No it doesn't apply to non-uniformed irregulars, historically they have been field executed as spies after any useful information has been extracted. Put on a uniform and you get GC protection, take it off and you get a bullet/hanging/trip to Gitmo.
By that logic, Mr. Al-Sadr's militia in Najaf/Kharbala, Taliban Regulars, or active elements fighting under Saddam's flag/commanders should be afforded GC protection if captured, but the Saddam Feedyeen in street clothes or Al-Quida are not.
I guess I could have phrased that as "working on XHTML strict compliance", but the RE team is focused on getting fully complaint ASAP, if they can quit trying to put out fires like "online users" and comment spam.
Fox news (and Rush, Hanity, the WSJ, and more) is a perfect example of the Free Market hard at work. Roger Ailes and Murdoch saw that a signifigant portion of the American populace were not happy with the big 3 networks, NPR, MSNBC, or CNN, so they risked a ton of their money on starting a cable news network that is distinctly different than any other cable news outlet, and they were right, they have made a ton of money and have mobilized conservative/republican voters. I find it hard to believe that Ted Turner, with his and other lefties money, couldn't take a crack at a "real" left-wing network, as opposed to the supposedly centrist current outlets. The real question is if there is actually a market for that network, Franken's radio attempt is not exactly showing that is the case, but I welcome their attempts.
Fox provides the american public with a different viewpoint on the day's news, you aren't actually suggesting that we "censor" Fox just because it doesn't toe the big government, high taxes line.
If I had the cash, I'd wipe my rear with the Mona Lisa. Either you own something and should be able to do as you please (as long as it doesn't interfere with my rights), or you don't.
Bzzt, wrong jackass 18/25 or 19/28 depending on what engine/trans combo you are running, and a fully optioned vette comes in at under $60K. Why people wanna playa hate on the 'vette, lets see the Eurotrash crank out that sort of performance at that price-point.
Not trolling here but all of the options you mentioned were java based ones. Java is not the be all and end all of languages, php has its place, just as java does. If you want to see PHP really in action, check out the horde project, yeah they have a forums/portal system, but on top of that they have a tremendous framework which can be used to add tremendous functionality to your website, ranging from FTP and NNTP gateways to a great calendar and contact manager app.
Despite the efforts of the Apache Foundation, IBM, the JBoss people and others, Sun maintains a stranglehold on java standardization and API's, which can be (and have been) changed on a whim.
<span class="rant">What pisses me off is the failures of JVM's to degrade gracefully, we have a management app for a device that is java based, but written to what appears to be Java 1.2/AWT, which JVM 1.4.* + moz 1.6 or NN4.8 pukes and crashes over, IE6 somehow stays alive, but throws exceptions all over the place. The product has been EOL'ed by the vendor but it is critical to our opperation and is the only reason I load IE ever</span>
Thanks, I noticed the prestoServe when I was looking for parts for an Ultra2 that is soon to become my testbed machine at work, got distracted and didn't google for it. I'm just going to be glad to see that SparcStation 5 disappear from my office, it is just a little underpowered for my tastes and very little disk space.
I dunno about that, look at covalent, they basicaly sell and support apache (and keep much of apache's core team employed). At the same time I don't see netcraft reporting tons of "covalent server" or whatever they are calling it these days.
Nokia 5160 (TDMA) will cause pops and rattles in my speakers and distort my crappy old 15" monitor at home, my 19" monitor at work seems to be immune to the interference tough. SMS messages seem to be worse about distortion than incomming calls as well.
Last time I checked, the Brits had a implementation of RSA long befor R, S, and A did, it just happened to be classified. Polish mathmeticians broke enigma in what 30, 31? Didn't help them much, but their techniques trained the first generation of computer cryptographers (Turing included). There was no point in having the listening/intercept nets that the US, England, and the former USSR maintained during the cold war had and China and the US have today if all you get to listen to was essentially white noise.
There are advantadges and disadvantadges to this though, Bin Laden was supposedly tracked to Tora Bora b/c he was using a "failed" brit military scheme,
but, Just like with Soviet nuke engineers, there are very good cryptanalysts/cyrtographers for hire out there, and stable, 1st world nations occasionally get outbid for their services.
...And you are going to hand over 200-700 dollars worth of Microsoft licenses as well, cause Joe Welfare's kids aren't going to have a *nix geek around to explain Gaim and OpenOffice. Hardware is cheap, but unless you/goodwill/$charity can provide support for these users unix-like systems are a no-go.
I'd be more than happy if the US government stopped handing the UN money, civilian staff and troops, and that downtown NY real estate is kinda valuable. Unfortunately, telling the UN to move their irrelevant rears back to The Hague, Berlin, Paris, or some other european locale is not politically kosher these days. The American people have yet to figure out that ~120 dicatatorships/juntas/theocracies (1 on the sec council forever) versus ~40 countries that are willing to stand up to a bully is a fight that democracy and capitalism can not win when one nation, one vote are the rules. Add in supposed allies that were taking money under the table to stab you in the back, and you kind of lose hope in a body that is supposed to be a sane and peaceful way to spread wealth, knowledge, stability, and basic human rights to the world.
