You hit my #2 request: Go to A via B via C via D to E. Of course I'd probably only ever use one via but I really want to be able to do it. My number one request is named topographical regions. Point out the mountains, rivers, basins, etc (give the names). I was trying to find a mountain earlier and I ended up having to find driving directions then lookign that up on google maps. Even in the sat. photo it wasn't obviously a mountain.
I hope so. I really get irked when I walk by a thinly-poled picket fence (is that what you call it) where I can see another part of the fence through it. As I walk down the street I get a very distorting effect of there being a completely solid barrier followed by there being no barrier as the pickets pass between and infront of eachother. Really, it's the closest thing I've seen in real life to pixelation. I demand an upgrade.
That kind of leads to an interesting question. Could there be an advanced race (paleolithic age to almost modern in earth terms) in our solar system and we just never noticed it because it's way too different from us? If a plume of gas was sentient, would we notice?
I register with a service. If they send me a newsletter without my explicit opt in, it's spam. I do opt-out whenever I can of course, although I shouldn't have to. If "opt-out" counts, then they can make opting out as hard as they want to and it would still count.
Every game is different. The mood that is being established dictates the drawing style. Beyond that, it's not a matter of drawing style preference, it's a matter of mood preference. Serious will be realistic. Funny/comic will often be unrealistic (that's not to say low quality). This realistic/unrealistic is obviously JUST THE GRAPHICS. Everything else is quite variable.
100 hrs at $1 just isn't as smooth, that's all. If by nanopayments you mean less than $0.01, I think that's supported. Just current reports don't show fractions of cents very often.
Charge someone $.01 an hour to use a piece of software. That's an actual reasonable amount to charge for software for a change, and few(er) people would circumvent it. For a part time developer (with an actual full time job), a nice app with (only) 100,000 people using it just say, two hours a month would net you a handsom $2000 a month. Make a few others and you can quit your full time job (although that's not advisable..).
I pick 100,000 people because that's between the number of people you'd get for a pay-to-use ($20 to $50 registration) and the number if it were freeware or shareware+(bugging to pay).
Has Company A ever offered any sort of incentives to Company B to NOT sell or buy products by Company C. (Note: I did not say incentives to buy/sell Company A, I said incentives to NOT buy/sell company C.)
If this is the case, the company has committed a crime. If this isn't a crime, then what the fuck is?
Say I work for software company XYZ. While working, I develop an awesome app on the side. Either you attempt to publish the software yourself or you tell the company about the software-- either way you're fired so the company can make money off of your invention, citing the agreement you signed. You have no rights to your creation.
Say I work for a construction company XYZ. Exactly the same thing happens. How's that? The construction company paid my salary which allowed me to get a roof over my head and purchase a compurer, and it allowed me to have peace of mind enough to write software, and there's a good chance at least some of my inspiration came from on the job.
Oh boy I'm not finished yet. Now the university you graduated from comes in, points to your grants, says "I paid for you!" and now they own a piece of your software. Now mommy and daddy, those freaks, come in and do the same thing.
YOU HAVE PAID FOR NOTHING WITH YOUR OWN MONEY YOUR WHOLE LIFE, unless you print it yourself. Of course then the company that made the printer owns a stake in your software since they paid for that...
Please point to the exact spot where it ends, and make it the law.
Well I wasn't sure if su'ing to root was kosher. I know logging in as root isn't by many, and I don't see a big difference between that and logging in then su'ing to root.
I do find your points valid but I'm unsure about #4, root logs. Since we're talking about administration let's do it right: su'ing to root isn't kosher. Where in windows everyone is an administrator, the *nix equivalent is everyone is in group wheel and can sudo. So now my question is, when every root command is issued by a sudo instruction, do you have a log of who issued what instruction?
Disclaimer: I don't know if su vs sudo is a contentious topic and I don't mean to get into it if it is. I just want to know if sudo gives you a better idea of who issued a root command.
As a reply to those who are replying to you, there is not much of a difference between costing money and costing lives. Costing money will indirectly cost lives. At the very least, as your income goes down your life expectancy drops. Even more direct are the suicides which result. For example, I wonder how many people will die and have already died as a result of Enron. A hundred or more wouldn't surprise me. Stress isn't good. Remember, it might kill people 20-30 years after the fact, but just like radiation, it's the original cause (and any subsequent doses) that are to blame. The blame is not spread around it's completely leveled on everyone, just like when 10 people murder 1 person, each of the ten is as guilty as if he or she did it alone.
To me, it means that they opened it without breaking it, unlike a disection which would involve the destruction of the player.
I suggest the computing power be listed in units of moonlander equivalents.
That joke is dying.
As with what LiquidCoooled said, we also have MRAM now working. Advances come dude.
You hit my #2 request: Go to A via B via C via D to E. Of course I'd probably only ever use one via but I really want to be able to do it. My number one request is named topographical regions. Point out the mountains, rivers, basins, etc (give the names). I was trying to find a mountain earlier and I ended up having to find driving directions then lookign that up on google maps. Even in the sat. photo it wasn't obviously a mountain.
