Seventh-day Adventists actually can be categorized quite nicely into conservative evangelicalism. They step outside the mainstream on issues like the weekly sabbath, the state of the dead and by maintaining a historicist approach to prophetic interpretation. They also have an unusually strong emphasis on religious liberty and the separation of church and state. But their soteriology/christology/etc... tend to be very orthodox evangelical.
Source: Grew up Adventist, still am a practicing Adventist, MA in Religion, and I read the work of many non-Adventist theologians and scholars.
You're actually more correct than you know. The term "scapegoat" actually came from "escape goat". It goes back to early English translations of the bible (Tyndale and KJV) and references the goat that is sent out of the camp during the Day of Atonement ceremony.
Feel free to look up the term scapegoat on Wikipedia.
I actually just dealt with this recently. Vista and 7 have no problem connecting to servers using CNAMES, but XP does. The solution is a single registry change on the server side. It's a very easy fix. Google DisableStrictNameChecking.
In most (all?) states the camera has to show that the light was red before you entered the intersection. Two pictures are taken - one of you outside the intersection with a red light and one of you in the intersection with the red light.
Oh, and the citations in Maryland include your speed. Can't speak for any other states.
It's because Intel dominates the high end. AMD can't sell a processor with a premium pricetag because its performance would compete with Intel's midrange which is priced pretty reasonably.
AMD is the loveable underdog, but don't forget how expensive their X2s were when they were dominant. AMD isn't cheap because they're doing us a favor, they're cheap because they have to be.
I can't confirm his claim that the total number of accidents increases, but studies have noted that rear end accidents go up even as the t-bone accidents go down with the cameras.
Poorly written net neutrality legislation could cause problems and reduce service quality.
For example, Akamai could work out a deal so that Comcast could cache Akamai's most popular content close to the end user. This requires less internet bandwidth and so Comcast could deliver the content to their users at a faster rate (a higher tier).
Poorly written net neutrality legislation could stop this from happening.
This is why there is some push back on net neutrality. If the legislation is screwed up, QoS and local caching that benefits the end user could end up inadvertently outlawed.
Last I heard, the clock speed was too low for it to be competitive with the different forms of DDR. DDR simply scales better. And lets face it - DDR/2/3 has been more than adequate to keep CPUs fed with data.
Actually, I had to look that up recently. It's not 3GB, it's 4GB. Here comes the science:
RAM starts from address 0. The BIOS allocates RAM from 0 up to the bottom of the PCI memory addresses mentioned above, typically limiting available RAM to between 3 GB and 3.4 GB."
I actually learned something last week, thought I'd pass it on... *Cue the "The More You Know" logo*
Looks like you ended up arguing his point. 32-bit Vista/XP are limited to a little over 3GB. How much over 3GB is determined by your hardware.
I seem to recall from reading the Bible that Jesus was not too fond of rich people. In fact, didn't he say "...I tell you the truth, it is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God. Matthew 19:24."???
First of all, Jesus is quite fond of rich and poor, sinners and saints. Secondly, this text isn't a condemnation of rich people. In the society at that time people saw a person's wealth as evidence that God approved of them and their actions. Sickness/poverty/accidental death were all viewed as punishments for sin. If you read on from the text you quoted you see the disciple's surprise at what was said. "Who then can be saved?" Their immediate reaction was "If a rich person can't make it, who can?" The point was not to condemn the wealthy - it was that no one could go to heaven without God's help.
This is not intended to dispute your point, just to show that the text you used should not be used to make that specific point.
This service is still based on fiber optics. The fiber optics go to your house. Inside your house it is distributed over coax. This article is about wiring INSIDE THE HOUSE. Therefore it is still FIOS.
This isn't even about fiber vs coax, it's about coax vs ethernet. The theory is that the existing coax within the home can be used instead of rolling out new CAT5 like they do now. With this, they still roll out the fiber to the home.
Now: FIOS->New CAT5 With this: FIOS->Existing coax
Official message boards in MMOGs have basically one thing on them: gamers shouting at the devs. Those of us that actually want to talk about playing the game with other players have to look around elsewhere. The idiots that sit there and try to make sure the devs reply to their post are poison to the community.
The solution? Get rid of the official message boards. Let the community develop on other sites. Monitor those sites and the discussions for feedback, but only post rarely, and only if you have something to say.
Gamer to gamer discussions are going to be far more helpful than a board that is just gamer shouting over gamer.
In the early days I loved the Ultima Online community on the newsgroups and on UOVault. But the communities in Galaxies and WoW are miserable unless you go to one of the forums that the devs stay off of such as the server forums and class forums. Stay out of general!
Few things are more annoying than a message subject that starts out with DEVS READ THIS NOW!
No, I didn't read the article. I've just wanted to get this off my chest for months now. This seemed like a good excuse.
