No, this happens to me periodically with any old messages. I can then usually send it again and it gets through. I think it has more to do with Microsoft's network sucking than any actual filtering going on.
That wasn't the point of my comment. Someone above argued that it's better to destroy infrastructure than to target people with something like chemical weapons. I was just pointing out that going after the people alone is just as effective, if not more so, just as you point out.
Yeah! They should put on Metropolis, if only for the odd meter breakdown section... that would blow the minds of some of those weenie 4/4 time riffers:p
I wish I had modpoints right now, because you totally debunked the parent poster's misinformation (which, curiously was modded up, while your comment has not).
A lot of people seem to miss these basic points: If you are the original copyright holder of the code to your project, you can distribute it under the GPL while linking to the GPL version of Qt. Should you decide later that you want to sell it as a non open source project you are then free to purchase a commercial GPL license and distribute it as closed source software. The only restriction forced upon you by the Qt is library is if you link against the GPL verison of the Qt library, your software must also be distributed under the terms of the GPL license. If you link against the commercial version of the library, which you can only do if you pay Trolltech the license fee, you are free to distribute it (and the necessary binary parts of the library, a right granted to you by the license that you pay for) under a different license. The terms of distributing the commercial portion of the Qt library may have some additional restrictions, but discovering those is left as an exercise for the reader.
Huh? I've never been able to move or resize unresponsive application Windows. In fact I just tried it now and it certainly doesn't work here on XP Pro..
I think this is BS. Sterlingtek, a popular merchant of after-market camera batteries and other stuff has great customer service. Their prices are also a fraction of that charged by the camera manufacturers. I know of hundreds of photographers who use their products. They are certainly "reputable" but still have much lower pricing than buying OEM.
You can just not compile in the features you don't want. Or run with:set compatible for that classic vi feel. Nobody forces you to use the new features.
Hint: The book is called Mastering Regular Expressions. It's not meant to be be an introductory primer (though it does include one) but a detailed look at uses of regular expressions, variations between systems, and advanced techniques as well. Sysadmins and programmers often have to deal with many Regexp systems and a book like this really helps. I know I use it quite often.
Hm, if they specify "a first, second, and third" display screen, does that mean that Apple could get around it by presenting say a fourth display screen? Or maybe only two screens?
Phones here in Japan have had this technology for quite some time, using square bar codes that can encode way more information than the typical barcodes in North America. I can scan them with my phone and get a URL or other information...
I don't get people complaining about Backslash, or talking about not getting it. If you don't get it, or don't like it, just turn it off for gods sake and quit posting about how you don't get it in every backslash story!
That's interesting. At my university it seems like almost EVERYONE has a laptop now. And most people I see are carrying around those 17" monoliths from Toshiba or Dell that weigh about 20 lbs. I started school there 4 years ago, and I got myself a laptop part of the way in to my first year so that I'd be able to work on projects without having to rely on finding space in the lab. At the time, I was one of the few people with a laptop. Then in the last 2 or 3 years, laptop use at my school has exploded, it's almost unusual to see someone walking around *without* a laptop. They're having to upgrade their shoddy wireless infrastructure because the users are now putting such a huge load on it that it's often hard to authenticate with the auth server.
Or
;)
TOP 20 SCARY HALLOWEEN MASKS YOU'VE NEVER SEEN!!!!
OMGWTFLOLPONIESORGASM!@$!%@%
Hm, slashdot lameness filter seems to hate my comment... proof Digg is lame
It is
iKid! iKid! iKid because iLove!
It makes perfect sense.... you make iLove and get an iKid.
After you have an iWedding of course: http://iwedding.co.kr/
Modeling?
;p
Don't you usually have to be good looking and fairly buff to pull off that kind of gig? That pretty much rules it out for most programmer types...
What does that have to do with being a better coder anyway?
No, I don't read comment bodies
nothing!
Also a bad example considering the UK is in Europe last I checked.
Guess he's not called "Shooter of Bul(l)" for nothing.
Exactly. If anyone has the power to fight for change in copyright law, it's Google. I'm sure they're not afraid of going to court.
No, this happens to me periodically with any old messages. I can then usually send it again and it gets through. I think it has more to do with Microsoft's network sucking than any actual filtering going on.
That wasn't the point of my comment. Someone above argued that it's better to destroy infrastructure than to target people with something like chemical weapons. I was just pointing out that going after the people alone is just as effective, if not more so, just as you point out.
What good are infrastructure and equipment without people to operate and maintain them?
Yeah! They should put on Metropolis, if only for the odd meter breakdown section... that would blow the minds of some of those weenie 4/4 time riffers :p
I wish I had modpoints right now, because you totally debunked the parent poster's misinformation (which, curiously was modded up, while your comment has not).
A lot of people seem to miss these basic points:
If you are the original copyright holder of the code to your project, you can distribute it under the GPL while linking to the GPL version of Qt. Should you decide later that you want to sell it as a non open source project you are then free to purchase a commercial GPL license and distribute it as closed source software. The only restriction forced upon you by the Qt is library is if you link against the GPL verison of the Qt library, your software must also be distributed under the terms of the GPL license. If you link against the commercial version of the library, which you can only do if you pay Trolltech the license fee, you are free to distribute it (and the necessary binary parts of the library, a right granted to you by the license that you pay for) under a different license. The terms of distributing the commercial portion of the Qt library may have some additional restrictions, but discovering those is left as an exercise for the reader.
Huh? I've never been able to move or resize unresponsive application Windows. In fact I just tried it now and it certainly doesn't work here on XP Pro..
I think this is BS. Sterlingtek, a popular merchant of after-market camera batteries and other stuff has great customer service. Their prices are also a fraction of that charged by the camera manufacturers. I know of hundreds of photographers who use their products. They are certainly "reputable" but still have much lower pricing than buying OEM.
You can just not compile in the features you don't want. Or run with :set compatible for that classic vi feel. Nobody forces you to use the new features.
Hint: The book is called Mastering Regular Expressions. It's not meant to be be an introductory primer (though it does include one) but a detailed look at uses of regular expressions, variations between systems, and advanced techniques as well. Sysadmins and programmers often have to deal with many Regexp systems and a book like this really helps. I know I use it quite often.
Nobody claimed it was the big news of today. It was simply the buried news.
You're new to this humor thing aren't you?
Obviously the information is written from a US-centric point of view. ;)
Hm, if they specify "a first, second, and third" display screen, does that mean that Apple could get around it by presenting say a fourth display screen? Or maybe only two screens?
Phones here in Japan have had this technology for quite some time, using square bar codes that can encode way more information than the typical barcodes in North America. I can scan them with my phone and get a URL or other information...
Sure, or we might as well just start tattooing it there.
"POOR IMPULSE CONTROL"
I just want to let you know your comment made me laugh uncontrollably. Thank you.
I don't get people complaining about Backslash, or talking about not getting it. If you don't get it, or don't like it, just turn it off for gods sake and quit posting about how you don't get it in every backslash story!
That's interesting. At my university it seems like almost EVERYONE has a laptop now. And most people I see are carrying around those 17" monoliths from Toshiba or Dell that weigh about 20 lbs. I started school there 4 years ago, and I got myself a laptop part of the way in to my first year so that I'd be able to work on projects without having to rely on finding space in the lab. At the time, I was one of the few people with a laptop. Then in the last 2 or 3 years, laptop use at my school has exploded, it's almost unusual to see someone walking around *without* a laptop. They're having to upgrade their shoddy wireless infrastructure because the users are now putting such a huge load on it that it's often hard to authenticate with the auth server.