Hard to believe perhaps, but Missouri has a pretty large and thriving population of those who believe in democracy, and vote democrat when we feel it might help the nation and ourselves. We even watch 'The Daily Show'.:) But there is the 55% or so that unwaveringly vote red here that the voice of the emotionally and politically sane are overwhelmed. Also, quite a few do more than consider abortion; we want to keep our remaining rights and believe they apply to people despite differences in creed, preference, etc.
I know, I know, the Martian Air Force strikes again, but while this is pretty solidly bad news, We've got another lander still scheduled to arrive Saturday. The pictures have been great so far, and at least if something was going to go wrong, it happened late enough that it wasn't a bust from the beginning. In fact, just as the press news was dying off, Spirit died. Like some wild soap opera, cut off from communication, what will happen to the next lander!?!
When the retail store you work at makes $50 dollars on every AOL disc "sold" (i.e. checked out and username created, customer installs and tries out AOL, or MSN, or NetZero, or Juno, or Earthlink) then yeah, it makes a hell of a difference. Hearing about not doing it enough in weekly meetings for 2 hours after an 8 hour shift is cruel and *usual punishment for the lax AOL-pusher.
Probably true, I was attempting to do this for the first time, and also route them via different ports as well. 80 VS 8080 and such. It was an attempt to make it invisible to the user what was being done behind the scenes. Pretty easy stuff in retrospect.
The way it was done was pretty much just a couple of lines, which had to be perfectly set up. The largest error, definitely a user error on my part was attempting to modify too much of the httpd.conf before I really realized what I was doing. Googling for the solution helped, but if I'd had a book, perhaps the one being reviewed, chances are that it might not have been such a slow job.
Apache is damned good.
on
Apache Cookbook
·
· Score: 3, Insightful
Only big problem I've ever encountered, and this may seem n00bish, but routing multiple domains to a single machine involved some heavy httpd.conf editing. Almost made me wish for a GUI, but what you learn from error and mistake, (over and over again) helps in the end.
somewhat clever, but nothing too impressive. Import needed currency image from another program, even earlier versions of Photoshop, then use, save, print as usual, no more image checking is done.
Rather than blast Adobe for including this, a better idea in my opinion is to be somewhat grateful that there's no constant checking in place to waste CPU cycles, or slow down graphic developers everytime an image is saved or loaded.
And I'm honestly impressed with the achievements of the last few years. Mars. Impressive though we've been there previously. But space is huge, interesting, and the future. We're the US, and we really need a new way to support exploration and science for those of us who care so much about it. Anyone think things are changing for the better or know of a way to change them?
I'm more than all for manned missions in space, and even more expansion of our space program, but this strikes me as horrible posturing. Being an election year, this smacks of lack of real dedication. Anyone willing to donate the kind of time needed to travel to Mars, maybe even back, deserves better than this.
:edit: Site appears to be slowing/not responding:/edit:
Conclusion: Let's look at the advantages and disadvantages of the reviewed products
Swiftech MCX462-V (Provided by: Bacata) PRO Plug&Play installation Easy attachment of both 80&90mm fans Top end performance in both silent as loud categories
CON Higher price
The MCX462-V is a true engineering beauty, combining functionality with top performance, the helicoid pin layout allows for very low noise production when using different types of fans. The full copper block provides excellent thermal conduction making overclocking possible even with very silent fans!
Thermalright SP-97 (Provided by: Thermalright) PRO 1st class performance in all categories Secure installation Efficiency increases with the CPU overclock thanks to the heat pipes
CON Installation requires motherboard removal
The successful formula from the SP-94 Intel heatsink has been brought over to the AMD side of town, and the performance is stunting, providing excellent results no matter what fan is used, it edges out the competition by a comfortable margin!
Thermalright SLK947-U (Provided by: Bacata) PRO Good overall performance Secure installation Competitively priced
CON Installation requires motherboard removal
The "older" SLK947-U still delivers very respectable results, although its performance has been surpassed by the SP-97, it manages to provide the best performance/price ratio in this roundup. If you are on a budget but still want top end air-cooling for your AMD setup then look no further then the latest SLK from Thermalright!
Scythe Kamakaze (Provided by: Bacata) PRO Includes a Fan + Rheobus Decent performance
CON Installation method far from perfect on all motherboards
I had a lot of installation issues with this heatsink but that was due to the socket/capacitor layout used by the board on which we did the test. The performance is average, edging out the old PAL8045 by a very small margin.
