The -f will skip over anything that can't be done, you know.
What happens when your HD node is deleted from/dev? I'll answer that for you: No more deleted files. Everything prior to it getting to/dev is gone, but the rest is left. By going directly to the device with DD you'll complete the overwrite.
Or I just have a fast computer. Or know how to compile once and roll out binary packages to our 2 dozen servers.
Mainly it's because of the trouble I had with RedHat 7.2->8.0 transition and was absolutely DONE with dependancy problems and installed Gentoo at that point. I've had the same Gentoo install on my workstation over the last 8 years or so which I've kept up to date with emerge. From P2 -> Core 2 Duo with Athlon & AMD64 in between. Went from 32 bit to 64 bit with an --emptytree compile.
Two cities were destroyed due to nuclear weapons in Japan during WWII. Although these were indeed strategically-important industrial cities, one could argue that the net damage to the nation was less than if there had been a conventional war.
Pfft. That's what I say to that. Hiroshima was chosen because the US hadn't bombed that city yet with conventional warfare specifically because they wanted to see what kind of damage would be done. Japan was in ruins prior to the bomb being dropped. Most of Tokyo was burned to the ground from the firebombing, most other Japanese cities were the same.
There was conventional war in Japan for multiple years prior to the bombs dropping. You know those bombers which dropped the Nukes? They could carry normal bombs too.
I still have my Disks for Xwing, Tie Fighter, XvT, and XWing: Alliance. None work on Vista64 (I tried last week actually). I don't game in linux, but I suppose I can try them under wine.
Exactly True. I'd love to have Blu-Ray. I've been incrementally upgrading my home theatre and have to do it as I can afford it. 2 years ago I got the nice TV & converted to HD Cable. Last year I got a nice Upconverting A/V receiver and an upconverting DVD player. Moved everything over to HDMI.
Blu-Ray is low on the list for 2 reasons. The Blu-Ray selection at my local rental shop isn't of interest to me yet (About 5 I'd like to see and 10 or 15 I've seen already on DVD). I know I can go netflix, but this is a mom & pop rental place and I'd prefer to keep my money in the area. Second: Buying Blu-Ray is expensive.
Either way, I'll get it eventually. It did win the format war after all.
Perhaps I'm understanding you wrong, but ever since I got my TiVo I no longer care about what time a show is on. All I care is when I sit down my shows are on there.
I had no clue T:TSCC had been moved until I read this story. I just have it on as a season pass in my TiVo and it records it when it's on. No issues. So you just tell it what "your" show is, it'll record it when it's on.
From a security standpoint it's important. Often malware programs hide files named the same as legitimate files in different folders than they should be in. Putting explorer.exe in C:\windows\system for example. When talking about security problems such as this you should try to be as exact and correct as possible.
When you register your physical disk key with steam they let you know in no uncertain terms that you'll need to login to steam to use those games from that point forward. This isn't hidden information.
This includes the Elliot 803 (a 1960s machine with 4KB of memory), the aforementioned Colossus Mark 2, a Bunsviga adding machine (pictured) and a punch card machine.
I read the slashdot summary and I have to say, the Bunsviga adding machine looks a lot like a grounding plug.
The FTL part was more of detecting ships in real time based on their gravity but not being able to see them so you could have various tactical options open to you.
No reboot required. Oh wait, you didn't actually try it did you? This isn't about the client being able to open your xlsx document. It's about someone with an older version of office being able to open documents they are sent. You can't control what people send you, but you can make it work to the best of your ability without requiring you upgrade from your older working spreadsheet.
They voted. Colbert just did good campaigning. Or do you think people who see a campaign ad and vote based on that aren't valid votes either?
The -f will skip over anything that can't be done, you know.
/dev? I'll answer that for you: No more deleted files. Everything prior to it getting to /dev is gone, but the rest is left. By going directly to the device with DD you'll complete the overwrite.
What happens when your HD node is deleted from
You'll want to exclude at least /dev and /proc from that command if you want it to complete. I actually just prefer dd for ease of destruction.
Or I just have a fast computer. Or know how to compile once and roll out binary packages to our 2 dozen servers.
Mainly it's because of the trouble I had with RedHat 7.2->8.0 transition and was absolutely DONE with dependancy problems and installed Gentoo at that point. I've had the same Gentoo install on my workstation over the last 8 years or so which I've kept up to date with emerge. From P2 -> Core 2 Duo with Athlon & AMD64 in between. Went from 32 bit to 64 bit with an --emptytree compile.
