It kicks on 30 seconds *before* he uses it. Presumably it's recording all the time but throwing everything older than 30 seconds away, up until the time it's triggered.
Or are you concerned that it doesn't store everything? That's a reasonable concern, but constant recording might have some practical problems, like storage capacity or how to find significant footage in amongst the donuts.
I was foolish enough to keep my order for a new refrigerator active, despite weeks of delay in delivery. They had no problem accepting my money (they took it when I ordered it) but even after it had been delivered to their store they took a week and a half to get it to me.
After talking to me every day, assuring me, "We're loading it on the truck right now."
When it was finally delivered, the truck driver (who worked for a delivery company, not Sears) apologized profusely and told me that he had been standing right next to the Sears guy the previous day, listening to him lie to me.
It'll be a cold day in Hell before they see any more of my money.
I tell my students that they should definitely take a look at what Wikipedia says. It sometimes has good information, and can be a great jumping off point for further research.
I also tell them that they'll lose points if they actually cite it directly, since you cannot depend on its information. Wikipedia is not evidence, it's just background for further research.
I think it was a mistake for the mods to mod you down. I've always believed that a "I disagree" is a bad reason for a downmod. Here is a prime example, folks. If you disagree with this guy, you should allow his voice to be heard. He's his own best antagonist.
I don't know if he's right about the effect of the Internet on "professional tastemakers," but if he is, that's got to be one of the best things the Internet has ever accomplished.
You're saying that you are less capable of doing without the aid than you were before you started using it. That's not the same as saying you are less *capable* now than before you started using it.
Are you less capable *with* the GPS than you were before, when you were relying entirely on your own skills?
We tried using a virtual machine to run National Instrument's LabView. It did not get along well with the NI Elvis breadboard systems we are using. Using it on native Win7 machines didn't work either.
XP mode is a VM based technology, though admittedly not the same as we used. Does it communicate better with external hardware than VMware?
I don't know the nature of the software she was using, but some I have seen in optomitrists' offices *does* run hardware. If that's the case, XP mode and other virtual machines might not be good a solution.
I don't know. I have gotten several "invites" from people I have never heard of. I've also gotten invitations from some people I *do* know. There's always a slight tinge of guilt when I ignore them (especially when I got one from my sister) but not enough to cause me to respond.
Other than the invitations I get on a regular basis, I've never had anything to do with LinkedIn. I've no particular interest in it.
Yeah, when management says "There's no pressure," or "This has nothing to do with that incident when..." then you know there *is* and it certainly *does*.
I was on a year to year appointment when I gave an F to the professor's kid. I didn't worry too much, I knew the chair had my back, and there were no donors involved. Since then I became staff rather than faculty (well, part time faculty only) and am a bit more protected. Lower on the social ladder maybe, but overall better off.
My high school chemistry/physics teacher gave us each a blank 8 1/2 x 11 sheet of paper and told us we could bring it to the final. Anything we had written on it was legal.
He told us that if we hand wrote all our "cheat notes" we would never use them, since by writing them we would end up learning the material. He was mostly right.
When I got to the university, the physics department had the same policy. Their only rules were "no machine generated content" and "one side only." You had to hand write it.
If my students don't do the work and I fail them, my chair doesn't mind a bit. My dean doesn't get involved, nor does the provost, since they're on the management side of the fence, not the academic side. It's not their call. I suppose if we had big donors and their children were in one of my classes there might be some blowback, but so far that hasn't happened. Our donors, such as they are, tend to be corporations, not individuals.
I did fail a professor's son once for cheating. He fought it and ended up taking the F and the letter in his file. As far as I know his dad didn't get involved.
You don't even have to do that. The Kickstarter is not for development of a Windows version, it's for development of OpenShot. It will be released under Windows, Mac and Linux.
I saw his presentation at SCALE and he owned up to many stability problems in the old code. That was the reason for the ground up rewrite. The old code depended on third party libraries, and many of the bugs were not accessible to him, so he's written his own engine. And he says it's much more stable--his demos at SCALE seemed to demonstrate that.
