They should pull a Trent Reznor and re-submit the app.
He did, but it looks like the same reviewer bounced it for the same reason, without taking on board any of his comments about it not itself having any content itself...
He did later get a request to remove "this particular section" of his app, which suggests the reviewer still didn't understand what the app did (i.e. provide a search/download/read interface to PG).
None of the 6" readers handle 'standard' PDF well, but that's down to the nature of PDF and it's reproduction of a page. The native formats are reflowable, so don't assume a particular page size. As for the 'proprietary' formats, Sony's include TXT & RTF! In addition there are a number of free/open apps to create & convert from other formats such as HTML, or MS Reader's LIT format - http://wiki.mobileread.com/wiki/PRS505#Supported_Formats.
This case really happened.
On August 22, 1999, Tony Martin of Emneth, Norfolk, England, killed one burglar and wounded a second. In April, 2000, he was convicted and is now serving a life term. Actually, in 2001, Martin's murder conviction was reduced to manslaughter and a duration of five years, and his 10-year sentence for wounding Fearon was cut to three years, to run concurrently, as he was judged to be suffering from a paranoid personality disorder and acting under diminished responsibility.
He was released from custody in July 2003.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/norfolk/3087003.stm
Well, I've got to say that I have found daemontools to be rather useful in a few scenario's where I need to have some controllable, 'always-up' processes.
As for qmail, however, while I've not needed to use it, I have looked at it & while it did look useful back at the start, even then it seemed to me that djb could have done with a little more 'third-party' input to provide a less 'focused' view...
One of the counter factors is that it is often easier to do massive data chomping on a desktop PC. For example, Oracle servers are almost always overburdened and therefore slow, so that people tend to download raw data to MS-Access and similar tools and process it themselves faster.
That's all well and good, for as far as I goes, but I'd have to quibble with your description of 'massive' when referring to anything on a desktop PC - unless you were thinking in the Terabyte range?
I was told by a UK traffic officer that on motorways here (= US freeways) at least, they do that (or drive 20% under the limit) to avoid having the tailbacks that would result if they stuck to the speed limits.
I've just bought one of the Sony Hi-MD players rather than an alternative MP3 player because I could get 1GB of audio on something that runs for 20+ hrs on an AA batttery for less than a 1GB Shuffle.
If I then buy 3 more Hi-MD disk's then I've got as much storage as an iPod Mini (although not as fast to switch from one GB to another)!
Try a default Solaris installation, i.e. One where they haven't installed a compiler...
I was going to set one up when I found that out, so it's almost certainly going to be Jetty and JSPwiki, as there's a Java 2 JDK on there.
Hmm, a bit harsh, as that only applied to a beta of their 2.0 OS.
The big advantage of the Xenium is the way it has a significant amount of utility on the mod-chip itself, such that you don't need to physically change dip-switches, etc, to enable/disable the mod, select different bioses or flash new bioses, as all that can be done via the GUI, including picking the new bios from the HDD or the CD drive.
Not entirely correct - a modded box doesn't need an unlocked hard drive. (My understanding is that modified bioses unlock locked ones on boot in the same way the original bioses do).
Either way, you don't need to physically replace a modified HDD with the original if you want to use Live, you just need to boot to the original bios, unless your replacement HDD is one that's not able to be locked, as the original BIOS will expect a locked HDD. Some can, some can't - I don't know the split.
With the Xenium modchip, deactivating the mod is just a different option in the menu on boot (choosing the original bios), so no significant time at all!
only filter based on "To, "From", and "Subject" headers
Also "Has the words" and "Doesn't have" now.
Their address book is terrible, and there isn't any way to import an existing one.
Import's been there for a little while, whereas 'terrible's a value judgement.
I guess the lack of the plain HTML is because (as I understand it, the bulk of the current implementation is JavaScript, doing a background connection to get the data then a lot of fancy work on the page, rather than pulling raw HTML down. Given that, it's going to be a whole new channel to get a HTML based page system running.
In the UK at least, most agencies will only accept resumes in MS Word format and may well edit them to remove direct contact details/match agency formats before forwarding them to clients.
Hmm, I'd have said that mainline Gentoo is more like Debian testing whereas emerging with the ~arch keyword will get you experimental/unstable.
