It seems to be a really bad idea for a program to start over writing the close window functionality provided by OS/WM. I don't want a program replacing the minimize button with their custom logo spinning and such.
Yep, American and I had Calc I my senior year of high school which was the highest math class offered.
I eventually had DiffyQ in college.
I just don't see how you could have DiffyQ at 15. If 18 is a senior in high school then you're talking about students in 9th grade. Before DiffyQ I had calc 1-4 as well as things like Discrete so in order to have Diff at 15 you would have to have had Calc I somewhere around 10-11 years old. I call BS.
So you mean that other nations don't have secretaries and truck drivers?
These kids were 15! That can't be much more than algebra. We're not talking about getting 90% of the population competing in Differential Equations here.
What ever happened with that? I thought some company bought up their network and were redeploying in some areas, but that was a long while ago and I've never heard anything since.
I look at the beta title a lot like Firefox and Tunderbird. They are both functional programs, but they don't include all of the features and testing required for a full 1.0 release. I used both of them through their "beta" phase and I think gmail is the same sort of thing.
You exercised your right to speech and spread the word about your candidate.
Guess what? I am going to keep exercising that right to bitch, whine, and hope that Air Force One developes a nice flamable fuel leak over the next four years.
Then I'm going to go back out and vote all over again. Ah, the cycle of politics.
Have you seen the size of the devices for these things? No way apple would touch that. You would have to sleek down the devices a ton to make them look anywhere close to decent.
So why charge $2 a month, and how are they verifying you are using it or not. It seems the only way to get a monthly payment out of you would be if they were hosting and monitoring usage. I read it as you would have to pay for the server software, but they took care of hardware and the client software for the $2 per user per month. Maybe I just misunderstand this: "The company plans to charge customers $2 per user per month for access to the software, plus the cost of server software, such as IBM's WebSphere"
What would be needed in large shops is the ability to have it hosted internal. That way you're not dependent on the internet connection, just your internal network which should be a lot more failure resistant. This is starting to sound like citrix delivered apps, however.
Well I would assume a larger aircaft offers a more stable platform for the laser. I admit I am not pilot, but for all those calculations I think the larger aircraft would offer more crew space for long flights (these things would have to be up 24/7 wouldn't they?) and help keep the laser on target and not get buffeted as much by turbulance.
What I love about iTunes is the search. Once you start typing it starts limiting the files quickly. I tried the WinAmp beta and the thing I did not like was that while it would limit the playlist based on a library search, it would not reset the playlist once you removed the search criteria from the library like iTunes does.
How many times have you read a review that stated that while the hardware was fine, the software for configuring/using the device was far too complicated? The software that a device comes with can make a huge difference in ease of use.
For instance, I won't buy a linksys WAP anymore. I liked the first generations that had a USB plug in the back and a nice simple config software package. The software in later versions drove me nuts.
That is the question. The whole thing stinks to be honest, but I can't see a developer doing everything 100% outside on the up and up. He would have had to have never touched the code on his work machine, bought his own set of dev tools, etc. Come on, be honest...we've all popped open an editor at work to tinker with a bug or something.
I hope the guys didn't though. Seems that apple could just throw a couple hundred grand his way and he'd be reasonably happy.
It seems to be a really bad idea for a program to start over writing the close window functionality provided by OS/WM. I don't want a program replacing the minimize button with their custom logo spinning and such.
except that they also provide a nice .deb package that installed fine on my debian desktop and ubuntu laptop.
damn 2.2 here....4 hours for a powerpoint presentation. I'm not going to make it.
Yep, American and I had Calc I my senior year of high school which was the highest math class offered.
I eventually had DiffyQ in college.
I just don't see how you could have DiffyQ at 15. If 18 is a senior in high school then you're talking about students in 9th grade. Before DiffyQ I had calc 1-4 as well as things like Discrete so in order to have Diff at 15 you would have to have had Calc I somewhere around 10-11 years old. I call BS.
So you mean that other nations don't have secretaries and truck drivers?
These kids were 15! That can't be much more than algebra. We're not talking about getting 90% of the population competing in Differential Equations here.
Forget plugging in mice. How about getting the thinkpad trackpoint going on some Powerbooks. :)
What ever happened with that? I thought some company bought up their network and were redeploying in some areas, but that was a long while ago and I've never heard anything since.
I look at the beta title a lot like Firefox and Tunderbird. They are both functional programs, but they don't include all of the features and testing required for a full 1.0 release. I used both of them through their "beta" phase and I think gmail is the same sort of thing.
Guess what? I am going to keep exercising that right to bitch, whine, and hope that Air Force One developes a nice flamable fuel leak over the next four years.
Then I'm going to go back out and vote all over again. Ah, the cycle of politics.
Have you seen the size of the devices for these things? No way apple would touch that. You would have to sleek down the devices a ton to make them look anywhere close to decent.
Ok, who reincarnated Clippy as a sea creature?
You should check the options in AIM sometime. Logging your conversations is in there.
It works with firefox, but does not index the history of surfing in firefox like it will do with IE.
Congratulations on making a difference and establishing the exception to the rule ...oh wait...
ouch didn't even last 10 minutes. Anyone have it to share?
So why charge $2 a month, and how are they verifying you are using it or not. It seems the only way to get a monthly payment out of you would be if they were hosting and monitoring usage. I read it as you would have to pay for the server software, but they took care of hardware and the client software for the $2 per user per month. Maybe I just misunderstand this:
"The company plans to charge customers $2 per user per month for access to the software, plus the cost of server software, such as IBM's WebSphere"
What would be needed in large shops is the ability to have it hosted internal. That way you're not dependent on the internet connection, just your internal network which should be a lot more failure resistant. This is starting to sound like citrix delivered apps, however.
Discrete
Calc 1-3
Probability and Statistics
Diffy Screw
That was what I had to take I think.
Well I would assume a larger aircaft offers a more stable platform for the laser. I admit I am not pilot, but for all those calculations I think the larger aircraft would offer more crew space for long flights (these things would have to be up 24/7 wouldn't they?) and help keep the laser on target and not get buffeted as much by turbulance.
You have to love this one. So would using your instead of you're count as a spelling mistake? Oops, don't feed the trolls.
They are called grad students. They even pay to be there.
What I love about iTunes is the search. Once you start typing it starts limiting the files quickly. I tried the WinAmp beta and the thing I did not like was that while it would limit the playlist based on a library search, it would not reset the playlist once you removed the search criteria from the library like iTunes does.
Funny, I somehow got it on my Windows XP box with a free download from the Apple website.
Now a port for my linux box would be sweet.
For instance, I won't buy a linksys WAP anymore. I liked the first generations that had a USB plug in the back and a nice simple config software package. The software in later versions drove me nuts.
That is the question. The whole thing stinks to be honest, but I can't see a developer doing everything 100% outside on the up and up. He would have had to have never touched the code on his work machine, bought his own set of dev tools, etc. Come on, be honest...we've all popped open an editor at work to tinker with a bug or something.
I hope the guys didn't though. Seems that apple could just throw a couple hundred grand his way and he'd be reasonably happy.