Gasoline nozzles are also called "unleaded" nozzles--because it used to be that "standard" gasoline was leaded and the smaller fill throat was created to prevent you from putting leaded gas into your unleaded tank and ruining your catalytic converter.
Now, of course, leaded gas and its nozzles are gone, but we still have the smaller nozzles, only they are now "standard" gasoline.
So now diesel is smaller than that?
Some type of fuel (maybe avgas? Which is leaded) uses a flared and flattened nozzle.
When CDs were introduced, they came at a significant premium over LPs. An LP might cost $10-12, whereas that same album as a CD would run $15-20. Artsts were paid their percentage based on what LP sales would have been -- that premium went solely to the label.
This was justified by the additional production costs, as well as an improvement in durability and sound quality. And it probably did cost more to manufacture at the time.
But the production costs came down and the premium for CDs never did, at least until downloading started. And artists continued to be paid as if they were selling the same number of LPs, at LP prices.
A friend of mine regularly sends such pps files. LibreOffice mostly opens them fine. The ones that someone got "artistic" with enough to make them not open well I just don't worry about.
It kicks on 30 seconds *before* he uses it. Presumably it's recording all the time but throwing everything older than 30 seconds away, up until the time it's triggered.
Or are you concerned that it doesn't store everything? That's a reasonable concern, but constant recording might have some practical problems, like storage capacity or how to find significant footage in amongst the donuts.
If all you're selling is the bits, you're right.
They need to figure out some sort of value added, which probably involves something physical.
I was foolish enough to keep my order for a new refrigerator active, despite weeks of delay in delivery. They had no problem accepting my money (they took it when I ordered it) but even after it had been delivered to their store they took a week and a half to get it to me.
After talking to me every day, assuring me, "We're loading it on the truck right now."
When it was finally delivered, the truck driver (who worked for a delivery company, not Sears) apologized profusely and told me that he had been standing right next to the Sears guy the previous day, listening to him lie to me.
It'll be a cold day in Hell before they see any more of my money.
Yup. Very similar.
Um. Since your crop *is* the seeds, that leads to making the product seedless seeds.
Ahem!
You're citing Wikipedia? As evidence?
I tell my students that they should definitely take a look at what Wikipedia says. It sometimes has good information, and can be a great jumping off point for further research.
I also tell them that they'll lose points if they actually cite it directly, since you cannot depend on its information. Wikipedia is not evidence, it's just background for further research.
Whew.
I think it was a mistake for the mods to mod you down. I've always believed that a "I disagree" is a bad reason for a downmod. Here is a prime example, folks. If you disagree with this guy, you should allow his voice to be heard. He's his own best antagonist.
I don't know if he's right about the effect of the Internet on "professional tastemakers," but if he is, that's got to be one of the best things the Internet has ever accomplished.
You're saying that you are less capable of doing without the aid than you were before you started using it. That's not the same as saying you are less *capable* now than before you started using it.
Are you less capable *with* the GPS than you were before, when you were relying entirely on your own skills?
Frankly, I wish that were true.
My Bionic just upgraded to Jelly Bean, after upgrading to ICS just a few months ago.
I want Gingerbread back. It was faster and more responsive.
In any case, my 18 month old Motorola phone just got a major upgrade (less than a week ago.) So I call BS.
How well does this interact with hardware?
We tried using a virtual machine to run National Instrument's LabView. It did not get along well with the NI Elvis breadboard systems we are using. Using it on native Win7 machines didn't work either.
XP mode is a VM based technology, though admittedly not the same as we used. Does it communicate better with external hardware than VMware?
I don't know the nature of the software she was using, but some I have seen in optomitrists' offices *does* run hardware. If that's the case, XP mode and other virtual machines might not be good a solution.
