Let me just say that I have yet to see Episode II. It was about a year and half after Episode I came out that I bothered to see it. The only reason I did was because a couple coworkers and myself happened to be bored at work and skipped out; we had to find something to do or go back to work. I figure it will be sometime in late 2008 before I see Episode III. Let me know if I miss anything....
Ideally you'd buy a small circulation pump like what you'd buy for a typical water-cooled heatsink and pick up a small radiator at the salvage yard. A small ATF radiator would do nicely. Add a couple 120mm fans to the backside of that and you've got your cooling problem nixed.
I have to disagree here. I think that a legislator could in fact vote against this bill by publicly calling onto the carpet the asshats that added this rider and blatently pointing out exactly what they're trying to do before your opponents have a chance to publicly attack you. I believe in a completely open legislature. I think every second of every phone call a legislator makes while on the clock should be public record. I think every single character of every email they send should be posted on their website. Would you like to keep politicians honest for once? Hold the little bastards accountable and keep them in the public light. That's my take on it. I'm sure whichever decent legislator took these noble steps would find them up shit's creek without a paddle the next day in the eyes of their corrupt colleagues but I'd admire them for their guts. If only one of them had a backbone and some balls...
Perhaps your state is different but all the states I've dealt with don't operate that way. Really it shouldn't be hard at all to keep proof of insurance in a car. Of course it's quite possible have end up with an outdated proof of insurance. I do that often. I don't always get the latest insurance card in my glove box as quickly as I should. Still I don't think that many cops will razz you about it much if you're only a month past the date on the old card. They're human too, usually...;-)
That's actually how it works here too with both driver's licenses and proof of insurance. The officer may hassle you but you do in fact have a week to present proof of whatever it was that you were missing at your local courthouse. I do believe that you have to have your vehicle's registration in the car though. I may be wrong on that one.
A majority, however, need only be 50.1%. To address the entire 100% as war-loving Americans is certainly a disservice to those that reside in the 49.9% minority. Now if the country was 10/90 then perhaps I could understand it.
Now I must admit that even I group large populations together in some of the phrases I use. For example, the French. I probably don't need to say any more there other than to say that I'm sure not all of the French citizens think and act alike.
I think it should be easier to reference Kansans however. The pattern of abuse for the word hasn't been established nearly as long as, for example, the French reference has. Changing the wording to read "What the hell are the Christian fundamentalists up to in Kansas?" instead of saying "What the hell is Kansas up to? Bunch of damn Christian nutjobs." is much better. At least it does clump us all into the same stereotypical boat. Anyhow, I digress.
Did "devine inspiration" guide the hand of the political figures that changed the bible numerous times over the years to suit their whims? "I don't like this part so strike that." "I want this part to read like this to make me look better."
Not everyone in Kansas is a back-woods Bible-thumping hillbilly that can't tolerate evolution and supports these intolerant actions. There are many people in Kansas who may or may not believe in evolution due to their personal spiritual beliefs but are reasonable/tolerant enough to not object to it being taught in schools. So the favor I'm asking is this: Don't lump all Kansans into the same boat when you're referring to the actions of the intolerant. I'm sure you don't like it when a European refers to a war-loving American anymore than all Kansans like being called a Bible-thumping hillbilly.
The MTAs don't actually have any choice. They rely on the system's local resolver; which in turn points to a recursive resolver which could be either local (if they run a Bind or nscd on the local box), their upstream provider, or a commercial DNS provider; the recursive resolver handles the real lookup, querying root for the TLD, then the domain, and then the domain's NS for the MX records. The MTA can't specify how a lookup is made. It's possible someone could write that ability into a MTA but it's extremely unlikely. The local host's resolver should be used for all lookups. Make sense?
I use them daily. I hand then out as tips and use them at the corner QT when I buy a pop. I never check my wallet when I leave the house to see if I have any cash in it. Even if I did I don't have a drawer full of cash sitting around for me to replenish my wallet's supply. I do however make sure I have a variety of coins in my pocket every morning. 4-5 quarters, a couple of nickels, a couple of dimes, 3-4 pennies, and at least 5 Susan B Anthony's or Sacagawea's. That will cover a couple of pops, a gallon or two of gas if aboslutely necessary, and maybe a fast food lunch if I can't hit a sit down place that takes my debit card. Works for me.
Would you mind changing your quote to instead point at the actual views of the administration of our country and not a generally vague and inaccurate statement about the sentiment of all the population? For example,
Current USA Government: the enemy of the free world.
That would be a much more accurate statement and wouldn't malign the large percentage of the US population who's views do not reflect that of our "leaders." There is a significant distinction. Thanks
Almost everyone that I knew before and after they started using computers (back in the 80s and 90s) had to get glasses within 6 months of using a computer with a CRT.
Interesting. Not to bash you or theory but I've been using a CRT of some sort for over 20 years and I don't wear glasses. I have perfect 20/20 vision. I typically stare at a monitor at work for 10 hours each day and another 5 when I get home. My eyes are frequently bloodshot due to my lifestyle but I still have perfect vision.
