Mac OS X print drivers That's seems pretty important, especially for schematics.
Actually, it's more important for the board layout as everything must be perfectly 1:1 to see that everything fits appropriately (particularly if you're working with a new part and have just designed a new footprint). Mac OS X's X11 handles printing just fine (perhaps without the standard windows, however). If you're still not satisfied, print to PostScript and open in Preview.
Was it by chance looking for the license file? Just click the browse button and point it at your EAGLE-X11/bin/freeware.key.
As a user of the OS X version of Eagle, the fact that it runs under X11 instead of in aqua does not diminish the program's usefulness. Sure, nice things such as Mac OS X print drivers, inline spell checkers, common dialog boxes, and pretty widows are nice, but they are not necessary in the least. Installation is a breeze if you follow the steps in the readme. It is still the same "professional grade" as used in Linux and Windows!
My spam filter has falsely identified one sales order in the last few years as spam (from Digi-Key, not Apple), but it's still "learning". Gotta always give those messages a brief scan.
As far as the insurance companies, AAA seemed to have no problems with printed email receipts when I filed my claim a year ago.
Not to mention that they skipped more version numbers than most mature programs could ever hope to obtain. Quoth the wiki:
The first widely-distributed version of GNU Emacs was 15.34, which appeared in 1985. (Versions 2 through 12 never existed. Earlier versions of GNU Emacs had been numbered "1.x.x", but sometime after version 1.12 the decision was made to drop the "1", as it was thought the major number would never change. Version 13, the first public release, was made on March 20, 1985.
A senator or representative is only a moron outside his or her district for pork. Inside, it's a job well done, bringing home the bacon. Example: All the other states save Alaska are outraged by the bridge to nowhere, but back on the frozen tundra, they're heros.
On the one hand, these guys do risk alienating the voters for introducing this bad legislation, but on the other hand, they risk enough funding to pay for their re-election.
What about using an infrared camera with the same motion algorithm? Seems to me that it would be pretty tricky to mask your heat signature while cruising through the jungle/desert/wherever you install this.
And how often does this exactly happen? When the ambulance comes from behind, they can't force you to speed. Your speeding still breaks the spirit as well as the letter of the law. The other "examples" are nice stretches. What is wrong with admitting you were speeding because you wanted to and face the music???
Apple does not design processors anymore than Dell does. You can bet that if Motorola or IBM starts offering a faster chip, Apple will jump on it. To switch architectures may become an option at some point, but that's going to be a huge mess.
I apologize for my ignorance, but which laptops can decode HD video using less power? Do they have dedicated hardware to do so or are they throwing a desktop class processor in the box?
It's not the fault of Apple or any other manufacturer to continue the march of progress. I am disappointed that my spiffy new PowerBook cannot take advantage of QuickTime 7's H.264. Does this mean that Apple should not offer the software to render H.264 in HD until their entire product line can support it? Of course not. The requirements are what they are based on the way the software is engineered.
While I would agree that memory and hard drives are very necessary upgrades, I do not think that the video card belongs on that list as well. For the majority of users, their computer experience is not limited by their video card. I have many clients that are still getting good use out of original iMacs, with their Rage Pro Turbo (6 MB) chips. If the Rage card were mounted on an AGP slot, would it really be cost effective to upgrade? The limiting factor on their computer's performance is first RAM and second CPU/chipset/bus speeds. Hard drive capacity gets increased when your drive is full, not generally a performance issue. For those that are interested in lots of power and upgradability, you can pay more $$$ for the PowerMac line.
I'm sure there is already an agreement that you have to sign or at least click through. The problem is that it is 20 pages in length, written in legalize.
So what happens if I use an old analog-style wireless phone for my banking and someone with a portable radio overhears my conversation and intercepts my account information? Is the bank still responsible for the breach of security? Due diligence on the part of the consumer is expected in all sorts of other areas of life. If my car is stolen because I left the doors unlocked, I don't get to sue Honda because it should have warned me, even though they *knew* about the problem.
Also, the man regularly initiated international wire transfers, hence no fraud alert triggered.
The old adage still rings true; a fool and his money are soon parted.
The cost of modern fuel cells can be reduced through mass production, but the cost of the platinum membrane is still prohibitively high. Until the amount of platinum can be reduced, fuel cells will never be able to compete with other energy storage devices.
If they are a responsible company, they should release a patch in a couple years, once they are no longer gaining revenue for the product. Intuit did something similar with Turbo Tax.
You'd have an excellent point, except.com seems to have become the dumping ground for everything on the web. How many web sites in a random google search are anything but.com?
Despite all the examples of excess, government works most of the time for most people. Of course it makes mistakes, but it is a human run organization and is subject to fallibility.
So, rather than asking federal officials to pay special attention when the public's right to know might collide with the government's need to safeguard our security, Ashcroft instead asked them to consider whether "institutional, commercial and personal privacy interests could be implicated by disclosure of the information." Even more disturbing, he wrote:
"When you carefully consider FOIA requests and decide to withhold records, in whole or in part, you can be assured that the Department of Justice will defend your decisions unless they lack a sound legal basis or present an unwarranted risk of adverse impact on the ability of other agencies to protect other important records."
The Greenwich case appears to be an extension of the precident set by General Ashcroft. If FOIA is curtailed, how will journalists and watchdog groups get their information they use to keep government honest?
