You could read the whole thing and see they have one for sale for $2,400. It could be great for cloning chili plants. Get some cuttings of the plants you like the best and grow them in the fridge until they're good enough to plant.
You are government property. That's why they get to decide what substances you can, can't, and must consume. People don't like corporations? Corporations don't send armed men to your house in the middle of the night to abduct you because you have a plant they don't like.
Government is the worst, freedom is so much better.
As an employer, grades really aren't a top concern. I graduated with 2.85, I know skills go beyond grade. An interview is really where I'd make my decision.
I inherited a class C that formally belonged to a spammer. Made it almost impossible to get outbound mail accepted. Since we were a small org (50 people), out going was relayed over a T1 to a host in another network. Almost a year and a half later, and I'd estimate 90% of the mail gets accepted. Some old firewalls and blackholes block them still.
So because we were lucky enough to have another site to send from, we weren't screwed... I'd hate to be there without a backup!
I have two of such cats. One of them has them, but aren't really opposable. She really just uses them as a bigger paw.
The other, however, can really use hers. She'll pick up her toys and put them in her mouth rather than bending down to pick it up. I've even seen her pick the peices of food out of the bowl that she wants and putting them in her mouth instead of just bending down and eating.
The only TOS I ever signed was for unlimited data usage for $15 (not $10, sorry, just looked it up). There's no stipulation that the phone can't act as a DUN device in the agreement. Hell, this is a device that THEY provided with DUN built in (earlier realeases had DUN via bluetooth enables. Sprint enabled it on my phone). Hence they've given their approval to use it.
FWIW, I'm on Sprint and sometimes connect my laptop via bluetooth to my Treo 650. It's enabled on the phone, and for me is as simple as pretending it's a modem and dialing #777. And poof. Online. Not the greatest connection, but beats nothing. And all that data transfer is included in the $10/mo I pay for data.
Granted, I don't use it that often. Quick connections when out somewhere odd to make a few small fixes.
I know lots of other phones have this ability as well, but don't enable it. Which strikes me a dumb.
Everyone is lactose tolerant. Some people just don't like the taste of it as a kid, or get phlegm one day and decide their "intolerant" -- meaning they don't like it.
Uhhhh... no?
I'm lactose intolerant. And it sucks. I love milk, cheese, and ice cream. I lived on a diet with so much cheese. Then I started getting horrible stomach cramps, among other problems not for polite company. My doctor suggested going two weeks with no milk products. That cleared it up.
So now I've got to eat soy cheese, and lactose free milk. It sucks. Every once in a while I'll go ahead and eat the real stuff anyway, because it's so much better, but then I'll pay for it later.
My father took a really interesting approach. He ended up as a software engineer somewhat by accident (long story). His approach was interesting, looking back. He had an Apple IIc (I think, I was still really young). He told us we could ONLY use the computer for X amount of time.
This of course, made me want to use it MORE than X.
Eventually I started wanting to make the computer do what _I_ wanted it to do, rather than what someone else told it to do.
So I started poking (and peeking) at BASIC programs. Eventually I learned more and more, and with my father help, became a good programmer.
Eventually, I got enough skill so that I was writing code my father thought I should be selling. (Heh, I remeber one was a preloader to Duke Nuke'em 3D that would let you select any map, instead of being limited to the X number they would display inside the program.) And oddly, I declined and posted the source as well as binary to local BBSs. And this was even before I was introduced to Open Source!
With my introduction to Linux, I got hooked on C. Spent lots of time hacking on other peoples code before I started writing my own. PHP came to me when I was asked to build a simple web app.
Time passed, and I added C++, Java, Perl, Lisp (and Scheme), and multiple other languages. I looked down at "scripting languages" for the longest time.
But then when I was tasked with dealing with massive amounts of text strings, I learned to love Perl. The whole TRTFTRG thing. (The Right Tool For The Right Job). And my rationale changed slightly. What's the difference between compiled and interpreted languages? Compiled languages are read by a compiler and turned into machine code at one time, interpreted languages are read and turned into machine code at run time, and then there's Java, which does a bit of both.
