Yup, they could even block all robots but googlebot (via robots.txt) and then use the appropriate googlebot no-cache header, or just block all the 'bots.
Cut my teeth on TRS-DOS and then MS DOS. Skipped Win until a brand-new P200mmx, but had used the first macs some while in high school. Got off windows, now prefer Linux, and still use command line for a lot of stuff.
So yeah, I'd say early computer experiences will lay a foundation of "comfort" as to how you should intereact with a computer. For some reason I don't understand, there are some people who think a blinking curson isn't a graphic:)
Firearms do what they are designed to do, it is the actions of the user that makes them unsafe. However, there is that slight chance that a hunk of metal could gain intelligence and the ability to move on its own. To help determine if it really is dangerous, could you please keep your eye on the webcam feed at this site and let us all know when that evil thing starts doing stuff on its own?
Simple, and I've posted this link a few times before, but you really need to use cenqua. Takes all the pain out of comments, and still allows personality quirks to show thru.
Ditch the TV and get one of those bajillion lumen projectors and a mac mini or a mini itx setup to act as as driver for it and a middle man for everything else?
Would you rather do several things at once at a speed that is probably "fast enough", or one thing at a time really fast? Would you like to be able to run some massive CPU hog of a app and still have a responsive system for doing other things while you wait for it to do its thing (compile, render, whatever). In cases like this, disk access quickly becomes your bottleneck.
I work at a community college. I'd like to challenge that remark, although I'll concede that there are a few that shouldn't have a right to follow that fashion trend. Long live whale tails and camel toes.
1/4 mile drags/NHRA/top fuel/funny cars, etc. IIRC (not likely, since i'm not a race fan) first to break 250mph in the 1/4 mile and first to break 300mph in the 1/4 mile happened here in Gainesville... OK, some quick googling shows that I of course don't RC, but here's the blurb -
"Gainesville Raceway opened in 1969 and held its first Gatornationals event in 1970. Long considered one of the fastest tracks on the NHRA circuit, it was from this legendary launch point that drivers clocked the first 260-, 270- and 300-mph Top Fuel runs. It also was from this starting line, during the 2000 Mac Tools NHRA Gatornationals, that eight of 10 national records were set in the professional classes."
Much like why speed records are often set at the GatorNationals- the weather here in N Fla in the spring can be *perfect* for engine performance at times, with that just right combination of humidity and temperature.
You need one massively redundant device that can offload whatever is appropriate to DVD, tape, whatever. Whipping up a big RAID 5 machine shouldn't be too hard, and just either run everything from it (think SAN) or sync everything to it every so often via rsync or whatever. You can even scale this to enterprise level by calling up your favorite IBM rep and saying "If you take me to a nice lunch with alcohol and strippers, I'll recommend to the PHB that we order a SHARK storage unit from you". Sure, it'll cost you *lots* but 1) it will work and keep working and 2) it will be the best freakin business lunch you'll ever have.
Only the more geeky. To most of my non-geek and very computer illiterate friends, I've recommended a mac mini and a good monitor. They ask why and I explain that it does all they want, does it well, and isn't subject to the virus/exploit du jour (normally...).
So... how many of those now-linux-using-instead-of-mac people have converted one or more to mac?
No problems for light to medium L^hWAMP work either, although for what I use it for (calendar, job listing, light form submission) flat files and a CGI module for VB4 worked fine for a few years before ?AMP became viable to begin with.
If the school is accredited, then there should be no issues. The college I work for (in the online education area no less) is accredited by SACS. And SACS states (and enforces and checks for) equivalency between classes - same outcome, same expectations of students, etc. Not only that, but section numbers aren't on transcripts or degrees - so the only way for someone to know if classes were taken online would be for them to look at your registration/schedule record (drops/adds at the beginning of the term, etc).
So find out of the school is accredited, by who, and if they've done a substantative change review or normal review since they've been offering online classes.
My complaint about it when I first started learning sql (ms flavor, only way offered at school at the time) and got to wildcards, where someone writing the spec chose % instead of * and so on. To top it off, I use sql so infrequently (months between writing it, then only a few statements) that this difference bites me in the butt just about every time I try to use a wildcard.
Are they his xrays?
on
Film to X-rays?
·
· Score: 4, Informative
If they are his xrays, they should be part of his medical record, which means he owns them. You can keep them as long as you like (they are signed out to you right? dont get some poor clerk in trouble), or return them and your other doc can request them.
At least, thats the way it worked in the radiology dept. I worked in for a while about 10 years ago.
Yup, they could even block all robots but googlebot (via robots.txt) and then use the appropriate googlebot no-cache header, or just block all the 'bots.
Source wouldn't even be needed. Just specs. Maybe a few 1 hour q&a phone calls within the next few months.
"Well, see Bill, we haven't actually *sold* anything in Macedonia...."
So I guess Irish Coffee sorta balances it out? The liquor trashes the liver, the caffiene saves it. And isometric intoxication too!
Now where's my Bushmills and Jamaica Blue coffee beans?