Brings back memories of junior high/early high school. The girls would group up in small groups of 2-4 really close friends and then throughout the year they would have fights and switch groups.
Meanwhile the guys just got along. Really close friends were rare, but fights/enemies were rarer.
I went to a small (160 students from K-10) private school. I have no clue if public school is the same way.
Pentium 4 3.4 GHz 800 MHz FSB was $282... don't bother me until it's under $140. Top end AMD Semprons at $110 in quantity - nope, try $50 or less. I'm not even factoring in the 32-bit motherboard which will also lack salvage value, plus any other accessories tied into that architecture.
What? All the newer Semprons are 64 bit. AMD did this in response to Intel making the Celeron D 64 bit. And the P4 650 (3.4GHz, 800MHz FSB, $268 at Newegg is 64 bit. You can get a 64 bit Celeron D or a 64 bit Sempron for well under $100 dollars ($77 and $62 respectively from Newegg)
rsync + hard links is awesome. And since rsync runs on most any platform, I backup Netware/Windows Server/Windows XP and Linux to our Debian backup server. I use Apache for single file restore and a Samba share for multiple files. (Only admins can restore ATM)
I didn't use rsnapshot (didn't know about it), instead I wrote a script to take care of the linking.
It's easy, it's fast, it's reliable and I don't miss Backup Exec at all.
It probably varies from region to region, but where my wife worked the stores permitted it. It was simply when you went to far (ie stealing tags) that they had issues.
I know this is simply an anecdote, and as such may not apply to all of the Wal-Marts out there. Before I married her, my wife worked at Wal-Mart, and they certainly didn't kick people out for writing down prices. The line was when people stole the price tag on the shelf. Then they'd go after you.
Employees from big stores like that are often asked to go to competing stores and check prices on common merchandise.
I've been working to offer all of Google Talk's features into other clients. Currently, I'm working on making it as easy as possible for other clients to use Google Talk's voice features. You can expect Gaim and other clients to be interoperable with Google Talk's voice features in the near future.
He's not working on GoogleTalk, he's working on putting its features into other clients, not the least of which is GAIM.
iFolder rocks. I haven't used 3, and it's a very different product from the version we use at our office (in version 3 storage isn't encrypted and its designed to work with groups as well as with individuals), but the basic idea is the same. You have an ifolder server, and the clients stay synchronized to it.
The benefit is that my desktop at home has all the same files as my computer at work. Change a file on one, and it replicates to the other. It only replicates changes and presumably it uses rsync at its core.
Server goes down? Who cares. Your files are on your computer. Computer goes down? Grab files from the server with a java applet on any computer with a browser.
If you want to run something like this without spending money buying Novell Open Enterprise Server check out http://www.ifolder.com/index.php/Simple_Server and download Simias Simple Server.
Seventh-day Adventists actually can be categorized quite nicely into conservative evangelicalism. They step outside the mainstream on issues like the weekly sabbath, the state of the dead and by maintaining a historicist approach to prophetic interpretation. They also have an unusually strong emphasis on religious liberty and the separation of church and state. But their soteriology/christology/etc... tend to be very orthodox evangelical.
Source: Grew up Adventist, still am a practicing Adventist, MA in Religion, and I read the work of many non-Adventist theologians and scholars.
You're actually more correct than you know. The term "scapegoat" actually came from "escape goat". It goes back to early English translations of the bible (Tyndale and KJV) and references the goat that is sent out of the camp during the Day of Atonement ceremony.
Feel free to look up the term scapegoat on Wikipedia.
I actually just dealt with this recently. Vista and 7 have no problem connecting to servers using CNAMES, but XP does. The solution is a single registry change on the server side. It's a very easy fix. Google DisableStrictNameChecking.
Yeah, I don't get that. I absolutely love my Pre. And to answer your question, Exchange syncing works great.
In most (all?) states the camera has to show that the light was red before you entered the intersection. Two pictures are taken - one of you outside the intersection with a red light and one of you in the intersection with the red light.
Oh, and the citations in Maryland include your speed. Can't speak for any other states.
It's because Intel dominates the high end. AMD can't sell a processor with a premium pricetag because its performance would compete with Intel's midrange which is priced pretty reasonably.
AMD is the loveable underdog, but don't forget how expensive their X2s were when they were dominant. AMD isn't cheap because they're doing us a favor, they're cheap because they have to be.
I can't confirm his claim that the total number of accidents increases, but studies have noted that rear end accidents go up even as the t-bone accidents go down with the cameras.
Poorly written net neutrality legislation could cause problems and reduce service quality.
For example, Akamai could work out a deal so that Comcast could cache Akamai's most popular content close to the end user. This requires less internet bandwidth and so Comcast could deliver the content to their users at a faster rate (a higher tier).
