The etymology of the word "bug" as we know it dates to long before the first computers were introduced. This just happens to be the first COMPUTER related bug on record. My guess is that it's a joke, i.e. "hey, Bob we found that BUG in the system. yuk yuk yuk."
However, Goodmon said, if he wants to preempt Fox programming to carry, say, a basketball game between two local college teams, he gets one "strike" from the network. Two more strikes -- preemptions not based on community standards -- and he could lose his Fox affiliation.
Sounds to me like the stations could fight back by blocking network programming, getting three strikes, and then they're free!! All you would need to do is get all of them to agree to it and it might work. See, I see this as an advantage.
Actually, this was a reference to his former pro-wrestling career, where his title was "Wesley, The Boy Crusher". It's a period that Wil would rather soon forget about, thank you very much.
What I want to know is how the phone handles handoffs to other Wi-fi nodes and whether it can roam around a campus environment. If you start to lose the signal on one node and pick up another, you get a new IP Address through DHCP... How does the phone system handle this? In order for this system to work, it has to be able to roam across wireless nodes.
I have a copy of that MOD file, send me an e-mail and I'll send you a copy of it.
The etymology of the word "bug" as we know it dates to long before the first computers were introduced. This just happens to be the first COMPUTER related bug on record. My guess is that it's a joke, i.e. "hey, Bob we found that BUG in the system. yuk yuk yuk."
Actually, this was a reference to his former pro-wrestling career, where his title was "Wesley, The Boy Crusher". It's a period that Wil would rather soon forget about, thank you very much.
What I want to know is how the phone handles handoffs to other Wi-fi nodes and whether it can roam around a campus environment. If you start to lose the signal on one node and pick up another, you get a new IP Address through DHCP... How does the phone system handle this? In order for this system to work, it has to be able to roam across wireless nodes.