Would it not be easier to approve individuals than spend time unapproving anyone not from your little community. Do you threaten the intruders with pitchforks whilst crying "Are you local????". Facebook is open to the world, but still manages to sustain small communities / groups. It's not impossible.
You could restrict your website to 127.0.0.1 - that's very local. Or you could wire all the houses together on a private subnet.
In the UK (and Europe I believe), it's normal to be finishing your thesis at the end of the 3rd year/first half of 4th year, I took 4 days more than 3 years. But even as a chemistry student, I did partial diff equations in the 1st year of my undergraduate (ie aged 18). So what kind of university are you at?
The microsoft implementation would print "1" on Vista Home, "2" on Professional and "12" on Premium. It prints "4" on Linux just to prove it's linux that is broken. On Mac OS X it would print "1" and then "2" if you paid $50 more.
Actually, what am I saying. A M$ program exiting cleanly.... ha ha
In fact the further beauty of the kernel is that you can compile it how you like. For instance Red Hat Enterprise kernels whilst based on the same source code as say teh Open Moko mobile phone are compiled with different options and different modules. No one runs the Linux kernel with "everything" in some cases there are mutually exclusive options (like choice of scheduler).
You must be an American. I've never seen why people feel they need a "second" PhD. It's like re-taking your driving test in a different colour car. Once you have demonstrated that your ability to research and discover (or philosophize) is sufficient it doesn't matter what field you move to, you'll always be at that standard. The only reason I can see is that in some countries a PhD isn't just several years of research but also includes a few years of tedious learning - things that really should have been taught on an undergraduate course. So in fact what you really want to do is read for a BA (or BSc) in a new area - just do it at a good university (which unfortunately rules out most).
AMD/ATI losing out to nVidia in the extreme power cards. AMD/ATI losing out to Intel with the onboard graphics.
nVidia has a better closed source linux driver than ATI.
At the moment the only appeal of ATI is there mediocre graphics cards have open source 2D+3D drivers on Linux with R200(helped by ATI) or R300(no help from ATI/AMD) drivers.
At the moment AMD's best strategy is to build some fantastic onboard graphics chips for their AMD processors and try and beat nVidia by basically making and AMD chip + on board graphics as brilliant combination (ie no need to add an aftermarket card).
Send lesbians. No risk of pregnancy occurring in flight, and they can sell the in flight videos to fund the mission.
PS Don't mod this down, I did a lot of research for this post - I downloaded Lesbians in Space and Lesbians on Mars (I also downloaded one that I thought was about Uranus but was quite horrible).
Re:This is (now) a famous number-theory integer!
on
Censoring a Number
·
· Score: 1
It's not a theorem it's a definition. Also, you must be a complete moron to miss the joke. You clearly haven't studied anything to a higher level.
I had a Sharp Zaurus which is/was a GNU/Linux based PDA. Out of the box it only had support for Windows, and was really designed for windows users. In fact I get much better performance out of my Windows Mobile 5 PDA + Fedora Core 6 than I ever did with my Zaurus. I get proprietry stuff on the PDA like TomTom satnav (not available for linux PDA despite the Tomtom standalone uint being linux based). Development branch of Synce support syncing my PDA with Evolution. I can use Minimo web browser. I hate the fact I have to use windows on my pda despite not using windows at home or work but I simply wouldn't get any benfit from a linux pda.
In short. Linux on a PDA is a huge success for Linux but is really no better for everyday linux users unless we get proprietry stuff like Tomtom, RealPlayer, Flash available for it (not completely unlikely).
After an accident there will be many people who need to investigate the flight data. How problematic is it going to be that they will only be able to put the data on five computers?
Actually Fedora Core 6 shipped with working ATI open source drivers with 3D support (for most cards, sadly not mine). And Fedora 7 will include the nouveau drivers too (according to the release aims).
With new technology like AIGLX, XGL and XEGL emerging, having open source drivers for 3d cards is very important. Along with the recent R300 work for the ATI cards, this will bring much improved graphics to the Linux Desktop regardless of architecture. I only hope that the ATI X200M card gets open source support soon too (obviously not from nouveau).
Also Fedora 7 (dure April) intends to include the nouveau drivers - which is great as out-of-the-box Fedora can't include the binary nVidia driver necessary to have AIGLX working.
And to anyone who thinks this is unnecessary as there is the binary driver - just wait until you card is dropped from the official support and the old driver stops working with some future kernel.
Unless nVidia never release this new graphics core on normal PC hardware, surely it will eventually get the attention of the Nouveau project and 3D+2D drivers will get developed.