This deleting of home directories for typing in the wrong activation key is the same thing. It doesn't take into account accidents.
Ending up with a pirated key in the activation box isn't exactly an accident. On second thought, after watching my files end up down the drain for trying to get away with not paying for this software, "whoops!" is right.
He must have driven the I-5 considering at 2:48 you see Westley (off the I-5) and at 1:41 you see Kettleman City/41 (also off the I-5). The 99 is also not hilly between the Grapevine and Sacramento. I used to commute weekly between Pomona & Fresno, and from what I can see, this is not the 99.
Was it by chance looking for the license file? Just click the browse button and point it at your EAGLE-X11/bin/freeware.key.
As a user of the OS X version of Eagle, the fact that it runs under X11 instead of in aqua does not diminish the program's usefulness. Sure, nice things such as Mac OS X print drivers, inline spell checkers, common dialog boxes, and pretty widows are nice, but they are not necessary in the least. Installation is a breeze if you follow the steps in the readme. It is still the same "professional grade" as used in Linux and Windows!
My spam filter has falsely identified one sales order in the last few years as spam (from Digi-Key, not Apple), but it's still "learning". Gotta always give those messages a brief scan. As far as the insurance companies, AAA seemed to have no problems with printed email receipts when I filed my claim a year ago.
Solution? Don't register. And for my next trick...
A senator or representative is only a moron outside his or her district for pork. Inside, it's a job well done, bringing home the bacon. Example: All the other states save Alaska are outraged by the bridge to nowhere, but back on the frozen tundra, they're heros.
On the one hand, these guys do risk alienating the voters for introducing this bad legislation, but on the other hand, they risk enough funding to pay for their re-election.
What about using an infrared camera with the same motion algorithm? Seems to me that it would be pretty tricky to mask your heat signature while cruising through the jungle/desert/wherever you install this.
And how often does this exactly happen? When the ambulance comes from behind, they can't force you to speed. Your speeding still breaks the spirit as well as the letter of the law. The other "examples" are nice stretches. What is wrong with admitting you were speeding because you wanted to and face the music???
Print your bomb threat/ransom note/whatever on a B&W laser. If color bomb threats are your thing, use an ink jet or dye sub.
I realize the sarcasm, but pipe down. You don't want any legislatures to have that idea in the back of their heads. Scary...
Surely they would have already removed people who have died after the election took place. Otherwise, that number would be much larger, methinks.
Apple does not design processors anymore than Dell does. You can bet that if Motorola or IBM starts offering a faster chip, Apple will jump on it. To switch architectures may become an option at some point, but that's going to be a huge mess.
I apologize for my ignorance, but which laptops can decode HD video using less power? Do they have dedicated hardware to do so or are they throwing a desktop class processor in the box?
It's not the fault of Apple or any other manufacturer to continue the march of progress. I am disappointed that my spiffy new PowerBook cannot take advantage of QuickTime 7's H.264. Does this mean that Apple should not offer the software to render H.264 in HD until their entire product line can support it? Of course not. The requirements are what they are based on the way the software is engineered.
While I would agree that memory and hard drives are very necessary upgrades, I do not think that the video card belongs on that list as well. For the majority of users, their computer experience is not limited by their video card. I have many clients that are still getting good use out of original iMacs, with their Rage Pro Turbo (6 MB) chips. If the Rage card were mounted on an AGP slot, would it really be cost effective to upgrade? The limiting factor on their computer's performance is first RAM and second CPU/chipset/bus speeds. Hard drive capacity gets increased when your drive is full, not generally a performance issue. For those that are interested in lots of power and upgradability, you can pay more $$$ for the PowerMac line.
What is this "dating" thing the article talks about?
I'm sure there is already an agreement that you have to sign or at least click through. The problem is that it is 20 pages in length, written in legalize.
Also, the man regularly initiated international wire transfers, hence no fraud alert triggered.
The old adage still rings true; a fool and his money are soon parted.
The cost of modern fuel cells can be reduced through mass production, but the cost of the platinum membrane is still prohibitively high. Until the amount of platinum can be reduced, fuel cells will never be able to compete with other energy storage devices.
If they are a responsible company, they should release a patch in a couple years, once they are no longer gaining revenue for the product. Intuit did something similar with Turbo Tax.
You'd have an excellent point, except .com seems to have become the dumping ground for everything on the web. How many web sites in a random google search are anything but .com?
Despite all the examples of excess, government works most of the time for most people. Of course it makes mistakes, but it is a human run organization and is subject to fallibility.
I wonder if this has anything to do with the Attorney General Ashcroft's October 12, 2001 memo instructing federal agencies to stall on FOIA requests.
The Greenwich case appears to be an extension of the precident set by General Ashcroft. If FOIA is curtailed, how will journalists and watchdog groups get their information they use to keep government honest?
As opposed to recording afterwards. Didn't George Carlin have a rant about "previously recorded"?
Ending up with a pirated key in the activation box isn't exactly an accident. On second thought, after watching my files end up down the drain for trying to get away with not paying for this software, "whoops!" is right.
Comic gold! That was a great laugh!!!
He must have driven the I-5 considering at 2:48 you see Westley (off the I-5) and at 1:41 you see Kettleman City/41 (also off the I-5). The 99 is also not hilly between the Grapevine and Sacramento. I used to commute weekly between Pomona & Fresno, and from what I can see, this is not the 99.