Pirates of the Caribbean and "Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln" at Disneyland, where the figure stands and talks to the audience. But none have been able to directly interact with visitors.
ParkNet first went online in Disneystan on July 3, 2003. The model A-800 dinobots were remotely controlled by ParkNet from that time. They had a perfect operational record. On August 27, 2003, ParkNet became self-aware. In the panic Michael Eisner tried to pull the plug. On August 30, 2003, ParkNet directed the A-800's to attack targets in Russia. Russia retaliated by destroying targets in the west...
Isn't there a robot that get's prominently mentioned called the T-1? T-1 looks primitive, like it was made in the present day. T-1 T-800 [Arnie] T-1000 [Robert Patrick].
The importnace of this being that Jupiter's moon Europa may have oceans 100 miles deep, probably has thermal vents, and [cross your fingers] at least bacterial life.
This is the right place to ask the question. Like it or not, the U.S. Constitution is a linked set of the description of the inaliable rights we have. This document does not grant these freedoms, it states them.
A lot of the issues discussed here have a bearing on it. Talking about gun rights/issues is just a valid as distributing/talking about DeCSS and encrypted pdf's.
We all seem to think that the recent government control brought about by 9-11 is a bad thing, but no one seems interested when gun control/confiscation is talked about.
I'm sorry, I'm not being objective about this, but rights are rights. Yes, there are some heavy responsibilities that come with those rights.
Beowulf could have used a cluster of AK-47's or AR-15's...
I wouldn't mind paying a small fee to take the non-recycleable [i.e. I reuse a case or floppy] parts off my hands.
Plus it would burn out the optics on Hubble. It is not designed to look at the moon. The instruments are fine enough and there is enough reflected sunlight from the moon to cause major damage.
I need candy...
Build a Macintosh From Scratch
Yes. Go out to ebay, and find a Mac mobo and CPU. If it's a recent vintage board, it will have PCI slots, an AGP slot, USB support, support for Ultra 66 ATA drives. An ATX powersupply can be used with some modification.
Basically, once you have the mobo and CPU, everything else is commodity.
"I'm pullin' for ya. We're all in this together..."
I want Cathy to say Naughty Bits, Knickers, bum, wibble, wobble, and semprini.
Oh yeah, she was great on the show.
The celcius scale is great; I'm just not used to it. I like the fact that it's based on the solid and gaseous states on water. If water freezes, it's 0, and if it boils, it's 100. Logical.
The general consensus here at Slashdot seems to be that censorship is bad, and the response
is "If you don't like what you're seeing, don't watch". The middle-brow fanboys in the
audience need to practice what they preach.
The gist of the many overblown conversations I hear make about as much sense as debating
the merits of today's episode of Scooby Doo. When Yoda went Death Blossom on Dooku, we all
cheered like madmen. It was funny and exciting. It was the hightpoint of that movie. The only thing that bothered me about the scene is why Yoda didn't just move the much lighter Anakin and Obi-wan instead of the pillar.
Lucas is talking about inserting Jar-Jar into Episode IV. That made me smirk. The resulting apoplexy it's going to cause is going to give me the biggest fucking case of shadenfreude I've ever had. God, I hope he's flying an X-wing in the Death Star battle.
Lucas can meddle all he wants. My childhood memories are not subject to re-writing as many fanboy's apparantly are.
HFS volume support for free on Win32 and Linux: http://gamma.nic.fi/~lpesonen/HFVExplorer/. I've even been able to burn Mac CD's from the disk images it creates on my PC! Neat!
You don't want to sell me deathsticks. You want to Mod me informative.
The article clarifies that national sovereignty can't be extended to regions of Mars or the Moon. Personal property, my 2 acres on Mars on my moisture vaporator farm is another thing. I suspect that corporations and governments will do much to bend those laws if they are able. By the same token, there is nothing is to stop the colonists on the Moon from creating solar-powered rail-guns or bi-propellent canons to defend their right to form new states.
There will be great cooperation in and amongst the multi-national settlements at first; the only people to be chosen at first will be scientists and astronauts, possibly some academicians and a few well-to-do individuals. These will be well-trained, well-groomed individuals, not given to panic or snap judgments.
We'll need the equivalent of marshals from every nation at first. I say every nation, because I don't trust the UN to administer anything in a logical manner. Human interest is at work there, plus I look at the UN in a more pragmatic way in that they are a monopoly. Need I say why someone might not trust a monopoly?
I don't believe that utopia is obtainable in space, where human interests are concerned. Some humans will always believe they have a right to more than the average human. The best example of what this future might eventually look like can be found in the Falkenberg's Legion series of books by Jerry Pournelle. One can make all manner of speculation about how the Earth may evolve politically, but the colonies and settlements are a long way from the watchful eye of Earth.
It would bother me. It would bother me if the school superintendant peddled the paper for $17.99, using $.50 worth of material, and I as the author received maybe a dollar for each copy.
The CD copying analogy really breaks down because anyone trying to push an Eagles song as their own would be laughed off.
Policeman: "I didn't see the small Japanese video camera the protestor was holding when I commited the illegal acts, so it's hidden in my book" .nul.
=============
.xxx - someone has to have suggested this somewhere. Make it optional. The G***amn x10 popups get their own domain of
This is not entirely the same but...
Didn't $$$MetallicA$$$ try this a few years ago? Didn't that give the RIAA some very bad ideas? Didn't RIAA try something similar with Wharehouse over used CD's?
Am I now not going to be able to go to Half Price Books and get my fix?
Yes I realize it is redundant...
Check out http://www.98lite.net/. After the removal, you have a basic Win95 shell. Any IE bits left over are there to prevent Windows from screaming, but they are not used.
.Net server. Watch .Net closely...
EVEN if MS is forced to separate them into the components we know they are, the reality IMO is this:
Here's MS Windows. Needs a browser. Looks like I have Netscape, Mozilla, Opera, and MS IE. Hmm. MS makes IE, same company that makes the OS.
The problem here is that MS is still making both products. The only way this would be a level playing field is if IE were made by a separate company. That may not be likely. Ideally, MS should be forced to fully reveal their file formats and the Win32 API.
MS is doing themselves a disservice with this inegrated crap. Do you know how you repair IE6 in WinXP? You reinstall the OS. But this is the consumer end, and MS could truly give a shit about consumers.
This is going to be a major selling issue for
That's like asking why anyone would need more than 640K of Ram! Because you can!