The Greeks would seem to be specifically asking about how the __original__ images are to be handled, not just how the images which eventually make onto the service will be presented. 2 different things.
so the size of the user interface will still be the same on the laptop i.e. the screen. this will still consume a considerable amount of power as will the hard disk motor. reliably detecting mechanical actuations from the keyboard using a single molecule wont be simple either.
And now its happened. There was a time when people
who used Linux came up against brick walls AND THEN CLIMBED OVER THEM. The Quickcam for example. Great device, but no Linux drivers. so they wrote them.
Unfortunately everyone sees Linux as this great, magical, free thing which popped up from nowhere and everyone can have it, plus they get to tell the people that gave them this free thing to bloody well hurry up and make it work for them, just so they can go off and tell their mates how crap Windows etc. is and look what I've got, and oh yeah I didn't pay a penny! Ha!
surely freeing a load of the bandwidth that the non-commercial web takes up will just increase the bandwidth available to the commercial web. We all know that will get eaten up straightaway.
Just like a nice 5 lane motorway (freeway, whatever), take all the trucks off it and put them on trains, the cars just take up the slack.
Why don't BT just charge their customers to cover the costs and stop whinging about it?
The Greeks would seem to be specifically asking about how the __original__ images are to be handled, not just how the images which eventually make onto the service will be presented. 2 different things.
What use is a tax when people don't even buy stuff anymore?
so the size of the user interface will still be the same on the laptop i.e. the screen. this will still consume a considerable amount of power as will the hard disk motor. reliably detecting mechanical actuations from the keyboard using a single molecule wont be simple either.
And now its happened. There was a time when people who used Linux came up against brick walls AND THEN CLIMBED OVER THEM. The Quickcam for example. Great device, but no Linux drivers. so they wrote them.
Unfortunately everyone sees Linux as this great, magical, free thing which popped up from nowhere and everyone can have it, plus they get to tell the people that gave them this free thing to bloody well hurry up and make it work for them, just so they can go off and tell their mates how crap Windows etc. is and look what I've got, and oh yeah I didn't pay a penny! Ha!
you must start with pure white light for that cloth test to be valid.
surely freeing a load of the bandwidth that the non-commercial web takes up will just increase the bandwidth available to the commercial web. We all know that will get eaten up straightaway.
Just like a nice 5 lane motorway (freeway, whatever), take all the trucks off it and put them on trains, the cars just take up the slack.