You should perhaps try saving the document as RTF. Since it's an open format, everyone can ensure that their implimentation follows the standard. Word will by default open RTFs just like DOC files, so it won't cause any problems on anyone else's end either.
Of course the difference being that Waterworld was so expensive because their first set actually *sunk*. I'm not sure why FF cost so much money. Rendering farms? R&D?
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Kinda like the second episode of The Tick where Chairface Chippendale wrote the first part of his name on the moon before being thwarted by the Tick?
The funny thing was that they left that writing on the moon for all the subsequent moon shots on that show.
I already have 2 30GB drives, and after hearing horror stories about hard drives crashing recently, I've decided my next step is to get another 30GB drive and run RAID5 across them all. Linux can do this in software by the way, and this way you can be assured that your data will stay intact if one of the hard drives crash or not, plus you won't lose half of your drives to backup.
If you are concerned with recovering deleted files, simply use tar or something similar to backup to either a separate directory, or create a separate partition on the RAID array. Another advantage is that you can always increase your storage by slapping in an additional drive, partitioning it the way you want, and then adding it to the current array.
Neh, it simply rained for 40 days. They were in the ark for longer than that, until the waters started receding and they sent out a bird to try to find dry land, eventually it came back with a twig, and eventually it didn't come back at all (signifying that it found a place to roost). Long story even shorter, they ended up landing on a mountain (Mt. Ararat). But even then, that would mean that the water was as high as that mountain, and it never says whether the waters receded back completely to their old levels. So, it's possible given that account, that "sea level" ended up being higher then.
FWIW, I've been able to get Notes working under wine since... Redhat 5.2 or so. Lexmark (of course) is a big Notes user, and so it became necessary for my Linux box to run it so I could check my mail.
A lot of people seem to confuse what the posters say (which is in quotes btw) and what the Slashdot crew says. Of course, either is just as likely to be spelled incorrectly:).
That's one of the main things that has turned me off about KDE's window manager -- no well-defined window memory. That's also one of the main things that keeps me coming back to enlightenment. There are just certain windows I always want to open a certain size, on a certain desktop, in a certain place. Some of these windows I want to be always sticky, some it doesn't matter. With enlightenment I can always define exactly where I want a window to go.
Some window managers get it half right, they let you remember *all* of the settings. But sometimes I want a window to open in a certain desktop, but not always at the same size, or vice versa.
And of course, being able to group certain windows together, and have them all iconify or shade together is nice too. Seems to me if you really wanted to, you could get all this functionality ion has to offer in E, just by doing some window memory.
Eh, probably the same thing would happen that happened when there were licensing problems with ipfw in OpenBSD. They just removed all that code and a developer reimplimented it.
If it's not a matter of dust on the connectors, I found out back in my NES days that a lot of times the copper connectors inside the NES got bent further and further away from the catridges over time. I ended up taking apart the NES and bending back the copper connectors with a small screwdriver and had no more problems.
I'm not a KDE user (prefer straight E), but from what I've seen in the configuration manager, you can tell KDE to behave like itself, Mac, Windows, or UNIX in terms of mouse clicks and general focus rules. Check the look and feel section of the configuration manager to change this setting. I'm pretty sure you can also manually change each individual setting as well.
I suppose the problem is that, especially with these new definitions of war. We could be at "war" indefinitely. I mean, we didn't declare war on Afghanistan, we declared war on "terrorism" and have stated that this war will not end until all terrorists are stopped.
Now... these goals are kind of vauge to me. It is the kind of thing that could lend itself to a "war" that lasts for decades, all the while our civil liberties would be suspended "for the war". Say, while we are at it, why don't we suspend our civil liberties to help fight the "war" on drugs too. There's another war that I'm sure we will end in a month or two!
1984 allusions are running rampant at this moment, but "we have always been at war with Eurasia".
The Athlon XP uses the Palomino chipset just like the Athlon MP, so yes you can use it in an MP configuration.
