Give me a nice clean distro like Gentoo anyday. I can't stand that a Fedora install requires 5CDs and installs some 600 packages that I will never use. Why do I need so many text editors, etc? I get lost in the and nervous in the Applications menu. Sure, I tried 30 text editors before I found the one I wanted, but that's all I install on my box durring reinstall or upgrade.
BTW, this parent might be offtopic, be he is no troll. Shame on you mods!
If by excellent you mean ass slow... KQEMU is a huge help, but it's no VMware... VMWare has support for 3D hardware acceleration, finally, too.. -- Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
I haven't seen any websites that use flash to open popup windows, but then, I have a small set of sites I daily frequent.
What I've noticed is webpages use document.write("<scr" + "ipt> new.window.code.for.popup(location, whatever) </scr" + "ipt>")
which is what I assume this new version protects against... Whenever I get popups in firefox on a new page I check the source, and this is what I've continually seen.
If you do this, then you are deliberately disabling a copy protection system, which is illegal under the DMCA. So Sony can sue you
You can disable copy-protection to your hearts content, Doug. What you can't do is circumvent it.
If I don't have a copy-protected CD in the drive, their copy protection rootkit/driver isn't doing anything. I can remove it with no legal reprecussions. It will just install itself the next time I put the CD in the drive.
Now, if I try to rip the songs by cirucmventing the DRM rootkit/driver, then yes, that's a violation of the DMCA.
Nevermind the fact that if you complain to sony that you can't play your DRM'd CDs on your iPod that they'll TELL you how to circumvent the copy protection.. but I suppose then you're doing it with their conscent.
Before 18 you shouldn't be in the position to have access to something requiring a social security number unless you have access to it (IE: a bank account)
Execpt for standardized testing (CAT, Ohio Basic, SAT, ACT, etc) college applications, school transcripts, drivers license applications...
I knew my SSN by 3rd or 4th grade. I'd already seen it 2 or 3 times on the California Achievement Test. -- Google innovative? Phhfft! This is Zombo-com!
Well, so maybe they're making it pure XML now. That doesn't mean competitors can actually use it in their product. MS isn't charging money to integrate support (royalty free) but their license is very specific about who can legally use it and how.
That's pretend open. -- You could BugMeNot, or you could just click. You decide
* OpenDocument Format is a legal mine-field. As stated previously OpenDocument is a subset of MsOffice format,
Microsoft is ALSO an Open Document committee member (and has been for many years). They've had ample opportunity to ensure that the OpenDocument format supports everything that they need it to.
Since OpenDocument has been painstakenly crafted as Extensionable XML, there should be no problem with Microsoft Extending the standard to add support for anything that is not currently included, provided they do so using Pure XML without any of the binary nuggets they've included in their own XML format. If they extend the format properly through the OpenDocument committee, then their updates can become part of the standard rather than being a fork (which definately would give Microsoft a lot of flak.)
Licensing on the ODF is actually very liberal and Sun, the only IP owner for anything related to the ODF, has already released an IP claims relating to the use of ODF. This is something they can't sue Microsoft over anymore.
LiveJournal's cleanhtml.pl already covers multiline splits in IE. It's not like IE's interpretation of single tags split on mutiple lines hasn't been known about for quite some time.
I completely agree that IE is the problem, but to say that this is something site administrators couldn't have been prepared for is untrue. To expect a self replicating javascript? No way. But to secure the filter to prevent multiline tags? Yes, cleanhtml.pl already does. It's known and out there already.
I don't care how he got the javascript to load. The fact of the matter is he got it to load. While it's Microsoft's fault for shipping a faulty browser, it's still the website's fault for not properly filtering. You can't just block the words "Javascript" and "Script" and call it good.
All that money and where's the fun?
on
Space Tourism?
·
· Score: 1
I can have sex in a bed at home.
The whole point of the mile high club is to be discrete while packed in around all of those people.
Who the hell cares if the tourist has a scientific background. He can still be the guinnea pig in an experiment done by the real scientists that are up there with him.
Or he could get in the way of the real scientists while they do experiments that don't involve him, but they'll put up with him being in the way. Why? Because he paid for most of the trip, making the experiment cost that much less. Or they're allocating the money for the experiment from the research budget and taking the tourist to earn some capital, however you want to consider it.
