The next time after you 'switch right on back to IE', could you file a bug report? Mozilla has a team of people who make sure that mozilla works with major (and even not-too-major) websites, but they need to rely on users to tell them which sites aren't working.
I didn't find any bugs in mozilla's bugzilla that referred to sportsline, so this problem most likely hasn't been reported yet. I was also unable to find the exact page you were referring too on cbs.sportsline.com. Otherwise, I would have submitted the bug.
Considering Bush's public speeches are among the best ever in American history.
Even if I were to agree with this opinion (and I don't), all that means is Bush has a good team of speech writers. The quality of his speeches has nothing to do with his intellectual prowess (or lack thereof).
I don't know if the first Insights had this feature, but all of the Civic Hybrids and all the new Insights have this feature. They call it "Auto Idle Stop".
Don't get me wrong. I like the Prius, too. I guess I should say I like the 2004 Prius. If I could have waited until the 2004 Prius came out, I would have gone for that. At the time I was looking to buy, however, I could only compare the 2002 Prius with the 2003 Civic Hybrids.
What you've described is how the Toyota Priuses (Prii?) work. The Honda Civic Hybrids are almost always using the gasoline engine. The electric engine helps out the gas engine. The only time the gas engine isn't being used is the case I described above -- slowing to a stop.
This is wrong. As described in a post above in this thread, if the honda civic hybrid slows down from driving speeds to less than 5 mph (and the temperature is above 41F), the gas engine cuts out, and stays off until you take your foot off the brake.
Mine does this all the time. There's a little light on the dash that blinks when the gas engine cuts out. You can feel and, if the music isn't playing too loudly, hear the gas engine cut out.
True, but the grand parent said that Kucinich was the only Senator. I was just pointing out that Kucinich is not a Senator, he's a Representative.
The lone dissenting Senator was Feingold.
According to Rep. Bernie Sanders, 66 Members of the House of Representatives voted against the USA Patriot Act. So, not to take away from the importances of his vote, but Kucinich was not the lone dissenting vote in the House of Representatives.
The National Journal's report (the one which called Kerry the most liberal member of the senate) was also only for 2003. It's been 10 years, even according to the National Journal, since Kerry last held that distinction. Kerry used to be really liberal, but he's lost that distinction.
In light of that, I think it's fair to use the yearly report provided by the ADA to counter that National Journal's report.
Right, and the link I provided goes back to 2002, 2 years ago.
The FISA requests are supposrt to be limited for intelligence use, but can be used against US citizens.
From my eff link:
American citizens and permanent residents are "agents" if they knowingly engage in espionage for a foreign power or intelligence service, and such activities "are about to involve" a violation of U.S. laws--any criminal laws, not just espionage.
and
If the target is a "U.S. person," which includes permanent resident aliens and associations and corporations substantially composed of U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens, 50 U.S.C.A. 1801(i), there must be probable cause to believe that the U.S. person's activities "may" or "are about to" involve a violation of the criminal statutes of the United States.
The "about to involve", or "may" violate a criminal statute (any criminal statute) of the US, are the disturbing part, mainly because FISA is a secret court.
Sorry, this is the last time I'll bring this up in this thread. I hope...
And who voted those members of Congress into power? We did.
I did no such thing, thank you very much. Instead I voted for the only senator to vote against the Patriot Act. Even in harsh times, some politicians are able to separate good laws from laws that are shoved down our throats; laws that we must pass, lest we be labelled terrorists.
Actually, that would be Senator Feingold. He was the only senator to vote against the Patriot Act. While I wasn't living in Wisconsin at the time if this vote, I was definitely proud that I voted for him in 1998, so he could make this vote years later. I'm grateful to be back in Wisconsin in time to vote for him again.
Also, Kucinich is a member of the House of Representatives (from Ohio), and therefore, not a Senator. So if your government teacher keeps telling you this, you should set him or her straight.
