Well I guess it all works out, since (not to sound snobby) I have better things to do than do a bunch of research and write out equations all day long. Instead I get to sit on my butt, study martial arts, and pretty much do something I want to do while I wait for someone who "has better things to do" to pay me to fix something or design something to make his/her life easier.
This is the real reason why the IT department will never die, most people can't even do level one tech support stuff themselves. Which pretty much a trained monkey with a knowledge database in front of him could perform. The reason why many PhD engineers from MIT, geniuses, etc. can't successfully upgrade their computer or figure out how to get their HDTV to work is because they never learned how. Yes being highly intelligent, as in any engineering situation is vitally important, but unless you where taught how to properly it isn't something you can inherently know.
You certainly wouldn't want most IT staff to engineer a chemical plant or design a bridge, just like in most cases you don't want an engineer to get anywhere near your computers:).
On the audio side, it looks like an HDMI cable is the only cable with enough bandwidth to carry the decrypted Dolby True HD without transcoding it. Since one of the big bonuses of Dolby True HD is that it is compressed using a lossless compression(which has the possibility of digital master quality audio), then transcoding it is going to degrade the sound.
If you don't have HDMI most devices can create a Dolby Digital output for SPDIF and optical connections to use, that will sound better than a standard DVD's audio, but not as good as the standard Dolby True HD signal.
Something like this happened to me at a soccer game too, but when I was playing the game. A clearing shot was kicked about 3 feet from my head and directed right at it as I was falling.
I clearly remember all sounds elongated, my normal movements occurring at "normal" speeds, but everyone else, including the ball moving at a snails pace. After I was able to reposition my body safely and the ball hit me normal perception was restored.
I think the testing mechanism was flawed, even if the participants did think they were going to die, reading the numbers wasn't going to save their life. The brain is capable of protecting the body and if need be send information to out conscious mind at higher rates.
To add to your experience, a fighter or martial artist may have performed the same moves to protect themselves from the broken bottle; however, they may not remember the event at all as a result of the brain never sending the information to conscious mind. A martial artist, through training,meditation, and repetition actually programs the unconscious mind to the point where fighting and walking our on a similar wavelength.
Tests have shown that a normal person, in a non threatening environment involving randomly timed lights and strike zones, that a martial artist will typically recognize the attack and complete a strike in the amount of time it takes a non trained person to even recognize the attack.
As an example if you started to punch someone highly skilled in the martial arts you would likely be punched in the face shortly after your hand started to move. While tests like this don't invalidate the test performed by these people, it does show that the brain can perceive events and have the body react at different rates of speed.
Yeah the parent probably meant homicide, which is essentially the same thing as murder but with a slightly different definition.
Timothy McVeigh's Death Certificate lists homicide as the method of death for instance.
Murder is a crime, homicide is simply one human being killed by another human. The confusion I think comes from homicide and murder being very close, in fact even in the definition for homicide it list murder as a synonym for a person who kills another. Further confused by jurisdiction, like in the McVeigh case if his death had occurred in a state that had the death penalty, his certificate would likely have said by lethal injection instead.
Ah your link doesn't work but a search on autism and Japan showed that Japan banned the MMR vaccine in 1993 not thermisol. That article said banning MMR did not reduce the incident of autism. I never mentioned MMR, so maybe you should stop spreading FUD.
As that wasn't my main point, I disagree. Besides you should try to explain that to parents of autistic children who changed very quickly after one of their vaccines, debunking a study isn't/doesn't necessarily mean the hypothesis was wrong, it means their should be another study. Do you see a pharmaceutical company funding such an independent study to prove they should use their mercury containing vaccines instead of their non mercury containing vaccines?
Without getting too technical the bigger problem is that very few babies have reactions to these vaccines, so in general they are a necessary evil because they contain mercury for no good reason. While I do believe it is true that vaccinating a child provides more protection than not, there are mercury free alternatives, and those should be used instead. In the end these vaccines are the main impetus behind the no vaccine crowd, take away the mercury and they go away.
Yeah because doctor's always know more than their patients know. Damn those knowledgeable patients.
While I would never suggest someone attempt to diagnose or determine a course of treatment for a problem via information found on the internet, properly using the internet to gain information about their problems is never a bad thing (unless you are a hypochondriac, then please step away from the keyboard:))
As an example, say patient A is suffering from nightmare disorder. Patient A's doctor hates benzoes, but also hates referring patients to speciallists who might prescribe them. So for some reason instead of prescribing a shorter acting benzo like klonopin or adavan(xanax is too short for nightmares as they occur 4 hours after sleep) he prescribes Valium. yeah thats right something that builds up in the blood of the course of several days. Doesn't help the nightmares, but makes Patient A give a crap about his nightmares, he gets great sleep but is also a freaking zombie during the day.