Actually, I just checked and the Nouveau driver should work but Sony have hidden the interface through something called hypervisor.
One of the great strengths of OSS compared to proprietary software is the ability to make use of older hardware.
This doesn't happen automagically when you license something by GPL (or similar). It takes work. The strength of OSS is that no one is stopping you from making it work on older hardware. All the code for older firefox versions, and the code for gecko 1.9 is available. Just because Mozilla team is dropping support doesn't mean they won't add patches to fix this if someone else does it. Now compare that with say Windows Vista - you have no way of patching that to run on an old 386.
Moral of the story... don't be so quick to bitch about stuff.
My £100 (equivalent $200) will happily divide by Zero. It displays and "E" on the screen which I take to mean 14 in hex. So anything divided by Zero is 14. Apart from Zero divided by Zero which amusingly it consider to be Zero.
In fact, using proof-by-blatant-assertion,
if 0/0=14 then 0*14 must = 0 which it does therefore 0/0=14 so there !
While you wrote your preamble.tex I typed my letter, printed a label for the envelope, put a stamp on it and put it in the post box. Then I got back and made a cup of tea, played minesweeper, got a new high score. By which time you'd compiled the latex document.
But seriously, I use OpenOffice most of the time, but last year I wrote my 300 page thesis in LaTeX. I would always advocate LaTeX for large/complex documents. Each has their place. Hopefully Open Document, and it's common implementation in applications that also have PDF export (eg OOo), will lead to people using it correctly, ie Open Document for collaboration and PDF for sharing.
Probably not. RedHat have been working with the development free java, Fedora ships with a free java that works with OpenOffice, Eclipse and Azureus. Hopefully, within a few months of GPL Sun Java there will be a GPL Java 1.5 in Fedora Core. Altogether, this should be a speed boost for Java apps (the current free java is slower than Sun's).
Would it not be easier to approve individuals than spend time unapproving anyone not from your little community. Do you threaten the intruders with pitchforks whilst crying "Are you local????".
Facebook is open to the world, but still manages to sustain small communities / groups. It's not impossible.
You could restrict your website to 127.0.0.1 - that's very local. Or you could wire all the houses together on a private subnet.
In the UK (and Europe I believe), it's normal to be finishing your thesis at the end of the 3rd year/first half of 4th year, I took 4 days more than 3 years. But even as a chemistry student, I did partial diff equations in the 1st year of my undergraduate (ie aged 18). So what kind of university are you at?
No. Try again. -1^2 != -1 (same for -inf).
Did you go to school?
Actually, that is the common mis-quotation.
The correct quotation of William Congreve is "Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned / Nor hell a fury like a woman scorned."
The microsoft implementation would print "1" on Vista Home, "2" on Professional and "12" on Premium. It prints "4" on Linux just to prove it's linux that is broken. On Mac OS X it would print "1" and then "2" if you paid $50 more.
Actually, what am I saying. A M$ program exiting cleanly.... ha ha
It's just the GPL. Yes Linux is licensed under it, so is a lot of GNU software and millions of other programs.
I'm not after karma, or being a pedant. Just pointing out this piece of information.
In fact the further beauty of the kernel is that you can compile it how you like. For instance Red Hat Enterprise kernels whilst based on the same source code as say teh Open Moko mobile phone are compiled with different options and different modules. No one runs the Linux kernel with "everything" in some cases there are mutually exclusive options (like choice of scheduler).
No.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenDocument
It's the MS format that doesn't have ISO status. The free and open OASIS standard does.
You must be an American. I've never seen why people feel they need a "second" PhD. It's like re-taking your driving test in a different colour car. Once you have demonstrated that your ability to research and discover (or philosophize) is sufficient it doesn't matter what field you move to, you'll always be at that standard. The only reason I can see is that in some countries a PhD isn't just several years of research but also includes a few years of tedious learning - things that really should have been taught on an undergraduate course. So in fact what you really want to do is read for a BA (or BSc) in a new area - just do it at a good university (which unfortunately rules out most).
AMD/ATI losing out to nVidia in the extreme power cards.
AMD/ATI losing out to Intel with the onboard graphics.
nVidia has a better closed source linux driver than ATI.
At the moment the only appeal of ATI is there mediocre graphics cards have open source 2D+3D drivers on Linux with R200(helped by ATI) or R300(no help from ATI/AMD) drivers.