If you don't make any calls, keeping skype in and skype out running for a year is $5/mo
Incomming calls are free, and non-skype outgoing calls are about 1.9cents/minute (depending on the Euro/USD exchange when you purchased the minutes)
$130+60 = 190 for the first year, and 60/yr after that
$28.50/mo (what I pay in ND after state and federal taxes) x 12 = $342/yr
As someone who doesn't make any outgoing calls, the two downsides I see are that 1) It requires skype, so if you switch to real VOIP like vonage, the investment is lost 2) Skype has noticable lag. I've tried Vonage and Packet 8 elsewhere, and I don't notice any lag. With Skype Out, it was noticable for me.
I thought StarOffice 7.0 (isn't that were OO.o got it's roots? 7.0?) was nearly a from scratch endevour. I had always thought when they removed all of the StarOffice Desktop stuff they had also updated things like this...
And can people please RTFA. It's not free wi-fi, they don't have to roll out tons of gear... it's a VPN. It's to secure your connection from third party sniffers From TFA that I apparently didn't read: Where can I go to download Google Secure Access?
The program can currently be downloaded at certain Google WiFi locations in the San Francisco Bay Area.
I have a feeling the VPN client might work when you aren't using Google WiFi as your connection point, but it's clearly intended to be used with Google's own access points. -- Think Google's Innovative? Well, it's no Zombo.com
How the distilled water will be kept liquid during the night?
Electrolosis of distilled water is horribly inefficient. In order to boost efficiency of to the 70-80% area they add lots of scary chemicals that act as catylists (Potasium salts, etc). These will prevent the water from even considering freezing. -- Downloading in Firefox got you down? Cheer up
Gentoo is horrific as far as security goes.
Compile the SELinux profile into your kernel and then follow the gentoo security handbook.
Give me a nice clean distro like Gentoo anyday. I can't stand that a Fedora install requires 5CDs and installs some 600 packages that I will never use. Why do I need so many text editors, etc? I get lost in the and nervous in the Applications menu. Sure, I tried 30 text editors before I found the one I wanted, but that's all I install on my box durring reinstall or upgrade.
BTW, this parent might be offtopic, be he is no troll. Shame on you mods!
It's based on WineX
Actually, it is WineX. WineX was TransGaming's origional name for Cedega.
Biscuits are hard and dry and most importantly, you can dip them in tea.
Oh! You mean like cookies!
--
Google innovative? Phhfft! This is Zombo-com!
--
You could BugMeNot, or you could just click. You decide
If by excellent you mean ass slow... KQEMU is a huge help, but it's no VMware... VMWare has support for 3D hardware acceleration, finally, too..
--
Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
I haven't seen any websites that use flash to open popup windows, but then, I have a small set of sites I daily frequent.
What I've noticed is webpages use document.write("<scr" + "ipt> new.window.code.for.popup(location, whatever) </scr" + "ipt>")
which is what I assume this new version protects against... Whenever I get popups in firefox on a new page I check the source, and this is what I've continually seen.
If you do this, then you are deliberately disabling a copy protection system, which is illegal under the DMCA. So Sony can sue you
You can disable copy-protection to your hearts content, Doug. What you can't do is circumvent it.
If I don't have a copy-protected CD in the drive, their copy protection rootkit/driver isn't doing anything. I can remove it with no legal reprecussions. It will just install itself the next time I put the CD in the drive.
Now, if I try to rip the songs by cirucmventing the DRM rootkit/driver, then yes, that's a violation of the DMCA.
Nevermind the fact that if you complain to sony that you can't play your DRM'd CDs on your iPod that they'll TELL you how to circumvent the copy protection.. but I suppose then you're doing it with their conscent.
OOPS! I just picked up the meaning of your sentence as I was hitting submit :oops:
--
Downloading in Firefox got you down? Cheer up
Before 18 you shouldn't be in the position to have access to something requiring a social security number unless you have access to it (IE: a bank account)
Execpt for standardized testing (CAT, Ohio Basic, SAT, ACT, etc) college applications, school transcripts, drivers license applications...
I knew my SSN by 3rd or 4th grade. I'd already seen it 2 or 3 times on the California Achievement Test.
--
Google innovative? Phhfft! This is Zombo-com!
