It is part of Eclipse TPTP. TPTP also does profiling and other stuff. It is useless to add your own code to an app to debug leaks even if you are a C programmer, where tools like valgrind can find leaks.
You can learn Java for free as well. You will want JBoss (J2EE container) bundled with Tomcat (JSP/Servlet container) plus Eclipse (IDE) and the J2EE SDK (from Sun). It is all free. Sun has packages with all components integrated, but you will get Glassfish (which almost noone uses) instead of JBoss, and Netbeans instead of Eclipse.
Apache HTTP server is not written in Java. Try reading the source code (hint its written in C). The are many Java project in the Apache Foundation website, but that is a different kettle of fish.
I can see it now. The next day, Bush sends an email to Stephen Harper that says simply, "You're next." A week later, there's a news story that says the Bush administration suspects terrorists are being harbored in Canada and allowed to enter the U.S. across unprotected parts of the border without any challenge from Canadian authorities.
You kid, but I have read all sorts of paranoid news reports claiming some sort of underground Chinese invasion of Canada. So it wouldn't be that much of a stretch for those people to claim it had terrorists I guess.
The last time European nations tried an intervention in a conflict without US or Russian consent was in the Suez Crisis. After that happened France withdrew from NATO and developed atomic weapons on their own. This is one major reason why France didn't trust NATO anymore.
Creationism should be taught as much as geocentric Ptolemy's model or, more appropriately, flat earth. i.e. a fleeting couple of minutes comment about deprecated asinine historic theory in a class.
IIRC Mozilla uses a dual license. For the original author, it allows use of all user supplied modifications in a closed source program (i.e. Netscape). For everyone, it can also be used as copyleft.
MySQL also uses similar dual-licensing. Something like the MPL makes sense for certain business models.
Most space investment is useful. Earth reconnaissance satellites, weather satellites, global positioning satellites, communication satellites, etc. The launch vehicles and facilities to house them. Even the ISS is chump change compared to those.
The UK tried a privatization experiment under Thatcher. Some of these made sense (eg. the airlines), though for most, it's been a disaster. After privatizing the mail delivery system and post office (under separate entities), the Post Office operated for a few years independently, before determining that there was no way in hell that a post office can operate profitably in anything but a large city, and subsequently sold most of its assets, closed most of its locations, pocketed the cash, and called it a day.
Unlike other former state monopolies such as The Stationery Office, British Gas and British Telecom, Royal Mail was not privatised in the 1980s and 1990s, but remains a limited company wholly owned by the UK government.
I suspect fast chargers need high-voltage power lines, so they are most definitively not to be everywhere. Just pretty common. As for solar panels, they are overrated. Try doing the math for how many panels you need to charge a car, multiply that for how many cars you expect would use a station and you will see what I mean.
From what I read in other reports, the charge time is not linear. i.e. a lithium-ion battery charges progressively more slowly a you get close to capacity. You would need a 15 minute stopover only if you did need to charge to capacity. 120 miles is enough for plenty of people to drive to/from work in one day. An electric vehicle can charge at home as well. Even if it takes hours to charge at home, it means less time at public charging stations is required.
"One of the things we're looking at doing with StarCraft II's campaign is putting the choice more in the players' hands. So maybe you like dealing more with infantry? You can purchase those upgrades and make your marines and other infantry stronger. Or else you'll save up the credits you get from the missions to get tanks sooner than you normally could."
What, like Rise of Nations: Rise of Legends? Woopie do.
Age of Empires is a Microsoft game. The day when you will see that running on a non-MS platform is probably the day hell freezes over. There are other (better and cheaper) brands than Lexmark. VB6 has been deprecated even by Microsoft. Try using something better.
It is not civil nuclear power per se which is being opposed for Iran, but the centrifuge technology they have been developing. It is dual-use technology which can work either to make low-enriched uranium for power or high-enriched uranium for nuclear weapons. The IAEA has wanted to inspect the centrifuges to see if they have traces of high-enriched uranium, but Iran persistently refuses inspections which does not make others trust their intentions more for sure. Iran also has the required missile technology to deliver nuclear warheads, and continues to do saber rattling towards Israel and the USA.
If you are accounting for that, account for the silicon extraction and production as well. Not to mention the toxic chemicals used in semiconductor manufacturing processes.
If business analysts are that dumb, how could they know they had to use Visual Basic in the first place? Besides, no business analyst should have to decide which computer language is used in a project, unless he is utterly stupid. At best he should define user requirements. Visual Studio also comes with support for more than one language: C, C++, C#, J#, Visual Basic, etc. Same problem. As for default installs, telnet doesn't come with the default Windows Vista install, yet I enabled it afterwards. So I guess for you telnet isn't "integrated" with Windows Vista either.
What tool are you speaking about?
It is part of Eclipse TPTP. TPTP also does profiling and other stuff. It is useless to add your own code to an app to debug leaks even if you are a C programmer, where tools like valgrind can find leaks.
I prefer to use the leak check tool in Eclipse instead of adding inane fluff code in my application, thank you.