At the moment AMD's best strategy is to build some fantastic onboard graphics chips for their AMD processors and try and beat nVidia by basically making and AMD chip + on board graphics as brilliant combination (ie no need to add an aftermarket card).
Send lesbians. No risk of pregnancy occurring in flight, and they can sell the in flight videos to fund the mission.
PS Don't mod this down, I did a lot of research for this post - I downloaded Lesbians in Space and Lesbians on Mars (I also downloaded one that I thought was about Uranus but was quite horrible).
It's not a theorem it's a definition. Also, you must be a complete moron to miss the joke. You clearly haven't studied anything to a higher level.
I had a Sharp Zaurus which is/was a GNU/Linux based PDA. Out of the box it only had support for Windows, and was really designed for windows users. In fact I get much better performance out of my Windows Mobile 5 PDA + Fedora Core 6 than I ever did with my Zaurus. I get proprietry stuff on the PDA like TomTom satnav (not available for linux PDA despite the Tomtom standalone uint being linux based). Development branch of Synce support syncing my PDA with Evolution. I can use Minimo web browser. I hate the fact I have to use windows on my pda despite not using windows at home or work but I simply wouldn't get any benfit from a linux pda.
In short. Linux on a PDA is a huge success for Linux but is really no better for everyday linux users unless we get proprietry stuff like Tomtom, RealPlayer, Flash available for it (not completely unlikely).
After an accident there will be many people who need to investigate the flight data. How problematic is it going to be that they will only be able to put the data on five computers?
Subject says it all. Use Double ROT13 and prosecute anyone who breaks it.
A spell checker in a web browser?
Actually Fedora Core 6 shipped with working ATI open source drivers with 3D support (for most cards, sadly not mine). And Fedora 7 will include the nouveau drivers too (according to the release aims).
With new technology like AIGLX, XGL and XEGL emerging, having open source drivers for 3d cards is very important. Along with the recent R300 work for the ATI cards, this will bring much improved graphics to the Linux Desktop regardless of architecture. I only hope that the ATI X200M card gets open source support soon too (obviously not from nouveau).
Also Fedora 7 (dure April) intends to include the nouveau drivers - which is great as out-of-the-box Fedora can't include the binary nVidia driver necessary to have AIGLX working.
And to anyone who thinks this is unnecessary as there is the binary driver - just wait until you card is dropped from the official support and the old driver stops working with some future kernel.
Unless nVidia never release this new graphics core on normal PC hardware, surely it will eventually get the attention of the Nouveau project and 3D+2D drivers will get developed.
Actually, I just checked and the Nouveau driver should work but Sony have hidden the interface through something called hypervisor.
One of the great strengths of OSS compared to proprietary software is the ability to make use of older hardware.
This doesn't happen automagically when you license something by GPL (or similar). It takes work. The strength of OSS is that no one is stopping you from making it work on older hardware. All the code for older firefox versions, and the code for gecko 1.9 is available. Just because Mozilla team is dropping support doesn't mean they won't add patches to fix this if someone else does it. Now compare that with say Windows Vista - you have no way of patching that to run on an old 386.
Moral of the story... don't be so quick to bitch about stuff.
My £100 (equivalent $200) will happily divide by Zero. It displays and "E" on the screen which I take to mean 14 in hex. So anything divided by Zero is 14. Apart from Zero divided by Zero which amusingly it consider to be Zero.
In fact, using proof-by-blatant-assertion,
if 0/0=14
then 0*14 must = 0
which it does
therefore 0/0=14
so there !
While you wrote your preamble.tex I typed my letter, printed a label for the envelope, put a stamp on it and put it in the post box. Then I got back and made a cup of tea, played minesweeper, got a new high score. By which time you'd compiled the latex document.
But seriously, I use OpenOffice most of the time, but last year I wrote my 300 page thesis in LaTeX. I would always advocate LaTeX for large/complex documents. Each has their place. Hopefully Open Document, and it's common implementation in applications that also have PDF export (eg OOo), will lead to people using it correctly, ie Open Document for collaboration and PDF for sharing.
They couldn't. The 4th spacial dimension is encumbered with patent rights. Only Microsoft and/or Novell customers can use it.
Probably not. RedHat have been working with the development free java, Fedora ships with a free java that works with OpenOffice, Eclipse and Azureus. Hopefully, within a few months of GPL Sun Java there will be a GPL Java 1.5 in Fedora Core. Altogether, this should be a speed boost for Java apps (the current free java is slower than Sun's).
It doesn't have Li-ion batteries. Read the fucking info you fucking moron.