It will use Nero if you have it installed. I suggest staying completely free and using DVD Decrypter to burn the ISOs. Might take an extra step but it's worth it.
The public needs to be rendered totally unable to copy or play DVDs in a way of their choosing, as the law prescribes, before they will wake up and actually understand what the law prescribes. Right now there's no reason to fight the DMCA because no one knows what it really means. It's a ban on any speech which could be used to play DVDs or other media the way we want. And that's a pretty amazing thing.
What's really amazing is that people won't care. The MPAA (and RIAA for that matter) has been able to completely warp the truth about your rights when it comes to how, why, when, and where you watch/listen to your media.
These two organizations will continue to alter reality slowly and people will actually continue to listen. Doing what you say will have no effect.
DVDDecrypter or DVD Shrink. Rip and burn to ISO or another disc. I use DVD-shrink for dual layered discs and then burn the ISO with DVD Decrypter. If you have a single layer you can just use DVD Decrypter to burn the entire disc without edits.
Make a disk image of the original and read from that? Or like the C64 emulators (single example) do when they read from C64 floppies under emulation and hardware hacks?
Perhaps all long-journey astronauts should be women. There is a well known but seldom used gene present in women that causes immediate hibernation. It has been called the sex-gene. Once the word sex is mentioned the women immediately roll over and are asleep within seconds. This will continue until sex has not been mentioned for at least eight hours. If an automated speaker was constructed to force the sex-gene into operation every 6 or so hours the women should (in theory) remain unconscious.
Yes my gf reads Slashdot. No, I am not getting any tonight.
The final chapters on multimedia and games round out the topics that every semi-literate computer user has on their "must know how to" list. Under multimedia, KsCD, XMMS and Noatun are covered, including visualization plugins and skins. K3b, Grip and MPlayer are also described. Favorite Linux games are represented: KSirtet, KAsteroids, Frozen-Bubble, KBattleship, KPatience, KPoker... well, you get the idea!
Yes, games and multimedia are just so important to me when I begin learning a new OS! Not to mention specific examples of Linux games that I have never heard of and certainly wouldn't play.
This right here ends the "importance" of this book for me and should also end it for everyone else.
actually many countries, peoples, and centuries have used mercenaries.
Sometimes it did work and sometimes it didn't. Don't make it sound like mercenaries were a trivial part of a small portion of war history. They weren't.
The 503 errors were not just with Firefox. I was getting the same error while being logged in on either Firefox or IE. Only if I cleared my cookies and loaded the page would I be allowed to get past the 503.
Now that I could finally get logged in to reply to your post...
I meant Fascism in a general sense. My comment was not directly related to Italy or Germany. Perhaps for the general population this is something that is a bit difficult to fathom but I have faith that most people here knew better when it came to what I said (and based on your moderation and those under you I believe they did).
He has also opened a Paypal account to accept donations to help fund the mounting legal costs in persecuting attempts at allowing that evil Communist "freedom of information" idea that has been infiltrating our great fascist state.
Yes, this is the proper usage of Fascist. We are allowing our country to be opened to the control of the corporations.
The conglomorates haven't exactly cared whether you have money or not. If we all had enough money to support an effective legal defense against the monopolies or enough power to end their money-backed lawmaking schemes we wouldn't be trying grassroots campaigns to end their stranglehold.
Dr. Nishino and Dr. Nayar plan to try their corneal imaging system with archival photographs. "It will be fascinating to go back and look at photographs of important people like John Kennedy," Dr. Nayar said. "From a single image of the eye, we may be able to figure out what was around him and what he was looking at."
After scanning archives for minutes after I saw this posted to the Mysterious Future I was able to reconstruct what JFK was looking at in large crowds of people. Using highly technical applications and front-ends I was able to produce a 640x480 image of his favorite target. My results are published here.
"My hunch is that the best applications of this work will be with human-computer interactions," like using one's gaze to start a computer, Dr. Malik said. "The advantage of the technique is that it's passive," and does not direct additional energy at the eye, he added. (With some common eye-tracking methods, infrared light is projected into the user's eyes.)
It doesn't exactly say how precise this will be for computer usage. The comment "start a computer" makes me wonder if it won't be able to decipher individual icons (because of their size no doubt). Would it really be useful for picking a single individual out of a crowd? We may be focusing on one single entity out of a group but our mind is still focused further to eliminate the rest of the noise. I hope that it won't be precise enough to extract the data out to protect us from all those potential terrorists walking the streets.
