Really? I live in King's Hedges now, so I only see Arbury when I cycle through it twice a day to and from work, but I used to live in the middle (able to see Kingsway Flats from the kitchen window), and I don't recall seeing any burnt-out cars.
Roughly speaking. Generally a vehicle is used for the battering ram, and they may drive it into a display window (or, rarely, the wall around an ATM) rather than the door.
Apart from the invariant sections, it's too long, has an annoying political preamble, and it's hard to interpret.
IMO the first two apply to the GPL, which is why I refuse to use it for my projects. I prefer something similar to the MIT licence.
For example, they put up their book with no license, which means that it's illegal to copy it (theoretically even illegal to download it, since that's making a copy!)
I believe that, in England at least, legal opinion would probably be that by placing it on the Web you grant an implicit licence to copy for the purpose of reading. IANAL, etc.
"Content Management on a Tight Budget," left me wondering, though, whether the book's audience had morphed. Yes, Content-Management Systems (CMS) have benefits, especially for concurrent authoring and version control, but I don't see individuals putting together Web sites on a shoestring budget worrying such issues.
I'm currently putting together a shoestring website for my parents' church, which sounds like the profile you mentioned at the top of the review. The first thing I did was to look at the current site, which someone put together in Frontpage, and make notes on what needed to be done. Then I went and researched CMSs. I settled on Typo3. Why use a CMS? I may be putting in a small amount of time to admin it once it's set up - although ideally I won't need to, because I'm simply not going to be available much - but keeping it up-to-date will be done by a number of people: the youth leaders will update the youth section, etc. None of them know any HTML, so using a CMS is by far the easiest way to get a consistent look-and-feel. Moreover, Typo3 allows me to create users who have control over different sections of the content.
what you see on screen is how it's going to look on paper
Subject to the rather big assumption that your printer's capable of it. The effective resolution of Preview.app is far greater than that of most printers.
At the very least I want a bit of plain English so that I can use grep to find the part of the source code I need to read without having to work out the naming conventions and hope they're used consistently.
I don't know whether it was intentional, although I suspect so, but it gives the impression that the answers aren't being filtered by a crew of PR specialists.
A bit of Googling provides multiple respectable sources stating that HIV is categorised as biohazard level 3. CDC has some information on biosafety (2.8MB - pretty slow) which includes requirements for handling of agents at different levels.
There are some accessibility rules: in particular the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. (Article on DDA and web accessibility). Royal Mail even seems to recognise this - they have a page on accessibility, which appears to use apostrophes that Lynx doesn't render (unless they just don't use apostrophes at all). They do provide for feedback, so I'll let them know how badly they fare in Lynx and Mozilla, and maybe you could too.
In the 80s, Margaret Thatcher grew weary of nationalised industry, and while sitting on her stylised throne of evil ordered that the railways be privatised, which took effect in 1997, just when the new government was coming in. Clever that.
You make it sound as though Thatcher planned the timing to embarrass Labour, which would be quite impressive given that her term as PM ended in 1990.
One also wonders what he counts as a patch. One of the links in the summary shows that Secunia list 24 advisories for Windows Server 2003 in 2004, of which 23 appear to be patched. One advisory contains 14 vulnerabilities, most of which appear to be unrelated. Does "15 patches" mean 15 patch releases, each potentially including a number of patches?
Enter ads on buses reading your data and printing you out a voucher for a cafe it has deduced based on your ticket you will pass as you get off the bus.
Why can't this be implemented tomorrow? Is your driving licence going to provide information not otherwise available on whether you'll turn left or right after getting off the bus?
Then surely the solution is to make it easier for people to immigrate legally rather than to ignore (or encourage) illegal immigration. If the rationale for making it hard to immigrate legally is to make it hard for terrorists to enter, then surely you want illegal immigration to be harder than legal immigration: at least legal immigrants have to present some paperwork and go through some background checking, so you have some chance of detecting the would-be terrorists.
I wondered about posting something similar, but wasn't sure that grandparent poster was taking as his thesis "Slashdot is about news for nerds and stuff that matters". Posting links to links to news (or links to unimportant non-news) rather than directly to the news does seem to be the antithesis of what/. should be.
Why is it that so many people seem to think anal rape in prison is funny?
Really? I live in King's Hedges now, so I only see Arbury when I cycle through it twice a day to and from work, but I used to live in the middle (able to see Kingsway Flats from the kitchen window), and I don't recall seeing any burnt-out cars.
Roughly speaking. Generally a vehicle is used for the battering ram, and they may drive it into a display window (or, rarely, the wall around an ATM) rather than the door.
He's from Cambridge. Speaking as a man of Kent who's lived in Cambridge for 5 years, there are very few true chavs around here.
Buy? Surely everyone's planning to get it out from the library...
At the very least I want a bit of plain English so that I can use grep to find the part of the source code I need to read without having to work out the naming conventions and hope they're used consistently.
I don't know whether it was intentional, although I suspect so, but it gives the impression that the answers aren't being filtered by a crew of PR specialists.
A bit of Googling provides multiple respectable sources stating that HIV is categorised as biohazard level 3. CDC has some information on biosafety (2.8MB - pretty slow) which includes requirements for handling of agents at different levels.
Am I the only person who read the headline as a five-nil score for Linspire against First Look? So it's actually a version number, then?
I seem to recall writing an FSM for a TM which used precisely that notation.
Art Bell? Is this like that Taco Bell thing of which I've heard?
There are some accessibility rules: in particular the Disability Discrimination Act 1995. (Article on DDA and web accessibility). Royal Mail even seems to recognise this - they have a page on accessibility, which appears to use apostrophes that Lynx doesn't render (unless they just don't use apostrophes at all). They do provide for feedback, so I'll let them know how badly they fare in Lynx and Mozilla, and maybe you could too.
Safari complains that it can't find the server "http". It's probably Windows - I expect Firefox uses Windows' DNS rather than reimplementing it.
One also wonders what he counts as a patch. One of the links in the summary shows that Secunia list 24 advisories for Windows Server 2003 in 2004, of which 23 appear to be patched. One advisory contains 14 vulnerabilities, most of which appear to be unrelated. Does "15 patches" mean 15 patch releases, each potentially including a number of patches?
Then surely the solution is to make it easier for people to immigrate legally rather than to ignore (or encourage) illegal immigration. If the rationale for making it hard to immigrate legally is to make it hard for terrorists to enter, then surely you want illegal immigration to be harder than legal immigration: at least legal immigrants have to present some paperwork and go through some background checking, so you have some chance of detecting the would-be terrorists.
I wondered about posting something similar, but wasn't sure that grandparent poster was taking as his thesis "Slashdot is about news for nerds and stuff that matters". Posting links to links to news (or links to unimportant non-news) rather than directly to the news does seem to be the antithesis of what /. should be.