Evercool MAG-01 & CUF-715CA (Provided by: Evercool) PRO Very easy installation Decent performance Silent 70mm fan included Very competitively priced
CON Not "strong" enough for overclocking your AMD
Both Evercool heatsink proved to be worthy replacements for the Stock AMD cooler, providing better cooling at lower noise levels while being priced at only ~20! My preference goes out to the MAG-01 as it can be installed on almost all popular Sockets out there from Intel & AMD. The copper/alu mix does have an impact on the performance when compared to the full copper CUF-715CA, but the difference is minimal.
Branding Mozilla: Towards Mozilla 2.0 Recommendations for the branding and visual identity of the Mozilla Foundation's product and project line - by Steven Garrity Summary
This document is intended to offer suggestions to the Mozilla Foundation for the future of the Mozilla brand and visual identity. It is not intended to replace or redo the good work that has already been done in this area. Any suggestions made here that contradict, conflict, or replace guidelines, recommendation, or other work that has already been done reflects more my ignorance as the author than my opinion of what has been done.
As the Mozilla project moves towards an end-user focus from a developer and platform focus, the branding and visual identity of the organization and its software will need to be revisited. With the recent separation from Netscape and AOL, the need for the Mozilla project to have a brand of its own is all the more necessary. Keep What Works
First, the Mozilla project has a lot going for it. It has a long heritage, reaching back to the early Netscape web browsers. The Mozilla name was an apt choice as a nod to the roots of the project. It is also unique (free of trademark issues), memorable, and relatively easy to spell and pronounce. Mozilla is a good name. Lose What Doesn't Work
The Mozilla project is lacking a strong visual identity. The Mozilla lizard is widely recognized by developers and early-adopters on the web, but does not reach far beyond these groups. It is also used inconsistently across projects and products.
Any good visual identity builds on what is already established, while improving on the weaknesses of past. So too should the visual identity of the Mozilla project and products. A unified, consistent, but flexible brand and visual identity would be a great compliment to the technology developed under the Mozilla project. Products, Projects, and the Foundation
The broad scope of the Mozilla project has lead to confusion among end users. The term "Mozilla" is used to describe a web browser, a suite of applications, a platform, and an entire collection of software projects.
The recently formed Mozilla Foundation has already started the work of clarifying the terminology. The name of the Mozilla Foundation itself is a good and clear name that obviously defines the official organization that manages the Mozilla project.
They have also clarified the eventual naming of key Mozilla products; the current Mozilla Firebird project is the temporary development name for what will eventually be called Mozilla Browser; the current Mozilla Thunderbird project is the temporary development name for what will eventually be called Mozilla Mail. This is clear, simple, and smart.
Seemingly simple and obvious declarations like this are important for the success of the Mozilla project. People can't use software that they don't know how to ask for. People can't tell others about software that they don't know what to call.
The Mozilla Browser and Mozilla Mail names are clear, simple, and strong names for what will become the flagship products of the Mozilla project. Version Numbers
The Mozilla application suite is approaching version 2.0 (version 1.5 at the time of this writing) and the independent applications are approaching 1.0 (Mozilla Firebird is at 0.71 and Mozilla Thunderbird is at a humble 0.3 at the time of this writing). Many have speculated that the official replacement of the application suite with the independent applications would be appropriate time to declare them version 2.0.
The change in focus and new independent applications certain does warrant a new version number.
The Mozilla Suite ver. 2.0:
* Mozilla Browser
* Mozilla Mail
* Mozilla Calendar
* Mozilla Composer
The Visual Identity So Far
As the software produced by the Mozilla project stabilizes and matures, so too should its visual identity. The Mozilla 1.0 suite was generally internally
Buy a island in internation waters. Declare sovernity. Stock it with serious military. Write a constitution on a napkin, and using a great connection to the net, stockpile, and encourage others to help you gather and distribute any material you see fit. Fight the good fight.
Don't have any modpoints, but you're goddamned right.
Hard to believe perhaps, but Missouri has a pretty large and thriving population of those who believe in democracy, and vote democrat when we feel it might help the nation and ourselves. We even watch 'The Daily Show'. :) But there is the 55% or so that unwaveringly vote red here that the voice of the emotionally and politically sane are overwhelmed. Also, quite a few do more than consider abortion; we want to keep our remaining rights and believe they apply to people despite differences in creed, preference, etc.
That site is fscking funny. The 5 colors of the 'new' dell DJ.