It's simplicity.
Two cities were destroyed due to nuclear weapons in Japan during WWII. Although these were indeed strategically-important industrial cities, one could argue that the net damage to the nation was less than if there had been a conventional war.
Pfft. That's what I say to that. Hiroshima was chosen because the US hadn't bombed that city yet with conventional warfare specifically because they wanted to see what kind of damage would be done. Japan was in ruins prior to the bomb being dropped. Most of Tokyo was burned to the ground from the firebombing, most other Japanese cities were the same.
There was conventional war in Japan for multiple years prior to the bombs dropping. You know those bombers which dropped the Nukes? They could carry normal bombs too.
It's called hotflashing, requires removable flash chips but works fine.
There is some risk, but the original MoBo is dead anyways, if it doesn't work what's the loss?
Perhaps you shouldn't guess.
TomTom has been around since 1991. I think that is prior to 1995, but I didn't RTA to make sure.
but me dying eventually for some reason is.
I dunno about you, but I do know that my plan is to live forever. Everything is going according to plan so far.
What does that translate to in usable formats? Like Libraries of Congress or Cars?
I still have my Disks for Xwing, Tie Fighter, XvT, and XWing: Alliance. None work on Vista64 (I tried last week actually). I don't game in linux, but I suppose I can try them under wine.
Tie Fighter is the best of the bunch though.
Exactly True. I'd love to have Blu-Ray. I've been incrementally upgrading my home theatre and have to do it as I can afford it. 2 years ago I got the nice TV & converted to HD Cable. Last year I got a nice Upconverting A/V receiver and an upconverting DVD player. Moved everything over to HDMI.
Blu-Ray is low on the list for 2 reasons. The Blu-Ray selection at my local rental shop isn't of interest to me yet (About 5 I'd like to see and 10 or 15 I've seen already on DVD). I know I can go netflix, but this is a mom & pop rental place and I'd prefer to keep my money in the area. Second: Buying Blu-Ray is expensive.
Either way, I'll get it eventually. It did win the format war after all.
Tell that to Terry Childs.
Who?
If you read the CNN article you would have seen that the 18 people error was there.
Perhaps I'm understanding you wrong, but ever since I got my TiVo I no longer care about what time a show is on. All I care is when I sit down my shows are on there.
I had no clue T:TSCC had been moved until I read this story. I just have it on as a season pass in my TiVo and it records it when it's on. No issues. So you just tell it what "your" show is, it'll record it when it's on.
From a security standpoint it's important. Often malware programs hide files named the same as legitimate files in different folders than they should be in. Putting explorer.exe in C:\windows\system for example. When talking about security problems such as this you should try to be as exact and correct as possible.
Actually, the application data folder isn't in your My Documents Folder, it's in your profile folder alongside the My Docs Folder.
When you register your physical disk key with steam they let you know in no uncertain terms that you'll need to login to steam to use those games from that point forward. This isn't hidden information.
It's in beta. Did you file a bug report?
This includes the Elliot 803 (a 1960s machine with 4KB of memory), the aforementioned Colossus Mark 2, a Bunsviga adding machine (pictured) and a punch card machine.
I read the slashdot summary and I have to say, the Bunsviga adding machine looks a lot like a grounding plug.
The FTL part was more of detecting ships in real time based on their gravity but not being able to see them so you could have various tactical options open to you.
The absolute best part is that the guestbook STILL WORKS.
Wow, a whole hour devoted to analysing the plane's stability at high speeds? If that is correct, I'm amazed the plane flew at all.
It was a 1960's hour. You have to adjust for inflation and ADD in 2008, that's over a month in 2008 time.
Linux is GPL licensed. But you're not free to compile your own version to run on a tivo.
Sure you can, the TiVo just isn't obligated to run it. Sucks, but there you go.
Where do that come from? Nintendo consoles haven't always been technically inferior.
Came from the fact that Nintendo wants to MAKE money on the console from the start, not after 4 years.
No reboot required. Oh wait, you didn't actually try it did you? This isn't about the client being able to open your xlsx document. It's about someone with an older version of office being able to open documents they are sent. You can't control what people send you, but you can make it work to the best of your ability without requiring you upgrade from your older working spreadsheet.