I use the windows kernel when I have to (98, in this case), but then I have firefox, apache, thunderbird & openoffice running on it; When someone sends me an email saying "ZOMG!!! RUNING TIHS PROGGY W1LL 3NLARGE UR PENIS!!!!! [attached, penis.exe]", I don't run it, and I'm fine...
Actually, due to the randomness, I have a feeling that it may be that some of the servers in the/. cluster are out of sync, and only some of them have the bug. Or maybe it is firefox, but I can't be arsed to diff a working page vs a non-working one.
I've never used it myself, but screen has copy & pase via arrow keys - run screen, ctrl-a [ to go into copy mode, [[something I can't get to work]] to select, then ctrl-a ] to paste. I don't know if it works, as I can't seem to get it to, but with function names like copy & paste I'd assume that it works in the same sort of way as GPM, but just using arrow keys to move the pointer rather than a mouse.
And you can't have vi and emacs without ED! I actually use it surprisingly often - curses based interfaces are really slow on dialup ssh; line based editors go *much* faster - I'd write locally in vim, upload with scp, and if any changes needed to be done quickly (this being a website), it'd all be done with ed.
I can use wget just fine - You go to the list of files, pick one, that'll take you to the mirrors. Pick a mirror, and you get a url to the selected file on the selected mirror - that can be plugged into wget, and works wonderfully.
Let me be more precise, how about your fridge telling your insurance company that you eat too much ice cream/iced tea/coke whatever. Your medical insurance goes up because you are being a risk for diabetes.
Oh noeses! Looks like I'll have to stop eating raw lard, drinking vodka, and sitting in my slouch-o-matic all day:(
Either that, or I could hack my fridge to make it think that it's full of nowt but salad dressings... Yeeeesss....
(Meta-point: HowTF do you put an RFID tag in a vegetable?)
I logged in to my account this morning, to get a web page saying that I'd had some upgrades, I clicked continue, and it was all the same. Hit "refresh", and I got a new UI, but still 6MB limit. Hit "refresh" again, And the old UI with 100MB limit, hit "refresh", got new UI and 100MB limit, but all the images are broken. Also, add in some random name resolution errors (Blama akamai...)
Checking again this afternoon, things seem to have stabilised, and it's all quite nice:)
Windows uses a hack (which I wish someone would do in linux) to make things seem faster - it gives the currently selected window processing priority. Compress 2 things (7-zip works best for this, with "ultimate" settings), then have one window focused - the selected window's progress bar moves about twice as fast as the unselected one's, sometimes three or four times as fast. Open a third app, give it focus, and both compressings go slowly.
This should be quite easy to do in linux, apart from one thing - only root can give a process higher than normal priority, or raise a process's priority once it's started.
If you manually choose which processes get which priority, you can make things seem a lot faster (although things in the background suffer)
They do that already - there was a story a couple of months back about some guy who's money set off in-store RFID scanners. Upon microwaving his notes, the eye of one of the people (I don't know american money) exploded
Our postal service will physically send a letter to anywhere in Australia for 40c - which requires much more signficant investment in resources
Do you know how much it costs to research, create, launch, and maintain an array of satellites? Just beause you don't see people working on the text service as often as you see postal workers, doesn't mean that there aren't any.
Granted, it is expensive, but just think about all the background costs before complaining
What's happening is that you're putting a "display: block;" element (div class "a") inside a "display: inline;" one (div id "test") - firefox thus stops the inline, goes into block mode, and then goes back into inline.
A better example. To put the class "a" divs inside the "inline", they too must be "inline" elements - uncomment the obvious line to see it work.
Also, the premise of "should act like <td> or <tr>" is flawed anyway - if you want something to act like a table, you should be using the "display: table-foo;" attributes. Or better yet, if you want an actual table, use the <table> tags.
Here is the same code as above, but written properly. It displays as I assume you expect it to
ED> Slashdot seems to be messing up the formatting, and there are some other whitespace issues that appear in the preview but not in this text area. I only used 1-space indents beause/. complained of too much whitespace otherwise
Or lower it - Currently serieses like GitS:SaC are selling at $40-$60 per DVD, 3 eps per DVD, for a 26 epsiode series. Currently I can afford to buy one or two series a year - if the prices were halved, I would buy at *least* twice as much. Much like in the music industry, a big reason for buying pirated stuff is beause the genuine stuff is just too damned expensive.
I use the windows kernel when I have to (98, in this case), but then I have firefox, apache, thunderbird & openoffice running on it; When someone sends me an email saying "ZOMG!!! RUNING TIHS PROGGY W1LL 3NLARGE UR PENIS!!!!! [attached, penis.exe]", I don't run it, and I'm fine...
Try "Bush went to war. Soon afterwards, an oil pipeline was laid."
Your interpretation is debatable as a lie, but if you want to argue, argue what's said, not what you think was said.
Yes, there will be more attacks, but there's no guarantee that there will be any more successful attacks.
And even if there were, mozilla is more secure by design, so we wouldn't have anywhere near as many holes in total as IE does now.
Actually, due to the randomness, I have a feeling that it may be that some of the servers in the /. cluster are out of sync, and only some of them have the bug. Or maybe it is firefox, but I can't be arsed to diff a working page vs a non-working one.
