No, it is "its". "It's" is a common contraction for "it is". Just try and put that into where "its" is and you'll see that it doesn't fit. "Its" is the possesive form of "it".
If you're going to critique someone else's grammar, at least do it correctly.
When this first got posted, the status page was running horribly slowly. I guess that one server still has trouble handling the load that a bunch of Slashdot users can put onto it, even if the content is static.
Tampering with software and servers owned or used by the Army is cyber crime.
Hah, so it isn't a cyber crime to mess with other's computers if they're not owned or operated by the army? Thanks for stating the obvious, Capt. Obbvious.
Brought to you by Lt. Redundant.
/Stoped playing AA the moment the first email came back to me with recruiting info
Unplug your WAP. Then put it back in it's original box and store it in your closet for when you move to an area that isn't quite so congested. After that, cancel your internet.
Then, connect to someone else's WAP and leech off of their connection. Whenever they slow down too much, just switch to another access point, or if you're running Linux, write a script to have you hop between open APs every few minutes/hours (depends on whether or not you do a lot of large downloads, or just regular web browsing and email stuff).
Save yourself some $$ to spend on new hardware/books/CDs/whatever.
(Of course, this may be illegal depending on where you live, so check your local laws for where you live, I'm taking no responsibility for whatever you do)
Also note that if it's complaining that it can't find the files, you may want to check to see if Slashdot did any of it's wonderful space insertions into the displayed URL (in Preview, it looks like it did).
It expects everything and everyone fit into a single 2 layer model (Everyone, My Group, Me)
Looks like 3 layers there to me...
Anyways, people can belong to multiple groups, so there's a lot of flexability in that, it's not just your group that the permissions can be set for. Now if only there was some way to provide group inheritance, then it'd provide just a huge ammount of flexability.
This is nothing more than one form of the legalese that puts works into the public domain. Once that happens, it's not under a Creative Commons license, or any other license, it's in the public domain.
All of the other Creative Commons licenses on the other hand do impose some restrictions, plus the creator retains copyright, something that doesn't happen under public domain.
Other places may have that much uptime, but here in Las Vegas, brownouts across town are a fact of life during the summer. Too many people running their AC systems all at once. Quite frankly, our phone service is better than our power when it comes to uptime.
Aah, but what about us who aren't in Australia, and even better, those who are in non-extradition countries? It may be illegal for Australians to do that, but what would happen if you were to just send an image of your system to someone out there who were to disassemble it? Or are they going to make it illegal to transmit information outside of Australia?
The beauty of laws is that there's always loopholes.
I guess that they'd freak out if you ran everything from an OpenBSD box with everything encrypted, good PHRASE passwords, not single words, phrases, and used an encrypted connection as soon as you connected to the internet, and regularly inspected your hardware for indications that it'd been tampered with (or just carry your system with you at all times). And had your system check for rootkits and run something like tripwire against a nonvolatile piece of memory (like a SD card) every time you booted up.
Of course then you'd just be a paranoid freak, and probably deserving of the tapping of your system.
It also says that the top two search keyphrases to get to boingboing are anal and henai, with boingboing coming third and blowjobs coming fourth. I just want to know, what the hell?
German nationality is by bloodlines with the exception that if your family left Germany before a law change in 1910 or some time around then and were out of the country over ten years, then you lost your German citizenship. I've tried to get it, believe me, I've tried, my family came over in the 1870/80s and the consulate has told me that it wouldn't work.
Yeah, but you just have to click one button on the toolbar to export to a PDF. Open up the files that you routinely take around with you and export them, then whenever you update them, just re-export them. Doesn't seem to be too challenging to me. Everybody has Acrobat reader, or at least the ability to view PDFs (ghostscript, Apple Preview, etc.)
Get an older copy of Acrobat Reader (something like 5.0), so that it doesn't have all of that extra e-book reading cruft in it, and you'll have more than enough free space in your pen drive for it.