Kerry maybe liberal, but he is in no way the most liberal person in the senate. That number one ranking was based on Kerry's vote in 25 of the 62 votes ranked by the National Journal. Kerry missed the other 37 because he was out promoting himself on the campaign.
Please, please read those articles and don't just believe what you were spoonfed.
Russ is going to have himself a heck of a fight just to get reelected to the senate this year, though I'll for sure be doing my part to make sure that's not the case. Silly Republican candidates trying to convince us progressive Wisconsinites that Feingold is out of touch with the common man.
I've twice voted for Nader, but Feingold is one of the few democrats that I'd have no qualms about voting for in a presidential election.
While Russ stands for the common man, it's too easy for the other side to portray him as the worst four letter word in politics... liberal.
I can't tell you how many times I had hoped for a ticket made up of Feingold and Wellstone.
KMFMS stands for Kein Mitleid Für MicroSoft. It's a German acronym meaning "no pity for Microsoft." For those of you who were expecting the 'K' to stand for kill because that's what you thought it stood for in KMFDM, KMFDM is actually a German acronym meaning "no pity for the majority."
If there were, say, 3 browsers splitting the market and IE was still one of them you'd... still be doing that.
If IE only had ~30% marketshare, they would have a lot more incentive to improve the quality of their product, because they would care about losing marketshare.
As it stands right now, with 90-95% of the browser market, they know it's too much of hassle for most people to switch, so there is less incentive to improve quality.
Even if the vote passed you still would have been able to install non-free software on your debian machine, you just wouldn't be able to install it from debian or a debian mirror. Kind of like the blackdown java packages right now.
It's a turn-based strategy game. They have binaries for Windows, Mac OS X, BeOS and GNU/Linux. There are several server binaries available as well. On debian, apt-get install wesnoth wesnoth-server. The debian package is usually available on my mirror 2 days after an upstream release.
I haven't played a networked game yet, but the single-player campaigns are fun.
In production and disposal, though, you're talking about 2 one-time costs. With the other options (oil, coal, nuclear), you're constantly generating pollution during the duration you use that energy source.
Geez, give the OP a break. The incident happened almost a week ago (the 7th), and the article you linked to is dated today.
Give the OP some time to catch up on the news. AFAIK, Scalia just made a statement about it last night, so the news of his statement may not have made its way around the water coolers yet.
People who make $1M still notice $200k. It may not hurt them AS MUCH. But it still hurts them.
You've just pointed out the main point of a progressive tax system. It doesn't hurt them as much, so they get taxed more. The goal is making the "hurt" even across the board, as opposed to making the tax percentage even across the board, as in the flat tax.
You mean like synaptic or gnome-apt?
I didn't find any bugs in mozilla's bugzilla that referred to sportsline, so this problem most likely hasn't been reported yet. I was also unable to find the exact page you were referring too on cbs.sportsline.com. Otherwise, I would have submitted the bug.
Solution: unplug the network cable while installing it. When done, plug the network cable back in.
Even if I were to agree with this opinion (and I don't), all that means is Bush has a good team of speech writers. The quality of his speeches has nothing to do with his intellectual prowess (or lack thereof).
Don't get me wrong. I like the Prius, too. I guess I should say I like the 2004 Prius. If I could have waited until the 2004 Prius came out, I would have gone for that. At the time I was looking to buy, however, I could only compare the 2002 Prius with the 2003 Civic Hybrids.
What you've described is how the Toyota Priuses (Prii?) work. The Honda Civic Hybrids are almost always using the gasoline engine. The electric engine helps out the gas engine. The only time the gas engine isn't being used is the case I described above -- slowing to a stop.
My dash reports that I'm getting 45mpg over the life of the car, but my calculations are closer to 42.
Mine does this all the time. There's a little light on the dash that blinks when the gas engine cuts out. You can feel and, if the music isn't playing too loudly, hear the gas engine cut out.
The lone dissenting Senator was Feingold.
According to Rep. Bernie Sanders, 66 Members of the House of Representatives voted against the USA Patriot Act. So, not to take away from the importances of his vote, but Kucinich was not the lone dissenting vote in the House of Representatives.
