I use 2 WMs. KDE for fun stuff, and Xmonad for "real work." It's hard to waste time messing around with features when there really aren't any, and all configuration is done by editing the (interpreted) source.
Probably so that when people quote the parent you can see the actual reply in the preview, though it obviously causes problems in many situations. EG can't see quotations at all, they might quote one part & have the erply not make sense without the quotation, etc, etc.
Because it's not eye tracking. The user sees the letters flash, in sequence, and when the correct one is seen to flash the user changes his/her thoughts in a way detectable by the EEG. The system then inputs that letter. The eyes don't actually have to move (though it can be hard to see a letter since the usable area of the vision range is quite small).
It is not illegal, though that person may be in violation of some schools' policies.
I released many of my school papers under a license that was essentially the creative commons attribution share-alike license, but with the attribution clause negated. You could legally use it, so long as you did NOT attribute it to me. Sadly no one tried to use any of them (that I know of), so I never got to test the intersection of contract/copyright law and school rules.
Country & Western both deal with the american midwest: the singer often has an accent appropriate to the region and the topics are often about things that interest people in that region.
Folk is a much larger category. It includes traditional music of many cultures, as well as music done in a traditional style. So while all country/western might be folk, not all folk is country/western.
I don't know IIP, but I2p has a darknet, like freenet, but also allows routing to the internet like tor. It's just as slow as any of the other onion routers, but combines good bits from freenet and tor.
Planning for >1 RC is smart, in that it gives you time to fix bugs, but RCs are supposed to be releasable. 7.5 months seems much more like a beta than an RC. You put out an RC with exactly what you plan to release, and then fix any bugs found. Repeat. Once you have all critical bugs fixed you rename the RC to the release.
When I use a public bathroom I use a paper towel/toilet paper to open the door to leave. Look at the number of guys who don't wash their hands. They all touched the door handle, I'd rather not.
Mod Parent up. It's basic thermodynamics. A system with energy intake X and energy output X+Y will lose total energy if Y is positive. The primary energy storage system in humans is fat, thus a proper diet and exercise can burn fat. GGP correctly notes that different people store different amounts of energy from foods, but that simply changes the amount of energy output needed, it does not allow them to violate the laws of thermodynamics. If it did we'd have perpetual motion fatties, waddling through the streets and providing us with free energy.
Multiple layers of security.
That said, I think onion-routing BT could work, but would likely be slow (like pretty much every other onion-routed network out there.)
I use "pirated" copies all the time. Sure, I have the physical books sitting around, but full-text-search on an OCRed PDF is MUCH better than trying to find the page manually. Since my gaming group uses as computer and a DLP projector to handle the map getting the PDFs for the GM to read makes things vastly faster and easier.
WOTC should be offering PDFs, but of just the rules. No flavour, no art, just easily searchable, indexed rulesets. The use and quality of the books comes from their art and appearance, the use of the PDFs comes from the ease of finding information.
Global Warming/Climate Change is either caused by humans or it is not.
Also, it is either harmful to humans or it is not.
If it is harmful to us, then it doesn't matter if we caused it, it merely matters if we can stop/prevent it.
If it is not harmful to us, and it is caused by us, then it's our responsibility, but not as important to us as if it were harmful.
If it is not harmful to us, and not caused by us, then the only reason to stop it is if we care enough about those species it does harm to use the resources needed to stop it.
So if it's harmful to us it doesn't matter if we caused it or not, and since it seems like it could be harmful (and the only way to find out for sure is to let it harm us), then it is in our best interests to try to stop it, to prevent harm to ourselves.
The second law of thermodynamics only applies to a closed system. IF the universe is infinite and contains infinite energy to begin with then the second law wouldn't apply to the universe as a whole.
I use 2 WMs. KDE for fun stuff, and Xmonad for "real work." It's hard to waste time messing around with features when there really aren't any, and all configuration is done by editing the (interpreted) source.
Whereas with Linux you just boot into single user mode & use passwd to set the root password.
Probably so that when people quote the parent you can see the actual reply in the preview, though it obviously causes problems in many situations. EG can't see quotations at all, they might quote one part & have the erply not make sense without the quotation, etc, etc.