The printer-friendly version puts it all on one nice and image free page.
Article here
Sorry, didn't make it a link. Here it is in clickably delicious form.
LLGP 0.1 ISO
http://www.tlm-project.org/torrents/llgp/llgp-0.1p re0.iso.torrent
Sure, it's a horrible idea, I agree. But would *that* be the bad implementation that gets this bigger bad idea repealed?
That we've simultaneously both evolved and returned to our base instincts since "Pong"? Or maybe it's just a game.
33kb/ps here...Don't know if I'll finish it, trying some different BTs too.
you're retarded, it's a book called "Digital Fortress" by Dan Brown.
I know, I know, the Martian Air Force strikes again, but while this is pretty solidly bad news, We've got another lander still scheduled to arrive Saturday.
The pictures have been great so far, and at least if something was going to go wrong, it happened late enough that it wasn't a bust from the beginning. In fact, just as the press news was dying off, Spirit died. Like some wild soap opera, cut off from communication, what will happen to the next lander!?!
When the retail store you work at makes $50 dollars on every AOL disc "sold" (i.e. checked out and username created, customer installs and tries out AOL, or MSN, or NetZero, or Juno, or Earthlink) then yeah, it makes a hell of a difference. Hearing about not doing it enough in weekly meetings for 2 hours after an 8 hour shift is cruel and *usual punishment for the lax AOL-pusher.
Probably true, I was attempting to do this for the first time, and also route them via different ports as well. 80 VS 8080 and such. It was an attempt to make it invisible to the user what was being done behind the scenes. Pretty easy stuff in retrospect.
The way it was done was pretty much just a couple of lines, which had to be perfectly set up. The largest error, definitely a user error on my part was attempting to modify too much of the httpd.conf before I really realized what I was doing. Googling for the solution helped, but if I'd had a book, perhaps the one being reviewed, chances are that it might not have been such a slow job.
Only big problem I've ever encountered, and this may seem n00bish, but routing multiple domains to a single machine involved some heavy httpd.conf editing. Almost made me wish for a GUI, but what you learn from error and mistake, (over and over again) helps in the end.
somewhat clever, but nothing too impressive. Import needed currency image from another program, even earlier versions of Photoshop, then use, save, print as usual, no more image checking is done.
Rather than blast Adobe for including this, a better idea in my opinion is to be somewhat grateful that there's no constant checking in place to waste CPU cycles, or slow down graphic developers everytime an image is saved or loaded.
And I'm honestly impressed with the achievements of the last few years. Mars. Impressive though we've been there previously. But space is huge, interesting, and the future. We're the US, and we really need a new way to support exploration and science for those of us who care so much about it. Anyone think things are changing for the better or know of a way to change them?
I'm more than all for manned missions in space, and even more expansion of our space program, but this strikes me as horrible posturing. Being an election year, this smacks of lack of real dedication. Anyone willing to donate the kind of time needed to travel to Mars, maybe even back, deserves better than this.
:edit: Site appears to be slowing/not responding :/edit:
:
Conclusion
Let's look at the advantages and disadvantages of the reviewed products
Swiftech MCX462-V
(Provided by: Bacata)
PRO
Plug&Play installation
Easy attachment of both 80&90mm fans
Top end performance in both silent as loud categories
CON
Higher price
The MCX462-V is a true engineering beauty, combining functionality with top performance, the helicoid pin layout allows for very low noise production when using different types of fans. The full copper block provides excellent thermal conduction making overclocking possible even with very silent fans!
Thermalright SP-97
(Provided by: Thermalright)
PRO
1st class performance in all categories
Secure installation
Efficiency increases with the CPU overclock thanks to the heat pipes
CON
Installation requires motherboard removal
The successful formula from the SP-94 Intel heatsink has been brought over to the AMD side of town, and the performance is stunting, providing excellent results no matter what fan is used, it edges out the competition by a comfortable margin!
Thermalright SLK947-U
(Provided by: Bacata)
PRO
Good overall performance
Secure installation
Competitively priced
CON
Installation requires motherboard removal
The "older" SLK947-U still delivers very respectable results, although its performance has been surpassed by the SP-97, it manages to provide the best performance/price ratio in this roundup. If you are on a budget but still want top end air-cooling for your AMD setup then look no further then the latest SLK from Thermalright!
