And to get the best out of a projector you need a screen (which means the "blank wall" thing goes out of the window) and lower light levels than an LCD or flatscreen - which means curtains during the day or watching at night.
This is off by default in current builds. I don't think it's been decided if it will be switched on for the final version - I think it will depend on what sort of bug reports come in from beta testers.
I'm using it at home and work and it operates exactly as advertised.
I don't really like Ecclestone's Dr. Who, but having see David Tennant in Cassanova, I think he'll be excellent. He is very bright and witty but his training shows through, and I think that he will bring some gravitas to the role.
Anything that delays the deployment of wifi is bad in my books. In the UK we're seeing it proliferate - in transport hubs, trains, cafes. I'd really like to start seeing it used on a city-wide project here.
They'll even notify you by email when it starts. Odds: 1 in 3.
They may as well just give them away! I mean, come on - most of us will be gulping down this stuff from the vending machines at work.
Apple is so far ahead of the competition it's unreal. This sort of stuff has the iTunes and iPod brands on everyone's lips. I don't see anyone catching them anytime soon.
XFN already uses the ref attribute to establish relationships to people you are linking to.
Re:What does it do differently?
on
Learning PHP 5
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· Score: 2, Insightful
Absolutely not. ASP is a scripting language. PHP is a scripting language with string OOP features. ASP.net is a framework for the web, which allows you to use a fully featured OOP language such as C#.
To be honest, if you've never used ASP.net, then it is difficult to explain the differences. But for the web, nothing else comes close.
That's strange, because that very thing happened to me this morning and after about ten seconds of unresponsive behaviour, IE6 popped up a little box asking if I wanted to stop the script.
Speculation. I'd pay for Steam - because it will deliver me the games I want to play in a timely fashion. I'm not interested in game packaging. Buying CS:CZ was flawless for me, the whole interface and procedure was excellent. If I do have to subscribe, I'm not bothered. I'll work out the pricing and see whether it works out better for me. Otherwise I won't bother. You may remember that Valve has previously talked about two Steam payment methods - subscription (all Valve products within your sub period) or product by product. This would seem to still make sense.
Also, you have to bear in mind that I'm not an idiot and I know how to use my online banking service to check what's going out of my account.
"The problem is fixed on the trunk, which is why the status says "fixed". It is
known not to be fixed on the Firefox 1.0 branch or Mozilla 1.7 branch (which is
clear if you read the previous comments)."
From Michael Lefevre in the bug comments. It's marked FIXED for the trunk, not the aviary branch.
Jesus Fucking Christ, I'm sick of you indie kids. Just because something is "manufactured" doesn't make it BAD. Half the shit that you listen to will be as contrived as Avril or Britney, and the thing is you don't even realise it!
Meanwhile Avril releases Don't Tell me and Britney releases Toxic and obliterates virtually every release this year that meets your cool quotient but you've got your head stuck too far up your ass to realise it.
I've seen talk about using them for themes in Mozilla. Don't forget that though animated screams flashy images, you can simply think of it as a collection of states for a feature. For example, a single image could contain graphics for ready, busy and error states.
Unfortunately there isn't a program to stop the user being stupid. No matter which e-mail client is used, they all allow attachments, and without a virus scanner screening those attachments, computer illiterate users are going to get virii.
Yes. All extensions and themes which have not been updated for 0.9 WILL NOT work. You must wait for the theme you want to be updated before it will correctly work in this new version.
This was necessary because the theme and extension system in Firefox has been pretty badly broken since the project started. For example, you couldn't uninstall extensions.
0.9 will see automatic updates of extensions and a Mozilla.org extension repository.
You've totally missed the point. I fully agree that an inline element can contain a block level element.
What I am trying to get across, and what the original poster missed, is that div elements contained within an inline element will be block level elements unless explicitly told otherwise.
In fact, I fail to see what you think you have proved with your quote.
Re:for actually using a computer (writing document
on
Is Caps Lock Dead?
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· Score: 1
Then obviously he should be using his tongue to type with while his uni-digit holds down shift.
It will be interesting to see the Mozilla reaction to this - the response to the new theme has been mostly negative. I certainly haven't seen anyone raving about as they did with the recent Firefox application icons.
Will Mozilla make some kind of pretence at listening to the community here?
And to get the best out of a projector you need a screen (which means the "blank wall" thing goes out of the window) and lower light levels than an LCD or flatscreen - which means curtains during the day or watching at night.
That is accepted. Even by the Firefox devs.