You can learn Java for free as well. You will want JBoss (J2EE container) bundled with Tomcat (JSP/Servlet container) plus Eclipse (IDE) and the J2EE SDK (from Sun). It is all free. Sun has packages with all components integrated, but you will get Glassfish (which almost noone uses) instead of JBoss, and Netbeans instead of Eclipse.
Apache HTTP server is not written in Java. Try reading the source code (hint its written in C). The are many Java project in the Apache Foundation website, but that is a different kettle of fish.
What do you think would happen to java if Sun Microsystems went bankrupt?
IBM would pick it up?
I can see it now. The next day, Bush sends an email to Stephen Harper that says simply, "You're next." A week later, there's a news story that says the Bush administration suspects terrorists are being harbored in Canada and allowed to enter the U.S. across unprotected parts of the border without any challenge from Canadian authorities.
You kid, but I have read all sorts of paranoid news reports claiming some sort of underground Chinese invasion of Canada. So it wouldn't be that much of a stretch for those people to claim it had terrorists I guess.
The last time European nations tried an intervention in a conflict without US or Russian consent was in the Suez Crisis. After that happened France withdrew from NATO and developed atomic weapons on their own. This is one major reason why France didn't trust NATO anymore.
Creationism should be taught as much as geocentric Ptolemy's model or, more appropriately, flat earth. i.e. a fleeting couple of minutes comment about deprecated asinine historic theory in a class.
MySQL also uses similar dual-licensing. Something like the MPL makes sense for certain business models.
Most space investment is useful. Earth reconnaissance satellites, weather satellites, global positioning satellites, communication satellites, etc. The launch vehicles and facilities to house them. Even the ISS is chump change compared to those.
The UK tried a privatization experiment under Thatcher. Some of these made sense (eg. the airlines), though for most, it's been a disaster. After privatizing the mail delivery system and post office (under separate entities), the Post Office operated for a few years independently, before determining that there was no way in hell that a post office can operate profitably in anything but a large city, and subsequently sold most of its assets, closed most of its locations, pocketed the cash, and called it a day.
Hmmm, no. Quoting Wikipedia:
Unlike other former state monopolies such as The Stationery Office, British Gas and British Telecom, Royal Mail was not privatised in the 1980s and 1990s, but remains a limited company wholly owned by the UK government.
I doubt it. The sound synthesizer makes as much sense as a red flag law.
I suspect fast chargers need high-voltage power lines, so they are most definitively not to be everywhere. Just pretty common. As for solar panels, they are overrated. Try doing the math for how many panels you need to charge a car, multiply that for how many cars you expect would use a station and you will see what I mean.
From what I read in other reports, the charge time is not linear. i.e. a lithium-ion battery charges progressively more slowly a you get close to capacity. You would need a 15 minute stopover only if you did need to charge to capacity. 120 miles is enough for plenty of people to drive to/from work in one day. An electric vehicle can charge at home as well. Even if it takes hours to charge at home, it means less time at public charging stations is required.
What, like Rise of Nations: Rise of Legends? Woopie do.
Age of Empires is a Microsoft game. The day when you will see that running on a non-MS platform is probably the day hell freezes over. There are other (better and cheaper) brands than Lexmark. VB6 has been deprecated even by Microsoft. Try using something better.
I made a mistake there. It is Via C7 that is manufactured at East Fishkill, not Nano. Nano is manufactured at TSMC and Fujitsu.
IBM or Chartered Semiconductor could do it. The VIA Nano chip is manufactured at IBM East Fishkill facility.
Intel has been in the 3D chip market ever since they bought Real3D. They manufactured the i740 way back then..
James Lovelock and Patrick Moore (Greenpeace co-founder) are just some of the people pushing for increased use of nuclear power at the moment.
Nuclear power is indeed cleaner than coal and is the only realistic alternative to coal available today for baseline power generation.
It is not civil nuclear power per se which is being opposed for Iran, but the centrifuge technology they have been developing. It is dual-use technology which can work either to make low-enriched uranium for power or high-enriched uranium for nuclear weapons. The IAEA has wanted to inspect the centrifuges to see if they have traces of high-enriched uranium, but Iran persistently refuses inspections which does not make others trust their intentions more for sure. Iran also has the required missile technology to deliver nuclear warheads, and continues to do saber rattling towards Israel and the USA.
If you are accounting for that, account for the silicon extraction and production as well. Not to mention the toxic chemicals used in semiconductor manufacturing processes.
Wrong. You do not need nuclear power to make nuclear weapons. Nor do you need nuclear weapons to have nuclear power.
I use telnet to play MUDs and sometimes debug protocols or services. I am hardly concerned with security there.
If business analysts are that dumb, how could they know they had to use Visual Basic in the first place? Besides, no business analyst should have to decide which computer language is used in a project, unless he is utterly stupid. At best he should define user requirements. Visual Studio also comes with support for more than one language: C, C++, C#, J#, Visual Basic, etc. Same problem. As for default installs, telnet doesn't come with the default Windows Vista install, yet I enabled it afterwards. So I guess for you telnet isn't "integrated" with Windows Vista either.