+8, funny. You just social hacked the mods \o/
CFLAGS = -ansi -Wall -pedantic -pedantic-errors -ggdb -fstack-protector
check:
splint -strict -strict-lib *.c
all: check [progname]
It's a bitch to get anything to compile, but IIRC there's some prize for the first big project that passes "splint -strict" on every file :)
And when people learn that you've got spam = you've got infection, they'll be even *more* willing to get AV updates.
When I read the title, I thought it was a dupe on the OS fingerprinting article, where someone got nmap to think that a linux box was a dreamcast :/
I've never used it myself, but screen has copy & pase via arrow keys - run screen, ctrl-a [ to go into copy mode, [[something I can't get to work]] to select, then ctrl-a ] to paste. I don't know if it works, as I can't seem to get it to, but with function names like copy & paste I'd assume that it works in the same sort of way as GPM, but just using arrow keys to move the pointer rather than a mouse.
And you can't have vi and emacs without ED! I actually use it surprisingly often - curses based interfaces are really slow on dialup ssh; line based editors go *much* faster - I'd write locally in vim, upload with scp, and if any changes needed to be done quickly (this being a website), it'd all be done with ed.
fbgrab for framebuffer, or mouse select & paste
I can use wget just fine - You go to the list of files, pick one, that'll take you to the mirrors. Pick a mirror, and you get a url to the selected file on the selected mirror - that can be plugged into wget, and works wonderfully.
People get prizes to be the first to review something; Whether the reviewer has any idea what they're doing is beside the point
Demons, aliens, and nazis. What else can you shoot?
Troll? WTF? I was just about to make that joke myself :/
NOTE: WE SELL ONLY TO U.S. POLICE AND MILITARY CUSTOMERS
I think that's a "maybe". <-- Lame joke provided by caps-lock lameness filter. How Ironic :p
You're new here, aren't you?
Oh noeses! Looks like I'll have to stop eating raw lard, drinking vodka, and sitting in my slouch-o-matic all day :(
Either that, or I could hack my fridge to make it think that it's full of nowt but salad dressings... Yeeeesss....
(Meta-point: HowTF do you put an RFID tag in a vegetable?)
Checking again this afternoon, things seem to have stabilised, and it's all quite nice :)
Windows uses a hack (which I wish someone would do in linux) to make things seem faster - it gives the currently selected window processing priority. Compress 2 things (7-zip works best for this, with "ultimate" settings), then have one window focused - the selected window's progress bar moves about twice as fast as the unselected one's, sometimes three or four times as fast. Open a third app, give it focus, and both compressings go slowly.
This should be quite easy to do in linux, apart from one thing - only root can give a process higher than normal priority, or raise a process's priority once it's started.
If you manually choose which processes get which priority, you can make things seem a lot faster (although things in the background suffer)
Why does my linux box need a firewall? It doesn't have any insecure services turned on by default...
They do that already - there was a story a couple of months back about some guy who's money set off in-store RFID scanners. Upon microwaving his notes, the eye of one of the people (I don't know american money) exploded
Do you know how much it costs to research, create, launch, and maintain an array of satellites? Just beause you don't see people working on the text service as often as you see postal workers, doesn't mean that there aren't any.
Granted, it is expensive, but just think about all the background costs before complaining
What's happening is that you're putting a "display: block;" element (div class "a") inside a "display: inline;" one (div id "test") - firefox thus stops the inline, goes into block mode, and then goes back into inline.
.a {
//display: inline;
.a {
/. complained of too much whitespace otherwise
A better example. To put the class "a" divs inside the "inline", they too must be "inline" elements - uncomment the obvious line to see it work.
<html>
<head>
<style>
#test {
display: inline;
width: 250px;
border: solid 1px #FF3333;
padding: 3px;
}
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="test">
<div class="a">aaa</div>
<div class="a">aaa</div>
</div>
<div id="test">
<div class="a">aaa</div>
<div class="a">bbb</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
Also, the premise of "should act like <td> or <tr>" is flawed anyway - if you want something to act like a table, you should be using the "display: table-foo;" attributes. Or better yet, if you want an actual table, use the <table> tags.
Here is the same code as above, but written properly. It displays as I assume you expect it to
<html>
<head>
<style>
#test {
display: table-cell;
width: 250px;
border: solid 1px #FF3333;
padding: 3px;
}
display: table-row;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="test">
<div class="a">aaa</div>
<div class="a">aaa</div>
</div>
<div id="test">
<div class="a">aaa</div>
<div class="a">bbb</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
And for your future reference, the specs are here, please read them:
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/
http://www.w 3.org/TR/CSS21/
ED> Slashdot seems to be messing up the formatting, and there are some other whitespace issues that appear in the preview but not in this text area. I only used 1-space indents beause
Or lower it - Currently serieses like GitS:SaC are selling at $40-$60 per DVD, 3 eps per DVD, for a 26 epsiode series. Currently I can afford to buy one or two series a year - if the prices were halved, I would buy at *least* twice as much. Much like in the music industry, a big reason for buying pirated stuff is beause the genuine stuff is just too damned expensive.