This is slightly off-topic, but check out this article http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4477521,00. html from the Guardian on using Ozone to help in alleviating the problems with fillings and reducing dental decay.
Yes, you could do that, but don't you think it would be easier just to launch a cruise missile from a B-2 bomber, armed with a 200 kiloton nuke? Same result (except now expect nuclear retaliation).
Really nice. I've got a G4/400 (Gigabit Ethernet) with an ATI Rage 128 Pro w/ 16MB of VRAM and I can't use Quartz Extreme. Really, Really nice. Now I've got to buy either a Radeon or an Nvidia card w/ 32 MB and pray it works in my 2X AGP slot and prayer even harder that OS X has the right drivers for it. Thanks Steve.
...especially if you just happen to be purveyor of old, unencrypted hardware (just like the stuff I'm using now). For these people, all the MPAA/RIAA bullshit will be a godsend as the market for old used equipment skyrockets. So, don't throw out that old PC or Mac folks, they might be the only way you can keep your freedom.
Even if the statistics are true, which I doubt, I don't see how this makes one whit of difference. Penetration of Linux into the desktop market might be slow or stalling, but it's penetration into the server market is it's real strength. There Linux is doing extremely well, to the point where M$ is in dreaded fear of it. Most people in the Linux community forget that for the average User, Linux is not easy to either install or use for the average user (I use MacOS X, and use the command line frequently, it's nice to finally have a Mac with a command line). I applaud the Linux community for their efforts in making such an excellent stable OS, but for Joe and Janey Sixpack, trying to figure out how to configure it can be daunting.
"...and these atomic bombs which science burst upon the world that night were strange even to the men who used them."
H.G. Wells, "The World Set Free", 1914
Of course, the story deals with much, much more than just atomic weapons (atomic riveting?), it's a tale of how science will free man to do great things, with a liberal dose of Wells' theories on how civilization should work.
This is slightly off-topic, but check out this article http://www.guardian.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4477521,00. html from the Guardian on using Ozone to help in alleviating the problems with fillings and reducing dental decay.
I'd rather see The Bare Pimp Project from 'Trailer Park Boys' on IMAX. That'd be a hoot...
Yes, you could do that, but don't you think it would be easier just to launch a cruise missile from a B-2 bomber, armed with a 200 kiloton nuke? Same result (except now expect nuclear retaliation).
...generating voices in my head, or in the head of anybody in the vicinity. Great, just what I need, my dog begging me to take him to the Gap.
Quick, somebody alert Homeland Security! Save us from the politically correct!
Yeah, cut versions of movies, the A-Team, Miami Vice and of course, Wrassling by Vince McMahon. Now you know you're dealing with a classy channel.
So, basically, it's open source.
They probably will use Mozilla later, only they'll call it 'iBrowser' or something with 'i'.
Really nice. I've got a G4/400 (Gigabit Ethernet) with an ATI Rage 128 Pro w/ 16MB of VRAM and I can't use Quartz Extreme. Really, Really nice. Now I've got to buy either a Radeon or an Nvidia card w/ 32 MB and pray it works in my 2X AGP slot and prayer even harder that OS X has the right drivers for it. Thanks Steve.
...cause it could be all too real. It thought it was April Fool's, not Halloween.
...especially if you just happen to be purveyor of old, unencrypted hardware (just like the stuff I'm using now). For these people, all the MPAA/RIAA bullshit will be a godsend as the market for old used equipment skyrockets. So, don't throw out that old PC or Mac folks, they might be the only way you can keep your freedom.
Even if the statistics are true, which I doubt, I don't see how this makes one whit of difference. Penetration of Linux into the desktop market might be slow or stalling, but it's penetration into the server market is it's real strength. There Linux is doing extremely well, to the point where M$ is in dreaded fear of it. Most people in the Linux community forget that for the average User, Linux is not easy to either install or use for the average user (I use MacOS X, and use the command line frequently, it's nice to finally have a Mac with a command line). I applaud the Linux community for their efforts in making such an excellent stable OS, but for Joe and Janey Sixpack, trying to figure out how to configure it can be daunting.
"...and these atomic bombs which science burst upon the world that night were strange even to the men who used them."
H.G. Wells, "The World Set Free", 1914
Of course, the story deals with much, much more than just atomic weapons (atomic riveting?), it's a tale of how science will free man to do great things, with a liberal dose of Wells' theories on how civilization should work.