sometimes i wonder about the motivations of slashdot. the story links directly to a page with spam. at least on digg.com the community can pull the article by voting if it sucks, that way only good articles are out there.
I made the mistake of changing my info from 000-000-0000 to my real cell phone number and i get alot of calls from marketers telling me my site is ugly and they can redo it for a fee. I asked them which site and they dont know the name or what it looks like. they still continue to call my cell after is said DO NOT CALL.
I like some of the sites they link to. Some useful stuff. Like how to make a rocket out of a match. http://www.matchrockets.com/ Before internet, I once payed $2 out of the back of a comic book to learn that.
Has anyone thought of using a P2P network such as Gnutella or Edonkey / Emule for this? What if the provider's webpage had a link for a file hash to be found and for Emule to automatically download. The content is secure because its very difficult to generate a forged file for a hash thus a 'trusted peer' moderator wouldn't be needed. Mule is very good at redistributing content across its entire network even if its not actively being downloaded by yourself, it spreads rare files across the network to ensure that all content is accessible. Any comments on this? This would also useful for general file sharing too.
yeah man, unfortunately i found out that was the problem! your a genious!
yellow stains == piss
i agree. he doesent sound like he knows how to use asp.net right.
sometimes i wonder about the motivations of slashdot. the story links directly to a page with spam. at least on digg.com the community can pull the article by voting if it sucks, that way only good articles are out there.
it was digged. digg.com
I made the mistake of changing my info from 000-000-0000 to my real cell phone number and i get alot of calls from marketers telling me my site is ugly and they can redo it for a fee. I asked them which site and they dont know the name or what it looks like. they still continue to call my cell after is said DO NOT CALL.
the problem is the odbc not IIS.
gnulinux is great!
here is a picture of one. it makes it easier to see how it works.
HERE
here is a picture of one. it makes it easier to see how it works.
i was replying to another post that got modded away after i replied to it.3 2&cid=13216485
http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1577
its a weird one, bunch of numbers.
what is it? im afraid to run it.
I like some of the sites they link to. Some useful stuff. Like how to make a rocket out of a match.
http://www.matchrockets.com/
Before internet, I once payed $2 out of the back of a comic book to learn that.
refresh it yo!
Has anyone thought of using a P2P network such as Gnutella or Edonkey / Emule for this? What if the provider's webpage had a link for a file hash to be found and for Emule to automatically download. The content is secure because its very difficult to generate a forged file for a hash thus a 'trusted peer' moderator wouldn't be needed. Mule is very good at redistributing content across its entire network even if its not actively being downloaded by yourself, it spreads rare files across the network to ensure that all content is accessible. Any comments on this? This would also useful for general file sharing too.
http://www.physorg.com.nyud.net:8090/news1333.html