Kyoto didn't pass when the dems controlled the US Senate in 01/02, bitch at them if you wanted it passed. The republicans have flat out stated that any air quality standards will have the same as any other nation.
Never mind the questions about CO2 relevance, mankind's real effect on climate , ice age/thaw cycles, etc.
...When you provide a sizeable portion of its support, both with money and enforcement, you should have the ability to dictate policy. Of course, looking at the UN's record, Lybia, The Sudan, and Syria would be at the head of the Internet censorship^W policy control, just like they are on the human rights.
Yeah, this is an big (odd) run, but it was doable when I worked in Mag production 4 years ago (RR Donnelley and Sons, Glasgow Manufacturing, PC Mag, Yahoo Internet Life, Oprah, Brides, Southern Living, Esquire, and many more). 40,000 mags on a patent line with a fixed maverick (High speed inkjet on the mag binder, the thing that prints the address) You could run before lunch if the makeready was done beforehand. Probably a 4 hr makeready, and Mavericks will always slow a line down, so worst case, you are looking a 12 hr bind job, but you will charge a premium even though you cut costs on the press by using non-UV coat cover stock, fricking genius.
That being said, if Oprah tried this it would be a bitch, what's she got 2 mil subsrcibers? Something sick like that would make for a shitty couple of days
I'll second that, From the post-ROTJ SW books, the Tim Zahn Thrawn trillogy (Dark Force), and Truce at Bakura (Still wish the Ssi-Ruivi would get more time), had great space battles. The Jedi Academy series (Sun Crusher, a half completed DS) also had good tactical descriptions as well, but not quite as good as the Thrawn series. I quit reading after I, Jedi, but I'm thinking of restarting soon.
The first mac (not apple II/III variant) I ever played with was a 9" B/W fishbowl mac running 7/7.1 at the local wal mart, it just looked cooler than those AST/ACER/Packard Bell Win 3.1 systems, but no games and double the pricetag, no thanks.
I can't see much use for attaching sticky notes to the "backs" of windows Password lists, more secure than on a post-it under the keyboard or in the desk drawer.
No it doesn't apply to non-uniformed irregulars, historically they have been field executed as spies after any useful information has been extracted. Put on a uniform and you get GC protection, take it off and you get a bullet/hanging/trip to Gitmo.
By that logic, Mr. Al-Sadr's militia in Najaf/Kharbala, Taliban Regulars, or active elements fighting under Saddam's flag/commanders should be afforded GC protection if captured, but the Saddam Feedyeen in street clothes or Al-Quida are not.
I guess I could have phrased that as "working on XHTML strict compliance", but the RE team is focused on getting fully complaint ASAP, if they can quit trying to put out fires like "online users" and comment spam.
Easy to use/set-up, GPL license, and good (not perfect) XHTML strict compliance. Check it out if you have access to php/mysql
Fox news (and Rush, Hanity, the WSJ, and more) is a perfect example of the Free Market hard at work. Roger Ailes and Murdoch saw that a signifigant portion of the American populace were not happy with the big 3 networks, NPR, MSNBC, or CNN, so they risked a ton of their money on starting a cable news network that is distinctly different than any other cable news outlet, and they were right, they have made a ton of money and have mobilized conservative/republican voters. I find it hard to believe that Ted Turner, with his and other lefties money, couldn't take a crack at a "real" left-wing network, as opposed to the supposedly centrist current outlets. The real question is if there is actually a market for that network, Franken's radio attempt is not exactly showing that is the case, but I welcome their attempts.
Fox provides the american public with a different viewpoint on the day's news, you aren't actually suggesting that we "censor" Fox just because it doesn't toe the big government, high taxes line.
You got chocolate in my peanut butter
You got peanut butter in my chocolate
If I had the cash, I'd wipe my rear with the Mona Lisa. Either you own something and should be able to do as you please (as long as it doesn't interfere with my rights), or you don't.
So if the lava cools, it would be petrified, right?
FreeBSD uses UFS or UFS+S (UFS with Softupdates), UFS+S is a very nice FS that a lot of people dislike b/c it is not a true journaling FS.
Bzzt, wrong jackass 18/25 or 19/28 depending on what engine/trans combo you are running, and a fully optioned vette comes in at under $60K. Why people wanna playa hate on the 'vette, lets see the Eurotrash crank out that sort of performance at that price-point.
Not trolling here but all of the options you mentioned were java based ones. Java is not the be all and end all of languages, php has its place, just as java does. If you want to see PHP really in action, check out the horde project, yeah they have a forums/portal system, but on top of that they have a tremendous framework which can be used to add tremendous functionality to your website, ranging from FTP and NNTP gateways to a great calendar and contact manager app.
Despite the efforts of the Apache Foundation, IBM, the JBoss people and others, Sun maintains a stranglehold on java standardization and API's, which can be (and have been) changed on a whim.
