Stolen property is a not the same thing; false analogy. If they stole my phone I'd want the police to get it back and look at the person to see if he was the crook or knowingly bought stolen goods.
Except the situation the OP was talking about had nothing to do with stolen property. As soon as the phone was properly identified by Apple as being theirs, it was promptly returned to them (2010/4/19). Long after they had their property back, Apple induced the police into raiding the reporters house (2010/4/24).
The "mark" facility is one of the most powerful things in Vim. The m[a-z] syntax drops a marker at the current position of the cursor. So you have the full alphabet at your disposal for markers, not just a & b.
The " ' " (the single quote char) with a mark letter is how you address a mark. This can be combined with many Vim commands. Example: drop a marker-h (mh) at the function you are working on, then no matter where you move to in the file, typing "'h" will take you to the "home" function you are working on.
To yank a series of lines, drop a marker-a (ma) at the beginning of the series of lines. Move down to the bottom of where you wish to yank. Hit "y'a" and you will yank all the lines from marker-a to your current position and can then "place" them (I call it drop them) with the p or P commands.
Here is site at UCSD which goes into detail about the "Experimental Verification of a Negative Index of Refraction". Also, here is UCSD's press release the Rueters article is probably based on.
Stolen property is a not the same thing; false analogy. If they stole my phone I'd want the police to get it back and look at the person to see if he was the crook or knowingly bought stolen goods.
Except the situation the OP was talking about had nothing to do with stolen property. As soon as the phone was properly identified by Apple as being theirs, it was promptly returned to them (2010/4/19). Long after they had their property back, Apple induced the police into raiding the reporters house (2010/4/24).
The "mark" facility is one of the most powerful things in Vim. The m[a-z] syntax drops a marker at the current position of the cursor. So you have the full alphabet at your disposal for markers, not just a & b.
The " ' " (the single quote char) with a mark letter is how you address a mark. This can be combined with many Vim commands. Example: drop a marker-h (mh) at the function you are working on, then no matter where you move to in the file, typing "'h" will take you to the "home" function you are working on.
To yank a series of lines, drop a marker-a (ma) at the beginning of the series of lines. Move down to the bottom of where you wish to yank. Hit "y'a" and you will yank all the lines from marker-a to your current position and can then "place" them (I call it drop them) with the p or P commands.
There are plenty of other marker capabilities and many other cool things in Vim. Steve Qualline's great book "VI iMproved", http://www.amazon.com/iMproved-VIM-Landmark-Steve-Oualline/dp/0735710015/ref=pd_bbs_sr_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1226030977&sr=8-3, is a great read and well worth the money for it. For those that can not afford it, it is also available as an online PDF ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/doc/book/vimbook-OPL.pdf
Here is site at UCSD which goes into detail about the "Experimental Verification of a Negative Index of Refraction". Also, here is UCSD's press release the Rueters article is probably based on.