And that's where I am now! Perl, C, C++, Java, PHP, shell scripts, or whatever the appropriate tool is for the job.
But I love the old FF games. I actually just loaded up LJP and played FF1 (yes, 1) all last week. Love it. I've got 2 and 3 loaded up and they're the next on my list.
Of course this might have something to do with the fact that I haven't had a game console since the N64. And even that was a hand-me-down from a friend.
It appears I didn't make myself clear, my apologies.
I read/. less for the articles and more for the comments. "Top 5" doesn't make it in my book. "Top 50" might have chance. But as mobile internet changes, so shouldn't the sites that provide service?
I'm on my Treo all the time. ALL the time. Be it playing games, getting email, listening to music or watching movies. I have it out always. I want more! I'm greedy, I know.
I recently got a Treo 650, and while Blazer can render most pages well, I mostly stick with sites that I know work well. Wikipedia (with the right skin), and Google are great. Other sites like IMDB work well, but are slow due to extra stuff that doesn't render well. If they had a mobile IMDB system, I'd use it all the time. (I'm horrible with actor names, and have to know where I recognize someone from)
Actually for/., I just use the normal pages in "light" mode, which works out quite well. I don't get enough of the comments, which is why I love/.
If anyone knows any other good mobile pages, I'd love to hear them.
How does the browser experience differ for those with different devices.
You could read the whole thing and see they have one for sale for $2,400. It could be great for cloning chili plants. Get some cuttings of the plants you like the best and grow them in the fridge until they're good enough to plant.
Kids these days
You are government property. That's why they get to decide what substances you can, can't, and must consume. People don't like corporations? Corporations don't send armed men to your house in the middle of the night to abduct you because you have a plant they don't like.
Government is the worst, freedom is so much better.
I'm sad that no one has registered this domain already.
This doesn't affect openssh servers or clients. Only *some* things using libssh *might* be vulnerable. A bit overhyped.
> I'm curious as to why you think mandatory military service is a terrible idea.
Because I am not the property of the state and I will not be used as a slave to the state.
What's to stop you from connecting to it as a "hotspot" to do your torrenting and then back to "normal" for the rest of your traffic?
There is a Cabal.
We just don't let the youngsters in on it.
As an employer, grades really aren't a top concern. I graduated with 2.85, I know skills go beyond grade. An interview is really where I'd make my decision.
I inherited a class C that formally belonged to a spammer. Made it almost impossible to get outbound mail accepted. Since we were a small org (50 people), out going was relayed over a T1 to a host in another network. Almost a year and a half later, and I'd estimate 90% of the mail gets accepted. Some old firewalls and blackholes block them still.
So because we were lucky enough to have another site to send from, we weren't screwed... I'd hate to be there without a backup!
No... no you're not.
I have two of such cats. One of them has them, but aren't really opposable. She really just uses them as a bigger paw.
The other, however, can really use hers. She'll pick up her toys and put them in her mouth rather than bending down to pick it up. I've even seen her pick the peices of food out of the bowl that she wants and putting them in her mouth instead of just bending down and eating.
Be afraid. Be very afraid.
I'll gladly trade in the freedom..
... for a bargain at the market any ole day.
I'd like to go cry now.
Stop the world. I want to get off.
The only TOS I ever signed was for unlimited data usage for $15 (not $10, sorry, just looked it up). There's no stipulation that the phone can't act as a DUN device in the agreement. Hell, this is a device that THEY provided with DUN built in (earlier realeases had DUN via bluetooth enables. Sprint enabled it on my phone). Hence they've given their approval to use it.
Never had a problem.
FWIW, I'm on Sprint and sometimes connect my laptop via bluetooth to my Treo 650. It's enabled on the phone, and for me is as simple as pretending it's a modem and dialing #777. And poof. Online. Not the greatest connection, but beats nothing. And all that data transfer is included in the $10/mo I pay for data.
