No, I wouldn't, but that's only because I have no use for portable music players due to my sitting in front of computers at all times where i would need music. I listen to sports talk radio in the car, so no need there.
What Q3 mod do you play? I was extremely active in OSP CTF for a number of years (2000-2002).
Also, after denying permissions to an aspx.page http://server/directory\deniedpage.aspx didn't work either. Odds are you have no idea what you are talking about.
No. I typed in http://server/directory\bin\compiledfile.dll and it still prevented access. It also prevented access to web.config due to its extension. This is a different issue.
Hi, dave "420".
Methinks that is the weed talking.
You tell the families of the 3000 dead that the war on terror is all about PR. Go tell the citizens of Baghdad and Afghanistan that.
This has nothing to do with someone wanting to seek help for their urges. If they have ACTED upon those urges, and in fact have harmed a child, then I would expect any mental health professional to turn them in. Someone who has not harmed a child and is just voicing their desire to seek help for their urges is a different animal entirely.
Now I can realize just exactly how dumbed-down and introductory my school's Computer Engineering curriculum is. And they said they wanted to be modeled after MIT...
Anyone who has attended a Soundgarden/Audioslave song knows exactly what I'm talking about. Chris is considered to be one of the best alternative rock singers in the history of alternative rock (post 1989 era, along with Vedder, Staley, Cobain, Weiland, etc). How come his albums sound great yet he can't hit the first note live? I recently saw Audioslave's performance of Cochise on top of the Late Show building, and it was absolute ass. He could not hit any of the notes and his voice sounded like he had sung 25 songs prior to that one (1 song setlist!). I have also been to several Soundgarden shows and he can never hit the notes or sound as good as he sounded on the album. Engineered much?
PALO ALTO, Calif., Aug. 17 -- Airgo Networks, a heavily financed Silicon Valley start-up, plans on Monday to introduce an alternative to the popular Wi-Fi wireless data standard for connecting to the Internet, capable of doubling Wi-Fi's already high speed and extending its range.
Airgo's technology is just one example, industry executives said, of the continued emergence of new companies, undercutting recent fears that wireless technology innovation is slowing and is in danger of being dominated by a few large established concerns.
"Just as the revolution starts to happen, some people are saying that it's over," said Craig Mathias, president of the Farpoint Group, a industry consulting firm in Ashland, Mass. "Clearly, we are in the early days of wireless data."
Airgo's technology, known as multiple-in, multiple-out, or MIMO, relies on taking advantage of huge amounts of computing power to send numbers of signals from closely spaced antennas. By doing so, Airgo is able to squeeze in and out more data than conventional wireless data arrangements.
But Airgo faces a big challenge in winning broad support for an approach that is not compatible with the existing Wi-Fi standards.
The company said it hopes to create markets by seeking out consumer wireless equipment companies serving local area networks, hoping that in a hotly contested marketplace, a higher-speed, greater-range option will soon prove advantageous, even if it is not compatible with existing software.
On Monday, Airgo will announce a chip set that extends the speed at which data can be delivered to a computer by wireless radio signal, to as much as 108 megabits a second. Current Wi-Fi standards are capable of data speeds ranging from 11 to 54 megabits a second. The company says the signal can be sent farther as well -- from two to six times as far as current Wi-Fi technology, which typically reaches only about 100 to 150 feet from a transmitter connected to the Internet.
"We've created a new currency that is better range and better performance," Airgo's chief executive, Greg Raleigh, said.
The industry is working to define a new generation of Wi-Fi that could take data rates to 200 megabits or even higher, and Mr. Raleigh said Airgo would propose its technology for the standard.
In addition to computer communications applications, Mr. Raleigh said he expects new consumer uses for very high speed wireless, like data connections for HDTV television sets and other home appliances.
Michael Kleeman, chief technology officer of Cometa Networks of San Francisco, which is installing Wi-Fi access points nationally, said: "People are beginning to realize that it is important to focus on the radio frequency side of the equation. Now, people are paying attention to antennas."
Airgo's MIMO technology was pioneered at Stanford University, Bell Laboratories and other research centers. It is an example of the shift to what are known as smart antennas, an approach that is being widely adopted in the wireless networking world.
Other companies are also striving to develop antenna technologies to improve wireless data service. These include Vivato, a wireless technology company that is using antennas to direct beams, and the leading chip maker Intel, which has acquired the intellectual property of another Silicon Valley MIMO company, IoSpan Wireless.
Airgo, whose founders started and then sold Clarity Wireless to Cisco Systems in 1998, has so far raised a total of $52 million in venture capital from OVP Venture Partners, Sevin Rosen Funds, Nokia Venture Partners and Accel Partners.
Where are you from? Master P was regionally popular during the middle 1990's in the southern United States. He's old and washed up now though.
Master P might take offense to your idea.
You do not need to pay for a Live subscription in order to use the XBL Arcade. The paid Live subscriptions are intended for multiplayer gameplay.
It's now the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith. (CDF)
No, I wouldn't, but that's only because I have no use for portable music players due to my sitting in front of computers at all times where i would need music. I listen to sports talk radio in the car, so no need there.
What Q3 mod do you play? I was extremely active in OSP CTF for a number of years (2000-2002).
Man, I sure do love projecting my needs and wants on the entire human community! Love, Mogrify
Everyone... except any type of gamer that is.
That's because you're an luser. (http://www.imaluser.com/)
the DOM magically becomes the same as MSIE's.