Patient complains to doctor about being a zombie asks for a shorter acting equivalent of vallium since it is working is told that adavan and klonopin are the same as vallium and gets prescribed a beta blocker because it supposedly works on most of his patients who have PTSD as well.
Patient A then, as a result of being self informed runs to the nearest specialist and gets prescribe a drug that isn't a benzo, doesn't have side effects and actually stops the dreams instead of making one not care. So while you might not enjoy people "Google-gnosing" themselves, as a patient its normally better to be as informed as possible. If you aren't informed you can't ask questions and asking questions is never a bad thing.
Of course your doctor may have a "God complex" and hate questions from informed patients who may have "Google-gnosed" themselves.
Especially when they continue to use mercury based preservatives in any vaccine, let alone one given to babies and small children. There have been studies that have shown the rise in autism directly linked to the rise in the use of mercury in vaccines in 3rd world countries. The reason why JAMA is technically right is because the pharmaceutical companies sure as hell aren't going to fund research that takes their product off the market.
While pharmaceutical companies do make life sustaining drugs, trusting a corporation to protect anything but its bottom line is fool hearty at best.
Cases like this is what makes the patent/legal system ridiculous. From what I can tell this patent is an answering machine that has an address book feature, and uses the callers to MANUALLY type in their identifying information so that the voicemail messages may be tied to a specific person via the previously mentioned address book.
I know for a fact that when I call my wife's iPhone I don't enter a bunch of DTMF signals so that she knows it is my voicemail and not someone elses. Thanks to a much newer invention called Caller ID, it is completely unnecessary to do such a thing. Since ATT, apple and all of the others use Caller ID to identify the caller then a patent using the method to create a visual voicemail system using DTMF to identify callers is not being violated.
Especially since the purpose of Caller ID is to identify the caller, AND even linked voice mail systems attach the caller id to the voice mail header identifying the caller. Allowing random access instead of sequential access is pretty trivial since if it isn't sequential it has to be random.
So why the heck did Vonage settle? Because they can't afford a court fight thats why. Things like this show a pattern of legal racketeering. We really need some new laws fast...
I hadn't actually heard of this belief, but it would seem that a similar thought process or cognitive disonance is at play here.
Like someone else said, people dying only from blast damage die of internal organ damage, something that would show up in an autopsy. The bones are strong enough to withstand the shockwave without breaking. A laptop battery exploding in a pocket can not break the spine while leaving a simple burn on the mans chest.
So why would any reputable doctor think of such a thing? Well if you believe that leaving a fan on in a closed room decreases the temperature of the room, you will believe almost anything.
There is a device, I forget what it is called but it can actually chill air with a simple air vortex. The caviat is that a hot air stream is also produced out the back end. Which make sense because the conservation of energy is required. Plus, no one is going to sleep near one of these things because they are too freaking loud.
I'm not sure if this is a joke or you are misinformed. However each version of OS X has had more features and ran better not worse on the exact same hardware.
So let me fix that for you:
New Microsoft operating system[s] use more resources than old operating system[s]...
You can either explicitly say what context to use or say you modified apache to use/test instead of/var/www/html you could use/var/www/html as a reference.
chcon test --reference=/var/www/html
ls -lZ drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t test
Most mysql problems are solved the same way. SeLinux can be very complex, but the default rules provided in RHEL typically just require context changes on files and directories to make non RedHat packages work.
Per the terms of the license he is entitled to the upgrade, as was I. All I had to do was fax in my receipt from newegg, I didn't even have to show that I bought a new PC because I was the "System Builder"
You must agree to the above license, and there are limits to the OEM license. As others have stated the big one being you have the right to move the license from one machine to another with the retail but not the OEM version.
The AppleCare Protection Plan ensures that Apple-authorized technicians will perform repairs using genuine Apple parts(2). With this plan, parts and labor will be covered for three years from your computer's purchase date. The plan includes onsite service for desktop computers and global repair coverage, which can be very important if you travel abroad.
(1) Onsite service is not available in all locations. (2) Repair service may include onsite, carry-in, and direct mail-in; specific availability of each option depends on product type and location of Apple Authorized Service Provider. Apple may also request that the customer replace components with readily installable parts.
