I'm wondering if it was working fine and he just didn't have the PCM sound up using the ALSA-mixer...wouldn't it be SO funny if it was working all along and he didn't know how to turn the sound up?
That happened to me the other day.:x My, did I feel daft. I'm not usually that ditzy.
That's an Emu10k1 card, isn't it? I have one, too, the SoundBlaster Live; Debian autodetects it and sets it up for OSS during the install for me, and on PPC no less.;b We're used to things not working. ALSA is a bit tougher, but then again the average joe doesn't really need ALSA. (I do, for hardware MIDI, which fortunately worked without fiddling. sudo apt-get install alsabase autodetected my MIDI port without a problem.)
The only important thing is how far you develop not so much how quickly.
Not true. Actually, there are numerous critical periods for learning and, in general, the earlier the better. In some cases, they've discovered that early learning programs were ineffective even just at age 5, requiring earlier intervention.
http://static.kdenews.org/mirrors/www.lugod.org/pr esentations/kde-user-persp/thumbnails.html
How *do* you do thumbnail previews like they show there? I'm using KDE 3.2.1, but I can't seem to get Konqueror to do that.
But I'm not sure how taking their photograph or fingerprints on entry would have done anything to stop it.
It's simple! If you take a photograph, and they don't show up, they're vampires! Voila, no more British terrorist vampires.
What about the Macintosh, Lisa or Amiga, all of which either predate Windows or came out at around the same time? Microsoft didn't invent the GUI; if they hadn't been around, someone else would have made it big in their place. Really, it took them ages to clone what Apple and Commodore had earlier on.
I never heard jokes about Canadian money being 'fake' simply because it was worth 'less' than the US dollar.
Probably because you're not Canadian. I used to get those all the time, back when our dollar was weaker versus the American dollar.
It's certainly not always a bad thing, either; I recall that the Japanese animation for the otherwise American-made The Last Unicorn was absolutely beautiful. Of course, the animators later became Studio Ghibli, which certainly could explain it.
This certainly isn't the best solution, but with a flashcart you can listen to.MODs and theoretically, with conversion,.S3Ms on the Game Boy Advance. I have a fair portion of my Chrylian collection on my GBA flashcart; an hour and a half or so, and taking up a fraction of the flashcart's space.
Is that much different from how it used to be, anyway?;b My Japanese Ys I & II Complete DVD has trouble running on English Win98 without a patch to fix a major bug in Ys II's saving system; there are many similar problems with interoperability between Japanese and English Windows, at least prior to NT.
I'm not so sure. Dark musicals can work nicely; Les Miserables never comes across as silly in its most serious moments; there was hardly a dry eye in the house when the students were killed one by one in the final battle of their revolution.
One of the most memorable scenes in the film for me involved music, when Pippin sings a song and it is used for the background of Faramir and his men heading to their deaths.
I'll admit I haven't seen the animated adaptation, but I've heard some of the music and I have to say I think they're quite good - done well, I'd say this musical has quite a good chance of being a wonderful adaptation of the books.
But the home market basically *did* die until Nintendo revived it with the 1985 release of the NES. People were predicting that the videogame "fad" was over.
Re:Most advanced and powerful? -1, Biased.
on
KDE 3.2.1 Released
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· Score: 2, Interesting
Dictionary.com defines "prequel" as "A literary, dramatic, or cinematic work whose narrative takes place before that of a preexisting work or a sequel." It doesn't state that it needs to have been written later; a "prequel" simply comes before the next work, which is its sequel.
I mean no disrespect for fairy tales. Rather, I have great respect for them; there's much more to fairy tales than you give them credit for.
Fairy tales are the centre of quite a lot of literary study, for there's often much more depth than there seems to be on the surface. Certainly, one of my favourite novels and films, The Last Unicorn, is clearly a fairy tale while also being a great piece of literature.
No, I'd say that The Hobbit is very much a fairy tale; and very much literary, as well. The two are not exclusive.
It may just be me, but I don't think that the feel of Lord of the Rings would really suit The Hobbit. The Hobbit is much more of a fairy tale than an epic, unlike Lord of the Rings... I don't think the same presentation, &tc. would really be best for The Hobbit.