I wouldn't have to take the two different high-blood pressure meds that I do now. That would save me about $35/month and the random side effects that go with taking these medicines (shortness of breath when exercising, dizziness when getting up to fast, etc).
What would make my browsing experience better would be if Firefox rendered the pages correctly the first time so that I wouldn't have to change the font sizes everytime I go to a different page.
The Slashdot issue happens for me on all platforms. The Geocaching.com issue is irrelevant for you if you don't have an account and access to the/my page.
The rendering changes page to page. Font sizes are different on all different pages forcing me to change font size to read comfortably. The pages never do look as good as they did in IE.
Please understand that I was making fun of the CEO of the company that made the claims that Open Source is unsafe because of individuals contributing code from all over the world.
How about we not worry about color schemes and we start worrying about how lame it is that they have put EVERYTHING in "IT". I was much happier when they used more intelligent sections.
Perhaps we also need to suggest that they add ipod.slashdot.org so that we can block out the daily foursome of stories about the stupid bullshit the fucking iPod can do while still reading about MacOS X zealotry.
Let's go Taco. We are subscribers and we are footing at least a portion of the bill. Listen to our concerns.
Does this mean that MS Windows is now a security threat threat too? Because afterall, we could now have terrorists embedding code into Windows that is malicious!
Give me a broken site with a significant level of traffic (in other words, don't give me some 13 year old kid's site hosted off Geocities) that doesn't work in Firefox 0.8. Or, were you talking out your ass?
http://slashdot.org (left side overlaps main text requiring a page refresh to correct -- this has been noted MANY times and not corrected).
http://geocaching.com/my (fonts do not render correctly. I have to routinely change the sizes in order to view the page even half-acceptably -- strangely enough this happens on many pages but never with IE).
That's odd. At least every week I have someone mention some new spyware or popup they run into, and how do I deal with it. Many of them are now quite happily running Mozilla or Firefox.
That's odd. Most of the people I know have little to no idea what Spyware is, how to combat it other than to run Adaware, and that it comes from the issues built into IE. You are either talking to a better informed group (which I assume you are), the people that I know are just that clueless about computers and the world around them, or you are exaggerating to make your point.
I am throwing Karma out the window on this one as my comments on this subject fall on deaf ears here but... Firefox is not an acceptable replacement for IE for 90% of the users out there so I really think we could have done without the snide comment.
Yesterday I mentioned that nearly everyone who visits my site with Firefox are coming in from Slashdot URLs. It may come as a surprise to you but more than 90% of the Internet users out there aren't aware or concerned with IE vulnerabilities. It may also come as a surprise to you but Firefox isn't exactly the best browser out there if you want 100% compatibility with the "broken" sites on the Internet. These same users that don't know of the issues w/IE are more concerned that they cannot reach their online banking, see their sites the way that the "broken" authors intended, and have a seamless browsing experience.
Firefox is not the answer to MS' issues. Better preparation for security is.
Somehow this is different when we hack open Microsoft gaming consoles? Down with Microsoft for creating a closed format that we cannot do what we want with! How dare they!
Apple creates a unit that is closed, refuses to allow Real to come in and have an alliance for it, and so Real hacks it to do something cool. Apple "lays the smack down" and somehow that is a good thing? Killing innovation?
Zealotry is one thing but blatant fence hopping is another.
"This is not a work which many adults will read through more than once," said the anonymous reviewer in the Times Literary Supplement, while American critic Edmund Wilson, dismissed the entire trilogy in 1956 as "juvenile trash".
I understand that it may be difficult for us NOW to understand what the critics were saying in 1954 but you have to remember that writings were influenced by the conservative nature of the times.
There have been few books I have read more than once and LOTR is one of them, in fact, I found it completely uninteresting and only made it 3/4 of the way through. It's just not my type of book.
I wouldn't exactly say that he "triumphed" over anything. Times and tastes have changed and so have the reviews on his book.
It really is a huge problem to provide high-speed access to people living in rural Montanna or in the mountains of Washington state.
Only because of the legalized monopolies that we allow in this country. Sadly single companies control entire areas and they don't have any reason to put broadband in if there's no competition.