Often times, European countries determine nationality based upon descent, not where one was born, so even if she was born here in the US, she might be entitled to an Italian passport if her parents are Italian, or maybe even grandparents.
If that's the case, then you're automatically entitled to a work permit in any EU country. Just watch out for all of the other crap that you'll need to move to most European cities, like a printout of your police record and all sorts of other paperwork (and you thought the number forms was bad here in the US!)
I would also check out something like Mindmeld. It seems to have a lot of the features of a wiki, but with a completely different interface (Ask Jeeves style, you type in the question and it gives you the answer).
Interesting, look at how small those systems are, they have to have huge extentions just to fit into a normal rack. I'd be willing to bet that you could probably fit a good two or three systems into the space that one rack would normally contain. This would be interesting for companies that use highly-parallelizable applications, like the motion-picture industry or the sciences, especially considering the low prices...
Isn't he describing something like the Echo Framework?
Hey look, a web framework that uses javascript to dynamically update itself! It's only been around at that website since 2002.
No, it is "its". "It's" is a common contraction for "it is". Just try and put that into where "its" is and you'll see that it doesn't fit. "Its" is the possesive form of "it".
If you're going to critique someone else's grammar, at least do it correctly.
Of course, considering that she's your ex, you may just be wanting that to happen ;)
Maybe because it is.
No, they need to start using Coral for the webpages, or some other cache network...
Here's the Coralized link.
When this first got posted, the status page was running horribly slowly. I guess that one server still has trouble handling the load that a bunch of Slashdot users can put onto it, even if the content is static.
Use the Coralized link. No sense in crashing their status page. Plust it'll respond a lot quicker than loading the actual web page.
Hah, so it isn't a cyber crime to mess with other's computers if they're not owned or operated by the army? Thanks for stating the obvious, Capt. Obbvious.
Brought to you by Lt. Redundant.
Unplug your WAP. Then put it back in it's original box and store it in your closet for when you move to an area that isn't quite so congested. After that, cancel your internet.
Then, connect to someone else's WAP and leech off of their connection. Whenever they slow down too much, just switch to another access point, or if you're running Linux, write a script to have you hop between open APs every few minutes/hours (depends on whether or not you do a lot of large downloads, or just regular web browsing and email stuff).
Save yourself some $$ to spend on new hardware/books/CDs/whatever.
(Of course, this may be illegal depending on where you live, so check your local laws for where you live, I'm taking no responsibility for whatever you do)
I don't have the torrent trackers, but I do have the ed2k and the gnutella magnet links:
0 12510727Cdf7e85237fa7f75adb2fc34fef9bdc6e7C W HYWXL3Q3VP36OGLKCVN46UX35FKYDXC435OI2LBXYdnCrossfi re-20041015-JohnStewartavi
r essedwmv7C374377507Ce93f113574442b2499e1bb39ea1d67 957C W ZBAFLHG52X7KJ44O5QBYL43NDIVJW6WYJPYTMNRUQdnCrossfi re-20041015-JohnStewart--compressedwmv
Large AVI (96.5mb):
ed2k:7Cfile7CCrossfire-20041015-JohnStewartavi7C1
magnet:xturnbitprintPYY7PSQZXAIJK6EUOL4FAVHMGBFVH
Compressed WMV (35.7mb):
ed2k:7Cfile7CCrossfire-20041015-JohnStewart--comp
magnet:xturnbitprintY437NU2I2XYII7TZ764FKHFUOAIOO
Also note that if it's complaining that it can't find the files, you may want to check to see if Slashdot did any of it's wonderful space insertions into the displayed URL (in Preview, it looks like it did).
Come on now, they're not security holes, they're features!
It expects everything and everyone fit into a single 2 layer model (Everyone, My Group, Me)
Looks like 3 layers there to me...
Anyways, people can belong to multiple groups, so there's a lot of flexability in that, it's not just your group that the permissions can be set for. Now if only there was some way to provide group inheritance, then it'd provide just a huge ammount of flexability.