Do things that chains don't, like supporting charities by hosting lan parties and donating door fees to them, etc.
Cut my teeth on TRS-DOS and then MS DOS. Skipped Win until a brand-new P200mmx, but had used the first macs some while in high school. Got off windows, now prefer Linux, and still use command line for a lot of stuff.
:)
So yeah, I'd say early computer experiences will lay a foundation of "comfort" as to how you should intereact with a computer. For some reason I don't understand, there are some people who think a blinking curson isn't a graphic
Firearms do what they are designed to do, it is the actions of the user that makes them unsafe. However, there is that slight chance that a hunk of metal could gain intelligence and the ability to move on its own. To help determine if it really is dangerous, could you please keep your eye on the webcam feed at this site and let us all know when that evil thing starts doing stuff on its own?
On your Brady Campaign link... is it OK then for me to sue Ford because a drunk driving a Ford wiped out and took out my fence or loved one?
Your sig... yes, your right. I do miss it. Gonna have to get it setup again now that you've reminded me. Thanks.
Well, seeing as how this site was posted here on /. back on 4/1/05 and there is a "today only on 4/1" offer at the bottom of the page....
Simple, and I've posted this link a few times before, but you really need to use cenqua. Takes all the pain out of comments, and still allows personality quirks to show thru.
The Commentator
Just be careful on your settings and you should be fine.
Ditch the TV and get one of those bajillion lumen projectors and a mac mini or a mini itx setup to act as as driver for it and a middle man for everything else?
Would you rather do several things at once at a speed that is probably "fast enough", or one thing at a time really fast? Would you like to be able to run some massive CPU hog of a app and still have a responsive system for doing other things while you wait for it to do its thing (compile, render, whatever). In cases like this, disk access quickly becomes your bottleneck.
I work at a community college. I'd like to challenge that remark, although I'll concede that there are a few that shouldn't have a right to follow that fashion trend. Long live whale tails and camel toes.
1/4 mile drags/NHRA/top fuel/funny cars, etc. IIRC (not likely, since i'm not a race fan) first to break 250mph in the 1/4 mile and first to break 300mph in the 1/4 mile happened here in Gainesville... OK, some quick googling shows that I of course don't RC, but here's the blurb -
"Gainesville Raceway opened in 1969 and held its first Gatornationals event in 1970. Long considered one of the fastest tracks on the NHRA circuit, it was from this legendary launch point that drivers clocked the first 260-, 270- and 300-mph Top Fuel runs. It also was from this starting line, during the 2000 Mac Tools NHRA Gatornationals, that eight of 10 national records were set in the professional classes."
Much like why speed records are often set at the GatorNationals- the weather here in N Fla in the spring can be *perfect* for engine performance at times, with that just right combination of humidity and temperature.
joe
You need one massively redundant device that can offload whatever is appropriate to DVD, tape, whatever. Whipping up a big RAID 5 machine shouldn't be too hard, and just either run everything from it (think SAN) or sync everything to it every so often via rsync or whatever. You can even scale this to enterprise level by calling up your favorite IBM rep and saying "If you take me to a nice lunch with alcohol and strippers, I'll recommend to the PHB that we order a SHARK storage unit from you". Sure, it'll cost you *lots* but 1) it will work and keep working and 2) it will be the best freakin business lunch you'll ever have.
Only the more geeky. To most of my non-geek and very computer illiterate friends, I've recommended a mac mini and a good monitor. They ask why and I explain that it does all they want, does it well, and isn't subject to the virus/exploit du jour (normally...).
So... how many of those now-linux-using-instead-of-mac people have converted one or more to mac?
No problems for light to medium L^hWAMP work either, although for what I use it for (calendar, job listing, light form submission) flat files and a CGI module for VB4 worked fine for a few years before ?AMP became viable to begin with.
If the school is accredited, then there should be no issues. The college I work for (in the online education area no less) is accredited by SACS. And SACS states (and enforces and checks for) equivalency between classes - same outcome, same expectations of students, etc. Not only that, but section numbers aren't on transcripts or degrees - so the only way for someone to know if classes were taken online would be for them to look at your registration/schedule record (drops/adds at the beginning of the term, etc).
So find out of the school is accredited, by who, and if they've done a substantative change review or normal review since they've been offering online classes.
My complaint about it when I first started learning sql (ms flavor, only way offered at school at the time) and got to wildcards, where someone writing the spec chose % instead of * and so on. To top it off, I use sql so infrequently (months between writing it, then only a few statements) that this difference bites me in the butt just about every time I try to use a wildcard.
If they are his xrays, they should be part of his medical record, which means he owns them. You can keep them as long as you like (they are signed out to you right? dont get some poor clerk in trouble), or return them and your other doc can request them.
At least, thats the way it worked in the radiology dept. I worked in for a while about 10 years ago.
Is it perhaps Dire Straits? After all, there is probably a shortage of Fuolornis Fire Dragons (read ch22 too) in the lab environment.
But does it run easily and cleanly in wine or other (non)emulators?