I logged in for the first time in two years, and am posting for the first time in two years, just to point out that you're very, very, very, misguided in how you're approaching this. You're generalizing terms that the parent was using in specific economics-defined ways, which unfortunately have overlap into common English, where they mean much more general things.
As far as PowerMacs/whatever they're called, supposedly in August/January depending on what Intel chip they want to use. Intel iMacs are out now if you weren't aware.
I thought this must have been some sort of belated April Fools joke, and I still find it hard to believe after seeing it with my own eyes. They must have gotten a hold of that marketing research data that suggested a majority of Windows users would buy a Mac if they could run Windows on it as well.
This will go down as one of the most important developments in the history of Apple, and the various implications of it are astounding to contemplate. Will Windows end up doing more business through single-licenses? Will this further cripple beleagured PC builders? Could this be a ploy by Apple to force Microsoft in the short term to focus on single-user licenses, and in the long term they'll release OSX for manufacturers and completely push it out of the market?
I think we will all be very surprised what the PC landscape looks like 10 years from now, regardless of what happens.
I'm a high school senior, and I've been astonished as the smartest kids I know (National Merit Scholars, high 90 average through high school, numerous internships, etc.) get denied by the top colleges. Now I know why.
But, I want to know how these super-students find data to publish new and interesting research on freaking stem cells. It was my understanding that even top scientists had a hard time in the U.S. due to moral objections. How are high school students managing it?
Google has no right to index all the books it wants and throw them online for anyone to browse. They are the property of the rightful owner, not Google.
Their policy of having publishers request to not have their books scanned would be similar to the government forcing one to request not to have their phone tapped. Some fundamental rights should not be assumed to be given up until they actually are, and intellectual property is one of them.
No matter how much they redact irrelavent text or try to keep users from gaining full access to the book, someone will. The Slashdot community, of all, should recognize this. Time and time again encryption schemes are hacked (DeCSS being the simplest example to point to).
The article, even the summary, clearly indicates all they are patenting is the process of using a smiley on the phone/sending it. They are NOT patenting the smiley, that's just an inflammatory headline used to create negative response.
btw, wasn't Transmeta played out after their big new technology was having Linux on chip?
This seems redundant to me
on
Hardened PHP
·
· Score: 0
I'm a administrator for a rather large PHP site, and most of these features have already been implemented by other third parties. The fact these people are implementing the same features used in open source projects makes me wary of exactly how original their code is.
Particularly poor idea. My good friend is a program exec at NBC, and they're considering dropping soaps all together (not in the least due to they're only averaging 2.5 Nielsen points a week for all their soaps). In addition, soap opera viewership is 89% female. American females average 24 minutes a day online, men average 42. Essentially, they're transferring a female product to a male medium.
As a rudimentary physics student, even I can tell you that if we harpoon this asteroid from earth, the asteroid will exert just enough force to pull earth out of it's orbit!
Very simple F = MxA F = 194251kg X 30000 kmh F = 5827530000 newtons ASTEROID
F = MxA F = 252415kg x 1500 kmh F = 38122500 newtons EARTH
5827530000 > 38122500 Force of Asteroid > Force of Earth!!!
I logged in for the first time in two years, and am posting for the first time in two years, just to point out that you're very, very, very, misguided in how you're approaching this. You're generalizing terms that the parent was using in specific economics-defined ways, which unfortunately have overlap into common English, where they mean much more general things.
ya ma nga
doing it up in capen as i type
Silly American schools. :o
DisneyQuest has been a miserable failure. The last one in Orlando is closing in 2008.
That would be great if I had a million dollars actually. E3 could be a good place to use them.
...Heisenberg deals with momentum and velocity, and by implication energy.
As far as PowerMacs/whatever they're called, supposedly in August/January depending on what Intel chip they want to use. Intel iMacs are out now if you weren't aware.
I thought this must have been some sort of belated April Fools joke, and I still find it hard to believe after seeing it with my own eyes. They must have gotten a hold of that marketing research data that suggested a majority of Windows users would buy a Mac if they could run Windows on it as well.
This will go down as one of the most important developments in the history of Apple, and the various implications of it are astounding to contemplate. Will Windows end up doing more business through single-licenses? Will this further cripple beleagured PC builders? Could this be a ploy by Apple to force Microsoft in the short term to focus on single-user licenses, and in the long term they'll release OSX for manufacturers and completely push it out of the market?
I think we will all be very surprised what the PC landscape looks like 10 years from now, regardless of what happens.
I'm a high school senior, and I've been astonished as the smartest kids I know (National Merit Scholars, high 90 average through high school, numerous internships, etc.) get denied by the top colleges. Now I know why.
But, I want to know how these super-students find data to publish new and interesting research on freaking stem cells. It was my understanding that even top scientists had a hard time in the U.S. due to moral objections. How are high school students managing it?
Google has no right to index all the books it wants and throw them online for anyone to browse. They are the property of the rightful owner, not Google.
Their policy of having publishers request to not have their books scanned would be similar to the government forcing one to request not to have their phone tapped. Some fundamental rights should not be assumed to be given up until they actually are, and intellectual property is one of them.
No matter how much they redact irrelavent text or try to keep users from gaining full access to the book, someone will. The Slashdot community, of all, should recognize this. Time and time again encryption schemes are hacked (DeCSS being the simplest example to point to).
The article, even the summary, clearly indicates all they are patenting is the process of using a smiley on the phone/sending it. They are NOT patenting the smiley, that's just an inflammatory headline used to create negative response.
High school physics: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.
Gm1m2/r^2
btw, wasn't Transmeta played out after their big new technology was having Linux on chip?
I'm a administrator for a rather large PHP site, and most of these features have already been implemented by other third parties. The fact these people are implementing the same features used in open source projects makes me wary of exactly how original their code is.
Atomic weapons storage being centralized will probably increase rather than decrease risk of terrorism.
Particularly poor idea. My good friend is a program exec at NBC, and they're considering dropping soaps all together (not in the least due to they're only averaging 2.5 Nielsen points a week for all their soaps).
In addition, soap opera viewership is 89% female. American females average 24 minutes a day online, men average 42. Essentially, they're transferring a female product to a male medium.
God forbid Microsoft tries to help the market that everyone has been bitching doesn't have enough exposure.
home and write poems to some internet girl.
Whoa.
Waste of time + money. Almost like women :D
Since when isn't 94% of a market success?
59 + 34 + 1 = 94
GoatSE! GoatSE! GoatS2132132145154E! GoatS123213213E! GoatS3123321E! GoatS21321E! GoatS23213E! GoatSE2131!
...a porn flick role! IN THE SAME FILM!
lol
jk
seriously, this should be +5,Funny
As a rudimentary physics student, even I can tell you that if we harpoon this asteroid from earth, the asteroid will exert just enough force to pull earth out of it's orbit!
Very simple
F = MxA
F = 194251kg X 30000 kmh
F = 5827530000 newtons ASTEROID
F = MxA
F = 252415kg x 1500 kmh
F = 38122500 newtons EARTH
5827530000 > 38122500
Force of Asteroid > Force of Earth!!!
"Great new and innovative games!"
Sir, you forgot to add: "That are copies of other games!".
(for all of those who don't know what I mean, google Dance Dance Revolution)