But no, I'm not claiming it's equivalent to Debian Stable, although for a distribution with cutting edge software (KDE 3.2/Kernel 2.6, etc) IMHO, it/the developers do an amazingly good job.
Just for the record, when they were contacted, they suspended jamming for the remainder of the exercise - more info at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-15242835
Efficient? Maybe, but this basically means that my book collection is tied up with Calibre for the rest of my life.
Not really - just treat it's directory tree as a DB and recall you can easily export it to whatever structure/format you want, whenever you want.
They should pull a Trent Reznor and re-submit the app.
He did, but it looks like the same reviewer bounced it for the same reason, without taking on board any of his comments about it not itself having any content itself... He did later get a request to remove "this particular section" of his app, which suggests the reviewer still didn't understand what the app did (i.e. provide a search/download/read interface to PG).
None of the 6" readers handle 'standard' PDF well, but that's down to the nature of PDF and it's reproduction of a page. The native formats are reflowable, so don't assume a particular page size. As for the 'proprietary' formats, Sony's include TXT & RTF! In addition there are a number of free/open apps to create & convert from other formats such as HTML, or MS Reader's LIT format - http://wiki.mobileread.com/wiki/PRS505#Supported_Formats.
Even better, with my Sony Reader I can just press a button to see the text in a larger font if needed...
In certain cases, being victims - e.g. Lindsay Ann Hawker
Well, I've got to say that I have found daemontools to be rather useful in a few scenario's where I need to have some controllable, 'always-up' processes. As for qmail, however, while I've not needed to use it, I have looked at it & while it did look useful back at the start, even then it seemed to me that djb could have done with a little more 'third-party' input to provide a less 'focused' view...
While not disagreeing that product documentation could be better, have you seen the Wiki, and particularly http://cwiki.apache.org/WICKET/documentation-index .html ?
I was told by a UK traffic officer that on motorways here (= US freeways) at least, they do that (or drive 20% under the limit) to avoid having the tailbacks that would result if they stuck to the speed limits.
I've just bought one of the Sony Hi-MD players rather than an alternative MP3 player because I could get 1GB of audio on something that runs for 20+ hrs on an AA batttery for less than a 1GB Shuffle.
If I then buy 3 more Hi-MD disk's then I've got as much storage as an iPod Mini (although not as fast to switch from one GB to another)!
Pretty easily - See "Portable Firefox 0.9.3 & 1.0PR (USB Drive-Friendly)" at http://johnhaller.com/jh/mozilla/portable_firefox/ , for example.
Try a default Solaris installation, i.e. One where they haven't installed a compiler... I was going to set one up when I found that out, so it's almost certainly going to be Jetty and JSPwiki, as there's a Java 2 JDK on there.
The big advantage of the Xenium is the way it has a significant amount of utility on the mod-chip itself, such that you don't need to physically change dip-switches, etc, to enable/disable the mod, select different bioses or flash new bioses, as all that can be done via the GUI, including picking the new bios from the HDD or the CD drive.
Either way, you don't need to physically replace a modified HDD with the original if you want to use Live, you just need to boot to the original bios, unless your replacement HDD is one that's not able to be locked, as the original BIOS will expect a locked HDD. Some can, some can't - I don't know the split.
With the Xenium modchip, deactivating the mod is just a different option in the menu on boot (choosing the original bios), so no significant time at all!
Sounds like an ID:10-T error to me...
Having said the above, I got some over the w/e, so if you still need one, let me know where at gwyn at javaguy dot co dot uk.
Windows system bar - See other ./ thread for discussions.
I guess the lack of the plain HTML is because (as I understand it, the bulk of the current implementation is JavaScript, doing a background connection to get the data then a lot of fancy work on the page, rather than pulling raw HTML down. Given that, it's going to be a whole new channel to get a HTML based page system running.
[Can't help myself, as I've only had the one invite and thought I ought to pass it onto my wife! - It's easier to get ./ mod points!]
It's nice in summer, but the long winters tend to get to people, so it's not without it's downsides.
In the UK at least, most agencies will only accept resumes in MS Word format and may well edit them to remove direct contact details/match agency formats before forwarding them to clients.
Sounds like POPfile was what you were actually looking for!
But no, I'm not claiming it's equivalent to Debian Stable, although for a distribution with cutting edge software (KDE 3.2/Kernel 2.6, etc) IMHO, it/the developers do an amazingly good job.