For that matter you can use an Athlon tbird in an MP configuration, but the Palominos have AMD's blessing. The HardOCP article talks about this somewhat.
Here's the relevant section of mine (and, you *are* using xmodmap to switch buttons 4 and 5 to the wheel aren't you?)
Typically the side buttons are mapped to left and right, just add this to the mozilla section of your.imwheelrc:
None, Left, Alt_R|Left
None, Right, Alt_R|Right
From what I can gather from reading the comments to the Linux Today article, the main things that have changed and the underlying libraries, nothing that would really change the look. So apparently a screenshot of this wouldn't really look any different from a screenshot of gnome 1.x.
You should have piped it through the antiword program, or many other quick.doc->.txt converters for Linux... They work well, especially for those simple text documents.
Oh bah... I have been waiting patiently for that for over a year. Fired emails to Loki when they were the ones responsible, and they were "working on it, look for a release soon."
If they were going to exploit the industry leader then they *would* write Apache exploits. Despite what MS would like you to believe, according to Netcraft they only have about 20% of the webserver market to Apache's 60%. So that argument goes out the window, the underdog IS IIS.
The Palomino chipset has some MP optimizations, and is officially supported by AMD for MP use. The older processors will work, but don't perform as well in the benchmarks I've seen. The Anandtech review states that they were able to use the old Athlon chipset in this board too. I'm thinking that when they built their old chip they allowed SMP, but they didn't optimize for it (or perhaps there were other issues with the chip that we don't know about) and so they released a new chipset once the MP boards were ready that was optimized for it.
So, yeah, you can use the old Athlons in your Tyan 2460, but if you really want the performance, you'll want to go with their Palomino core. As a added benefit, the Palomino is supposed to run cooler too.
Apparently you only need the registered RAM if you are going to use more than 2 Memory banks, the article says more about it. It apparently has to do with electrical load on the memory bus. The Anandtech review has this to say:
The Tiger MP keeps the 4 DIMM slots of the Thunder K7 which is a good thing since efficiency in higher end applications is not only governed by CPU and platform performance, but memory size as well. This also forces it to keep the registered DDR SDRAM requirement, but only if more than two banks are populated. If you only install two modules then you should be fine with regular DDR SDRAM (provided that it has no specific compatibility issues with the Tiger MP). During our tests we ran the board with Corsair Registered DDR SDRAM modules and the same Crucial unregistered DDR SDRAM we use in all of our other tests. As long as only two slots were filled, the stability was identical and the performance was roughly the same (the unregistered modules are theoretically faster but that doesn't translate into any tangible performance gains). When more than three unregistered DIMMs were installed the system would not POST; and adding a third registered DIMM to a set of two unregistered DIMMs would not boot either.
Nice thing about this board in comparison with Tyan's other AMD MP offerings is the fact that you can use a standard ATX power supply. Tyan's previous boards required that you purchase a proprietary 450W power supply. They recommend at least 300W, though. I'm running one of these right now with a single 1.2 Palomino on the 300W PS that came with my In-Win Q500N with no problems as of yet. While it can handle a standard power supply now, Tyan still recommends that you use Registered PC2100 RAM for it. I was able to find 256M for around $50 or so.
I recommend Einux Systems if you are looking for a place to purchase a motherboard processor combo for this board.
Before this board came out I was going to go for a dual PIII 1Ghz system, but since that type of processor is always going to stay at 1Ghz, I figured it was worth the extra money to be able to upgrade this board to wherever the Palomino chipset ends up (from what I've heard it the chipset should be able to scale up to 2Ghz or so).
There are supposed to be other boards released by Abit, MSI, etc. in the next month or two that will be even cheaper, but if you are like me and couldn't wait (and aren't planning on overclocking your system) then this board is a good choice.
Heh, yeah back when me and my friends were big on precision rollerblade bearings, we used to clean and lube them with WD40.
