As far as I can tell, it appears they just turned the menus into toolbars so anyone that knew where things were in the menus should know where they are on the toolbars. Anyone using Office for serious work should know the keyboard shortcuts for just about everything they actually use so unless those were changed, I don't see training becoming a huge problem.
AFAIK, Microsoft pays the WinZip people a license fee. If they get killed off because of this, perhaps its their own fault for not negotiating a better deal with MS>
We started managing it and we're still managing it. Maybe the US should just shut down the DNS and tell the UN they better put one up right quick? Oh, I bet you want the equipment and for us to pay for maintenance too? So you want us to wave a magic wand and declare it "AS IS" under the UN?
I heard about some being set free on the news. I'm pretty sure they were real people. Just because I don't personally know them, doesn't mean they don't exist or it didn't happen to them.
If the EU:
a) passes their Constitution
b) agrees to have only one seat in the UN
then maybe such a thing would actually be valid... As of now, they are just a collection of countries that like to pretend they are one but want to act like they are individuals when it suits them.
We would need to spend $93,267,765,186 per year to match the #1 (per capita that is). I'm sorry if we can't maintain such a ludicrous figure. Unless something has changed, we're still the #1 donor in raw dollars though. Just because someone else is giving more per capita, it doesn't mean our contribution is nothing.
It will allow users of alternative browser to exact revenge by gangbanging the server repeatedly downloading the sources to the software until the server is shut down due to bandwidth overuse or the owner loses their entire life savings to his ISP for a massive bandwidth bill. What recourse will he have if the source downloading is legitimate traffic?
I can't wait for the first batch of awful security holes where someone managed to get this "feature" to download or access files other than the software sources.
No, not good, they probably made a mistake and could grow up into law abiding citizens if it weren't for a prosecutor who wants to be "tough on child killers". The state should take custody and make sure they are fixed. If you knew anything about physiology, you'd know that children don't work the same way as adults.
Their only legal recourse is the PR disaster of filing a completely new lawsuit naming a 13 year old girl? Up until this point, they've been trying to just sue whoever had their name on the IP address. If this trend continues and the RIAA tries to sue hundreds or thousands of children, the public might be enraged to the point that Congress would be forced to make changes to the laws that make the RIAA's witchhunt possible.
We let a lot of kids off with less punishment for accidentally killing another child than the RIAA wants from these kids for sharing music (and possibly unknowingly at that since the p2p apps are configured that way...).
Considering the fact that the court system generally considers children less accountable for most infractions, I don't think it would be a stretch for a judge to tell the RIAA to go stuff it up their ass when they start dragging kids into court.
and letting the states have the ability to just threaten to leave rather than obey the law would've been so much better. If it weren't for the civil war, a minority wouldn't be allowed to walk down the street in the southern US without risking a (perfectly legal) lynch mob coming down on them because some white girl said they looked at her the wrong way.
They scratch it up, Apple refuses to do anything about, they force their parents to buy them a new one and they sell the old one to some poor sucker that can't afford one at full price. Apple wins!
Visual C++ was never rebranded (except for the addition of the.NET stuff). It's still Visual C++ . Visual Basic actually predates the release of Visual C++ by 2 years. Visual C++ and Visual Basic are now a part of Visual Studio along with C#, J# etc. You can still purchase Visual C++ or the other components separately (they all use the Visual Studio IDE and the splash screen says "Visual Studio").
The complainers think that Microsoft should remove Word and Outlook from Office leaving a $500 suite which isn't much of a suite anymore because there's only Excel and PowerPoint in it?
I don't think anyone is saying that it's all natural. I think they're point is that we're simply contributing to a larger trend rather than the other way around like most of the doomsayers would have us believe.
It's actually common for tards to install p2p programs on a friend's PC and tell them about the "big favor" they did by installing that "free" music program on that there PC. The woman probably deleted the shortcuts and left the program on there. If she didn't install it and doesn't know how to remove it or what it's doing, should she really be held liable for it? Should I be held liable for a virus that plants child porn on my hard drive?
Yet they actually drop suits left and right to keep a judge from ruling against them when the truth about the supposed infringement comes out. They even refuse to examine the equipment supposedly involved because they'd have to share their findings with the defense. If they found that there was a program, virus or other malware covertly sharing files without the owners knowledge, the owner would probably get off, so the RIAA doesn't even want to look at the equipment for fear or finding it.
As far as I can tell, it appears they just turned the menus into toolbars so anyone that knew where things were in the menus should know where they are on the toolbars. Anyone using Office for serious work should know the keyboard shortcuts for just about everything they actually use so unless those were changed, I don't see training becoming a huge problem.