AC was posting obvious humor, but complaining about it is acceptable, too, I suppose ;)
Well, so maybe they're making it pure XML now. That doesn't mean competitors can actually use it in their product. MS isn't charging money to integrate support (royalty free) but their license is very specific about who can legally use it and how.
That's pretend open.
--
You could BugMeNot, or you could just click. You decide
* OpenDocument Format is a legal mine-field. As stated previously OpenDocument is a subset of MsOffice format,
Microsoft is ALSO an Open Document committee member (and has been for many years). They've had ample opportunity to ensure that the OpenDocument format supports everything that they need it to.
Since OpenDocument has been painstakenly crafted as Extensionable XML, there should be no problem with Microsoft Extending the standard to add support for anything that is not currently included, provided they do so using Pure XML without any of the binary nuggets they've included in their own XML format. If they extend the format properly through the OpenDocument committee, then their updates can become part of the standard rather than being a fork (which definately would give Microsoft a lot of flak.)
Licensing on the ODF is actually very liberal and Sun, the only IP owner for anything related to the ODF, has already released an IP claims relating to the use of ODF. This is something they can't sue Microsoft over anymore.
--
Bob/Paul
LiveJournal's cleanhtml.pl already covers multiline splits in IE. It's not like IE's interpretation of single tags split on mutiple lines hasn't been known about for quite some time.
I completely agree that IE is the problem, but to say that this is something site administrators couldn't have been prepared for is untrue. To expect a self replicating javascript? No way. But to secure the filter to prevent multiline tags? Yes, cleanhtml.pl already does. It's known and out there already.
I don't care how he got the javascript to load. The fact of the matter is he got it to load. While it's Microsoft's fault for shipping a faulty browser, it's still the website's fault for not properly filtering. You can't just block the words "Javascript" and "Script" and call it good.
I can have sex in a bed at home.
The whole point of the mile high club is to be discrete while packed in around all of those people.
Or do they supply the partner?
Who the hell cares if the tourist has a scientific background. He can still be the guinnea pig in an experiment done by the real scientists that are up there with him.
Or he could get in the way of the real scientists while they do experiments that don't involve him, but they'll put up with him being in the way. Why? Because he paid for most of the trip, making the experiment cost that much less. Or they're allocating the money for the experiment from the research budget and taking the tourist to earn some capital, however you want to consider it.
Any should be many... I do make outgoing calls, just not daily ;)
If you don't make any calls, keeping skype in and skype out running for a year is $5/mo
Incomming calls are free, and non-skype outgoing calls are about 1.9cents/minute (depending on the Euro/USD exchange when you purchased the minutes)
$130+60 = 190 for the first year, and 60/yr after that
$28.50/mo (what I pay in ND after state and federal taxes) x 12 = $342/yr
As someone who doesn't make any outgoing calls, the two downsides I see are that
1) It requires skype, so if you switch to real VOIP like vonage, the investment is lost
2) Skype has noticable lag. I've tried Vonage and Packet 8 elsewhere, and I don't notice any lag. With Skype Out, it was noticable for me.
But... they are sold at a loss.
--
Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
If we all just refused to join sides and went with using both or a third browser
"If it weren't for my horse, I wouldn't have spent those last few years in college."
--Lewis Black
--
Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
I thought StarOffice 7.0 (isn't that were OO.o got it's roots? 7.0?) was nearly a from scratch endevour. I had always thought when they removed all of the StarOffice Desktop stuff they had also updated things like this...
Recall that OpenOffice includes its own GUI toolkit and app framework
Wouldn't they save a lot of time if they didn't code their own middleware?
--
Don't fight Firefox! Let FireFox fight YOU!
And can people please RTFA. It's not free wi-fi, they don't have to roll out tons of gear... it's a VPN. It's to secure your connection from third party sniffers
From TFA that I apparently didn't read:
Where can I go to download Google Secure Access?
The program can currently be downloaded at certain Google WiFi locations in the San Francisco Bay Area.
I have a feeling the VPN client might work when you aren't using Google WiFi as your connection point, but it's clearly intended to be used with Google's own access points.
--
Think Google's Innovative? Well, it's no Zombo.com
How the distilled water will be kept liquid during the night?
Electrolosis of distilled water is horribly inefficient. In order to boost efficiency of to the 70-80% area they add lots of scary chemicals that act as catylists (Potasium salts, etc). These will prevent the water from even considering freezing.
--
Downloading in Firefox got you down? Cheer up