Now they can't swap out LCD screens on site, they can't typically even do that in their shop. But pretty much anything related to the Computer they can do. The biggest problem would be if you live too far from a service provider that does on site repairs. And technically this isn't a "business" plan per se. If you bought one for your own personal use and get the Apple Care Protection Plan they are suppose to come out to your house and fix it.
Actually if you purchase Apple Care they are suppose to come to your business and fix it there. The G5 we have had a bad logic board when I bought it. They wanted me to take it in, and I told them that their service required them to come out and fix it on site. When we got it down to either a logic board or a CPU they eventually has someone come out and replace the logic board.
My only complaint was they default to telling you to bring in the system yourself.
I think the point was more on the lines of, if you want to play blu-ray discs all you need to do is buy a blu-ray player.
But in reality that $2000 LCD monitor you have isn't going to help because it can't tell the video card that its a protected device, well you need to go buy a new monitor.
Wait that $500 video card can't detect trusted monitors, better go buy a new card that can.
Oh yeah, and that all digital surround sound system, well it isn't going to work at all so you need to go buy an analog one.
Weight loss in general, surgery or otherwise has the same effect. I choose a non surgical method, but the center I go to, associated with a hospital does offer surgical intervention. Loosing just 10 percent of your body weight can greatly effect type 2 diabetes, period. If weight loss doesn't help, then the damage to the pancreas has been done and the individual has become or is becoming a type 1 diabetic.
In fact many children are now becoming type 1 diabetics, not in the normal way(an autoimmune response), but they are so overwieght, and their diet is so poor that they cross over to type 1 from type 2 at a horribly young age.
A type 2 diabetic can greatly control their blood sugar levels simply from their dietary intake. The suppliments taken after surgery for instance are high in protein and have very little sugar.
The third way is of course excercise.
The main problem I see with this drug for use with people with type 2 diabetes is in the end it isn't going to be a miracle drug for many of them. Type 2 diabetes is tied directly to insulin response, insulin response is effected by weight, diet, and excercise. Without a change in diet, excercise or weight loss, the levels of insulin are still going to be high as a result there is still going to be high blood pressure, and arterial hardening which leads to stroke and heart disease.
Yeah at least if you look up "bird" in the dictionary you get a "chiefly british slang" option to understand what they mean:).
I'm not a linguist, but just because you have used nonce for years one way and no one else has doesn't mean it is so for everyone. If the dictionary was full of slang and other jargon any given English word could probably mean just about anything.
At least in my county in Michigan the optical scan kicks out over votes as well.
The verifiable paper trail is important. Especially when one candidate ends up with negative votes..
Yeah clearly he should be making his own instead...
The workaround for many missing 64 bit drivers is to use the 32 bit drivers for when the manufacturer *cough* creative *cough* doesn't make one or refuses to make one that works is to install the 32 bit driver in compatability mode.
Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't, but its better than nothing when it does...
I'm not sure about flip 3D, but Expose has two options, one is to show all the programs you have open, and one to show all the windows in the program that is active. It is generally pretty easy to quickly tell what is firefox, indesign, photoshop, illustrator, mail, word, acrobat, extensis, finder, whatever and be able to quickly switch to it.
Or for instance when in photoshop it is easy to see what photoshop window you want also from a single button click.
I'll do it for you. The word that means "offer an incentive" IS motivate.
motivate
tr.v. motivated, motivating, motivates
To provide with an incentive; move to action; impel.
I think that applies to High Density 5.25.
Its been a while, but I have the enchanter/sorcerer/spellbinder box set from infocom for the PC. Enchanter is on one side and Sorcerer is on the other of one 5.25.
And guess what, back then Intel correct. The chips even had Intel's watermark in them still, AMD didn't even bother to take it out.
AMD certainly deserves credit for x64 and much better processors since, but back then AMD quite literally copied Intel.
True at least problems like these can be corrected (If found) with paper ballots - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacking_Democracy.
The problem is optical scan software, or even the central tabulating software can be compromised as well.
I'm not saying that it happened in this primary election, but it just doesn't seem like anything is "safe" anymore.
Well I guess it all works out, since (not to sound snobby) I have better things to do than do a bunch of research and write out equations all day long. Instead I get to sit on my butt, study martial arts, and pretty much do something I want to do while I wait for someone who "has better things to do" to pay me to fix something or design something to make his/her life easier.
:).
