I think the better termage is pulled. With more mass added, Mars would be actually pulled toward the Sun a little more... (granted, a little rover isn't much mass... altogether we've probably only planted less than 50 Earth pounds on Mars, if even)
Probably only a slight fraction of a micrometer closer, of course!
Then again, since we on Earth lost that mass, we probably moved a slight fraction of a micrometer farther from the sun!
I just had to switch jobs, and moved out of an area where cable modems had just started being offered to an area where:
1) Cable modems are, at earliest, a year from now. 2) I'm about 2 miles too far for DSL. 3) The phone lines in this area are so pathetic, best I can get is a 19.2 or maybe a 21.6 connection on my V.90 USR 56k modem.
I'm almost about to get a friend of mine who lives about 8 miles away who has cable modem to set up a hacked up Apple Airport with the 9-10 mile hack and just wireless network to me, with his NAT box and everyhting. Even if I only get 1 MB, it's still more than enough to use a cable modems 650k speeds.
ATI distributes a paper-envelope packaged CD with all their video cards, sealed with a sticker.
This CD has all the initial drivers for their cards (the ones offered on their site are all upgrade supplemental drivers), and some software (DVD software on the Expert 2000, for example.)
The package also has the EULA (behind the CD, so you have to open the package to read it.)
The sticker reads:
Please note that removal of this label is your acknowledgement that use of the enclosed software is subject to the terms and conditions set out in the enclosed license agreement. If these terms and conditions are not acceptible, please return the entire product to your place of purchasing for a refund.
Now, I ask you, how do I know the terms of the agreement, to be able to disagree with them, until I read the agreement? If the agreement is inside the package, don't I have to open it to read the agreement first?
(Of course, I could always tear the bottom of the envelope open, thereby not removing the sticker at all! Does that mean I am not bound by their EULA?)
This particular one is a.MPG.exe. Now, as everyone knows, you don't care about anything except the three characters after the last dot (a carryover of the old DOS 8.3 format, except now it's 255.3.)
Anyways, I know, and have seen, ASF's that can, toward the end of the page, redirect you to a webpage, usually the maker of the movie. However, you can make a quick 1 second, 5 second, whatever length you want, ASF, and have it redirect to a page that contains an ActiveX script, or Javascript. If you have those enabled on your browser, boom, instant run, and you don't even know about it!
"Suing Napster is like suing Ford because a couple bank robbers used a Ford to get away"
AND
"If they're going to sue Napster because they allow people to transfer MP3's, then why don't they also sue the makers of every web browser, FTP program, and any other file transfer program out there?"
The latter has been a question I've had since the whole Napster thing began. Stopping the MP3 spread is impossible. It's like unleashing an airborne virus: once it's out, you can't stop it all, no matter how hard you try.
If you were serious about stoppng MP3, what you'd have to do is this: Sue every company on the planet to bankruptcy that produces anything having to do with file transers, from physical media like floppys, to Sony memory sticks, to Zip Disks and CD's, to electronic media like hard drives, routers, hubs, to software like FTP, Web, and other.
Even then you wouldn't be able to stop it. There would still be MP3's out there, because you just shut down the companies, not the actual stuff they've already made and sold. You would then have to go and destroy every single person's form of the above mentioned technologies. EMP wouldn't work, because CD's aren't susceptible to magnetic disturbance. You'd pretty much have to make a total apocalypse, up to and including destruction of the whole planet to eliminate the underground bunkers that the occasional geek has bought.
And if you've got that much money to spend on those courses of action, illegal MP3's of your music are the least of your worries.
SDMI was on the right track: if you can't beat them, join them. SDMI failed in one important fact though: people want to save money whenever possible, including MP3 copies of music. However, there is still no way the artists will make as much from music per listener as they used to. The artists will just have to get used to it.
I have noticed, however, working in a tech support department, that those whose lives consist of something that is stereotypically NOT a computer-linked career, like athletics or military, tend to stay as far from computers as they can. Same for those who don't understand how to use a computer.
Good luck to the military trying to teach these soldiers how to use them. Even tougher, enforcing the use of them (as opposed to leaving it behind in the big round metal bucket in the barracks.)