It will use Nero if you have it installed. I suggest staying completely free and using DVD Decrypter to burn the ISOs. Might take an extra step but it's worth it.
The public needs to be rendered totally unable to copy or play DVDs in a way of their choosing, as the law prescribes, before they will wake up and actually understand what the law prescribes. Right now there's no reason to fight the DMCA because no one knows what it really means. It's a ban on any speech which could be used to play DVDs or other media the way we want. And that's a pretty amazing thing.
What's really amazing is that people won't care. The MPAA (and RIAA for that matter) has been able to completely warp the truth about your rights when it comes to how, why, when, and where you watch/listen to your media.
These two organizations will continue to alter reality slowly and people will actually continue to listen. Doing what you say will have no effect.
People are sheep.
DVDDecrypter or DVD Shrink. Rip and burn to ISO or another disc. I use DVD-shrink for dual layered discs and then burn the ISO with DVD Decrypter. If you have a single layer you can just use DVD Decrypter to burn the entire disc without edits.
See here for more information on DVD Shrink.
They are both free and work well.
Make a disk image of the original and read from that? Or like the C64 emulators (single example) do when they read from C64 floppies under emulation and hardware hacks?
Perhaps all long-journey astronauts should be women. There is a well known but seldom used gene present in women that causes immediate hibernation. It has been called the sex-gene. Once the word sex is mentioned the women immediately roll over and are asleep within seconds. This will continue until sex has not been mentioned for at least eight hours. If an automated speaker was constructed to force the sex-gene into operation every 6 or so hours the women should (in theory) remain unconscious.
Yes my gf reads Slashdot. No, I am not getting any tonight.
The final chapters on multimedia and games round out the topics that every semi-literate computer user has on their "must know how to" list. Under multimedia, KsCD, XMMS and Noatun are covered, including visualization plugins and skins. K3b, Grip and MPlayer are also described. Favorite Linux games are represented: KSirtet, KAsteroids, Frozen-Bubble, KBattleship, KPatience, KPoker ... well, you get the idea!
Yes, games and multimedia are just so important to me when I begin learning a new OS! Not to mention specific examples of Linux games that I have never heard of and certainly wouldn't play.
This right here ends the "importance" of this book for me and should also end it for everyone else.
actually many countries, peoples, and centuries have used mercenaries.
Sometimes it did work and sometimes it didn't. Don't make it sound like mercenaries were a trivial part of a small portion of war history. They weren't.
The 503 errors were not just with Firefox. I was getting the same error while being logged in on either Firefox or IE. Only if I cleared my cookies and loaded the page would I be allowed to get past the 503.
Now that I could finally get logged in to reply to your post...
I meant Fascism in a general sense. My comment was not directly related to Italy or Germany. Perhaps for the general population this is something that is a bit difficult to fathom but I have faith that most people here knew better when it came to what I said (and based on your moderation and those under you I believe they did).
He has also opened a Paypal account to accept donations to help fund the mounting legal costs in persecuting attempts at allowing that evil Communist "freedom of information" idea that has been infiltrating our great fascist state.
Yes, this is the proper usage of Fascist. We are allowing our country to be opened to the control of the corporations.
The conglomorates haven't exactly cared whether you have money or not. If we all had enough money to support an effective legal defense against the monopolies or enough power to end their money-backed lawmaking schemes we wouldn't be trying grassroots campaigns to end their stranglehold.
Now would we?
Dr. Nishino and Dr. Nayar plan to try their corneal imaging system with archival photographs. "It will be fascinating to go back and look at photographs of important people like John Kennedy," Dr. Nayar said. "From a single image of the eye, we may be able to figure out what was around him and what he was looking at."
After scanning archives for minutes after I saw this posted to the Mysterious Future I was able to reconstruct what JFK was looking at in large crowds of people. Using highly technical applications and front-ends I was able to produce a 640x480 image of his favorite target. My results are published here.
"My hunch is that the best applications of this work will be with human-computer interactions," like using one's gaze to start a computer, Dr. Malik said. "The advantage of the technique is that it's passive," and does not direct additional energy at the eye, he added. (With some common eye-tracking methods, infrared light is projected into the user's eyes.)
It doesn't exactly say how precise this will be for computer usage. The comment "start a computer" makes me wonder if it won't be able to decipher individual icons (because of their size no doubt). Would it really be useful for picking a single individual out of a crowd? We may be focusing on one single entity out of a group but our mind is still focused further to eliminate the rest of the noise. I hope that it won't be precise enough to extract the data out to protect us from all those potential terrorists walking the streets.
