Maneuvering the Segfault would be awkward due to that. It shouldn't be that hard to move the switch and make it steer like a bicycle's steering handlebar, which isn't that hard to do at all.
But all in all, they've made the Segway-like device simpler, thus cheaper and easier to manufacture and service. We'll have stuff like this as christmas presents soon enough.
same as pcs, the motherboard needs to be well made, but the casing and rest of the metal for the box can be recycled metals.
To my experience, among the most short-lived components in a PC are the motherboards and hard drives. For hard drives, it may be inevitable, being mechanical and all but motherboards? it's beyond me.
It doesn't prevent people from creating GPL'ed apps that work only on a $100 Windows platform...
If the source is available, then it's your right to distribute. How you distribute it, it is up to your own capability (the fee required to submit the app into the App Store) and media (internet fees, paper, CDs, etc).
Jigdo used by Debian already does this for its behemothian ISO images. Not that anybody downloads them all anyway.
But it would fit for what you're suggesting.
DNS service and even mail services are not the majority of servers. File servers, application servers and web servers are. That's where the real work should be considered.
*ahem*
Upgrading a file server, application server and web server shouldn't cost your machine's uptime. You could just stop the appropariate services, upgrade, and then restart it.
Running IE as a normal user is (a bit) safer than Administrator -- quite a number of those spyware and malware _will_ attempt to try to takeover everything. And if even one succeeds, just delete the account and its files, and start anew.
Or at least use the HTML <abbrev> or <acronym> tags so that those of us with decent compliant browsers can hover a mouse pointer over the acronym and see the expansion!
IE doesn't support the hover-on-acronym thing. and, slashdot doesn't allow either <abbr> or <acronym>
The last thing we need is to have a bug-for-bug compatibility with MS Word, which includes VBA. Unfortunately, we'd bring in the macro viruses nightmare into linux as well.
*whoosh*
They couldn't. They'd have to enter a confirmation code you'd receive via SMS.
Maneuvering the Segfault would be awkward due to that. It shouldn't be that hard to move the switch and make it steer like a bicycle's steering handlebar, which isn't that hard to do at all.
But all in all, they've made the Segway-like device simpler, thus cheaper and easier to manufacture and service. We'll have stuff like this as christmas presents soon enough.
same as pcs, the motherboard needs to be well made, but the casing and rest of the metal for the box can be recycled metals.
To my experience, among the most short-lived components in a PC are the motherboards and hard drives. For hard drives, it may be inevitable, being mechanical and all but motherboards? it's beyond me.
http://go-oo.org/
Better support for Open Office XML, whether we like it or not, is critical if we're thinking serious competition against Microsoft Office.
Linux is trademarked.
Linux Mark Institute, exclusive licensor of the Linux trademark on behalf of its owner, Linus Torvalds.
http://www.linuxmark.org/
Charging, say, $500 wouldn't be legal, because there's no way it costs that much to send out a CD.
If you're delivering the software yourself into a really remote place?
Charging any amount is legal. But people have the choice to get it from you, or from somebody else. It is fair.
It doesn't prevent people from creating GPL'ed apps that work only on a $100 Windows platform...
If the source is available, then it's your right to distribute. How you distribute it, it is up to your own capability (the fee required to submit the app into the App Store) and media (internet fees, paper, CDs, etc).
But it is always a cool thing to try, the problem is that a mouse is easier to move than your hands.
With what do you move your mouse? Telekinesis?
Jigdo used by Debian already does this for its behemothian ISO images. Not that anybody downloads them all anyway. But it would fit for what you're suggesting.
What are you, blind? He spelt it correctly in the first place.
*ahem*
Upgrading a file server, application server and web server shouldn't cost your machine's uptime. You could just stop the appropariate services, upgrade, and then restart it.
Mod parent up, please?
That was good.
And vast fields of grass are able to thrive without sunlight?
Nice try, dude.
IE.
Running IE as a normal user is (a bit) safer than Administrator -- quite a number of those spyware and malware _will_ attempt to try to takeover everything. And if even one succeeds, just delete the account and its files, and start anew.
However, I don't recommend IE at all.
I used IrfanView on Windows, and gThumb is what I use on Linux.
hacked by realloc.
IE doesn't support the hover-on-acronym thing. and, slashdot doesn't allow either <abbr> or <acronym>
And have multiple copies of the same function in the memory (if you tend to run >1 copies of Evolution at one time.) No, thank YOU!
In Debian, an 'apt-get install acpid' will get you instant 'shutdown -h now' via the power button.
For some reasons, you may not run explorer.exe using runas. It won't work.
You might want to try a different file manager, though.
Try creating a shortcut of the app u wanted to run as administrator. Right-click the shortcut -> Properties -> Advanced.
In Windows XP check the 'Run with different credentials' box. In Windows 2000, it's something similar.
I find that this works for quite a number of apps, save a select few.
Isn't capacitance measured in farads? I believe u meant resistance.
The last thing we need is to have a bug-for-bug compatibility with MS Word, which includes VBA. Unfortunately, we'd bring in the macro viruses nightmare into linux as well.