AFAIK, Microsoft pays the WinZip people a license fee. If they get killed off because of this, perhaps its their own fault for not negotiating a better deal with MS>
but using a chip that does unpredictable things on inputs and could destroy the entire plane and kill everyone on board is extremely STUPID.
We started managing it and we're still managing it. Maybe the US should just shut down the DNS and tell the UN they better put one up right quick? Oh, I bet you want the equipment and for us to pay for maintenance too? So you want us to wave a magic wand and declare it "AS IS" under the UN?
I heard about some being set free on the news. I'm pretty sure they were real people. Just because I don't personally know them, doesn't mean they don't exist or it didn't happen to them.
If the EU:
a) passes their Constitution
b) agrees to have only one seat in the UN
then maybe such a thing would actually be valid... As of now, they are just a collection of countries that like to pretend they are one but want to act like they are individuals when it suits them.
We would need to spend $93,267,765,186 per year to match the #1 (per capita that is). I'm sorry if we can't maintain such a ludicrous figure. Unless something has changed, we're still the #1 donor in raw dollars though. Just because someone else is giving more per capita, it doesn't mean our contribution is nothing.
It will allow users of alternative browser to exact revenge by gangbanging the server repeatedly downloading the sources to the software until the server is shut down due to bandwidth overuse or the owner loses their entire life savings to his ISP for a massive bandwidth bill. What recourse will he have if the source downloading is legitimate traffic?
I can't wait for the first batch of awful security holes where someone managed to get this "feature" to download or access files other than the software sources.
No, not good, they probably made a mistake and could grow up into law abiding citizens if it weren't for a prosecutor who wants to be "tough on child killers". The state should take custody and make sure they are fixed. If you knew anything about physiology, you'd know that children don't work the same way as adults.
Their only legal recourse is the PR disaster of filing a completely new lawsuit naming a 13 year old girl? Up until this point, they've been trying to just sue whoever had their name on the IP address. If this trend continues and the RIAA tries to sue hundreds or thousands of children, the public might be enraged to the point that Congress would be forced to make changes to the laws that make the RIAA's witchhunt possible.
We let a lot of kids off with less punishment for accidentally killing another child than the RIAA wants from these kids for sharing music (and possibly unknowingly at that since the p2p apps are configured that way...).
Considering the fact that the court system generally considers children less accountable for most infractions, I don't think it would be a stretch for a judge to tell the RIAA to go stuff it up their ass when they start dragging kids into court.
No, it's copyright infringement.
and letting the states have the ability to just threaten to leave rather than obey the law would've been so much better. If it weren't for the civil war, a minority wouldn't be allowed to walk down the street in the southern US without risking a (perfectly legal) lynch mob coming down on them because some white girl said they looked at her the wrong way.
They scratch it up, Apple refuses to do anything about, they force their parents to buy them a new one and they sell the old one to some poor sucker that can't afford one at full price. Apple wins!
What this means is if they don't like the service or Tivo decides they don't like them, the consumer gets to give Tivo $150.
Visual C++ was never rebranded (except for the addition of the .NET stuff). It's still Visual C++ . Visual Basic actually predates the release of Visual C++ by 2 years. Visual C++ and Visual Basic are now a part of Visual Studio along with C#, J# etc. You can still purchase Visual C++ or the other components separately (they all use the Visual Studio IDE and the splash screen says "Visual Studio").
MySQL even thinks that using ODBC should make your application GPL...somehow. What they really want is to be paid large bags of cash though.
The complainers think that Microsoft should remove Word and Outlook from Office leaving a $500 suite which isn't much of a suite anymore because there's only Excel and PowerPoint in it?
http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/pastdec.shtml NOAA seems to confirm what junk science is saying...there's no obvious pattern.
I don't think anyone is saying that it's all natural. I think they're point is that we're simply contributing to a larger trend rather than the other way around like most of the doomsayers would have us believe.
The controversial part is whether humans are indeed causing it or whether it's a normal thing which we may have accelerated slightly.
It's actually common for tards to install p2p programs on a friend's PC and tell them about the "big favor" they did by installing that "free" music program on that there PC. The woman probably deleted the shortcuts and left the program on there. If she didn't install it and doesn't know how to remove it or what it's doing, should she really be held liable for it? Should I be held liable for a virus that plants child porn on my hard drive?
I'm still pretty sure they need to accurately identify the person before they are allowed to sue them.
Yet they actually drop suits left and right to keep a judge from ruling against them when the truth about the supposed infringement comes out. They even refuse to examine the equipment supposedly involved because they'd have to share their findings with the defense. If they found that there was a program, virus or other malware covertly sharing files without the owners knowledge, the owner would probably get off, so the RIAA doesn't even want to look at the equipment for fear or finding it.