The same also exists in the USA, as established in the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992, both on recording hardware and media. This is the moderately fair act that officially gave individual users fair use rights, which were not included in the 1976 act, in exchange for taxation. That's the primary difference between an "audio" cdr and a "data" cdr - the audio cdr price includes the excise.
Of course, the DMCA nullified all of the fair use elements of AHRA in 1998, without repealing the excise.
I wouldn't disagree with you, and yes, I have read Nietzsche. However, I would point out that these two (actually, Nietzsche building on the foundation of Kant) brought nihilism into the mainstream social vocabulary, and into the fabric of common thought.
Are they completely responsible? No. But they did open the door. Is that a negative thing? No. But as the parent post noted, society has allowed it to evolve into a negative movement.
That's exactly what my boss did this year. Small company, and we were blown away by our end-of-year treat: 40GB ipods, itrips, and $500. They'll love you for it!
GTE Wireless and their affiliates had that service -- named something like "Cell2Go". A friend of mine had it here in Nashville, and it was pretty cool. I think it got killed by the cheap cell boom, since it cost $75 on top of your local carrier.
I live in a historic district, and we've got a roaster/coffeehouse about 8 blocks from my house. I rejoice every time I can smell them from home, because that means the breeze isn't blowing through the recycling plant a mile west of the house!
OK, I'm also a coffee addict. So what?!?
Not quite as fast, but cheaper for small networks. Plus, legacy iMacs/iBooks don't have any way to add GigE. Plus, could be a nice step toward cheap SAN and sharable scanners, etc.
Yep. Connectix (Virtual PC guys) had a PS1 emulator that was crushed in court, but ran quite well. I think it was called GameStation, or something like that.
Uh, actually, most of the clones were PPC 601/604 models. The OS licensing/clones debacle was over by the time the G3 came out. I'm not saying that Motorola's not still peeved about the way the licensing went down, just that the G3 wasn't involved.
The same also exists in the USA, as established in the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992, both on recording hardware and media. This is the moderately fair act that officially gave individual users fair use rights, which were not included in the 1976 act, in exchange for taxation. That's the primary difference between an "audio" cdr and a "data" cdr - the audio cdr price includes the excise.
Of course, the DMCA nullified all of the fair use elements of AHRA in 1998, without repealing the excise.
Actually, it's $150 less than the wireless Squeezebox.
it's probably this Fostex.
I wouldn't disagree with you, and yes, I have read Nietzsche. However, I would point out that these two (actually, Nietzsche building on the foundation of Kant) brought nihilism into the mainstream social vocabulary, and into the fabric of common thought.
Are they completely responsible? No. But they did open the door. Is that a negative thing? No. But as the parent post noted, society has allowed it to evolve into a negative movement.
Nietzsche, and Kant has become the nihilistic cess pool of today.
Um, not to be too obvious, but you're stating the very reason they are nihilistic.
That's exactly what my boss did this year. Small company, and we were blown away by our end-of-year treat: 40GB ipods, itrips, and $500. They'll love you for it!
Now I can learn how to build a cluster out of all of those Timex data watches, palms, and toasters cluttering my basement ...
I always liked Amerika, too ... although the What?Records releases were good almost-mainstream albums.
3. Apple only does it for bragging rights. ....
That must be why they have so many ads spotlighting auto-mdix
GTE Wireless and their affiliates had that service -- named something like "Cell2Go". A friend of mine had it here in Nashville, and it was pretty cool. I think it got killed by the cheap cell boom, since it cost $75 on top of your local carrier.
I live in a historic district, and we've got a roaster/coffeehouse about 8 blocks from my house. I rejoice every time I can smell them from home, because that means the breeze isn't blowing through the recycling plant a mile west of the house! OK, I'm also a coffee addict. So what?!?
You'd have to buy a Ram Van for that!!
Not quite as fast, but cheaper for small networks. Plus, legacy iMacs/iBooks don't have any way to add GigE. Plus, could be a nice step toward cheap SAN and sharable scanners, etc.
Yep. Connectix (Virtual PC guys) had a PS1 emulator that was crushed in court, but ran quite well. I think it was called GameStation, or something like that.
Uh, actually, most of the clones were PPC 601/604 models. The OS licensing/clones debacle was over by the time the G3 came out. I'm not saying that Motorola's not still peeved about the way the licensing went down, just that the G3 wasn't involved.
Yeah, the blood loss gets old pretty quick :)
Bought one (combo USB/1394) for $19 at CompUSSR a few months ago.