I've told them to use FireFox (It has trouble with the hotmail website so I switched back to IE)
What sort of problems? I use Hotmail regularly on Firefox (running Linux, although I doubt there's a difference between ports) without a problem. Have you reported it as a bug?
That's an Emu10k1 card, isn't it? I have one, too, the SoundBlaster Live; Debian autodetects it and sets it up for OSS during the install for me, and on PPC no less. ;b We're used to things not working. ALSA is a bit tougher, but then again the average joe doesn't really need ALSA. (I do, for hardware MIDI, which fortunately worked without fiddling. sudo apt-get install alsabase autodetected my MIDI port without a problem.)
Or it could be that it's the international term for this kind of fraud.
Hm... oddly, waiting isn't causing anything to happen, although the tooltip previews do work. Perhaps because I upgraded from an older KDE?
http://static.kdenews.org/mirrors/www.lugod.org/pr esentations/kde-user-persp/thumbnails.html
How *do* you do thumbnail previews like they show there? I'm using KDE 3.2.1, but I can't seem to get Konqueror to do that.
How do you think they're funding the experiment? ;3
But I'm not sure how taking their photograph or fingerprints on entry would have done anything to stop it. It's simple! If you take a photograph, and they don't show up, they're vampires! Voila, no more British terrorist vampires.
Well, there's mostly dead, and then there's completely dead.
What about the Macintosh, Lisa or Amiga, all of which either predate Windows or came out at around the same time? Microsoft didn't invent the GUI; if they hadn't been around, someone else would have made it big in their place. Really, it took them ages to clone what Apple and Commodore had earlier on.
"Right, but is it the God of the Anglicans or the God of the Catholics you don't believe in?"
I never heard jokes about Canadian money being 'fake' simply because it was worth 'less' than the US dollar. Probably because you're not Canadian. I used to get those all the time, back when our dollar was weaker versus the American dollar.
It's certainly not always a bad thing, either; I recall that the Japanese animation for the otherwise American-made The Last Unicorn was absolutely beautiful. Of course, the animators later became Studio Ghibli, which certainly could explain it.
This certainly isn't the best solution, but with a flashcart you can listen to .MODs and theoretically, with conversion, .S3Ms on the Game Boy Advance. I have a fair portion of my Chrylian collection on my GBA flashcart; an hour and a half or so, and taking up a fraction of the flashcart's space.
Is that much different from how it used to be, anyway? ;b My Japanese Ys I & II Complete DVD has trouble running on English Win98 without a patch to fix a major bug in Ys II's saving system; there are many similar problems with interoperability between Japanese and English Windows, at least prior to NT.
I'm not so sure. Dark musicals can work nicely; Les Miserables never comes across as silly in its most serious moments; there was hardly a dry eye in the house when the students were killed one by one in the final battle of their revolution. One of the most memorable scenes in the film for me involved music, when Pippin sings a song and it is used for the background of Faramir and his men heading to their deaths. I'll admit I haven't seen the animated adaptation, but I've heard some of the music and I have to say I think they're quite good - done well, I'd say this musical has quite a good chance of being a wonderful adaptation of the books.
But Animal Crossing is just an upgrade of an older N64 game, not a new game.
But the home market basically *did* die until Nintendo revived it with the 1985 release of the NES. People were predicting that the videogame "fad" was over.
Funny, I'm a furry and I use KDE. ;b
"or a sequel," it says. "Or" implies one or the other, not both; I didn't contradict my own quote, for it allows both coexisting interpretations.
Dictionary.com defines "prequel" as "A literary, dramatic, or cinematic work whose narrative takes place before that of a preexisting work or a sequel." It doesn't state that it needs to have been written later; a "prequel" simply comes before the next work, which is its sequel.
Fairy tales are the centre of quite a lot of literary study, for there's often much more depth than there seems to be on the surface. Certainly, one of my favourite novels and films, The Last Unicorn, is clearly a fairy tale while also being a great piece of literature.
No, I'd say that The Hobbit is very much a fairy tale; and very much literary, as well. The two are not exclusive.
It may just be me, but I don't think that the feel of Lord of the Rings would really suit The Hobbit. The Hobbit is much more of a fairy tale than an epic, unlike Lord of the Rings... I don't think the same presentation, &tc. would really be best for The Hobbit.