At COMDEX I asked one of the progeny guys about this. He told me that it was because they try to be as multi-platform as possible: it should work on an old ultra-5 as well as on your amd-64. Making sure something works on a headless box is higher priority than making it pretty. Comes down to design philosophy I guess.
I have the highlander katana, I bought it at a store called "Natural Lights" in Pueblo, Colorado. Only ran me a couple hundred, and it's decent quality for a show-sword. Just don't expect to fight with it:)
It's good to see that as a doctor you're will to help anyone who needs help....however I have a true first-hand story coming up.
There is a lawyer in a town in Colorado (Canon City) named Anna Owen. She's not a very good lawyer, btw. She is, however, the primary guardian of my roommates neice. About 5 or 6 months ago she had two anuerisms [sp?], and was rushed to the hospital in Pueblo CO
The second she got in, she started telling everyone how she was a lawyer, and making demands, refusing to sign forms, etc. Frankly, how she was able to be a bitch with two anuerisms is beyond me.
The doctors, not being idiots, or as nice as you perhaps, refused to take care of her, and I can see why. Imagine the lawsuits from her being permanantly brain damaged. They thusly sent her to Denver for treatment, and she was treated quite well. Now here's the kick in the balls.
She, after recovering, is able to work, and does. However, she is now suing the hospital in Denver for causing her undue harm, or some such thing. I wish I had the specifics of the suit at hand. The way I look at it, she had two veins in her head blow up and she's still able to do EVERYTHING she did before, that to me is a miracle in itself, and a testament to the treatment the doctors gave her.
It's good to treat everyone equally, but it turns out the two self-protective doctors here in Pueblo are the winners in this case. But you seem nice, so I hope YMMV.
A REAL all-out space race, open to everyone with will and a national budget, winner probably getting to own space
I predict that there will not be a space race, because the cost-benefit isn't acceptable yet. If this technology is only 2 years away (doubtful again), then there would be massive funding to accelerate the program if there was enough interest. Lack of interest now means that there is probably not going to be much interest when the nanotubes arrive.
Here in Pueblo the Californians have banned smoking in bars too. Somehow the housing prices have stayed normal here, though. Probably because no one that had money would ever dream of living here.
The RIAA used an altered version of their Kazaa client to find all those people that they then subpeonaed, which Sherman Networks feels violates their rights.
While the the pressure falling 9mm Hg isn't too dramatic, and wouldn't be noticable without sensors, I could see that this would be bad. But how bad exactly? If they can't find the leak soon, I'm sure they could bring more O2 up quick enough, but what if they don't find it even after that? Could the ISS be shutdown because of the added cost of O2 shipments?
Last year I assisted with some research involving Poincare along with four other professors. We studied weak wide-angle temperature correlations in the cosmic MICROWAVE background.
There exists a simple geometric model of a NON-INFINITE and NON-NEGATIVE curved space, which we call the POINCARE space.
First, he states that he is either Jean-Pierre Luminet, Alain Riazuelo, Jeffery Weeks, Jean-Philippe Uzan, or Roland Lehoucq, none of whom are Computer Science professors as his sig claims him to be. Second, none of these gentlemen teach at 'slaughter college', which once again does not exist.
Finally, that particular study was interesting, but solving Poincare's theory wouldn't affect it at all. He wrongly used Poincare's significance. The Planck surveryor data should determine Omega0 to within 1%, and from that it will be simple to conclude (as the fine men who studied this did) that if Omega0 is less than 1.01, Poincare's dodecahedron makes a bad model of the universe, and if it's greater then it's a good model. This is not dependant on proving Poincare's theorum.
I live in Colorado, in an area were there are a lot of Elk Ranches (Yes, they do exist). CWD is covered fairly regularly by the local papers when they don't have enough fluff to fill the space
Basically, no one has caught CWD as far as they can tell, yet. They really have no clue if it's possible, but there are a few cases here in Colorado where people have gotten Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and have eaten wild elk. CJ disease is what humans get from mad cow. It is of course possible they got it from some other mean, but when all the locals infected live in the mountains and hunt for food...it's hard not to make conclutions.
1) some potential for transmission of CWD to humans via meat; 2) CWD is similar to Mad Cow, but 3) don't panic, because you can't get Mad Cow from eating the meat of an infected animal.
1) It might be possible, as I already mentioned. 2) Veeeery similar. 3) They were referring to getting CWD from eating meat, which they aren't really 100% sure on. At least the ranchers out here aren't
CWD is, incidently, airborne. They have determined this because wild elk get it from going to areas near penned elk. Of course this isn't 'official', and they'll rather term it 'possible lateral transmission', but it happens.
That beer was so ignorant, it confused Mexico with Canada on a map AND thinks Saddam had something to do with 9/11.
Typical Euro-drivel. Our northern neighbors, bless their spanish-speaking hearts, would agree that Saddam was behind the 9/11 attacks, because he invaded Kuwait, which shows how anti-american he is. Not only that, but he mastered the art of making invisible WMDs - a true threat to America The Perfect!
Besides, I saw a picture of Saddam and Osama together, and there's no way in hell it could be photoshopped. Evil Bert is in on it too.
I live in Pueblo, south of Colorado Springs, and saw the laser test. I had no clue what it was, and didn't get a chance to film it. I can say, though, that it was a very bizarre sight. I had no clue what it was until I saw this on/.
Also in redhat-artwork, comes with KDE.
At COMDEX I asked one of the progeny guys about this. He told me that it was because they try to be as multi-platform as possible: it should work on an old ultra-5 as well as on your amd-64. Making sure something works on a headless box is higher priority than making it pretty. Comes down to design philosophy I guess.