<span class="rant">What pisses me off is the failures of JVM's to degrade gracefully, we have a management app for a device that is java based, but written to what appears to be Java 1.2/AWT, which JVM 1.4.* + moz 1.6 or NN4.8 pukes and crashes over, IE6 somehow stays alive, but throws exceptions all over the place. The product has been EOL'ed by the vendor but it is critical to our opperation and is the only reason I load IE ever</span>
1.3.30 was had a windows specific bug-fix to 1.3.29 if IIRC.
Thanks, I noticed the prestoServe when I was looking for parts for an Ultra2 that is soon to become my testbed machine at work, got distracted and didn't google for it. I'm just going to be glad to see that SparcStation 5 disappear from my office, it is just a little underpowered for my tastes and very little disk space.
There is still a community around Rebellion (Supremacy in the EU), check the out at http://www.swrebellion.com
I dunno about that, look at covalent, they basicaly sell and support apache (and keep much of apache's core team employed). At the same time I don't see netcraft reporting tons of "covalent server" or whatever they are calling it these days.
Plus you get to wear those kick-ass t-shirts that say "If you see me running, you should be following me!"
Nokia 5160 (TDMA) will cause pops and rattles in my speakers and distort my crappy old 15" monitor at home, my 19" monitor at work seems to be immune to the interference tough. SMS messages seem to be worse about distortion than incomming calls as well.
Last time I checked, the Brits had a implementation of RSA long befor R, S, and A did, it just happened to be classified. Polish mathmeticians broke enigma in what 30, 31? Didn't help them much, but their techniques trained the first generation of computer cryptographers (Turing included). There was no point in having the listening/intercept nets that the US, England, and the former USSR maintained during the cold war had and China and the US have today if all you get to listen to was essentially white noise.
There are advantadges and disadvantadges to this though, Bin Laden was supposedly tracked to Tora Bora b/c he was using a "failed" brit military scheme, but, Just like with Soviet nuke engineers, there are very good cryptanalysts/cyrtographers for hire out there, and stable, 1st world nations occasionally get outbid for their services.
...And you are going to hand over 200-700 dollars worth of Microsoft licenses as well, cause Joe Welfare's kids aren't going to have a *nix geek around to explain Gaim and OpenOffice. Hardware is cheap, but unless you/goodwill/$charity can provide support for these users unix-like systems are a no-go.
I'd be more than happy if the US government stopped handing the UN money, civilian staff and troops, and that downtown NY real estate is kinda valuable. Unfortunately, telling the UN to move their irrelevant rears back to The Hague, Berlin, Paris, or some other european locale is not politically kosher these days. The American people have yet to figure out that ~120 dicatatorships/juntas/theocracies (1 on the sec council forever) versus ~40 countries that are willing to stand up to a bully is a fight that democracy and capitalism can not win when one nation, one vote are the rules. Add in supposed allies that were taking money under the table to stab you in the back, and you kind of lose hope in a body that is supposed to be a sane and peaceful way to spread wealth, knowledge, stability, and basic human rights to the world.
Kyoto didn't pass when the dems controlled the US Senate in 01/02, bitch at them if you wanted it passed. The republicans have flat out stated that any air quality standards will have the same as any other nation.
Never mind the questions about CO2 relevance, mankind's real effect on climate , ice age/thaw cycles, etc.
...When you provide a sizeable portion of its support, both with money and enforcement, you should have the ability to dictate policy. Of course, looking at the UN's record, Lybia, The Sudan, and Syria would be at the head of the Internet censorship^W policy control, just like they are on the human rights.
Yeah, this is an big (odd) run, but it was doable when I worked in Mag production 4 years ago (RR Donnelley and Sons, Glasgow Manufacturing, PC Mag, Yahoo Internet Life, Oprah, Brides, Southern Living, Esquire, and many more). 40,000 mags on a patent line with a fixed maverick (High speed inkjet on the mag binder, the thing that prints the address) You could run before lunch if the makeready was done beforehand. Probably a 4 hr makeready, and Mavericks will always slow a line down, so worst case, you are looking a 12 hr bind job, but you will charge a premium even though you cut costs on the press by using non-UV coat cover stock, fricking genius.
That being said, if Oprah tried this it would be a bitch, what's she got 2 mil subsrcibers? Something sick like that would make for a shitty couple of days
I'll second that, From the post-ROTJ SW books, the Tim Zahn Thrawn trillogy (Dark Force), and Truce at Bakura (Still wish the Ssi-Ruivi would get more time), had great space battles. The Jedi Academy series (Sun Crusher, a half completed DS) also had good tactical descriptions as well, but not quite as good as the Thrawn series. I quit reading after I, Jedi, but I'm thinking of restarting soon.
The first mac (not apple II/III variant) I ever played with was a 9" B/W fishbowl mac running 7/7.1 at the local wal mart, it just looked cooler than those AST/ACER/Packard Bell Win 3.1 systems, but no games and double the pricetag, no thanks.
I can't see much use for attaching sticky notes to the "backs" of windows
Password lists, more secure than on a post-it under the keyboard or in the desk drawer.