I posted a note describing version numbers back in March. I reposted it, and you can see it Here.
ALSO, on Final Fantasy Anthology:
Final Fantasy Anthology has been out in the US for a few months now. It includes the following games, which have been touched up a bit with new scenes and new CGI FMV movies:
Final Fantasy 5 (released in Japan as Final Fatasy 5 Super Famicom, never released in US)
Final Fantasy 6 (released in Japan as Final Fantasy 6 Super Famicom, released in US as Final Fantasy 3 Super Nintendo)
You can get Final Fantasy Anthology for Playstation, an it runs you about $40-50, depending where you get it. It also, once you complete the game, puts a saved game on your Playstation memory card so you can go to a special area and view behind the scenes footage, making of, and view the FMV movies.
This was posted by me in the comment about a month ago on the Final Fantasy Movie, which brought up the same questions on version numbers (I couldn't link directly to my comment, for some reason!) -ERP
Here's a comparison of the different incarnations of Final Fantasy:
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 1 (Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 1 (NES)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 2 (Famicom) US Title: Not Released
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 3 (Famicom) US Title: Not released (now, hold your horses, keep reading)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 4 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 2 (SNES) (Note: The US version is substantially different that the Japanese version)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 5 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 5. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. First time released in US.
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 6 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 3 (SNES). Also under Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 6. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. (IMO, the best of the series... I haven't tried the anthology version, though.)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX) US Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX) US Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
I know I'm leaving out Final Fantasy Mystic Quest, Final Fantasy Tactics, and others. I'm not sure what their equivalents are. Also, don't ask for dates... I don't know those, either.
If you want to play any of these games nowadays to experience them, you must either find a way to get one of the originals, or use an emulator, and download the ROM image of the game. I cannot tell you where to get either, because use of emulators has been determined to be illegal. All I can say is if you're reading this, you are smart enough to use a search engine.
However, most scientists believe that such anti-gravity research is fundamentally flawed. It goes against what we know about the physical Universe and is therefore impossible, they say.
Now, that, is one very WRONG saying. Just because we don't know something, means it's impossible? I DON'T THINK SO!!!
(Oh, and on a side note: The DNS maintainers of Greenglow need to change their DNS settings. Sure, Greenglow may be on the local machine, but everybody else on the Internet doesn't see it on 127.0.0.1, the local loopback IP
Combine this with the news recently of IBM's new 70GB hard drive, and you've got a pretty big hard drive, in a pretty small space... 70GB, ten times that is 700GB.
How long until we have terrabyte drives for consumer use?
(Better question: How long until Microsoft comes out with an OS that takes up 10GB? Win98 was about 500, Win200 was 1 GB, what's next in size?)
You have to be linked to at least one other person in the Gnutella network. Then, you use their list of other people in the network, and so on. This thing expands exponentially. Thing is, you need to get on first.
How? IRC to Efnet (#gnutella), and do a/dns on someone there (hopefully, they're running gnutella). Then, you add that IP to your list (under the GnutellaNet tab, type in the number, and click add). Then, click on Get More. You're in the Net.
Agreed. Tried it to my localhost, and finally got two gnutellaNet entries (myself , and myself serving). Still, when I did a search for what I knew was out there on my little network, didn't quite get what I wanted to get... instead, got ZERO.
Well, looks like you actually have to build a database... have to have at least one person, then build off what they have, maybe?
The documentation is very poor... Says "Clicking ping will auto-list other members in the GnutellaNet network." Well, I don't see no Ping button... closest I see is Update, and it doesn't do what it should.
Dunno. Guess this is what I get for being an alpha tester.
Through www.dictionary.com/translate (Babelfish was hosed)... tried to English-ify it as much as possible:
1. March 2000 - Author: Florian Breitsameter DUNE Miniseries: The first pictures of the set!
On 22 November 1999 work in Prague began towards filming for a 6-hour TV filming of the novel " The Desert Planet " ("Dune"), by Frank Herbert. The TV project has a $20 million budget(US), which can offer thereby a hochkaraetigen occupation and crew.
