They want you on their site, but they want the power to summarise and manage their search engine face to maximise foot traffic whilst not giving the whole story away.
The pirate party in Switzerland is run by master criminal Heidi. She is well known for having a huge media stash up in the highlands at her Grandfathers shack.
Her internet connection runs on the immensely popular (in Switzerland) and fast IP over Yodel protocol.
Thanks for the clarifications - I knew it was something like I said but couldn't think of the correct description.
As for the breakdown of a rotating shaft *eventually* I agree with you, but since you have literal hands on experience - does this occur within products' lifespans or is the article using a sledgehammer to pound some FUD into the process?
incorporate into greasemonkey or your own standard method and forget about feeling lucky.
Is this a google vulnerability though or just creative thinking? If google actually checked the link and rejected commands if invalid parameter data is present then we would land on a harmless search page no matter what.
(incidentally, will some regex wiz work their magic on the initial link test)
I don't think so, they whacked their sample with a hammer until it cracked.
On the other hand, using half the pressure but cycling the test hundreds of thousands of times revealed a gradually increasing pattern of surface damage at the indentation site--clear indication of mechanical fatigue.
The tiny mirrors on the DLP are just going to flex in a magnetic field. I can grab a piece of wood and wobble it for hours (like Rolf Harris!) without a crack appearing but I can also pound it with a hammer and do a Jack Nicholson impression with the hole.
A group of 12-13 year old lads don't care if something "works". The name set the tone for the entire lesson and every single reference was followed by the entire class breaking down in fits of giggles. As for the technology itself I never once disparaged it.
In my first experience with IT, our technology teacher (who was also the metalwork guru) tried to show us the source code to the program. He spent about 30 minutes loading the (BBC micro) computer and flicking the power switch to try to see under the hood. "If you do it really fast it comes up and shows you the code"
Incidentally he was also the teacher who taught us about the wankel engine, I am not sure which caused a bigger laugh.
Its not just computers or cars. First generation anything is pretty notorious for having problems.
As with anything in life, if you need something thats new, get it immediately but expect problems. If you want something, wait until it becomes a need and then get it.
You will have less problems and will have had time to assess the market (also you will save money)
The shortness of portal is ok, the lack of storyline should be fleshed out in Ep3. It whet my appetite and now I have been homing my skills on the challenges and custom maps. It has greater replay-ability than HL itself and now play it like playing patience or minesweeper or tetris, not for the storyline but for a mental workout.
The advert was right - you really do begin to think with portals.
I look around real life for ways to shave off seconds whilst I walk to my car or around the shops. Getting a drink would be simple with a portal in the kitchen.
I have to mentally stop myself from diving headfirst from platforms and it took real effort not to jump into a big pink Barbie mirror at the local wal-mart.
How would AT&T tell Apple you were connected to the web using wifi?
Using the information on requests apple can easily mine the number of people who go over AT&T EDGE and who use wifi. Also, if they do not ever want to block the URL from working with none iphone devices they can do it based on the IMEI and not on some if(!ipOwnedBy("AT&T")) code.
You signed an agreement when you bought the device.
When you interact with Apple, we may collect personal information relevant to the situation, such as your name, mailing address, phone number, email address, and contact preferences; your credit card information and information about the Apple products you own, such as their serial numbers and date of purchase; and information relating to a support or service issue.
However people will expect this to be at manual support time and not all the time.
Thank god this is only a simulation. When they finally put this stuff into real space ships, just make sure they don't copy the motion-activated air-lock doors. I kinda like breathing, keep the motion activation swooshing to internal doors only please.
Other than that it looks really really cool and well worth the money they spent on it.
Isn't Yellowstone park just one great big fuck off source of hot water?
And the same netiquette also says you don't give one answer to the spider and another to the end-user.
They want it all.
That's the problem.
They want you on their site, but they want the power to summarise and manage their search engine face to maximise foot traffic whilst not giving the whole story away.
Actually he isn't.
The pirate party in Switzerland is run by master criminal Heidi.
She is well known for having a huge media stash up in the highlands at her Grandfathers shack.
Her internet connection runs on the immensely popular (in Switzerland) and fast IP over Yodel protocol.
Of course the more mundane solution is that I just fucked up - Wii got the we at the start of 2007 - practically a year ago.
We got one in January last year, its a dream.
You can have it for a couple of thousand dollars. *evil grin*
Thanks for the clarifications - I knew it was something like I said but couldn't think of the correct description.