This is nothing more than one form of the legalese that puts works into the public domain. Once that happens, it's not under a Creative Commons license, or any other license, it's in the public domain.
All of the other Creative Commons licenses on the other hand do impose some restrictions, plus the creator retains copyright, something that doesn't happen under public domain.
Other places may have that much uptime, but here in Las Vegas, brownouts across town are a fact of life during the summer. Too many people running their AC systems all at once. Quite frankly, our phone service is better than our power when it comes to uptime.
Simple, with several 10 exabyte indexes. After all, the size is more than cut in half, so it should be exponentially quicker.
If you're looking for something that's pretty small, AbiWord is really lightweight and can read .sxw files, among dozens of others.
Aah, but what about us who aren't in Australia, and even better, those who are in non-extradition countries? It may be illegal for Australians to do that, but what would happen if you were to just send an image of your system to someone out there who were to disassemble it? Or are they going to make it illegal to transmit information outside of Australia?
The beauty of laws is that there's always loopholes.
I guess that they'd freak out if you ran everything from an OpenBSD box with everything encrypted, good PHRASE passwords, not single words, phrases, and used an encrypted connection as soon as you connected to the internet, and regularly inspected your hardware for indications that it'd been tampered with (or just carry your system with you at all times). And had your system check for rootkits and run something like tripwire against a nonvolatile piece of memory (like a SD card) every time you booted up.
Of course then you'd just be a paranoid freak, and probably deserving of the tapping of your system.
It also says that the top two search keyphrases to get to boingboing are anal and henai, with boingboing coming third and blowjobs coming fourth. I just want to know, what the hell?
German nationality is by bloodlines with the exception that if your family left Germany before a law change in 1910 or some time around then and were out of the country over ten years, then you lost your German citizenship. I've tried to get it, believe me, I've tried, my family came over in the 1870/80s and the consulate has told me that it wouldn't work.
Yeah, but you just have to click one button on the toolbar to export to a PDF. Open up the files that you routinely take around with you and export them, then whenever you update them, just re-export them. Doesn't seem to be too challenging to me. Everybody has Acrobat reader, or at least the ability to view PDFs (ghostscript, Apple Preview, etc.)
Get an older copy of Acrobat Reader (something like 5.0), so that it doesn't have all of that extra e-book reading cruft in it, and you'll have more than enough free space in your pen drive for it.
Often times, European countries determine nationality based upon descent, not where one was born, so even if she was born here in the US, she might be entitled to an Italian passport if her parents are Italian, or maybe even grandparents.
If that's the case, then you're automatically entitled to a work permit in any EU country. Just watch out for all of the other crap that you'll need to move to most European cities, like a printout of your police record and all sorts of other paperwork (and you thought the number forms was bad here in the US!)
I would also check out something like Mindmeld. It seems to have a lot of the features of a wiki, but with a completely different interface (Ask Jeeves style, you type in the question and it gives you the answer).
Well, if you're looking for a CMS (content management system), then you probably should have looked through the recent archives of Ask Slashdot (http://ask.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/11/18/0 043234&tid=169).
r efox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&q=open+s ource+erp&btnG=Search, http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&client=fire fox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&q=open+so urce+crm&btnG=Search).
And then if you're looking for an open-sourced ERP/CMS, Google can be your best friend. (http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&client=fi
The only one that seems to intersect both is Compiere, but that requires an Oracle license.
Of course, if what you're doing is just contracting, I'd just look at some good CRM software, like here (http://java-source.net/open-source/erp-crm).
Interesting, look at how small those systems are, they have to have huge extentions just to fit into a normal rack. I'd be willing to bet that you could probably fit a good two or three systems into the space that one rack would normally contain. This would be interesting for companies that use highly-parallelizable applications, like the motion-picture industry or the sciences, especially considering the low prices...