Granted, I don't use it that often. Quick connections when out somewhere odd to make a few small fixes.
I know lots of other phones have this ability as well, but don't enable it. Which strikes me a dumb.
Did you really just source the Onion to try to prove a point?
Really?
No... you didn't.... did you?
Uhhhh... no?
I'm lactose intolerant. And it sucks. I love milk, cheese, and ice cream. I lived on a diet with so much cheese. Then I started getting horrible stomach cramps, among other problems not for polite company. My doctor suggested going two weeks with no milk products. That cleared it up.
So now I've got to eat soy cheese, and lactose free milk. It sucks. Every once in a while I'll go ahead and eat the real stuff anyway, because it's so much better, but then I'll pay for it later.
My father took a really interesting approach. He ended up as a software engineer somewhat by accident (long story). His approach was interesting, looking back. He had an Apple IIc (I think, I was still really young). He told us we could ONLY use the computer for X amount of time.
This of course, made me want to use it MORE than X.
Eventually I started wanting to make the computer do what _I_ wanted it to do, rather than what someone else told it to do.
So I started poking (and peeking) at BASIC programs. Eventually I learned more and more, and with my father help, became a good programmer.
Eventually, I got enough skill so that I was writing code my father thought I should be selling. (Heh, I remeber one was a preloader to Duke Nuke'em 3D that would let you select any map, instead of being limited to the X number they would display inside the program.) And oddly, I declined and posted the source as well as binary to local BBSs. And this was even before I was introduced to Open Source!
With my introduction to Linux, I got hooked on C. Spent lots of time hacking on other peoples code before I started writing my own. PHP came to me when I was asked to build a simple web app.
Time passed, and I added C++, Java, Perl, Lisp (and Scheme), and multiple other languages. I looked down at "scripting languages" for the longest time.
But then when I was tasked with dealing with massive amounts of text strings, I learned to love Perl. The whole TRTFTRG thing. (The Right Tool For The Right Job). And my rationale changed slightly. What's the difference between compiled and interpreted languages? Compiled languages are read by a compiler and turned into machine code at one time, interpreted languages are read and turned into machine code at run time, and then there's Java, which does a bit of both.
And that's where I am now! Perl, C, C++, Java, PHP, shell scripts, or whatever the appropriate tool is for the job.
Long post short, thanks Dad!
Check out BillMonk, I think it does everything you need, all via sms, email, or the web interface.
http://www.billmonk.com/
But I love the old FF games. I actually just loaded up LJP and played FF1 (yes, 1) all last week. Love it. I've got 2 and 3 loaded up and they're the next on my list.
Of course this might have something to do with the fact that I haven't had a game console since the N64. And even that was a hand-me-down from a friend.
Maybe I'm just getting old...
I got schooled by #43 one time. Too funny.
/now get off my lawn
There needs to be an Old School Slashdotters club.
Man, I love UID wars.
It appears I didn't make myself clear, my apologies.
/. less for the articles and more for the comments. "Top 5" doesn't make it in my book. "Top 50" might have chance. But as mobile internet changes, so shouldn't the sites that provide service?
I read
I'm on my Treo all the time. ALL the time. Be it playing games, getting email, listening to music or watching movies. I have it out always. I want more! I'm greedy, I know.
I recently got a Treo 650, and while Blazer can render most pages well, I mostly stick with sites that I know work well. Wikipedia (with the right skin), and Google are great. Other sites like IMDB work well, but are slow due to extra stuff that doesn't render well. If they had a mobile IMDB system, I'd use it all the time. (I'm horrible with actor names, and have to know where I recognize someone from)
/., I just use the normal pages in "light" mode, which works out quite well. I don't get enough of the comments, which is why I love /.
Actually for
If anyone knows any other good mobile pages, I'd love to hear them.
How does the browser experience differ for those with different devices.
I have to agree. "Podcasting". What is it? Downloading mp3s. that. is. it.
"Oh, but now you can tell via RSS that a new mp3 is ready". Oh joy.