My brandnew Dell Inspiron 9200 stopped coming out of either hibernate or standby last week. Before that only standby would crash it. It's only 1.5 months old. I should have put Linux on it.
Like it or not, the purpose of a DNS domain is to identify a namespace for hosts under your control. In short, a DNS domain reflects Internet infrastructure, not some vanity content label. If you're going to connect infrastructure to the Internet, you should be prepared to announce your identity to the rest of the Internet so that if/when you cause problems, you can be contacted.
Do you own a car? If so then you are part of the automotive infrastructure of whatever state/country you live in. What would you say if a government agency unilaterally required that all members of the automotive infrastructure post their name, address and telephone number in big bold letters on all their vehicles? That way all the other members of the automotive infrastructure can clearly see your identity so that if/when you cause problems, you can be contacted. Sound good to you? It must because that's exactly what you're condoning for the owners of.us TLDs.
This is not 1988. The Internet can't be summed up in a hosts file. Get your head out of the glory days of the past and join the rest of us in the real world.
Then you discover Debian and recover your time, realizing that except for special cases, compiling yourself isn't worth it.
Quite to the contrary, I've been using Linux since 1997 and compile damn near everything by hand. I have no reason to ever use any company's precompiled binary harshness. It's a timesaver for me to do it myself and do it right the first time. Why do people like myself compile from source? Because the end results are usually faster, more secure, less bloated, and because it's cool. Why else?
I haven't seen a spammer's box in the last couple of years that's used to send spam also listen on tcp/25. That's because they don't have a SMTP server listening. When you try to send the spam back to the originating computer you're going to get your TCP connection rejected simply because they aren't running a SMTP server. Who's resources are they planning on wasting? Good grief. This isn't rocket science.
It's really quite disappointing when fundamentalists on any topic can convince what should be an independent entity to silence another fundamentalist's viewpoint. How many pickets can you recall by people with other religious views such as muslims and athiests when the "Passion of the Christ" movie first aired? None. How many Christian fundamentalist pickets are there whenever one of these factual science-based flicks airs? Dozens. The door should swing both ways, should it not? It seems only fair to me.
Like the subject said, use the time to learn a new language. People do it all the time. I think it would be a good waste of time, personally. Get an unlimited cell phone calling plan and a headset and call your wife while she gets ready for work. Can't hurt. Say hello to her boyfriend while you're at it.;-)
Apple licensed PARC's GUI and hired the PARC inventors away from Xerox. Apple certainly did not "snag" Xerox's windowing GUI or try to pass it off as their own. It was their own. Where the hell have you been for the last 2 decades, troll?
Don't forget Microsoft CEMENT. (Alternate link)
Let me just say that I have yet to see Episode II. It was about a year and half after Episode I came out that I bothered to see it. The only reason I did was because a couple coworkers and myself happened to be bored at work and skipped out; we had to find something to do or go back to work. I figure it will be sometime in late 2008 before I see Episode III. Let me know if I miss anything....
Ideally you'd buy a small circulation pump like what you'd buy for a typical water-cooled heatsink and pick up a small radiator at the salvage yard. A small ATF radiator would do nicely. Add a couple 120mm fans to the backside of that and you've got your cooling problem nixed.
I have to disagree here. I think that a legislator could in fact vote against this bill by publicly calling onto the carpet the asshats that added this rider and blatently pointing out exactly what they're trying to do before your opponents have a chance to publicly attack you. I believe in a completely open legislature. I think every second of every phone call a legislator makes while on the clock should be public record. I think every single character of every email they send should be posted on their website. Would you like to keep politicians honest for once? Hold the little bastards accountable and keep them in the public light. That's my take on it. I'm sure whichever decent legislator took these noble steps would find them up shit's creek without a paddle the next day in the eyes of their corrupt colleagues but I'd admire them for their guts. If only one of them had a backbone and some balls...
Perhaps your state is different but all the states I've dealt with don't operate that way. Really it shouldn't be hard at all to keep proof of insurance in a car. Of course it's quite possible have end up with an outdated proof of insurance. I do that often. I don't always get the latest insurance card in my glove box as quickly as I should. Still I don't think that many cops will razz you about it much if you're only a month past the date on the old card. They're human too, usually... ;-)
That's actually how it works here too with both driver's licenses and proof of insurance. The officer may hassle you but you do in fact have a week to present proof of whatever it was that you were missing at your local courthouse. I do believe that you have to have your vehicle's registration in the car though. I may be wrong on that one.
Now I must admit that even I group large populations together in some of the phrases I use. For example, the French. I probably don't need to say any more there other than to say that I'm sure not all of the French citizens think and act alike.
I think it should be easier to reference Kansans however. The pattern of abuse for the word hasn't been established nearly as long as, for example, the French reference has. Changing the wording to read "What the hell are the Christian fundamentalists up to in Kansas?" instead of saying "What the hell is Kansas up to? Bunch of damn Christian nutjobs." is much better. At least it does clump us all into the same stereotypical boat. Anyhow, I digress.