You are describing the UI to a workplace application as "exciting".
Just checking.
I hope so. I really get irked when I walk by a thinly-poled picket fence (is that what you call it) where I can see another part of the fence through it. As I walk down the street I get a very distorting effect of there being a completely solid barrier followed by there being no barrier as the pickets pass between and infront of eachother. Really, it's the closest thing I've seen in real life to pixelation. I demand an upgrade.
That kind of leads to an interesting question. Could there be an advanced race (paleolithic age to almost modern in earth terms) in our solar system and we just never noticed it because it's way too different from us? If a plume of gas was sentient, would we notice?
Festive hats.
/still waiting
I register with a service. If they send me a newsletter without my explicit opt in, it's spam. I do opt-out whenever I can of course, although I shouldn't have to. If "opt-out" counts, then they can make opting out as hard as they want to and it would still count.
I somehow missed the original. Could some one please drop me a link? Thanks
Every game is different. The mood that is being established dictates the drawing style. Beyond that, it's not a matter of drawing style preference, it's a matter of mood preference. Serious will be realistic. Funny/comic will often be unrealistic (that's not to say low quality). This realistic/unrealistic is obviously JUST THE GRAPHICS. Everything else is quite variable.
100 hrs at $1 just isn't as smooth, that's all. If by nanopayments you mean less than $0.01, I think that's supported. Just current reports don't show fractions of cents very often.
Charge someone $.01 an hour to use a piece of software. That's an actual reasonable amount to charge for software for a change, and few(er) people would circumvent it. For a part time developer (with an actual full time job), a nice app with (only) 100,000 people using it just say, two hours a month would net you a handsom $2000 a month. Make a few others and you can quit your full time job (although that's not advisable..).
I pick 100,000 people because that's between the number of people you'd get for a pay-to-use ($20 to $50 registration) and the number if it were freeware or shareware+(bugging to pay).
Has Company A ever offered any sort of incentives to Company B to NOT sell or buy products by Company C. (Note: I did not say incentives to buy/sell Company A, I said incentives to NOT buy/sell company C.)
If this is the case, the company has committed a crime. If this isn't a crime, then what the fuck is?
No. If you write it on your on time while at home, your employer owns it. Read the things you sign.
You are on very thin ice.
Say I work for software company XYZ. While working, I develop an awesome app on the side. Either you attempt to publish the software yourself or you tell the company about the software-- either way you're fired so the company can make money off of your invention, citing the agreement you signed. You have no rights to your creation.
Say I work for a construction company XYZ. Exactly the same thing happens. How's that? The construction company paid my salary which allowed me to get a roof over my head and purchase a compurer, and it allowed me to have peace of mind enough to write software, and there's a good chance at least some of my inspiration came from on the job.
Oh boy I'm not finished yet. Now the university you graduated from comes in, points to your grants, says "I paid for you!" and now they own a piece of your software. Now mommy and daddy, those freaks, come in and do the same thing.
YOU HAVE PAID FOR NOTHING WITH YOUR OWN MONEY YOUR WHOLE LIFE, unless you print it yourself. Of course then the company that made the printer owns a stake in your software since they paid for that...
Please point to the exact spot where it ends, and make it the law.
Give me the budget that they have in their disposal and I will give you the best game since Civilization. Otherwise, what's the point in saying that?
You only trust someone if you have good experiences with it again and again.
Like this story, for example.
Virgins
Inpsired
Spew
Timely
Acronyms
I'm planning on offering discounted lawn care services.
Only 200? That seems low to me. Can we confirm this number? I'm hoping that rover #100 would cost almost an order of magnitude less than rover #1.
Well I wasn't sure if su'ing to root was kosher. I know logging in as root isn't by many, and I don't see a big difference between that and logging in then su'ing to root.
Thanks
I do find your points valid but I'm unsure about #4, root logs. Since we're talking about administration let's do it right: su'ing to root isn't kosher. Where in windows everyone is an administrator, the *nix equivalent is everyone is in group wheel and can sudo. So now my question is, when every root command is issued by a sudo instruction, do you have a log of who issued what instruction?
Disclaimer: I don't know if su vs sudo is a contentious topic and I don't mean to get into it if it is. I just want to know if sudo gives you a better idea of who issued a root command.
As a reply to those who are replying to you, there is not much of a difference between costing money and costing lives. Costing money will indirectly cost lives. At the very least, as your income goes down your life expectancy drops. Even more direct are the suicides which result. For example, I wonder how many people will die and have already died as a result of Enron. A hundred or more wouldn't surprise me. Stress isn't good. Remember, it might kill people 20-30 years after the fact, but just like radiation, it's the original cause (and any subsequent doses) that are to blame. The blame is not spread around it's completely leveled on everyone, just like when 10 people murder 1 person, each of the ten is as guilty as if he or she did it alone.