William Hurt ("Lost In Space", "Dark City" and also "Until The End Of The World") plays the role of the Duke Leto Atreides, which will have to be seen. The film will also feature Italian actors Giancarlo Giannini as Imperator Shaddam IV and to Ian McNeice as a bad baron Harkonnen.
Alec Newman plays Paul Atreides, the main figure of the film. Barbara Kodetova plays Chani, at the page of Alec Newman. With Uwe Ochsenknecht, who embodies the Fremen Leader very convincingly, is represented also a German actor in this internationally filled production.
The film script to "desert planet" was written by John Harrison, who also directs; executive producers are Richard P. Rubinstein and Mitchell Galin. The camera work is done by the three-time Oscar winner Vittorio Storaro (Apocalypse Now).
The marvelous costumes come from Theodor Pistek (obtained a Oscar for the costumes at Amadeus). Additionally the special effect conductor Ernest Farino and the production designer Miljen Kreka Kljakovic are involved in the project. The digital special effects will come from three of studios, among them AREA 51 and One Digital (Babylon 5).
" Dune " is produced by Amsterdam Entertainment Inc., the Scifi Channel and KirchMedia tandem Communications. The US airing is planned for the Fall 2000, in Germany the television airing will air in Spring 2001 (thus only little later).
World-exclusively SF Film.de can show the first photos of the set and the fiming work here now. Thank you for it at Torsten Dewi!
Here's a comparison of the different incarnations of Final Fantasy:
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 1 (Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 1 (NES)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 2 (Famicom) US Title: Not Released
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 3 (Famicom) US Title: Not released (now, hold your horses, keep reading)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 4 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 2 (SNES) (Note: The US version is substantially different that the Japanese version)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 5 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 5. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. First time released in US.
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 6 (Super Famicom) US Title: Final Fantasy 3 (SNES). Also under Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 6. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. (IMO, the best of the series... I haven't tried the anthology version, though.)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX) US Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX) US Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
I know I'm leaving out Final Fantasy Mystic Quest, Final Fantasy Tactics, and others. I'm not sure what their equivalents are. Also, don't ask for dates... I don't know those, either.
If you want to play any of these games nowadays to experience them, you must either find a way to get one of the originals, or use an emulator, and download the ROM image of the game. I cannot tell you where to get either, because use of emulators has been determined to be illegal. All I can say is if you're reading this, you are smart enough to use a search engine.
We do screen the moderators, albeit after the fact. It's called Meta Moderation.
Once you're logged in, you see a link at the top of your main Slashdot page that says "Have you tried Meta Moderation?" Click on that, and you are given 10 moderations from a previous group of posts. You get to choose if these moderations were fair, neutral, or unfair.
This is who watches the watchers. The question now becomes: Who watches the ones who watch the watchers? The answer: H & CT
This thing looks nice and everything, has all the services I think I'd want (except print sharing). Love the ability to administer it from the web page.
But, one thing comes to mind. What happens when your web service goes wacko some day, and you can't access the web pages? What do you do, what DO you do? I didn't see any alternative way to get in (unless maybe it's got a serial port you can hook a terminal into and administer).
All in all, though, looks like a sweet looking machine (could beef up the hard drive to about 13-20 GB though, instead of 6). I think I'd like to get one for home sometime.
I think the better termage is pulled. With more mass added, Mars would be actually pulled toward the Sun a little more... (granted, a little rover isn't much mass... altogether we've probably only planted less than 50 Earth pounds on Mars, if even)
Probably only a slight fraction of a micrometer closer, of course!
Then again, since we on Earth lost that mass, we probably moved a slight fraction of a micrometer farther from the sun!
I just had to switch jobs, and moved out of an area where cable modems had just started being offered to an area where:
1) Cable modems are, at earliest, a year from now.
2) I'm about 2 miles too far for DSL.
3) The phone lines in this area are so pathetic, best I can get is a 19.2 or maybe a 21.6 connection on my V.90 USR 56k modem.
I'm almost about to get a friend of mine who lives about 8 miles away who has cable modem to set up a hacked up Apple Airport with the 9-10 mile hack and just wireless network to me, with his NAT box and everyhting. Even if I only get 1 MB, it's still more than enough to use a cable modems 650k speeds.