This is off by default in current builds. I don't think it's been decided if it will be switched on for the final version - I think it will depend on what sort of bug reports come in from beta testers.
I'm using it at home and work and it operates exactly as advertised.
I don't really like Ecclestone's Dr. Who, but having see David Tennant in Cassanova, I think he'll be excellent. He is very bright and witty but his training shows through, and I think that he will bring some gravitas to the role.
How do the /. feel the US job market is going these days?
As someone who recently explored the UK market, it seems like there are a lot of options for programmers here. What makes the US so different?
Anything that delays the deployment of wifi is bad in my books. In the UK we're seeing it proliferate - in transport hubs, trains, cafes. I'd really like to start seeing it used on a city-wide project here.
They may as well just give them away! I mean, come on - most of us will be gulping down this stuff from the vending machines at work.
Apple is so far ahead of the competition it's unreal. This sort of stuff has the iTunes and iPod brands on everyone's lips. I don't see anyone catching them anytime soon.
XFN already uses the ref attribute to establish relationships to people you are linking to.
Absolutely not. ASP is a scripting language. PHP is a scripting language with string OOP features. ASP.net is a framework for the web, which allows you to use a fully featured OOP language such as C#.
To be honest, if you've never used ASP.net, then it is difficult to explain the differences. But for the web, nothing else comes close.
Are you really that stupid? TF2 will be *huge*, the fact that you don't like Valve will make no difference, believe it or not.
That's strange, because that very thing happened to me this morning and after about ten seconds of unresponsive behaviour, IE6 popped up a little box asking if I wanted to stop the script.
Speculation. I'd pay for Steam - because it will deliver me the games I want to play in a timely fashion. I'm not interested in game packaging. Buying CS:CZ was flawless for me, the whole interface and procedure was excellent. If I do have to subscribe, I'm not bothered. I'll work out the pricing and see whether it works out better for me. Otherwise I won't bother. You may remember that Valve has previously talked about two Steam payment methods - subscription (all Valve products within your sub period) or product by product. This would seem to still make sense.
Also, you have to bear in mind that I'm not an idiot and I know how to use my online banking service to check what's going out of my account.
"The problem is fixed on the trunk, which is why the status says "fixed". It is known not to be fixed on the Firefox 1.0 branch or Mozilla 1.7 branch (which is clear if you read the previous comments)."
From Michael Lefevre in the bug comments. It's marked FIXED for the trunk, not the aviary branch.
http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=217527
That's the bug. It's fixed on the main trunk but not on the Firefox 1.0 branch... yet.
Jesus Fucking Christ, I'm sick of you indie kids. Just because something is "manufactured" doesn't make it BAD. Half the shit that you listen to will be as contrived as Avril or Britney, and the thing is you don't even realise it!
Meanwhile Avril releases Don't Tell me and Britney releases Toxic and obliterates virtually every release this year that meets your cool quotient but you've got your head stuck too far up your ass to realise it.
I've seen talk about using them for themes in Mozilla. Don't forget that though animated screams flashy images, you can simply think of it as a collection of states for a feature. For example, a single image could contain graphics for ready, busy and error states.
:)
Whether that is of any use is another matter
Yes, "crippled". Imagine how crippled it would be if you tried to do such a dynamic, visually strong site in HTML you idiot.
You missed out a step - how does one get from one stage to the other?
Unfortunately there isn't a program to stop the user being stupid. No matter which e-mail client is used, they all allow attachments, and without a virus scanner screening those attachments, computer illiterate users are going to get virii.
Open the bookmark manager, go to File, then Export. HTML Bookmarks are now yours to do with what you will.
Yes. All extensions and themes which have not been updated for 0.9 WILL NOT work. You must wait for the theme you want to be updated before it will correctly work in this new version.
This was necessary because the theme and extension system in Firefox has been pretty badly broken since the project started. For example, you couldn't uninstall extensions.
0.9 will see automatic updates of extensions and a Mozilla.org extension repository.
You've totally missed the point. I fully agree that an inline element can contain a block level element.
What I am trying to get across, and what the original poster missed, is that div elements contained within an inline element will be block level elements unless explicitly told otherwise.
In fact, I fail to see what you think you have proved with your quote.
Then obviously he should be using his tongue to type with while his uni-digit holds down shift.
It will be interesting to see the Mozilla reaction to this - the response to the new theme has been mostly negative. I certainly haven't seen anyone raving about as they did with the recent Firefox application icons.
Will Mozilla make some kind of pretence at listening to the community here?