Scythe Kamakaze
(Provided by: Bacata)
PRO
Includes a Fan + Rheobus
Decent performance
CON
Installation method far from perfect on all motherboards
I had a lot of installation issues with this heatsink but that was due to the socket/capacitor layout used by the board on which we did the test. The performance is average, edging out the old PAL8045 by a very small margin.
Evercool MAG-01 & CUF-715CA
(Provided by: Evercool)
PRO
Very easy installation
Decent performance
Silent 70mm fan included
Very competitively priced
CON
Not "strong" enough for overclocking your AMD
Both Evercool heatsink proved to be worthy replacements for the Stock AMD cooler, providing better cooling at lower noise levels while being priced at only ~20! My preference goes out to the MAG-01 as it can be installed on almost all popular Sockets out there from Intel & AMD. The copper/alu mix does have an impact on the performance when compared to the full copper CUF-715CA, but the difference is minimal.
Best Heatsink I've ever owned. Solid, and frosty.
Mod him down!
Should've submitted as AC.
Branding Mozilla: Towards Mozilla 2.0
Recommendations for the branding and visual identity of the Mozilla Foundation's product and project line - by Steven Garrity
Summary
This document is intended to offer suggestions to the Mozilla Foundation for the future of the Mozilla brand and visual identity. It is not intended to replace or redo the good work that has already been done in this area. Any suggestions made here that contradict, conflict, or replace guidelines, recommendation, or other work that has already been done reflects more my ignorance as the author than my opinion of what has been done.
As the Mozilla project moves towards an end-user focus from a developer and platform focus, the branding and visual identity of the organization and its software will need to be revisited. With the recent separation from Netscape and AOL, the need for the Mozilla project to have a brand of its own is all the more necessary.
Keep What Works
First, the Mozilla project has a lot going for it. It has a long heritage, reaching back to the early Netscape web browsers. The Mozilla name was an apt choice as a nod to the roots of the project. It is also unique (free of trademark issues), memorable, and relatively easy to spell and pronounce. Mozilla is a good name.
Lose What Doesn't Work
The Mozilla project is lacking a strong visual identity. The Mozilla lizard is widely recognized by developers and early-adopters on the web, but does not reach far beyond these groups. It is also used inconsistently across projects and products.
Any good visual identity builds on what is already established, while improving on the weaknesses of past. So too should the visual identity of the Mozilla project and products. A unified, consistent, but flexible brand and visual identity would be a great compliment to the technology developed under the Mozilla project.
Products, Projects, and the Foundation
The broad scope of the Mozilla project has lead to confusion among end users. The term "Mozilla" is used to describe a web browser, a suite of applications, a platform, and an entire collection of software projects.
The recently formed Mozilla Foundation has already started the work of clarifying the terminology. The name of the Mozilla Foundation itself is a good and clear name that obviously defines the official organization that manages the Mozilla project.
They have also clarified the eventual naming of key Mozilla products; the current Mozilla Firebird project is the temporary development name for what will eventually be called Mozilla Browser; the current Mozilla Thunderbird project is the temporary development name for what will eventually be called Mozilla Mail. This is clear, simple, and smart.
Seemingly simple and obvious declarations like this are important for the success of the Mozilla project. People can't use software that they don't know how to ask for. People can't tell others about software that they don't know what to call.
The Mozilla Browser and Mozilla Mail names are clear, simple, and strong names for what will become the flagship products of the Mozilla project.
Version Numbers
The Mozilla application suite is approaching version 2.0 (version 1.5 at the time of this writing) and the independent applications are approaching 1.0 (Mozilla Firebird is at 0.71 and Mozilla Thunderbird is at a humble 0.3 at the time of this writing). Many have speculated that the official replacement of the application suite with the independent applications would be appropriate time to declare them version 2.0.
The change in focus and new independent applications certain does warrant a new version number.
The Mozilla Suite ver. 2.0:
* Mozilla Browser
* Mozilla Mail
* Mozilla Calendar
* Mozilla Composer
The Visual Identity So Far
As the software produced by the Mozilla project stabilizes and matures, so too should its visual identity. The Mozilla 1.0 suite was generally internally
Buy a island in internation waters. Declare sovernity. Stock it with serious military. Write a constitution on a napkin, and using a great connection to the net, stockpile, and encourage others to help you gather and distribute any material you see fit. Fight the good fight.
9-10 dollars is incredibly gracious, average CD manufacturing cost per? less, (sometimes far less) than one single dollar.
ID10T. He said he's used windows since 3.1. New to english?