First time I've heard of gas using the GPL!
That's what I'm asking! I don't understand how in the world this is offtopic from the story!
ATI distributes a paper-envelope packaged CD with all their video cards, sealed with a sticker.
This CD has all the initial drivers for their cards (the ones offered on their site are all upgrade supplemental drivers), and some software (DVD software on the Expert 2000, for example.)
The package also has the EULA (behind the CD, so you have to open the package to read it.)
The sticker reads:
Please note that removal of this label is your acknowledgement that use of the enclosed software is subject to the terms and conditions set out in the enclosed license agreement. If these terms and conditions are not acceptible, please return the entire product to your place of purchasing for a refund.
Now, I ask you, how do I know the terms of the agreement, to be able to disagree with them, until I read the agreement? If the agreement is inside the package, don't I have to open it to read the agreement first?
(Of course, I could always tear the bottom of the envelope open, thereby not removing the sticker at all! Does that mean I am not bound by their EULA?)
This particular one is a .MPG.exe. Now, as everyone knows, you don't care about anything except the three characters after the last dot (a carryover of the old DOS 8.3 format, except now it's 255.3.)
Anyways, I know, and have seen, ASF's that can, toward the end of the page, redirect you to a webpage, usually the maker of the movie. However, you can make a quick 1 second, 5 second, whatever length you want, ASF, and have it redirect to a page that contains an ActiveX script, or Javascript. If you have those enabled on your browser, boom, instant run, and you don't even know about it!
Only in Pennsylvania, so far. See this article from Slashdot, June 2nd.
right, sure, we believe you!
I like a few quotes I saw on this discussion:
"Suing Napster is like suing Ford because a couple bank robbers used a Ford to get away"
AND
"If they're going to sue Napster because they allow people to transfer MP3's, then why don't they also sue the makers of every web browser, FTP program, and any other file transfer program out there?"
The latter has been a question I've had since the whole Napster thing began. Stopping the MP3 spread is impossible. It's like unleashing an airborne virus: once it's out, you can't stop it all, no matter how hard you try.
If you were serious about stoppng MP3, what you'd have to do is this: Sue every company on the planet to bankruptcy that produces anything having to do with file transers, from physical media like floppys, to Sony memory sticks, to Zip Disks and CD's, to electronic media like hard drives, routers, hubs, to software like FTP, Web, and other.
Even then you wouldn't be able to stop it. There would still be MP3's out there, because you just shut down the companies, not the actual stuff they've already made and sold. You would then have to go and destroy every single person's form of the above mentioned technologies. EMP wouldn't work, because CD's aren't susceptible to magnetic disturbance. You'd pretty much have to make a total apocalypse, up to and including destruction of the whole planet to eliminate the underground bunkers that the occasional geek has bought.
And if you've got that much money to spend on those courses of action, illegal MP3's of your music are the least of your worries.
SDMI was on the right track: if you can't beat them, join them. SDMI failed in one important fact though: people want to save money whenever possible, including MP3 copies of music. However, there is still no way the artists will make as much from music per listener as they used to. The artists will just have to get used to it.
I have noticed, however, working in a tech support department, that those whose lives consist of something that is stereotypically NOT a computer-linked career, like athletics or military, tend to stay as far from computers as they can. Same for those who don't understand how to use a computer.
Good luck to the military trying to teach these soldiers how to use them. Even tougher, enforcing the use of them (as opposed to leaving it behind in the big round metal bucket in the barracks.)
I posted a note describing version numbers back in March. I reposted it, and you can see it Here .
ALSO, on Final Fantasy Anthology:
Final Fantasy Anthology has been out in the US for a few months now. It includes the following games, which have been touched up a bit with new scenes and new CGI FMV movies:
Final Fantasy 5 (released in Japan as Final Fatasy 5 Super Famicom, never released in US)
Final Fantasy 6 (released in Japan as Final Fantasy 6 Super Famicom, released in US as Final Fantasy 3 Super Nintendo)
You can get Final Fantasy Anthology for Playstation, an it runs you about $40-50, depending where you get it. It also, once you complete the game, puts a saved game on your Playstation memory card so you can go to a special area and view behind the scenes footage, making of, and view the FMV movies.