Poorly written net neutrality legislation could stop this from happening.
This is why there is some push back on net neutrality. If the legislation is screwed up, QoS and local caching that benefits the end user could end up inadvertently outlawed.
Last I heard, the clock speed was too low for it to be competitive with the different forms of DDR. DDR simply scales better. And lets face it - DDR/2/3 has been more than adequate to keep CPUs fed with data.
Actually, I had to look that up recently. It's not 3GB, it's 4GB. Here comes the science:
RAM starts from address 0. The BIOS allocates RAM from 0 up to the bottom of the PCI memory addresses mentioned above, typically limiting available RAM to between 3 GB and 3.4 GB."
I actually learned something last week, thought I'd pass it on...
*Cue the "The More You Know" logo*
Looks like you ended up arguing his point. 32-bit Vista/XP are limited to a little over 3GB. How much over 3GB is determined by your hardware.
2.5" != laptop drive. Many SAS drives are 2.5" but they won't fit in a laptop anytime soon.
You can't discriminate like that. It's sexist!
This service is still based on fiber optics. The fiber optics go to your house. Inside your house it is distributed over coax. This article is about wiring INSIDE THE HOUSE. Therefore it is still FIOS.
Did no one read the article?
This isn't even about fiber vs coax, it's about coax vs ethernet. The theory is that the existing coax within the home can be used instead of rolling out new CAT5 like they do now. With this, they still roll out the fiber to the home.
Now: FIOS->New CAT5
With this: FIOS->Existing coax
Official message boards in MMOGs have basically one thing on them: gamers shouting at the devs. Those of us that actually want to talk about playing the game with other players have to look around elsewhere. The idiots that sit there and try to make sure the devs reply to their post are poison to the community.
The solution? Get rid of the official message boards. Let the community develop on other sites. Monitor those sites and the discussions for feedback, but only post rarely, and only if you have something to say.
Gamer to gamer discussions are going to be far more helpful than a board that is just gamer shouting over gamer.
In the early days I loved the Ultima Online community on the newsgroups and on UOVault. But the communities in Galaxies and WoW are miserable unless you go to one of the forums that the devs stay off of such as the server forums and class forums. Stay out of general!
Few things are more annoying than a message subject that starts out with DEVS READ THIS NOW!
No, I didn't read the article. I've just wanted to get this off my chest for months now. This seemed like a good excuse.
Brings back memories of junior high/early high school. The girls would group up in small groups of 2-4 really close friends and then throughout the year they would have fights and switch groups.
Meanwhile the guys just got along. Really close friends were rare, but fights/enemies were rarer.
I went to a small (160 students from K-10) private school. I have no clue if public school is the same way.
What? All the newer Semprons are 64 bit. AMD did this in response to Intel making the Celeron D 64 bit. And the P4 650 (3.4GHz, 800MHz FSB, $268 at Newegg is 64 bit. You can get a 64 bit Celeron D or a 64 bit Sempron for well under $100 dollars ($77 and $62 respectively from Newegg)
rsync + hard links is awesome. And since rsync runs on most any platform, I backup Netware/Windows Server/Windows XP and Linux to our Debian backup server. I use Apache for single file restore and a Samba share for multiple files. (Only admins can restore ATM)
I didn't use rsnapshot (didn't know about it), instead I wrote a script to take care of the linking.
It's easy, it's fast, it's reliable and I don't miss Backup Exec at all.
It probably varies from region to region, but where my wife worked the stores permitted it. It was simply when you went to far (ie stealing tags) that they had issues.
I know this is simply an anecdote, and as such may not apply to all of the Wal-Marts out there. Before I married her, my wife worked at Wal-Mart, and they certainly didn't kick people out for writing down prices. The line was when people stole the price tag on the shelf. Then they'd go after you.
Employees from big stores like that are often asked to go to competing stores and check prices on common merchandise.
In the quote you gave:
He's not working on GoogleTalk, he's working on putting its features into other clients, not the least of which is GAIM.
iFolder rocks. I haven't used 3, and it's a very different product from the version we use at our office (in version 3 storage isn't encrypted and its designed to work with groups as well as with individuals), but the basic idea is the same. You have an ifolder server, and the clients stay synchronized to it.
The benefit is that my desktop at home has all the same files as my computer at work. Change a file on one, and it replicates to the other. It only replicates changes and presumably it uses rsync at its core.
Server goes down? Who cares. Your files are on your computer. Computer goes down? Grab files from the server with a java applet on any computer with a browser.
If you want to run something like this without spending money buying Novell Open Enterprise Server check out http://www.ifolder.com/index.php/Simple_Server and download Simias Simple Server.
Again, iFolder rocks.
Apparently you haven't studied the history of psychiatry.
I've been using MSN Messenger with a non-hotmail/msn email address since the last few months of 2002.