Yes, we have no bananas!
Running fiber optic cable is a better way to avoid emissions.
Why do you, and the gp, keep, putting in, so many unnecessary commas? Do you type a comma when you get back to /.?
Because it's not eye tracking. The user sees the letters flash, in sequence, and when the correct one is seen to flash the user changes his/her thoughts in a way detectable by the EEG. The system then inputs that letter. The eyes don't actually have to move (though it can be hard to see a letter since the usable area of the vision range is quite small).
It is not illegal, though that person may be in violation of some schools' policies.
I released many of my school papers under a license that was essentially the creative commons attribution share-alike license, but with the attribution clause negated. You could legally use it, so long as you did NOT attribute it to me. Sadly no one tried to use any of them (that I know of), so I never got to test the intersection of contract/copyright law and school rules.
Country & Western both deal with the american midwest: the singer often has an accent appropriate to the region and the topics are often about things that interest people in that region.
Folk is a much larger category. It includes traditional music of many cultures, as well as music done in a traditional style. So while all country/western might be folk, not all folk is country/western.
I don't know IIP, but I2p has a darknet, like freenet, but also allows routing to the internet like tor. It's just as slow as any of the other onion routers, but combines good bits from freenet and tor.
Planning for >1 RC is smart, in that it gives you time to fix bugs, but RCs are supposed to be releasable. 7.5 months seems much more like a beta than an RC. You put out an RC with exactly what you plan to release, and then fix any bugs found. Repeat. Once you have all critical bugs fixed you rename the RC to the release.
http://www.bancomicsans.com/fonts.html The site that started it all offers quite a few alternatives.
Also, it's yid, hay, vav, hay. YHVH, not YHWH.
Put a Stirling engine in there. Though, you'll need to connect the cool end to a cool area, some sort of radiator.
When I use a public bathroom I use a paper towel/toilet paper to open the door to leave. Look at the number of guys who don't wash their hands. They all touched the door handle, I'd rather not.
Mod Parent up. It's basic thermodynamics. A system with energy intake X and energy output X+Y will lose total energy if Y is positive. The primary energy storage system in humans is fat, thus a proper diet and exercise can burn fat. GGP correctly notes that different people store different amounts of energy from foods, but that simply changes the amount of energy output needed, it does not allow them to violate the laws of thermodynamics. If it did we'd have perpetual motion fatties, waddling through the streets and providing us with free energy.
Not for diatoms, maybe, but for nano-sea-kittens?
Multiple layers of security.
That said, I think onion-routing BT could work, but would likely be slow (like pretty much every other onion-routed network out there.)
I use "pirated" copies all the time. Sure, I have the physical books sitting around, but full-text-search on an OCRed PDF is MUCH better than trying to find the page manually. Since my gaming group uses as computer and a DLP projector to handle the map getting the PDFs for the GM to read makes things vastly faster and easier. WOTC should be offering PDFs, but of just the rules. No flavour, no art, just easily searchable, indexed rulesets. The use and quality of the books comes from their art and appearance, the use of the PDFs comes from the ease of finding information.
So it's like playing ET with a blindfold.
Except for "Ask Slashdot", Opinion pieces, and book reviews, which aren't really news. But /. is not just an aggregator.
Setting up Linux + Apache + MySQL + PHP under FreeBSD can be hard, but VMs do wonders these days.
Global Warming/Climate Change is either caused by humans or it is not.
Also, it is either harmful to humans or it is not.
If it is harmful to us, then it doesn't matter if we caused it, it merely matters if we can stop/prevent it.
If it is not harmful to us, and it is caused by us, then it's our responsibility, but not as important to us as if it were harmful.
If it is not harmful to us, and not caused by us, then the only reason to stop it is if we care enough about those species it does harm to use the resources needed to stop it.
So if it's harmful to us it doesn't matter if we caused it or not, and since it seems like it could be harmful (and the only way to find out for sure is to let it harm us), then it is in our best interests to try to stop it, to prevent harm to ourselves.
The second law of thermodynamics only applies to a closed system. IF the universe is infinite and contains infinite energy to begin with then the second law wouldn't apply to the universe as a whole.
No, you just need to install OS/2 on them.