of paper airplanes worthy of this article and also of our tax paying dollars.
1. Fold in half, then open
2. Put paper in palm of open hand (pick one)
3. Crumple paper rigoriously
4. Lean back in rocker and shoot for the downtown shot and swish.
5. Send a bill for 5 million dollars to NASA for a superior design flaw, used paper.
cleansed of anything really useful or insightful. One thing can be assumed here is that many three lettered acronym departments in the governmint have scrubbed the collection top to bottom years ago.
Plan and simple, you want to get information you have to do it when and where the carrier (in this case TMobile) decides you get it. The problem is there are not an unlimited supply of carriers to choose from that vary by any reasonable means. In the old days if you wanted to find alternative media, you either got letters or packages of papers from free thinking markets. Today, if you want to get information you have to do it when, where and how someone tells you to do it. If there were alternative info highways for many users this would not be an issue, but there are not, so this is a major factor and a step toward information facism.
Why in the world would I want to 'deter' someone from pointing AK-47s or RPGs at my ship? If I actually thought I was in danger of being overtaken by a pirate ship with those weapons I'd much rather just blow them out of the water and be done with another ship of vermin. This article's intro really has me perplexed. Do I want to help conspirators make better decisions, or protect my crew that I am on the high seas with for eternity by cleansing the waters of such riff raff with a real weapon like AK47s and RPGs of my own. Or better yet, a skin melting micro wave gun that will make the scumbags of the high seas feel as if they are cooking alive. I think that would change their minds faster than a visual deterent they can look away from or have filtered/reflective glasses to make the laser meaningless.
That is my point, its a promise and no delivery in real market terms. The real problem is that folks have a dream, but it doesn't come to fruition via either reality or forced-up-the-market power of a large corp. OLPC is just a pipe dream, over promise and under delivery regardless of intent. I do not hold my breath, for I will die before what has been pipe-dreamed becomes reality. Maybe in due time, 20-30 years, the folks of the world will be liberated. Until then, I deal with reality as best as I can and ignore the fantasy of an equal society where a majority of non-modern cultures are having a hard time dealing with simple dysentery.
But didn't we learn from the promise and price fiasco with the 1.0 and beta of this hardware? I personally remember being very excited in the mid 2000's about this hardware, how it was going to save the world, bring tech to the masses and the promise of a reasonable computer bringing network computing to the masses around the world (including the US where there are 30-40 million people without modern computers). The lack of bandwidth (price and locale) as well as the internal issues in OLPC made this a forgettable device much like that of the folks at CrunchTech with the CrunchPad. Lessons learned, first in wins the game, its time for tech companies to stop playing catchup and do something real and inventive that will change the face of our user experience. Cheap hardware and software is a nice idea, I'm just not holding my breath on this evolutionary release (soft and hard).
I still have the 6502 for Apple source assembly and the Inman and Inman book (soft cover as well, but 5x7 or whatever sizing) that I took to Europe with me. Its just hard to let go of this stuff.
I learned it while on vacation in europe in 1981 prior to my even knowing BASIC or FORTH on the Apple ][ line of computers. It was the most important step in my otherwise stellarly mediocre life as a senior software engineer with NeXT and Apple. Its great to see others taking a lasting approach to the chip that made the most impact on me and others in my industry. Thank you! BTW, did you know there is at least one logic bug in the CPU?:) Its fairly well known now, find it and you will have a bit of history on your hands.
The governmint can't keep track of used hard drives, so this is not a big threat in real terms. When they can tell the US citizens where all the data for nukes and secrets is on their hard drives I'll care more about malware in emails.
as of recently. Bought a RAID setup with 1.5 TB drives about 1.5 years ago. The same drives are selling at the same retail for the same price last week. I think this part of our history in drives will be recognized as a major stall in product development, innovation and consumer needs.
should there be no client? The desire of big business is to centralize everything. The liberation and free user period of the 80s and 90s is over and now its all about the borg. So get over the argument and silly questions of 'to be or not to be' and realize that regardless the motion of the ocean is a big bone in your IT ass dicktated by Apple, M$haft and the wannabees or hazbeanz.
in the early 90s by a fella named Matt Moran in Denver (student in from Fort Collins). He along with others like Chris Miner were NeXT consultants and started an open source company called of all things OpenSource.com. This company quickly went out of business due to Matt's terrible business plan and poor leadership skills. Others came and went in the company and as we know NeXT changed its business plans monthly, as a result nobody was able to figure out if the Steve Jobs Bukkake was coming or going. So, OpenSource was 'coined' a long long long time before the seven claimed it was.
a lot of things like driving habits and terrain when considering the efficiency of the car. The EPA isn't in the business of doing the right thing, its in business.
Of the market by using Smalltalk. Its great to Instantiations still in business, and focused on Smalltalk. I find it very perplexing that Google bought the Java tools from them while leaving the Smalltalk business and dev folks behind that used Smalltalk to create these Java tools. When folks finally get to the real world of Smalltalk and its power, and Java is realized for its weaknesses maybe we'll all get back to the real work of creating real tools for real people with real problems to solve.