I wouldn't have to take the two different high-blood pressure meds that I do now. That would save me about $35/month and the random side effects that go with taking these medicines (shortness of breath when exercising, dizziness when getting up to fast, etc).
What would make my browsing experience better would be if Firefox rendered the pages correctly the first time so that I wouldn't have to change the font sizes everytime I go to a different page.
The Slashdot issue happens for me on all platforms. The Geocaching.com issue is irrelevant for you if you don't have an account and access to the /my page.
The rendering changes page to page. Font sizes are different on all different pages forcing me to change font size to read comfortably. The pages never do look as good as they did in IE.
Please understand that I was making fun of the CEO of the company that made the claims that Open Source is unsafe because of individuals contributing code from all over the world.
How about we not worry about color schemes and we start worrying about how lame it is that they have put EVERYTHING in "IT". I was much happier when they used more intelligent sections.
Perhaps we also need to suggest that they add ipod.slashdot.org so that we can block out the daily foursome of stories about the stupid bullshit the fucking iPod can do while still reading about MacOS X zealotry.
Let's go Taco. We are subscribers and we are footing at least a portion of the bill. Listen to our concerns.
Does this mean that MS Windows is now a security threat threat too? Because afterall, we could now have terrorists embedding code into Windows that is malicious!
Give me a broken site with a significant level of traffic (in other words, don't give me some 13 year old kid's site hosted off Geocities) that doesn't work in Firefox 0.8. Or, were you talking out your ass?
http://slashdot.org (left side overlaps main text requiring a page refresh to correct -- this has been noted MANY times and not corrected).
http://geocaching.com/my (fonts do not render correctly. I have to routinely change the sizes in order to view the page even half-acceptably -- strangely enough this happens on many pages but never with IE).
That's odd. At least every week I have someone mention some new spyware or popup they run into, and how do I deal with it. Many of them are now quite happily running Mozilla or Firefox.
That's odd. Most of the people I know have little to no idea what Spyware is, how to combat it other than to run Adaware, and that it comes from the issues built into IE. You are either talking to a better informed group (which I assume you are), the people that I know are just that clueless about computers and the world around them, or you are exaggerating to make your point.
I am throwing Karma out the window on this one as my comments on this subject fall on deaf ears here but... Firefox is not an acceptable replacement for IE for 90% of the users out there so I really think we could have done without the snide comment.
Yesterday I mentioned that nearly everyone who visits my site with Firefox are coming in from Slashdot URLs. It may come as a surprise to you but more than 90% of the Internet users out there aren't aware or concerned with IE vulnerabilities. It may also come as a surprise to you but Firefox isn't exactly the best browser out there if you want 100% compatibility with the "broken" sites on the Internet. These same users that don't know of the issues w/IE are more concerned that they cannot reach their online banking, see their sites the way that the "broken" authors intended, and have a seamless browsing experience.
Firefox is not the answer to MS' issues. Better preparation for security is.
Somehow this is different when we hack open Microsoft gaming consoles? Down with Microsoft for creating a closed format that we cannot do what we want with! How dare they!
Apple creates a unit that is closed, refuses to allow Real to come in and have an alliance for it, and so Real hacks it to do something cool. Apple "lays the smack down" and somehow that is a good thing? Killing innovation?
Zealotry is one thing but blatant fence hopping is another.
"This is not a work which many adults will read through more than once," said the anonymous reviewer in the Times Literary Supplement, while American critic Edmund Wilson, dismissed the entire trilogy in 1956 as "juvenile trash".
I understand that it may be difficult for us NOW to understand what the critics were saying in 1954 but you have to remember that writings were influenced by the conservative nature of the times.
There have been few books I have read more than once and LOTR is one of them, in fact, I found it completely uninteresting and only made it 3/4 of the way through. It's just not my type of book.
I wouldn't exactly say that he "triumphed" over anything. Times and tastes have changed and so have the reviews on his book.
It really is a huge problem to provide high-speed access to people living in rural Montanna or in the mountains of Washington state.
Only because of the legalized monopolies that we allow in this country. Sadly single companies control entire areas and they don't have any reason to put broadband in if there's no competition.
I didn't post any of that, just so you know.