Yeah it works well for a day or two, and then it just comes screeching to a halt.
What we didn't know at the time was that the WD40 actually works by dissolving things like rust (and apparently the grease/oil in the bearings) so that even when we added more grease after "cleaning" the bearings with WD40, it would dissolve it until we made sure that we cleaned ALL of the WD40 out of there.
You should perhaps try saving the document as RTF. Since it's an open format, everyone can ensure that their implimentation follows the standard. Word will by default open RTFs just like DOC files, so it won't cause any problems on anyone else's end either.
"Nova" Scotia should have known better!
Of course the difference being that Waterworld was so expensive because their first set actually *sunk*. I'm not sure why FF cost so much money. Rendering farms? R&D?
Kinda like the second episode of The Tick where Chairface Chippendale wrote the first part of his name on the moon before being thwarted by the Tick?
The funny thing was that they left that writing on the moon for all the subsequent moon shots on that show.
I already have 2 30GB drives, and after hearing horror stories about hard drives crashing recently, I've decided my next step is to get another 30GB drive and run RAID5 across them all. Linux can do this in software by the way, and this way you can be assured that your data will stay intact if one of the hard drives crash or not, plus you won't lose half of your drives to backup.
If you are concerned with recovering deleted files, simply use tar or something similar to backup to either a separate directory, or create a separate partition on the RAID array. Another advantage is that you can always increase your storage by slapping in an additional drive, partitioning it the way you want, and then adding it to the current array.
Neh, it simply rained for 40 days. They were in the ark for longer than that, until the waters started receding and they sent out a bird to try to find dry land, eventually it came back with a twig, and eventually it didn't come back at all (signifying that it found a place to roost). Long story even shorter, they ended up landing on a mountain (Mt. Ararat). But even then, that would mean that the water was as high as that mountain, and it never says whether the waters receded back completely to their old levels. So, it's possible given that account, that "sea level" ended up being higher then.
FWIW, I've been able to get Notes working under wine since... Redhat 5.2 or so. Lexmark (of course) is a big Notes user, and so it became necessary for my Linux box to run it so I could check my mail.
There are also XFS boot disks available.
The link is on the official XFS site.
A lot of people seem to confuse what the posters say (which is in quotes btw) and what the Slashdot crew says. Of course, either is just as likely to be spelled incorrectly :).
That's one of the main things that has turned me off about KDE's window manager -- no well-defined window memory. That's also one of the main things that keeps me coming back to enlightenment. There are just certain windows I always want to open a certain size, on a certain desktop, in a certain place. Some of these windows I want to be always sticky, some it doesn't matter. With enlightenment I can always define exactly where I want a window to go.
Some window managers get it half right, they let you remember *all* of the settings. But sometimes I want a window to open in a certain desktop, but not always at the same size, or vice versa.
And of course, being able to group certain windows together, and have them all iconify or shade together is nice too. Seems to me if you really wanted to, you could get all this functionality ion has to offer in E, just by doing some window memory.
The word you are looking for is phononym. Words that sound the same but are spelled differently.
Eh, probably the same thing would happen that happened when there were licensing problems with ipfw in OpenBSD. They just removed all that code and a developer reimplimented it.
If it's not a matter of dust on the connectors, I found out back in my NES days that a lot of times the copper connectors inside the NES got bent further and further away from the catridges over time. I ended up taking apart the NES and bending back the copper connectors with a small screwdriver and had no more problems.
I'm not a KDE user (prefer straight E), but from what I've seen in the configuration manager, you can tell KDE to behave like itself, Mac, Windows, or UNIX in terms of mouse clicks and general focus rules. Check the look and feel section of the configuration manager to change this setting. I'm pretty sure you can also manually change each individual setting as well.
I suppose the problem is that, especially with these new definitions of war. We could be at "war" indefinitely. I mean, we didn't declare war on Afghanistan, we declared war on "terrorism" and have stated that this war will not end until all terrorists are stopped.