This was posted by me in the comment about a month ago on the Final Fantasy Movie, which brought up the same questions on version numbers (I couldn't link directly to my comment, for some reason!)
-ERP
Here's a comparison of the different incarnations of Final Fantasy:
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 1 (Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 1 (NES)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 2 (Famicom)
US Title: Not Released
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 3 (Famicom)
US Title: Not released
(now, hold your horses, keep reading)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 4 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 2 (SNES)
(Note: The US version is substantially different that the Japanese version)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 5 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 5. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. First time released in US.
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 6 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 3 (SNES). Also under Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 6. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI.
(IMO, the best of the series... I haven't tried the anthology version, though.)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
US Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
US Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
I know I'm leaving out Final Fantasy Mystic Quest, Final Fantasy Tactics, and others. I'm not sure what their equivalents are. Also, don't ask for dates... I don't know those, either.
If you want to play any of these games nowadays to experience them, you must either find a way to get one of the originals, or use an emulator, and download the ROM image of the game. I cannot tell you where to get either, because use of emulators has been determined to be illegal. All I can say is if you're reading this, you are smart enough to use a search engine.
However, most scientists believe that such anti-gravity research is fundamentally flawed. It goes against what we know about the physical Universe and is therefore impossible, they say.
Now, that, is one very WRONG saying. Just because we don't know something, means it's impossible? I DON'T THINK SO!!!
(Oh, and on a side note: The DNS maintainers of Greenglow need to change their DNS settings. Sure, Greenglow may be on the local machine, but everybody else on the Internet doesn't see it on 127.0.0.1, the local loopback IP
My 3 bits.
Combine this with the news recently of IBM's new 70GB hard drive, and you've got a pretty big hard drive, in a pretty small space... 70GB, ten times that is 700GB.
How long until we have terrabyte drives for consumer use?
(Better question: How long until Microsoft comes out with an OS that takes up 10GB? Win98 was about 500, Win200 was 1 GB, what's next in size?)
Okay, here's what you do:
/dns on someone there (hopefully, they're running gnutella). Then, you add that IP to your list (under the GnutellaNet tab, type in the number, and click add). Then, click on Get More. You're in the Net.
You have to be linked to at least one other person in the Gnutella network. Then, you use their list of other people in the network, and so on. This thing expands exponentially. Thing is, you need to get on first.
How? IRC to Efnet (#gnutella), and do a
(Remember to share your directory(s) as well!)
Agreed. Tried it to my localhost, and finally got two gnutellaNet entries (myself , and myself serving). Still, when I did a search for what I knew was out there on my little network, didn't quite get what I wanted to get... instead, got ZERO.
Well, looks like you actually have to build a database... have to have at least one person, then build off what they have, maybe?
The documentation is very poor... Says "Clicking ping will auto-list other members in the GnutellaNet network." Well, I don't see no Ping button... closest I see is Update, and it doesn't do what it should.
Dunno. Guess this is what I get for being an alpha tester.
Tickets here in SouthEastern Connecticut are running $6.00 for a matinee, and $8.00 for an evening showing.
Through www.dictionary.com/translate (Babelfish was hosed)... tried to English-ify it as much as possible:
1. March 2000 - Author: Florian Breitsameter
DUNE Miniseries: The first pictures of the set!
On 22 November 1999 work in Prague began towards filming for a 6-hour TV filming of the novel " The Desert Planet " ("Dune"), by Frank Herbert. The TV project has a $20 million budget(US), which can offer thereby a hochkaraetigen occupation and crew.
William Hurt ("Lost In Space", "Dark City" and also "Until The End Of The World") plays the role of the Duke Leto Atreides, which will have to be seen. The film will also feature Italian actors Giancarlo Giannini as Imperator Shaddam IV and to Ian McNeice as a bad baron Harkonnen.
Alec Newman plays Paul Atreides, the main figure of the film. Barbara Kodetova plays Chani, at the page of Alec Newman. With Uwe Ochsenknecht, who embodies the Fremen Leader very convincingly, is represented also a German actor in this internationally filled production.