I'd spank a load on it and post to youtube, showing all the power of the Steve Jobs Bukkake effect. Steve knows how to give it out, but can't take it on the chin like the great pron star he could be.
My guess is that the Big Sis and her fun loving civil liberty thefts are laughing all the way to the bank on this one. 1/3 of a billion in sales (at least) for Chertoff and clan as well, kickbacks to governmint officials and the public protestors are seen as a loose bunch of losers that can't organize a real movement. There has to be more than a protest 'day', which is easily skipped. There has to be a civil unrest and protest that lasts months or years for there to be any chance of change. So many that made the 60s and 70s what it was in protesting are old and passing the battle on to a ADHD laden group of kids they pushed out as a 2nd and 3rd generation of wannabees. Seriously, if you want change, folks have to change themselves (literally and figuratively). If you want society to get better, than you had better start by getting better yourselves. Lead by example, and refuse to have your liberties taken/stripped away. Getting naked or in a bathing suit at the airport is a JOKE, that is exactly what the TSA and Big Sis wants you to do, give up your privacy and self respect.
Google cares now, ad revenue down, don't piss off governments with freedom or speech, just fall in line and sell more ads. This is exactly why I won't use and don't encourage others to use anything related to Google, and turn off all adverts with FireFox popup and ad blocking plugins. Freedoms are only things we give up, we already have them inherently, and a love for tech device addictions and quick search results gives Google and companies like them power. There are always better choices/alternatives.
of the homes of each member of congress, the judicial branches, and the whitehouse, and lets see how many of the 1000s caught have cousins that already are working here illegally paid under the table with tax dollars?
Cycles, like biology, society, greed and humanity constantly oscillate over time. Right now we just see
a lot of little/big ripples since time compression is happening. Eventually all living systems fail
since nothing can sustain living in its own waste. Life itself has always been the answer. Science
is just a group of lords, or witches claiming to be more than lazy self proclaimed discoverers of the obvious.
That is of course assuming Apple has a tough scrutiny that is uniform across all apps and all its screeners. I often get the impression that with 1000s of crap apps submitted, and 1000s of crap apps approved, with 1000s of good apps rejected, and even more 1000s of crap apps rejected there is no rhyme or reason to the insanity that still is the approval process at AppStore. To summarize, they do what is necessary to keep it afloat, and no more. Others take advantage of it, and thinking there is some conspiracy at AppStore is as valid in my mind as the argument that this Storm8 upload of PNUM was a mistake/error. Just don't buy it.
of paper airplanes worthy of this article and also of our tax paying dollars. 1. Fold in half, then open 2. Put paper in palm of open hand (pick one) 3. Crumple paper rigoriously 4. Lean back in rocker and shoot for the downtown shot and swish. 5. Send a bill for 5 million dollars to NASA for a superior design flaw, used paper.
cleansed of anything really useful or insightful. One thing can be assumed here is that many three lettered acronym departments in the governmint have scrubbed the collection top to bottom years ago.
Plan and simple, you want to get information you have to do it when and where the carrier (in this case TMobile) decides you get it. The problem is there are not an unlimited supply of carriers to choose from that vary by any reasonable means. In the old days if you wanted to find alternative media, you either got letters or packages of papers from free thinking markets. Today, if you want to get information you have to do it when, where and how someone tells you to do it. If there were alternative info highways for many users this would not be an issue, but there are not, so this is a major factor and a step toward information facism.
Why in the world would I want to 'deter' someone from pointing AK-47s or RPGs at my ship? If I actually thought I was in danger of being overtaken by a pirate ship with those weapons I'd much rather just blow them out of the water and be done with another ship of vermin. This article's intro really has me perplexed. Do I want to help conspirators make better decisions, or protect my crew that I am on the high seas with for eternity by cleansing the waters of such riff raff with a real weapon like AK47s and RPGs of my own. Or better yet, a skin melting micro wave gun that will make the scumbags of the high seas feel as if they are cooking alive. I think that would change their minds faster than a visual deterent they can look away from or have filtered/reflective glasses to make the laser meaningless.
That is my point, its a promise and no delivery in real market terms. The real problem is that folks have a dream, but it doesn't come to fruition via either reality or forced-up-the-market power of a large corp. OLPC is just a pipe dream, over promise and under delivery regardless of intent. I do not hold my breath, for I will die before what has been pipe-dreamed becomes reality. Maybe in due time, 20-30 years, the folks of the world will be liberated. Until then, I deal with reality as best as I can and ignore the fantasy of an equal society where a majority of non-modern cultures are having a hard time dealing with simple dysentery.
But didn't we learn from the promise and price fiasco with the 1.0 and beta of this hardware? I personally remember being very excited in the mid 2000's about this hardware, how it was going to save the world, bring tech to the masses and the promise of a reasonable computer bringing network computing to the masses around the world (including the US where there are 30-40 million people without modern computers). The lack of bandwidth (price and locale) as well as the internal issues in OLPC made this a forgettable device much like that of the folks at CrunchTech with the CrunchPad. Lessons learned, first in wins the game, its time for tech companies to stop playing catchup and do something real and inventive that will change the face of our user experience. Cheap hardware and software is a nice idea, I'm just not holding my breath on this evolutionary release (soft and hard).