This is the real reason why the IT department will never die, most people can't even do level one tech support stuff themselves. Which pretty much a trained monkey with a knowledge database in front of him could perform. The reason why many PhD engineers from MIT, geniuses, etc. can't successfully upgrade their computer or figure out how to get their HDTV to work is because they never learned how. Yes being highly intelligent, as in any engineering situation is vitally important, but unless you where taught how to properly it isn't something you can inherently know.
You certainly wouldn't want most IT staff to engineer a chemical plant or design a bridge, just like in most cases you don't want an engineer to get anywhere near your computers
On the audio side, it looks like an HDMI cable is the only cable with enough bandwidth to carry the decrypted Dolby True HD without transcoding it. Since one of the big bonuses of Dolby True HD is that it is compressed using a lossless compression(which has the possibility of digital master quality audio), then transcoding it is going to degrade the sound.
If you don't have HDMI most devices can create a Dolby Digital output for SPDIF and optical connections to use, that will sound better than a standard DVD's audio, but not as good as the standard Dolby True HD signal.
Something like this happened to me at a soccer game too, but when I was playing the game. A clearing shot was kicked about 3 feet from my head and directed right at it as I was falling.
I clearly remember all sounds elongated, my normal movements occurring at "normal" speeds, but everyone else, including the ball moving at a snails pace. After I was able to reposition my body safely and the ball hit me normal perception was restored.
I think the testing mechanism was flawed, even if the participants did think they were going to die, reading the numbers wasn't going to save their life. The brain is capable of protecting the body and if need be send information to out conscious mind at higher rates.
To add to your experience, a fighter or martial artist may have performed the same moves to protect themselves from the broken bottle; however, they may not remember the event at all as a result of the brain never sending the information to conscious mind. A martial artist, through training,meditation, and repetition actually programs the unconscious mind to the point where fighting and walking our on a similar wavelength.
Tests have shown that a normal person, in a non threatening environment involving randomly timed lights and strike zones, that a martial artist will typically recognize the attack and complete a strike in the amount of time it takes a non trained person to even recognize the attack.
As an example if you started to punch someone highly skilled in the martial arts you would likely be punched in the face shortly after your hand started to move. While tests like this don't invalidate the test performed by these people, it does show that the brain can perceive events and have the body react at different rates of speed.
Yeah the parent probably meant homicide, which is essentially the same thing as murder but with a slightly different definition.
Timothy McVeigh's Death Certificate lists homicide as the method of death for instance.
Murder is a crime, homicide is simply one human being killed by another human. The confusion I think comes from homicide and murder being very close, in fact even in the definition for homicide it list murder as a synonym for a person who kills another. Further confused by jurisdiction, like in the McVeigh case if his death had occurred in a state that had the death penalty, his certificate would likely have said by lethal injection instead.
Ah your link doesn't work but a search on autism and Japan showed that Japan banned the MMR vaccine in 1993 not thermisol. That article said banning MMR did not reduce the incident of autism. I never mentioned MMR, so maybe you should stop spreading FUD.
However how about this link http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x4102045 that shows a pattern of not using thermisol in pediatric vaccines and the decline in autism in California?
In either case all I said is to not use vaccines with thermisol, that doesn't mean you can't vaccinate.
As that wasn't my main point, I disagree. Besides you should try to explain that to parents of autistic children who changed very quickly after one of their vaccines, debunking a study isn't/doesn't necessarily mean the hypothesis was wrong, it means their should be another study. Do you see a pharmaceutical company funding such an independent study to prove they should use their mercury containing vaccines instead of their non mercury containing vaccines?
Without getting too technical the bigger problem is that very few babies have reactions to these vaccines, so in general they are a necessary evil because they contain mercury for no good reason. While I do believe it is true that vaccinating a child provides more protection than not, there are mercury free alternatives, and those should be used instead. In the end these vaccines are the main impetus behind the no vaccine crowd, take away the mercury and they go away.
Yeah because doctor's always know more than their patients know. Damn those knowledgeable patients.
:))
While I would never suggest someone attempt to diagnose or determine a course of treatment for a problem via information found on the internet, properly using the internet to gain information about their problems is never a bad thing (unless you are a hypochondriac, then please step away from the keyboard
As an example, say patient A is suffering from nightmare disorder. Patient A's doctor hates benzoes, but also hates referring patients to speciallists who might prescribe them. So for some reason instead of prescribing a shorter acting benzo like klonopin or adavan(xanax is too short for nightmares as they occur 4 hours after sleep) he prescribes Valium. yeah thats right something that builds up in the blood of the course of several days. Doesn't help the nightmares, but makes Patient A give a crap about his nightmares, he gets great sleep but is also a freaking zombie during the day.