Dogg
I have the highlander katana, I bought it at a store called "Natural Lights" in Pueblo, Colorado. Only ran me a couple hundred, and it's decent quality for a show-sword. Just don't expect to fight with it :)
It's good to see that as a doctor you're will to help anyone who needs help....however I have a true first-hand story coming up.
There is a lawyer in a town in Colorado (Canon City) named Anna Owen. She's not a very good lawyer, btw. She is, however, the primary guardian of my roommates neice. About 5 or 6 months ago she had two anuerisms [sp?], and was rushed to the hospital in Pueblo CO
The second she got in, she started telling everyone how she was a lawyer, and making demands, refusing to sign forms, etc. Frankly, how she was able to be a bitch with two anuerisms is beyond me.
The doctors, not being idiots, or as nice as you perhaps, refused to take care of her, and I can see why. Imagine the lawsuits from her being permanantly brain damaged. They thusly sent her to Denver for treatment, and she was treated quite well. Now here's the kick in the balls.
She, after recovering, is able to work, and does. However, she is now suing the hospital in Denver for causing her undue harm, or some such thing. I wish I had the specifics of the suit at hand. The way I look at it, she had two veins in her head blow up and she's still able to do EVERYTHING she did before, that to me is a miracle in itself, and a testament to the treatment the doctors gave her.
It's good to treat everyone equally, but it turns out the two self-protective doctors here in Pueblo are the winners in this case. But you seem nice, so I hope YMMV.
Silly mods, the joke is his user name...think it through......YES, that's it!!
You just don't like that you're on my foes list, Mr Troll :)
Crap, what was I going to post about?
RTFA? Are you kidding?! :)
The title makes it look like both SCO and IBM is supposed to produce code as well, when in fact just SCO has to show proof. Bad Simoniker!! Bad!!
Dogg
A REAL all-out space race, open to everyone with will and a national budget, winner probably getting to own space
I predict that there will not be a space race, because the cost-benefit isn't acceptable yet. If this technology is only 2 years away (doubtful again), then there would be massive funding to accelerate the program if there was enough interest. Lack of interest now means that there is probably not going to be much interest when the nanotubes arrive.
DoggHere in Pueblo the Californians have banned smoking in bars too. Somehow the housing prices have stayed normal here, though. Probably because no one that had money would ever dream of living here.
The RIAA used an altered version of their Kazaa client to find all those people that they then subpeonaed, which Sherman Networks feels violates their rights.
What's good for the goose is good for the gander.
Dogg
Hrm, I wonder if that accounts for my odd blood-sugar problems lately. Thank you for that link, I'd mod you up if I had the points.
dogg
I would say relevent to a degree. Poincare doesn't need to be proved to validate their theory.
This is a study referenced by a troll earlier that demonstrates why Poincare could also describe the universe.
dogg
Last year I assisted with some research involving Poincare along with four other professors. We studied weak wide-angle temperature correlations in the cosmic MICROWAVE background.
There exists a simple geometric model of a NON-INFINITE and NON-NEGATIVE curved space, which we call the POINCARE space.
First, he states that he is either Jean-Pierre Luminet, Alain Riazuelo, Jeffery Weeks, Jean-Philippe Uzan, or Roland Lehoucq, none of whom are Computer Science professors as his sig claims him to be. Second, none of these gentlemen teach at 'slaughter college', which once again does not exist.
Finally, that particular study was interesting, but solving Poincare's theory wouldn't affect it at all. He wrongly used Poincare's significance. The Planck surveryor data should determine Omega0 to within 1%, and from that it will be simple to conclude (as the fine men who studied this did) that if Omega0 is less than 1.01, Poincare's dodecahedron makes a bad model of the universe, and if it's greater then it's a good model. This is not dependant on proving Poincare's theorum.
doggThere is no Slaughter college, and he is a known troll. dogg
I live in Colorado, in an area were there are a lot of Elk Ranches (Yes, they do exist). CWD is covered fairly regularly by the local papers when they don't have enough fluff to fill the space
Basically, no one has caught CWD as far as they can tell, yet. They really have no clue if it's possible, but there are a few cases here in Colorado where people have gotten Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and have eaten wild elk. CJ disease is what humans get from mad cow. It is of course possible they got it from some other mean, but when all the locals infected live in the mountains and hunt for food...it's hard not to make conclutions.
1) some potential for transmission of CWD to humans via meat; 2) CWD is similar to Mad Cow, but 3) don't panic, because you can't get Mad Cow from eating the meat of an infected animal.
1) It might be possible, as I already mentioned. 2) Veeeery similar. 3) They were referring to getting CWD from eating meat, which they aren't really 100% sure on. At least the ranchers out here aren't
CWD is, incidently, airborne. They have determined this because wild elk get it from going to areas near penned elk. Of course this isn't 'official', and they'll rather term it 'possible lateral transmission', but it happens.
dogg
You can get OEM support from HP IIRC. They sell desktops with MDK 9.1 "Lite", for rather good prices. Dogg
That beer was so ignorant, it confused Mexico with Canada on a map AND thinks Saddam had something to do with 9/11.
Typical Euro-drivel. Our northern neighbors, bless their spanish-speaking hearts, would agree that Saddam was behind the 9/11 attacks, because he invaded Kuwait, which shows how anti-american he is. Not only that, but he mastered the art of making invisible WMDs - a true threat to America The Perfect!
Besides, I saw a picture of Saddam and Osama together, and there's no way in hell it could be photoshopped. Evil Bert is in on it too.
Dogg
Then again, it's not nice to always blame Darl.
Dogg
Dogg
Dogg
Dogg