You all make it sound like an X-ray machine can't differentiate between open space and explosive material. Current X-ray tech is pretty smart, it can identify just about anything. With a dual-energy X-ray system you can estimate the density and molecular weight of a region. Explosives all fall within certain ranges of both, so it's not going to see a bunch of black powder in a coke can and think it's air. The TSA has tight restrictions on airport scanners so I wouldn't worry about it. Besides, there are much more scary scenarios than the coke can.
Am I the only one that thinks this is good news? Legally playing DVDs is a key feature that will help Linux distros in the Desktop market. Lindows/Linspire does have this already, but personally I prefer a distribution that doesn't think it's Windows. I, for one, hope others start follow suit and include licensed DVD software. Even better if CyberLink releases PowerDVD for Linux to the public.
Google should really make a new service for a small fee that allows you to track a MAC address for cases like these. Everybody uses google, this would be a great tool.
fatmouse will leave your puny planet and terraform others. your space exploration is futile because fatmouse will consume all other forms of life. FATMOUSE MUST FEED!
Quick? Jeez, you'll spend forever bzip2'ing all those files...
The reviewer finds that the 3.3v rail has a potential of under 3.3v, more like 3.1 to 3.2. This isn't normal, is it? :)
You all make it sound like an X-ray machine can't differentiate between open space and explosive material. Current X-ray tech is pretty smart, it can identify just about anything. With a dual-energy X-ray system you can estimate the density and molecular weight of a region. Explosives all fall within certain ranges of both, so it's not going to see a bunch of black powder in a coke can and think it's air. The TSA has tight restrictions on airport scanners so I wouldn't worry about it. Besides, there are much more scary scenarios than the coke can.
Am I the only one that thinks this is good news? Legally playing DVDs is a key feature that will help Linux distros in the Desktop market. Lindows/Linspire does have this already, but personally I prefer a distribution that doesn't think it's Windows. I, for one, hope others start follow suit and include licensed DVD software. Even better if CyberLink releases PowerDVD for Linux to the public.
This article has the lamest picture ever! Definitely some girl right out of art school that likes the color pink :)
who wants code?
how about installing linux on a dead penguin? wouldn't that be more appropriate?
and i'm a little scared of doctors named "butch", hopefully it's not short for "butcher"? :-)
Wow, you gotta play the first video on that page in slow speed (right click on it, goto play speed -> Slow). Makes him sound drunk.
my car gets fourty rods to the hogshead and thats the way i likes it!
I hope it doesn't just use the rm command. "Just don't name a file -rf" - Larry Wall
but have you seen this one of Sergey Brin (co-founder)?
i see a first post!
Google should really make a new service for a small fee that allows you to track a MAC address for cases like these. Everybody uses google, this would be a great tool.
department of redundancy department, pleace wait and hold. sorry, please dont troll me :)
Yeah, well I was the first one to see uranus!
and my car gets fourty rods to the hogshead. and that's the way i likes it!
this idea is a load of crap.
cow pooped on led; you pay more.
would be the sam adams brewery. free as in beer, free as in speech!
the best hand-powered hardware
why is this story under biotech? *boggle*
warning: objects travel faster in metric.
fatmouse will leave your puny planet and terraform others. your space exploration is futile because fatmouse will consume all other forms of life. FATMOUSE MUST FEED!
Well, I'm taking I-93 south tomorrow. This ought to be interesting..