"Little House on the Prairie - IN SPACE" failed. Get over it.
No, man, you got it wrong. It's live action Rocket Robin Hood. They're thieves with a heart of gold, being chased by an evil government, through a stylized modern-primitive setting, and they travel with a hedonist priest.
So the important question is, in fact, is Maid Marion the hooker or the engineer with the vibrator?
I once had a buggy video card that behaved perfectly normally in Windows, but when I booted into OS2 on the other partition, touching the monitor would reboot the computer. I'm guessing there was some bad trace on the video card that was only active in a mode that the OS2 driver used, but was unused by the Windows drivers, and a static discharge on the monitor was enough to short out the card when it was in that mode. It was the quickest way to boot back into windows.
By my read, it looks like MIT were the ones to create the superfluid in June, and the later Rice research was about how the superfluid behaves when it has an unbalanced spin (ie: that it remains superfluid with up to 10% excess of spin up particles).
Has this been implemented in any of the major MTAs? I just got a legitimate bounce for the first time in a fair while, and it was also only the second false positive I've _ever_ gotten with my spam filters. So a way to configure my MTA to reliably recognize real bounces from my messages would be quite nice, I think.
As a Sympatico client, I'm actually pleased by the new cap structure. I don't want the 1% of clients who are hogging all the bandwidth with their warez collections to put my ISP out of business and leave me on dialup.
I do serious amounts of work at home over the office VPN, and my wife does the same with her office using pcanywhere (which is a bandwidth pig, comparatively). We also both surf the web a fair bit, and I'm running a low traffic web server, as well as tracking debian testing, with apt-get -d dist-upgrade running in a nightly cron job -- and we're still nowhere near the 5G caps.
BTW, if any sympatico users with debian boxes running ipmasq are worried about keeping Sympatico honest about their usage, apt-get install ipac.
1. Where are the sources for Vesta? How do I get a copy of the source?
[snip]
Of course it would be possible to make a.tar file of the sources available, but we don't see a lot of point in doing that. We feel that making source available for replication to any Vesta repository is sufficient, both for people who want to build modified versions of Vesta and to satisfy the requirements of Vesta's license (LGPL).
They're not going to get much traction in the linux community that way. If you can only get and build the source by using a built binary of their tool you installed from somewhere else, then how can it be trusted to be showing you the actual source, and not some decoy source hiding bugs or malware?
One theory is that early market exposure is worth more for a product than fixing the bugs with a patch will cost. Every day a product stays out of the market, it's losing 100% of new sales on that day to the competition, and down the road when it's time to upgrade, people are much more likely to stick with a product they already know than to switch to another brand.
You appear to have missed my point. Enterprise has _no_ theme music. You can't make me admit that Enterprise has theme music, no matter how hard you try.
What are you talking about? Enterprise has no theme song. There's no music what-so-ever at the start of that show. It just starts straight into the show. Really, it does.
Sign up for their developers program. They'll make you sign an NDA*, and once you do, they'll snail-mail you copies of all of their patents. Every time they get a new patent, they'll snail-mail it to you, too. Gracenote gets a _lot_ of patents (all of which seem to my not-a-patent-lawyer-eye to be for the same damn thing), and it can't be cheap to keep mailing them out.
* Of course, if you ever plan to be a code-submitter to freedb, this may not be advisable.
Some people just aren't all that interested in e-mail. She'd probably tell you that it's a great present because she doesn't want to hurt your feelings, but she probably wouldn't use the dreamcast any more frequently than she does the computer she's already got.
Taint: not quite assholes, but pretty close.
So I'm entitled to run live streaming video over carrier pigeons and social networks?
Do it with the twitter error page, and you can implement both protocols at the same time!
Um -- between the basement and the D&D store is just some internet. Why do you call it "bright"?
He must have a fiber optic net feed.
No, man, you got it wrong. It's live action Rocket Robin Hood. They're thieves with a heart of gold, being chased by an evil government, through a stylized modern-primitive setting, and they travel with a hedonist priest.
So the important question is, in fact, is Maid Marion the hooker or the engineer with the vibrator?
I once had a buggy video card that behaved perfectly normally in Windows, but when I booted into OS2 on the other partition, touching the monitor would reboot the computer. I'm guessing there was some bad trace on the video card that was only active in a mode that the OS2 driver used, but was unused by the Windows drivers, and a static discharge on the monitor was enough to short out the card when it was in that mode. It was the quickest way to boot back into windows.
I can't shake the feeling that this Ask Slashdot article was posted as part of the SEO contract solicited in TFJobPosting.
Don't tell anyone, but I've heard that they're actually robots, in disguise.
By my read, it looks like MIT were the ones to create the superfluid in June, and the later Rice research was about how the superfluid behaves when it has an unbalanced spin (ie: that it remains superfluid with up to 10% excess of spin up particles).
You mean the Second Great Eastern Seaboard blackout. Blackberry coverage was still on the drawing board during the Great Eastern Seaboard blackout.
I haven't seen the trailers or a preview yet, so this isn't a spoiler, just a guess. In fact, I'm only 3/4 through the DVDs.
I'm betting we'll find out what was up with that ident card Book had in Safe. And it won't be good.
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=2 90489
I wish that was a joke.
Has this been implemented in any of the major MTAs? I just got a legitimate bounce for the first time in a fair while, and it was also only the second false positive I've _ever_ gotten with my spam filters. So a way to configure my MTA to reliably recognize real bounces from my messages would be quite nice, I think.
As a Sympatico client, I'm actually pleased by the new cap structure. I don't want the 1% of clients who are hogging all the bandwidth with their warez collections to put my ISP out of business and leave me on dialup.
I do serious amounts of work at home over the office VPN, and my wife does the same with her office using pcanywhere (which is a bandwidth pig, comparatively). We also both surf the web a fair bit, and I'm running a low traffic web server, as well as tracking debian testing, with apt-get -d dist-upgrade running in a nightly cron job -- and we're still nowhere near the 5G caps.
BTW, if any sympatico users with debian boxes running ipmasq are worried about keeping Sympatico honest about their usage, apt-get install ipac.
http://www.acm.org/classics/sep95/
They're not going to get much traction in the linux community that way. If you can only get and build the source by using a built binary of their tool you installed from somewhere else, then how can it be trusted to be showing you the actual source, and not some decoy source hiding bugs or malware?
One theory is that early market exposure is worth more for a product than fixing the bugs with a patch will cost. Every day a product stays out of the market, it's losing 100% of new sales on that day to the competition, and down the road when it's time to upgrade, people are much more likely to stick with a product they already know than to switch to another brand.
You appear to have missed my point. Enterprise has _no_ theme music. You can't make me admit that Enterprise has theme music, no matter how hard you try.
Please have some respect for my state of denial.
What are you talking about? Enterprise has no theme song. There's no music what-so-ever at the start of that show. It just starts straight into the show. Really, it does.
Sign up for their developers program. They'll make you sign an NDA*, and once you do, they'll snail-mail you copies of all of their patents. Every time they get a new patent, they'll snail-mail it to you, too. Gracenote gets a _lot_ of patents (all of which seem to my not-a-patent-lawyer-eye to be for the same damn thing), and it can't be cheap to keep mailing them out.
* Of course, if you ever plan to be a code-submitter to freedb, this may not be advisable.
Some people just aren't all that interested in e-mail. She'd probably tell you that it's a great present because she doesn't want to hurt your feelings, but she probably wouldn't use the dreamcast any more frequently than she does the computer she's already got.