So two students found a bug on their webserver. Should take FON a minute to fix it and then they can see which users are trying to hack into the router. Remember, they know the MAC-address of the router they sold you. This will be useless tomorrow.
A friend of mine showcased the brandnew port of scummvm to the Nintendo DS port of linux.
I had some tears running down my face, just because it was so cool to see Guybrush asking how to become a pirate, on that little screen on that fully hacked hardware...
by Gom Jabbar on 07/20/2002 14:46 through 217.4.101.162
There won't be room over room. At least not within the next 10 years..."
sounds like doom 10 years before
The potential is HUGE!! Imagine:
on
P2P Roaming Chat
·
· Score: 1, Interesting
Did you guys read William Gibsons "Cyberspace"? The cyberspace is a virtual world where everone can design "his" location. But the elements he uses aren't trees or stupid stuff, but programs, buildings representing computer systems and so on. Take BrendanLand, add network-accessible COM-Objects with self-registering avatars and you have a Matrix as described by William Gibson.
I know this will be important stuff, because there are so few high rated comments about it. At first poeple ignore it, and once it booms, we can hardly remember whose idea it was in the first place...
Sig Nature
Anyone has a good printer?
on
The Euro
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· Score: 0
Many people don't know how the euro bills actually look like!
Yes, BeOS IS better than that. don't know numbers, but they used to count microseconds.
Just remember the sentence "ATTENTION: We're talking about MICRO-, not MILIseconds. Thats about 1000times faster"...
Some day it'll be only 2.2*10^20 addresses per solar system. And then? IPv8 will have to feature time traveling packets (send know, receive yesterday), self filling contents (send a packet and let it automagically collect its content) and of course an extended address space of 12345*10^4321 addresses per molecule. There is very little chance of addresses running out.
For me, its the speed and responsiveness of the system, its the little nifty features and its the "ooooh cool"-effect when somebody watches what it can do.
Linux can't even play mp3s perfectly when there's some load.
So there are many sub-notebooks in the 200mhz-1ghz range.
What do you install on them? I'm sure Ubuntu won't make fun on any of them...
So two students found a bug on their webserver.
Should take FON a minute to fix it and then they can see which users are trying to hack into the router. Remember, they know the MAC-address of the router they sold you.
This will be useless tomorrow.
Nope. Not even after all these years.
A friend of mine showcased the brandnew port of scummvm to the Nintendo DS port of linux.
I had some tears running down my face, just because it was so cool to see Guybrush asking how to become a pirate, on that little screen on that fully hacked hardware...
You made a mistake.
He said Mostly right (50.01%) + Most of the time (50.01%) + most of the people (50.01%) = 150.03% !!!
Now *thats* sexy, isnt it?
How about a new moderation option:
+1 Easy
Cheers
AFAIK, all programs not using the "special add-on chips" the original amiga had will run.
so all the games won't.
Wine doesn't run MS Office (at least not the newest versions).
CrossOver Office does run them.
Casper
quote from the "most wanted feature" forum:
..
"#267:
by Gom Jabbar on 07/20/2002 14:46 through 217.4.101.162
There won't be room over room. At least not within the next 10 years..."
sounds like doom 10 years before
Did you guys read William Gibsons "Cyberspace"?
The cyberspace is a virtual world where everone can design "his" location. But the elements he uses aren't trees or stupid stuff, but programs, buildings representing computer systems and so on.
Take BrendanLand, add network-accessible COM-Objects with self-registering avatars and you have a Matrix as described by William Gibson.
I know this will be important stuff, because there are so few high rated comments about it. At first poeple ignore it, and once it booms, we can hardly remember whose idea it was in the first place...
Sig Nature
Many people don't know how the euro bills actually look like!
Yes, BeOS IS better than that. don't know numbers, but they used to count microseconds.
Just remember the sentence "ATTENTION: We're talking about MICRO-, not MILIseconds. Thats about 1000times faster"...
try --r3mix as your parameters to lame. the page tells why. only works on newer versions of lame.
At least his thougts about development (evolution)
are the same as those of "them" who "developed" reality. Or does he just copy these ideas?
Just an idea: /dev but also /usr/bin, /usr/man etc.,
/rootfs.
somebody could hack devfs to not only create a dynamic
or even
Does anyone know wheter QNX's package file system has an open standard?
---
Some day it'll be only 2.2*10^20 addresses per solar system. And then? IPv8 will have to feature time traveling packets (send know, receive yesterday), self filling contents (send a packet and let it automagically collect its content) and of course an extended address space of 12345*10^4321 addresses per molecule. There is very little chance of addresses running out.
There are reasons to use the Beos. Lots.
For me, its the speed and responsiveness of the system, its the little nifty features and its the "ooooh cool"-effect when somebody watches what it can do.
Linux can't even play mp3s perfectly when there's some load.
The answer: BeOS....
We can't make linux "The Media OS". There is too much missing.
Once again BeOS kicks Linux's butt..