I still have the 6502 for Apple source assembly and the Inman and Inman book (soft cover as well, but 5x7 or whatever sizing) that I took to Europe with me. Its just hard to let go of this stuff.
That bug is a bit less known, I meant the paging flaw with hex.
I learned it while on vacation in europe in 1981 prior to my even knowing BASIC or FORTH on the Apple ][ line of computers. It was the most important step in my otherwise stellarly mediocre life as a senior software engineer with NeXT and Apple. Its great to see others taking a lasting approach to the chip that made the most impact on me and others in my industry. Thank you! BTW, did you know there is at least one logic bug in the CPU? :) Its fairly well known now, find it and you will have a bit of history on your hands.
The governmint can't keep track of used hard drives, so this is not a big threat in real terms. When they can tell the US citizens where all the data for nukes and secrets is on their hard drives I'll care more about malware in emails.
as of recently. Bought a RAID setup with 1.5 TB drives about 1.5 years ago. The same drives are selling at the same retail for the same price last week. I think this part of our history in drives will be recognized as a major stall in product development, innovation and consumer needs.
should there be no client? The desire of big business is to centralize everything. The liberation and free user period of the 80s and 90s is over and now its all about the borg. So get over the argument and silly questions of 'to be or not to be' and realize that regardless the motion of the ocean is a big bone in your IT ass dicktated by Apple, M$haft and the wannabees or hazbeanz.
memorabilia, the biggest show on earth.
in the early 90s by a fella named Matt Moran in Denver (student in from Fort Collins). He along with others like Chris Miner were NeXT consultants and started an open source company called of all things OpenSource.com. This company quickly went out of business due to Matt's terrible business plan and poor leadership skills. Others came and went in the company and as we know NeXT changed its business plans monthly, as a result nobody was able to figure out if the Steve Jobs Bukkake was coming or going. So, OpenSource was 'coined' a long long long time before the seven claimed it was.
a lot of things like driving habits and terrain when considering the efficiency of the car. The EPA isn't in the business of doing the right thing, its in business.
Of the market by using Smalltalk. Its great to Instantiations still in business, and focused on Smalltalk. I find it very perplexing that Google bought the Java tools from them while leaving the Smalltalk business and dev folks behind that used Smalltalk to create these Java tools. When folks finally get to the real world of Smalltalk and its power, and Java is realized for its weaknesses maybe we'll all get back to the real work of creating real tools for real people with real problems to solve.
I'd spank a load on it and post to youtube, showing all the power of the Steve Jobs Bukkake effect. Steve knows how to give it out, but can't take it on the chin like the great pron star he could be.
My guess is that the Big Sis and her fun loving civil liberty thefts are laughing all the way to the bank on this one. 1/3 of a billion in sales (at least) for Chertoff and clan as well, kickbacks to governmint officials and the public protestors are seen as a loose bunch of losers that can't organize a real movement. There has to be more than a protest 'day', which is easily skipped. There has to be a civil unrest and protest that lasts months or years for there to be any chance of change. So many that made the 60s and 70s what it was in protesting are old and passing the battle on to a ADHD laden group of kids they pushed out as a 2nd and 3rd generation of wannabees. Seriously, if you want change, folks have to change themselves (literally and figuratively). If you want society to get better, than you had better start by getting better yourselves. Lead by example, and refuse to have your liberties taken/stripped away. Getting naked or in a bathing suit at the airport is a JOKE, that is exactly what the TSA and Big Sis wants you to do, give up your privacy and self respect.
I just couldn't help myself with this one.
I like it, worth watching.
Google cares now, ad revenue down, don't piss off governments with freedom or speech, just fall in line and sell more ads. This is exactly why I won't use and don't encourage others to use anything related to Google, and turn off all adverts with FireFox popup and ad blocking plugins. Freedoms are only things we give up, we already have them inherently, and a love for tech device addictions and quick search results gives Google and companies like them power. There are always better choices/alternatives.
of the homes of each member of congress, the judicial branches, and the whitehouse, and lets see how many of the 1000s caught have cousins that already are working here illegally paid under the table with tax dollars?
Cycles, like biology, society, greed and humanity constantly oscillate over time. Right now we just see a lot of little/big ripples since time compression is happening. Eventually all living systems fail since nothing can sustain living in its own waste. Life itself has always been the answer. Science is just a group of lords, or witches claiming to be more than lazy self proclaimed discoverers of the obvious.
Pretty good one too, just got it. I'm a bit slow today (usually most days) without coffee. Note to self, don't post emotion, post logic, with cream.
That is of course assuming Apple has a tough scrutiny that is uniform across all apps and all its screeners. I often get the impression that with 1000s of crap apps submitted, and 1000s of crap apps approved, with 1000s of good apps rejected, and even more 1000s of crap apps rejected there is no rhyme or reason to the insanity that still is the approval process at AppStore. To summarize, they do what is necessary to keep it afloat, and no more. Others take advantage of it, and thinking there is some conspiracy at AppStore is as valid in my mind as the argument that this Storm8 upload of PNUM was a mistake/error. Just don't buy it.