I don't know. I have gotten several "invites" from people I have never heard of. I've also gotten invitations from some people I *do* know. There's always a slight tinge of guilt when I ignore them (especially when I got one from my sister) but not enough to cause me to respond.
Other than the invitations I get on a regular basis, I've never had anything to do with LinkedIn. I've no particular interest in it.
Um. So which one of our political parties is *not* Corporatist?
I seem to have missed that part.
Yeah, when management says "There's no pressure," or "This has nothing to do with that incident when..." then you know there *is* and it certainly *does*.
I was on a year to year appointment when I gave an F to the professor's kid. I didn't worry too much, I knew the chair had my back, and there were no donors involved. Since then I became staff rather than faculty (well, part time faculty only) and am a bit more protected. Lower on the social ladder maybe, but overall better off.
My high school chemistry/physics teacher gave us each a blank 8 1/2 x 11 sheet of paper and told us we could bring it to the final. Anything we had written on it was legal.
He told us that if we hand wrote all our "cheat notes" we would never use them, since by writing them we would end up learning the material. He was mostly right.
When I got to the university, the physics department had the same policy. Their only rules were "no machine generated content" and "one side only." You had to hand write it.
If my students don't do the work and I fail them, my chair doesn't mind a bit. My dean doesn't get involved, nor does the provost, since they're on the management side of the fence, not the academic side. It's not their call. I suppose if we had big donors and their children were in one of my classes there might be some blowback, but so far that hasn't happened. Our donors, such as they are, tend to be corporations, not individuals.
I did fail a professor's son once for cheating. He fought it and ended up taking the F and the letter in his file. As far as I know his dad didn't get involved.
Why go to all the trouble of reverting the snapshot?
Just set the disk to "non-persistent" and nothing they do will modify the system. Each time the VM is restarted it's back to its default state.
I don't have any experience with VirtualBox, but with VMware include a line something like this in the .vmx file:
ide0:0.mode = "independent-nonpersistent"
When you want to make changes, shut down the VM and change that line to:
ide0:0.mode = "persistent"
then change it back when it's the way you want it.
I'm sure VirtualBox has something similar.
You don't even have to do that. The Kickstarter is not for development of a Windows version, it's for development of OpenShot. It will be released under Windows, Mac and Linux.
I saw his presentation at SCALE and he owned up to many stability problems in the old code. That was the reason for the ground up rewrite. The old code depended on third party libraries, and many of the bugs were not accessible to him, so he's written his own engine. And he says it's much more stable--his demos at SCALE seemed to demonstrate that.
That could be. The term does sound evocative, but I don't work in a very phone oriented position, so I may not have been exposed to it.
Gasoline nozzles are also called "unleaded" nozzles--because it used to be that "standard" gasoline was leaded and the smaller fill throat was created to prevent you from putting leaded gas into your unleaded tank and ruining your catalytic converter.
Now, of course, leaded gas and its nozzles are gone, but we still have the smaller nozzles, only they are now "standard" gasoline.
So now diesel is smaller than that?
Some type of fuel (maybe avgas? Which is leaded) uses a flared and flattened nozzle.
I don't think most Americans have ever heard the word "petrol."
And I don't think I've ever met an American who would confuse "gasoline" for "diesel."
I've never heard it. <shrug>
I haven't hit 60 yet.
Not here. Deans are former professors. They live on the administrative side of the house. Chairs of departments are professors, but not deans.
When CDs were introduced, they came at a significant premium over LPs. An LP might cost $10-12, whereas that same album as a CD would run $15-20. Artsts were paid their percentage based on what LP sales would have been -- that premium went solely to the label.
This was justified by the additional production costs, as well as an improvement in durability and sound quality. And it probably did cost more to manufacture at the time.
But the production costs came down and the premium for CDs never did, at least until downloading started. And artists continued to be paid as if they were selling the same number of LPs, at LP prices.
God, I wish.
A friend of mine regularly sends such pps files. LibreOffice mostly opens them fine. The ones that someone got "artistic" with enough to make them not open well I just don't worry about.