Not unless XML Islands are suddenly implemented.
Anecdotal evidence != fact. Perhaps Microtek doesn't support XP/2K?
Ah coo-dn't under staaaahhnd yah. Cooo-d yahh pleeeasse rreeepeeaaat yoooour-sssellff?
Why would people who spend all day on the computer have portable music players?
None of any of those replacements work in either Mozilla or IE to access either .dll files, web.configs, or .aspx pages with NTFS security set.
Also, after denying permissions to an aspx.page http://server/directory\deniedpage.aspx didn't work either. Odds are you have no idea what you are talking about.
No. I typed in http://server/directory\bin\compiledfile.dll and it still prevented access. It also prevented access to web.config due to its extension. This is a different issue.
Elton John, The Beatles, U2, Coldplay, Radiohead.... You're right. What do THEY know about music?!??!?!?
LSU, by any chance? (mnoel2, "Computing Services", "Union")
Hi, dave "420". Methinks that is the weed talking. You tell the families of the 3000 dead that the war on terror is all about PR. Go tell the citizens of Baghdad and Afghanistan that.
In Soviet Russia, vending machines dispense YOU!
or
In Soviet Russia, software owns YOU!
OMG. Only if you dial 911. It does NOT require companies to provide such tracking information for people that are not calling!
This has nothing to do with someone wanting to seek help for their urges. If they have ACTED upon those urges, and in fact have harmed a child, then I would expect any mental health professional to turn them in. Someone who has not harmed a child and is just voicing their desire to seek help for their urges is a different animal entirely.
Now I can realize just exactly how dumbed-down and introductory my school's Computer Engineering curriculum is. And they said they wanted to be modeled after MIT...
Anyone who has attended a Soundgarden/Audioslave song knows exactly what I'm talking about. Chris is considered to be one of the best alternative rock singers in the history of alternative rock (post 1989 era, along with Vedder, Staley, Cobain, Weiland, etc). How come his albums sound great yet he can't hit the first note live? I recently saw Audioslave's performance of Cochise on top of the Late Show building, and it was absolute ass. He could not hit any of the notes and his voice sounded like he had sung 25 songs prior to that one (1 song setlist!). I have also been to several Soundgarden shows and he can never hit the notes or sound as good as he sounded on the album. Engineered much?
I'm not trying to necessarily whore karma, just trying to limit the NYTimes' opportunity to steal your personal data.
I fucking hate the liberal newspaper and most of the political articles it runs.
PALO ALTO, Calif., Aug. 17 -- Airgo Networks, a heavily financed Silicon Valley start-up, plans on Monday to introduce an alternative to the popular Wi-Fi wireless data standard for connecting to the Internet, capable of doubling Wi-Fi's already high speed and extending its range. Airgo's technology is just one example, industry executives said, of the continued emergence of new companies, undercutting recent fears that wireless technology innovation is slowing and is in danger of being dominated by a few large established concerns. "Just as the revolution starts to happen, some people are saying that it's over," said Craig Mathias, president of the Farpoint Group, a industry consulting firm in Ashland, Mass. "Clearly, we are in the early days of wireless data." Airgo's technology, known as multiple-in, multiple-out, or MIMO, relies on taking advantage of huge amounts of computing power to send numbers of signals from closely spaced antennas. By doing so, Airgo is able to squeeze in and out more data than conventional wireless data arrangements. But Airgo faces a big challenge in winning broad support for an approach that is not compatible with the existing Wi-Fi standards. The company said it hopes to create markets by seeking out consumer wireless equipment companies serving local area networks, hoping that in a hotly contested marketplace, a higher-speed, greater-range option will soon prove advantageous, even if it is not compatible with existing software. On Monday, Airgo will announce a chip set that extends the speed at which data can be delivered to a computer by wireless radio signal, to as much as 108 megabits a second. Current Wi-Fi standards are capable of data speeds ranging from 11 to 54 megabits a second. The company says the signal can be sent farther as well -- from two to six times as far as current Wi-Fi technology, which typically reaches only about 100 to 150 feet from a transmitter connected to the Internet. "We've created a new currency that is better range and better performance," Airgo's chief executive, Greg Raleigh, said. The industry is working to define a new generation of Wi-Fi that could take data rates to 200 megabits or even higher, and Mr. Raleigh said Airgo would propose its technology for the standard. In addition to computer communications applications, Mr. Raleigh said he expects new consumer uses for very high speed wireless, like data connections for HDTV television sets and other home appliances. Michael Kleeman, chief technology officer of Cometa Networks of San Francisco, which is installing Wi-Fi access points nationally, said: "People are beginning to realize that it is important to focus on the radio frequency side of the equation. Now, people are paying attention to antennas." Airgo's MIMO technology was pioneered at Stanford University, Bell Laboratories and other research centers. It is an example of the shift to what are known as smart antennas, an approach that is being widely adopted in the wireless networking world. Other companies are also striving to develop antenna technologies to improve wireless data service. These include Vivato, a wireless technology company that is using antennas to direct beams, and the leading chip maker Intel, which has acquired the intellectual property of another Silicon Valley MIMO company, IoSpan Wireless. Airgo, whose founders started and then sold Clarity Wireless to Cisco Systems in 1998, has so far raised a total of $52 million in venture capital from OVP Venture Partners, Sevin Rosen Funds, Nokia Venture Partners and Accel Partners.