I had a Samsung 170MP for a little while. It was beautiful and exactly what I wanted, but I eventually sent it back because I couldn't get rid of pixel jittering. (Analog inputs only.)
And now I'm sensitized to jittering. I can notice annoying jittering in the annoying fuzzy dots on my Nokia CRT too.
I don't sit at my desk much any more. I geek from a Dell Inspiron laptop, 1400x1050. Crisp dots, no ghosting, no jittering, good scaling. The downside is I get to see all sorts of jpeg compression artifacts that aren't visible on a CRT.
Next desktop monitor I get will have digital inputs.
Also, I wanna propose that the code of law have a size quota (in words or in characters) that can only be changed by unanimous vote. There's no pressure to keep law clean and comprehensible. It just accretes more clauses and more cruft, like huge uncontrolled programming projects.
Perhaps this could be fixed if you had to delete or simplify laws in order to pass new laws.
What amuses me is that the main reason I haven't become an active investor despite years of parental prodding and sporadic research: I view it as a strange, risky game that frankly doesn't interest me at all.
So, Red Hat seems like such a nice boy. I've bought their trinkets before, and I was willing to throw at them some money I don't need, and hold a couple hundred shares for the long term, despite some qualms about their business plan.
Sure, there's a lingering thought of maybe becoming insanely rich, but ultimately that's not why I came to the party. Fudging the form would have been easy.
Ah well. This means I don't have to find a nice way of telling my parents, "No, I won't buy shares with your money."
I'm left with the impression that the people who play the game generally want people who are willing to play the same way, possibly because it makes the game more predictable.
Not sure if I'm going to keep the e*trade account. Their interface doesn't thrill me. (First-impression gripes are: heavy reliance on javascript, and 6-char passwords.)
Where do you see a dhcpcd 3.x? There's a beta version of dhcp called 3.x, but the latest dhcpcd I can find is 1.3.19.
Red Hat 7 ships with dhcp 2.0, supposed to be the latest stable version.
I had a Samsung 170MP for a little while. It was beautiful and exactly what I wanted, but I eventually sent it back because I couldn't get rid of pixel jittering. (Analog inputs only.)
And now I'm sensitized to jittering. I can notice annoying jittering in the annoying fuzzy dots on my Nokia CRT too.
I don't sit at my desk much any more. I geek from a Dell Inspiron laptop, 1400x1050. Crisp dots, no ghosting, no jittering, good scaling. The downside is I get to see all sorts of jpeg compression artifacts that aren't visible on a CRT.
Next desktop monitor I get will have digital inputs.
Also, I wanna propose that the code of law have a size quota (in words or in characters) that can only be changed by unanimous vote. There's no pressure to keep law clean and comprehensible. It just accretes more clauses and more cruft, like huge uncontrolled programming projects.
Perhaps this could be fixed if you had to delete or simplify laws in order to pass new laws.
What amuses me is that the main reason I haven't become an active investor despite years of parental prodding and sporadic research: I view it as a strange, risky game that frankly doesn't interest me at all.
So, Red Hat seems like such a nice boy. I've bought their trinkets before, and I was willing to throw at them some money I don't need, and hold a couple hundred shares for the long term, despite some qualms about their business plan.
Sure, there's a lingering thought of maybe becoming insanely rich, but ultimately that's not why I came to the party. Fudging the form would have been easy.
Ah well. This means I don't have to find a nice way of telling my parents, "No, I won't buy shares with your money."
I'm left with the impression that the people who play the game generally want people who are willing to play the same way, possibly because it makes the game more predictable.
Not sure if I'm going to keep the e*trade account. Their interface doesn't thrill me. (First-impression gripes are: heavy reliance on javascript, and 6-char passwords.)