As for the breakdown of a rotating shaft *eventually* I agree with you, but since you have literal hands on experience - does this occur within products' lifespans or is the article using a sledgehammer to pound some FUD into the process?
For the startings to a cure, see here:
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=373765&cid=21513421
Stupid I know, but until slash starts cradling us with some form of protection, I wrote the following
javascript:(function(){
var i,x,l,h;
for(i=0;x=document.links[i];++i){
l=x.href.toLowerCase();
if(l.indexOf('google')>=0 && l.indexOf('btni')>=0) {
x.href = x.href.replace(/btni/gi, "btnG");
h=document.createTextNode("[I'm Feeling unlucky]");
x.parentNode.insertBefore(h, x.nextSibling);
}
} })()
incorporate into greasemonkey or your own standard method and forget about feeling lucky.
Is this a google vulnerability though or just creative thinking?
If google actually checked the link and rejected commands if invalid parameter data is present then we would land on a harmless search page no matter what.
(incidentally, will some regex wiz work their magic on the initial link test)
I don't think so, they whacked their sample with a hammer until it cracked.
On the other hand, using half the pressure but cycling the test hundreds of thousands of times revealed a gradually increasing pattern of surface damage at the indentation site--clear indication of mechanical fatigue.
The tiny mirrors on the DLP are just going to flex in a magnetic field.
I can grab a piece of wood and wobble it for hours (like Rolf Harris!) without a crack appearing but I can also pound it with a hammer and do a Jack Nicholson impression with the hole.
Do not slosh the chemicals around to see if your battery is flat.
You could cause massive injury if the binary chemicals mix.
Well whats wrong with hitting him with 'dis bar in my hand or 'dat bar over there?
A group of 12-13 year old lads don't care if something "works".
The name set the tone for the entire lesson and every single reference was followed by the entire class breaking down in fits of giggles.
As for the technology itself I never once disparaged it.
In my first experience with IT, our technology teacher (who was also the metalwork guru) tried to show us the source code to the program.
He spent about 30 minutes loading the (BBC micro) computer and flicking the power switch to try to see under the hood.
"If you do it really fast it comes up and shows you the code"
Incidentally he was also the teacher who taught us about the wankel engine, I am not sure which caused a bigger laugh.
Is google video centralised into one specific server or do you obtain video from one of a number of points around the internet?
Its not just computers or cars. First generation anything is pretty notorious for having problems.
As with anything in life, if you need something thats new, get it immediately but expect problems.
If you want something, wait until it becomes a need and then get it.
You will have less problems and will have had time to assess the market (also you will save money)
Thanks, I realised as soon as I posted but thought people would be able to suss it out for themselves.
The shortness of portal is ok, the lack of storyline should be fleshed out in Ep3.
It whet my appetite and now I have been homing my skills on the challenges and custom maps.
It has greater replay-ability than HL itself and now play it like playing patience or minesweeper or tetris, not for the storyline but for a mental workout.
The advert was right - you really do begin to think with portals.
I look around real life for ways to shave off seconds whilst I walk to my car or around the shops. Getting a drink would be simple with a portal in the kitchen.
I have to mentally stop myself from diving headfirst from platforms and it took real effort not to jump into a big pink Barbie mirror at the local wal-mart.
How would AT&T tell Apple you were connected to the web using wifi?
Using the information on requests apple can easily mine the number of people who go over AT&T EDGE and who use wifi.
Also, if they do not ever want to block the URL from working with none iphone devices they can do it based on the IMEI and not on some if(!ipOwnedBy("AT&T")) code.
You signed an agreement when you bought the device.
When you interact with Apple, we may collect personal information relevant to the situation, such as your name, mailing address, phone number, email address, and contact preferences; your credit card information and information about the Apple products you own, such as their serial numbers and date of purchase; and information relating to a support or service issue.
However people will expect this to be at manual support time and not all the time.
This is a different build - the one you are thinking of was a guy from England who went bankrupt trying to sell his 24th century flat.
http://www.24thcid.com/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/leicestershire/4695188.stm
Thank god this is only a simulation.
When they finally put this stuff into real space ships, just make sure they don't copy the motion-activated air-lock doors.
I kinda like breathing, keep the motion activation swooshing to internal doors only please.
Other than that it looks really really cool and well worth the money they spent on it.
You need a really small display cabinet to show off your nano technology awards.
850 untis * 77.1 cents gives a saving of 100,000 mackerals.
Excel 2007 FTW!
The NASA one has stars. ;)
Its obviously better