Did "devine inspiration" guide the hand of the political figures that changed the bible numerous times over the years to suit their whims? "I don't like this part so strike that." "I want this part to read like this to make me look better."
Not everyone in Kansas is a back-woods Bible-thumping hillbilly that can't tolerate evolution and supports these intolerant actions. There are many people in Kansas who may or may not believe in evolution due to their personal spiritual beliefs but are reasonable/tolerant enough to not object to it being taught in schools. So the favor I'm asking is this: Don't lump all Kansans into the same boat when you're referring to the actions of the intolerant. I'm sure you don't like it when a European refers to a war-loving American anymore than all Kansans like being called a Bible-thumping hillbilly.
The MTAs don't actually have any choice. They rely on the system's local resolver; which in turn points to a recursive resolver which could be either local (if they run a Bind or nscd on the local box), their upstream provider, or a commercial DNS provider; the recursive resolver handles the real lookup, querying root for the TLD, then the domain, and then the domain's NS for the MX records. The MTA can't specify how a lookup is made. It's possible someone could write that ability into a MTA but it's extremely unlikely. The local host's resolver should be used for all lookups. Make sense?
I use them daily. I hand then out as tips and use them at the corner QT when I buy a pop. I never check my wallet when I leave the house to see if I have any cash in it. Even if I did I don't have a drawer full of cash sitting around for me to replenish my wallet's supply. I do however make sure I have a variety of coins in my pocket every morning. 4-5 quarters, a couple of nickels, a couple of dimes, 3-4 pennies, and at least 5 Susan B Anthony's or Sacagawea's. That will cover a couple of pops, a gallon or two of gas if aboslutely necessary, and maybe a fast food lunch if I can't hit a sit down place that takes my debit card. Works for me.
Would you mind changing your quote to instead point at the actual views of the administration of our country and not a generally vague and inaccurate statement about the sentiment of all the population? For example,
Current USA Government: the enemy of the free world.
That would be a much more accurate statement and wouldn't malign the large percentage of the US population who's views do not reflect that of our "leaders." There is a significant distinction. Thanks
Interesting. Not to bash you or theory but I've been using a CRT of some sort for over 20 years and I don't wear glasses. I have perfect 20/20 vision. I typically stare at a monitor at work for 10 hours each day and another 5 when I get home. My eyes are frequently bloodshot due to my lifestyle but I still have perfect vision.
My brandnew Dell Inspiron 9200 stopped coming out of either hibernate or standby last week. Before that only standby would crash it. It's only 1.5 months old. I should have put Linux on it.
Do you own a car? If so then you are part of the automotive infrastructure of whatever state/country you live in. What would you say if a government agency unilaterally required that all members of the automotive infrastructure post their name, address and telephone number in big bold letters on all their vehicles? That way all the other members of the automotive infrastructure can clearly see your identity so that if/when you cause problems, you can be contacted. Sound good to you? It must because that's exactly what you're condoning for the owners of .us TLDs.
This is not 1988. The Internet can't be summed up in a hosts file. Get your head out of the glory days of the past and join the rest of us in the real world.
Actually managing such a system is trivial if you're an organized admin. Try it some time. It's really not hard.
Quite to the contrary, I've been using Linux since 1997 and compile damn near everything by hand. I have no reason to ever use any company's precompiled binary harshness. It's a timesaver for me to do it myself and do it right the first time. Why do people like myself compile from source? Because the end results are usually faster, more secure, less bloated, and because it's cool. Why else?
I haven't seen a spammer's box in the last couple of years that's used to send spam also listen on tcp/25. That's because they don't have a SMTP server listening. When you try to send the spam back to the originating computer you're going to get your TCP connection rejected simply because they aren't running a SMTP server. Who's resources are they planning on wasting? Good grief. This isn't rocket science.
is this.
It's really quite disappointing when fundamentalists on any topic can convince what should be an independent entity to silence another fundamentalist's viewpoint. How many pickets can you recall by people with other religious views such as muslims and athiests when the "Passion of the Christ" movie first aired? None. How many Christian fundamentalist pickets are there whenever one of these factual science-based flicks airs? Dozens. The door should swing both ways, should it not? It seems only fair to me.
Like the subject said, use the time to learn a new language. People do it all the time. I think it would be a good waste of time, personally. Get an unlimited cell phone calling plan and a headset and call your wife while she gets ready for work. Can't hurt. Say hello to her boyfriend while you're at it. ;-)
Not mistaken, you're correct.
Muchas gracias, amigo
Apple licensed PARC's GUI and hired the PARC inventors away from Xerox. Apple certainly did not "snag" Xerox's windowing GUI or try to pass it off as their own. It was their own. Where the hell have you been for the last 2 decades, troll?
Someone please give this man some mod loving'.