The film script to "desert planet" was written by John Harrison, who also directs; executive producers are Richard P. Rubinstein and Mitchell Galin. The camera work is done by the three-time Oscar winner Vittorio Storaro (Apocalypse Now).
The marvelous costumes come from Theodor Pistek (obtained a Oscar for the costumes at Amadeus). Additionally the special effect conductor Ernest Farino and the production designer Miljen Kreka Kljakovic are involved in the project. The digital special effects will come from three of studios, among them AREA 51 and One Digital (Babylon 5).
" Dune " is produced by Amsterdam Entertainment Inc., the Scifi Channel and KirchMedia tandem Communications. The US airing is planned for the Fall 2000, in Germany the television airing will air in Spring 2001 (thus only little later).
World-exclusively SF Film.de can show the first photos of the set and the fiming work here now. Thank you for it at Torsten Dewi!
Captions
Reverend Mother Ramallo (?), (Uwe Ochsenknecht) and Jessica (Saskia Reeves)
Gurney Halleck (P.H. Moriaty), an assassin (?), Paul Atreides (Alec Newman) and (Uwe Ochsenknecht)
Chani (Barbara Kodetova) and Paul Atreides (Alec Newman)
(Uwe Ochsenknecht) with blue eyes!
Richard Rubinstein(producer) and John Harrison (director) in the set for the Siege
Vittorio Storaro (camera) and Uwe Ochsenknecht in the background
Source: SFW, audio 51, Torsten Dewi, Victor television Productions, Inc..
Here's a comparison of the different incarnations of Final Fantasy:
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 1 (Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 1 (NES)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 2 (Famicom)
US Title: Not Released
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 3 (Famicom)
US Title: Not released
(now, hold your horses, keep reading)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 4 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 2 (SNES)
(Note: The US version is substantially different that the Japanese version)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 5 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 5. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI. First time released in US.
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 6 (Super Famicom)
US Title: Final Fantasy 3 (SNES). Also under Final Fantasy Anthology (PSX), under title Final Fantasy 6. Has been spruced up with some added scenes and CGI.
(IMO, the best of the series... I haven't tried the anthology version, though.)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
US Title: Final Fantasy 7 (PSX)
Japan Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
US Title: Final Fantasy 8 (PSX)
I know I'm leaving out Final Fantasy Mystic Quest, Final Fantasy Tactics, and others. I'm not sure what their equivalents are. Also, don't ask for dates... I don't know those, either.
If you want to play any of these games nowadays to experience them, you must either find a way to get one of the originals, or use an emulator, and download the ROM image of the game. I cannot tell you where to get either, because use of emulators has been determined to be illegal. All I can say is if you're reading this, you are smart enough to use a search engine.
We do screen the moderators, albeit after the fact. It's called Meta Moderation.
Once you're logged in, you see a link at the top of your main Slashdot page that says "Have you tried Meta Moderation?" Click on that, and you are given 10 moderations from a previous group of posts. You get to choose if these moderations were fair, neutral, or unfair.
This is who watches the watchers. The question now becomes: Who watches the ones who watch the watchers? The answer: H & CT
just wondering... sometimes things like this leave out the things we take for granted, like telnet, for the sake of "added security"
This thing looks nice and everything, has all the services I think I'd want (except print sharing). Love the ability to administer it from the web page.
But, one thing comes to mind. What happens when your web service goes wacko some day, and you can't access the web pages? What do you do, what DO you do? I didn't see any alternative way to get in (unless maybe it's got a serial port you can hook a terminal into and administer).
All in all, though, looks like a sweet looking machine (could beef up the hard drive to about 13-20 GB though, instead of 6). I think I'd like to get one for home sometime.
Gnucash sounds better than Gnocash, pronunciation wise.
(Gnucash sounds like NewCash, Gnocash sounds like NoCash)
Linkshare patented this already. Click here.
This was announced on Slashdot on December 6th. Wonder how Amazon patented something that was already patented?
"Like a pixie puked on my screen"
Loved it!