Patient complains to doctor about being a zombie asks for a shorter acting equivalent of vallium since it is working is told that adavan and klonopin are the same as vallium and gets prescribed a beta blocker because it supposedly works on most of his patients who have PTSD as well.
Patient A then, as a result of being self informed runs to the nearest specialist and gets prescribe a drug that isn't a benzo, doesn't have side effects and actually stops the dreams instead of making one not care. So while you might not enjoy people "Google-gnosing" themselves, as a patient its normally better to be as informed as possible. If you aren't informed you can't ask questions and asking questions is never a bad thing.
Of course your doctor may have a "God complex" and hate questions from informed patients who may have "Google-gnosed" themselves.
Absolutely,
Especially when they continue to use mercury based preservatives in any vaccine, let alone one given to babies and small children. There have been studies that have shown the rise in autism directly linked to the rise in the use of mercury in vaccines in 3rd world countries. The reason why JAMA is technically right is because the pharmaceutical companies sure as hell aren't going to fund research that takes their product off the market.
While pharmaceutical companies do make life sustaining drugs, trusting a corporation to protect anything but its bottom line is fool hearty at best.
Cases like this is what makes the patent/legal system ridiculous. From what I can tell this patent is an answering machine that has an address book feature, and uses the callers to MANUALLY type in their identifying information so that the voicemail messages may be tied to a specific person via the previously mentioned address book. I know for a fact that when I call my wife's iPhone I don't enter a bunch of DTMF signals so that she knows it is my voicemail and not someone elses. Thanks to a much newer invention called Caller ID, it is completely unnecessary to do such a thing. Since ATT, apple and all of the others use Caller ID to identify the caller then a patent using the method to create a visual voicemail system using DTMF to identify callers is not being violated. Especially since the purpose of Caller ID is to identify the caller, AND even linked voice mail systems attach the caller id to the voice mail header identifying the caller. Allowing random access instead of sequential access is pretty trivial since if it isn't sequential it has to be random. So why the heck did Vonage settle? Because they can't afford a court fight thats why. Things like this show a pattern of legal racketeering. We really need some new laws fast...
I hadn't actually heard of this belief, but it would seem that a similar thought process or cognitive disonance is at play here.
Like someone else said, people dying only from blast damage die of internal organ damage, something that would show up in an autopsy. The bones are strong enough to withstand the shockwave without breaking. A laptop battery exploding in a pocket can not break the spine while leaving a simple burn on the mans chest.
So why would any reputable doctor think of such a thing? Well if you believe that leaving a fan on in a closed room decreases the temperature of the room, you will believe almost anything.
There is a device, I forget what it is called but it can actually chill air with a simple air vortex. The caviat is that a hot air stream is also produced out the back end. Which make sense because the conservation of energy is required. Plus, no one is going to sleep near one of these things because they are too freaking loud.
I'm not sure if this is a joke or you are misinformed. However each version of OS X has had more features and ran better not worse on the exact same hardware.
So let me fix that for you:
New Microsoft operating system[s] use more resources than old operating system[s]...
You don't change the Selinux rules you update the context of the new location. You use the command chcon to change the context of the files.
/test instead of /var/www/html you could use /var/www/html as a reference.
ls -Z will help you find out which one to use.
for instance..
$ ls -lZ
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_script_exec_t cgi-bin
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t error
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t html
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t icons
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t manual
drwxr-xr-x webalizer root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t usage
You can either explicitly say what context to use or say you modified apache to use
chcon test --reference=/var/www/html
ls -lZ
drwxr-xr-x root root system_u:object_r:httpd_sys_content_t test
Most mysql problems are solved the same way. SeLinux can be very complex, but the default rules provided in RHEL typically just require context changes on files and directories to make non RedHat packages work.
Per the terms of the license he is entitled to the upgrade, as was I. All I had to do was fax in my receipt from newegg, I didn't even have to show that I bought a new PC because I was the "System Builder"
s e/2007_SB_Licenses/English.pdf
http://oem.microsoft.com/downloads/Public/sblicen
""System builder" means an original equipment manufacturer, an assembler, refurbisher, or pre-installer of software on computer systems."
You must agree to the above license, and there are limits to the OEM license. As others have stated the big one being you have the right to move the license from one machine to another with the retail but not the OEM version.