The National Journal's report (the one which called Kerry the most liberal member of the senate) was also only for 2003. It's been 10 years, even according to the National Journal, since Kerry last held that distinction. Kerry used to be really liberal, but he's lost that distinction. In light of that, I think it's fair to use the yearly report provided by the ADA to counter that National Journal's report.
The FISA requests are supposrt to be limited for intelligence use, but can be used against US citizens.
From my eff link: American citizens and permanent residents are "agents" if they knowingly engage in espionage for a foreign power or intelligence service, and such activities "are about to involve" a violation of U.S. laws--any criminal laws, not just espionage.
and
If the target is a "U.S. person," which includes permanent resident aliens and associations and corporations substantially composed of U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens, 50 U.S.C.A. 1801(i), there must be probable cause to believe that the U.S. person's activities "may" or "are about to" involve a violation of the criminal statutes of the United States.
The "about to involve", or "may" violate a criminal statute (any criminal statute) of the US, are the disturbing part, mainly because FISA is a secret court.
If the grand parent was referring to the FISA court, then yes, in fact, no request has been denied in over 23 years.
And who voted those members of Congress into power? We did.
I did no such thing, thank you very much. Instead I voted for the only senator to vote against the Patriot Act. Even in harsh times, some politicians are able to separate good laws from laws that are shoved down our throats; laws that we must pass, lest we be labelled terrorists.
Also, Kucinich is a member of the House of Representatives (from Ohio), and therefore, not a Senator. So if your government teacher keeps telling you this, you should set him or her straight.
That is completely untrue.
Kerry maybe liberal, but he is in no way the most liberal person in the senate. That number one ranking was based on Kerry's vote in 25 of the 62 votes ranked by the National Journal. Kerry missed the other 37 because he was out promoting himself on the campaign.
Please, please read those articles and don't just believe what you were spoonfed.
I've twice voted for Nader, but Feingold is one of the few democrats that I'd have no qualms about voting for in a presidential election.
While Russ stands for the common man, it's too easy for the other side to portray him as the worst four letter word in politics... liberal.
I can't tell you how many times I had hoped for a ticket made up of Feingold and Wellstone.
sigh...
KMFMS stands for Kein Mitleid Für MicroSoft. It's a German acronym meaning "no pity for Microsoft." For those of you who were expecting the 'K' to stand for kill because that's what you thought it stood for in KMFDM, KMFDM is actually a German acronym meaning "no pity for the majority."
If IE only had ~30% marketshare, they would have a lot more incentive to improve the quality of their product, because they would care about losing marketshare.
As it stands right now, with 90-95% of the browser market, they know it's too much of hassle for most people to switch, so there is less incentive to improve quality.
Hmm... Nope:
What are Winamp's minimum system requirements?
Could it be that Winamp is using Windows functionality to play the WMV files?
It didn't even garner a simple majority.
Even if the vote passed you still would have been able to install non-free software on your debian machine, you just wouldn't be able to install it from debian or a debian mirror. Kind of like the blackdown java packages right now.
It's a turn-based strategy game. They have binaries for Windows, Mac OS X, BeOS and GNU/Linux. There are several server binaries available as well. On debian, apt-get install wesnoth wesnoth-server. The debian package is usually available on my mirror 2 days after an upstream release.
I haven't played a networked game yet, but the single-player campaigns are fun.
In production and disposal, though, you're talking about 2 one-time costs. With the other options (oil, coal, nuclear), you're constantly generating pollution during the duration you use that energy source.
Give the OP some time to catch up on the news. AFAIK, Scalia just made a statement about it last night, so the news of his statement may not have made its way around the water coolers yet.
You've just pointed out the main point of a progressive tax system. It doesn't hurt them as much, so they get taxed more. The goal is making the "hurt" even across the board, as opposed to making the tax percentage even across the board, as in the flat tax.
Ok, I'm done now.