Now... these goals are kind of vauge to me. It is the kind of thing that could lend itself to a "war" that lasts for decades, all the while our civil liberties would be suspended "for the war". Say, while we are at it, why don't we suspend our civil liberties to help fight the "war" on drugs too. There's another war that I'm sure we will end in a month or two!
1984 allusions are running rampant at this moment, but "we have always been at war with Eurasia".
The Athlon XP uses the Palomino chipset just like the Athlon MP, so yes you can use it in an MP configuration.
For that matter you can use an Athlon tbird in an MP configuration, but the Palominos have AMD's blessing. The HardOCP article talks about this somewhat.
You simply have to map your .imwheelrc to do it.
.imwheelrc:
Here's the relevant section of mine (and, you *are* using xmodmap to switch buttons 4 and 5 to the wheel aren't you?)
Typically the side buttons are mapped to left and right, just add this to the mozilla section of your
None, Left, Alt_R|Left
None, Right, Alt_R|Right
From what I can gather from reading the comments to the Linux Today article, the main things that have changed and the underlying libraries, nothing that would really change the look. So apparently a screenshot of this wouldn't really look any different from a screenshot of gnome 1.x.
You should have piped it through the antiword program, or many other quick .doc->.txt converters for Linux... They work well, especially for those simple text documents.
Oh bah... I have been waiting patiently for that for over a year. Fired emails to Loki when they were the ones responsible, and they were "working on it, look for a release soon."
Oh well... guess it simply won't happen.
If they were going to exploit the industry leader then they *would* write Apache exploits. Despite what MS would like you to believe, according to Netcraft they only have about 20% of the webserver market to Apache's 60%. So that argument goes out the window, the underdog IS IIS.
The Palomino chipset has some MP optimizations, and is officially supported by AMD for MP use. The older processors will work, but don't perform as well in the benchmarks I've seen. The Anandtech review states that they were able to use the old Athlon chipset in this board too. I'm thinking that when they built their old chip they allowed SMP, but they didn't optimize for it (or perhaps there were other issues with the chip that we don't know about) and so they released a new chipset once the MP boards were ready that was optimized for it.
So, yeah, you can use the old Athlons in your Tyan 2460, but if you really want the performance, you'll want to go with their Palomino core. As a added benefit, the Palomino is supposed to run cooler too.
Nice thing about this board in comparison with Tyan's other AMD MP offerings is the fact that you can use a standard ATX power supply. Tyan's previous boards required that you purchase a proprietary 450W power supply. They recommend at least 300W, though. I'm running one of these right now with a single 1.2 Palomino on the 300W PS that came with my In-Win Q500N with no problems as of yet. While it can handle a standard power supply now, Tyan still recommends that you use Registered PC2100 RAM for it. I was able to find 256M for around $50 or so.
I recommend Einux Systems if you are looking for a place to purchase a motherboard processor combo for this board.
Before this board came out I was going to go for a dual PIII 1Ghz system, but since that type of processor is always going to stay at 1Ghz, I figured it was worth the extra money to be able to upgrade this board to wherever the Palomino chipset ends up (from what I've heard it the chipset should be able to scale up to 2Ghz or so).
There are supposed to be other boards released by Abit, MSI, etc. in the next month or two that will be even cheaper, but if you are like me and couldn't wait (and aren't planning on overclocking your system) then this board is a good choice.
Heh, yeah back when me and my friends were big on precision rollerblade bearings, we used to clean and lube them with WD40.
Yeah it works well for a day or two, and then it just comes screeching to a halt.
What we didn't know at the time was that the WD40 actually works by dissolving things like rust (and apparently the grease/oil in the bearings) so that even when we added more grease after "cleaning" the bearings with WD40, it would dissolve it until we made sure that we cleaned ALL of the WD40 out of there.