From http://www.apple.com/support/products/proplan.html
Convenient repair options
The AppleCare Protection Plan ensures that Apple-authorized technicians will perform repairs using genuine Apple parts(2). With this plan, parts and labor will be covered for three years from your computer's purchase date. The plan includes onsite service for desktop computers and global repair coverage, which can be very important if you travel abroad.
(1) Onsite service is not available in all locations.
(2) Repair service may include onsite, carry-in, and direct mail-in; specific availability of each option depends on product type and location of Apple Authorized Service Provider. Apple may also request that the customer replace components with readily installable parts.
Now they can't swap out LCD screens on site, they can't typically even do that in their shop. But pretty much anything related to the Computer they can do. The biggest problem would be if you live too far from a service provider that does on site repairs. And technically this isn't a "business" plan per se. If you bought one for your own personal use and get the Apple Care Protection Plan they are suppose to come out to your house and fix it.
Actually if you purchase Apple Care they are suppose to come to your business and fix it there. The G5 we have had a bad logic board when I bought it. They wanted me to take it in, and I told them that their service required them to come out and fix it on site. When we got it down to either a logic board or a CPU they eventually has someone come out and replace the logic board. My only complaint was they default to telling you to bring in the system yourself.
I think the point was more on the lines of, if you want to play blu-ray discs all you need to do is buy a blu-ray player.
But in reality that $2000 LCD monitor you have isn't going to help because it can't tell the video card that its a protected device, well you need to go buy a new monitor.
Wait that $500 video card can't detect trusted monitors, better go buy a new card that can.
Oh yeah, and that all digital surround sound system, well it isn't going to work at all so you need to go buy an analog one.
Weight loss in general, surgery or otherwise has the same effect. I choose a non surgical method, but the center I go to, associated with a hospital does offer surgical intervention. Loosing just 10 percent of your body weight can greatly effect type 2 diabetes, period. If weight loss doesn't help, then the damage to the pancreas has been done and the individual has become or is becoming a type 1 diabetic.
In fact many children are now becoming type 1 diabetics, not in the normal way(an autoimmune response), but they are so overwieght, and their diet is so poor that they cross over to type 1 from type 2 at a horribly young age.
A type 2 diabetic can greatly control their blood sugar levels simply from their dietary intake. The suppliments taken after surgery for instance are high in protein and have very little sugar.
The third way is of course excercise.
The main problem I see with this drug for use with people with type 2 diabetes is in the end it isn't going to be a miracle drug for many of them. Type 2 diabetes is tied directly to insulin response, insulin response is effected by weight, diet, and excercise. Without a change in diet, excercise or weight loss, the levels of insulin are still going to be high as a result there is still going to be high blood pressure, and arterial hardening which leads to stroke and heart disease.
Yeah at least if you look up "bird" in the dictionary you get a "chiefly british slang" option to understand what they mean :).
I'm not a linguist, but just because you have used nonce for years one way and no one else has doesn't mean it is so for everyone. If the dictionary was full of slang and other jargon any given English word could probably mean just about anything.
At least in my county in Michigan the optical scan kicks out over votes as well. The verifiable paper trail is important. Especially when one candidate ends up with negative votes..
Yeah clearly he should be making his own instead...
The workaround for many missing 64 bit drivers is to use the 32 bit drivers for when the manufacturer *cough* creative *cough* doesn't make one or refuses to make one that works is to install the 32 bit driver in compatability mode.
Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't, but its better than nothing when it does...
I'm not sure about flip 3D, but Expose has two options, one is to show all the programs you have open, and one to show all the windows in the program that is active. It is generally pretty easy to quickly tell what is firefox, indesign, photoshop, illustrator, mail, word, acrobat, extensis, finder, whatever and be able to quickly switch to it.
Or for instance when in photoshop it is easy to see what photoshop window you want also from a single button click.
I'll do it for you. The word that means "offer an incentive" IS motivate. motivate tr.v. motivated, motivating, motivates To provide with an incentive; move to action; impel.
I think that applies to High Density 5.25. Its been a while, but I have the enchanter/sorcerer/spellbinder box set from infocom for the PC. Enchanter is on one side and Sorcerer is on the other of one 5.25.
And guess what, back then Intel correct. The chips even had Intel's watermark in them still, AMD didn't even bother to take it out. AMD certainly deserves credit for x64 and much better processors since, but back then AMD quite literally copied Intel.