It's called embrace and extend. Look it up. You should also look at all of the features of Exchange including all of the Windows Mobile interaction. This is what the people who pay me want.
For all of you saying that businesses shouldn't be required to provide service to the vision impaired, I have one thing to say:
Pray that you never lose your sight.
What really burns me is that it actually takes effort to make a site inaccessible. The rules of good style (and taste) are often the same rules to make the site accessible. There have even been validation tools for this for a very long time. I actually pointed our marketing guy at one of these to stop him committing crimes against style on the company website.
All I've had so far is people throwing stuff at me. I might as well be back in high school. And the apps are over the top. Install one and the first thing it does is get in your face to spam it to all of your friends. The main problem is having the sort of friends who also forward chain letters. It sure feels the same.
They'll just declare a war on drives and form the DEA, the Drive Enforcement Administration. Or they could add it to something else and have the BATFED. I kinda like that one.
I was in a small shop where we already had IIS to run things like Outlook Web Access. IIS also made it easy to have integrated AD authentication and access controls, so we had single sign on.
Rather than running another box or supporting a VM image to run apache, it's easier just to make do with IIS. The point of this article is that MS is making IIS play better for people from the PHP/fcgi side of things.
We did however run the outside web server on apache on an ancient almost broken P166 and it ran well.
Re:Thunderbird is awesome on Windows
on
Thunderbird in Crisis?
·
· Score: 4, Informative
Thunderbird uses mbox format to store mail. There's nothing proprietary about it. I just copied the Inbox to a linux box and ran mail -f Inbox with no problems.
Isn't the point of radio to be listened to by as many people as possible. If your song gets airplay then people might buy your album. Wasn't that the whole point of payola? Plus, they get royalties each time the song is played.
This way they can cannibalize the radio audience for a few bucks and keep charging the same royalties. I think I should patent a business model.
I bet their next action is to sue people selling CDs. They'll go after a big offender like Virgin.
Start selling their singles for $9000 each. iTunes and others can raise their prices too.
The radio case is taken car of by royalties. If every kazaa user was required to pay royalties for every copy transferred then the RIAA would have a new business model.
I was talking about businesses who aren't getting stung by WG(D)A. These people have volume licenses that do allow audits and thus it's easy to go and ensure 'complete' compliance with licensing. I've never heard of personal licenses having audits in the EULA.
The UI wouldn't be half as bad if they provided some decent documentation for it. As others have mentioned, the tutorials aren't a good source of help. Once you learn how to use Blender, it's pretty good, but the learning curve is really steep.
It's been a while, so maybe they have better resources now. I'd be happy if they did.
Don't worry, the has-beens have got another four weeks to decide if we keep doing it this year. Let's see if they give us five days notice like last year.
You're just a commie mutant traitor. I bet you're in a secret society too. And you're involved in illegal human cloning. Freak.
It's called embrace and extend. Look it up. You should also look at all of the features of Exchange including all of the Windows Mobile interaction. This is what the people who pay me want.
For all of you saying that businesses shouldn't be required to provide service to the vision impaired, I have one thing to say:
Pray that you never lose your sight.
What really burns me is that it actually takes effort to make a site inaccessible. The rules of good style (and taste) are often the same rules to make the site accessible. There have even been validation tools for this for a very long time. I actually pointed our marketing guy at one of these to stop him committing crimes against style on the company website.
All I've had so far is people throwing stuff at me. I might as well be back in high school. And the apps are over the top. Install one and the first thing it does is get in your face to spam it to all of your friends. The main problem is having the sort of friends who also forward chain letters. It sure feels the same.
They'll just declare a war on drives and form the DEA, the Drive Enforcement Administration. Or they could add it to something else and have the BATFED. I kinda like that one.
Jeff Foxworthy? I feel a "you might be a redneck joke coming." Either that or is she smarter than a fifth grader.
Wait until they hire Patricia Dunn. You could have the Carly and Patti show. They could give advice on how to run a business the right way.
I was in a small shop where we already had IIS to run things like Outlook Web Access. IIS also made it easy to have integrated AD authentication and access controls, so we had single sign on.
Rather than running another box or supporting a VM image to run apache, it's easier just to make do with IIS. The point of this article is that MS is making IIS play better for people from the PHP/fcgi side of things.
We did however run the outside web server on apache on an ancient almost broken P166 and it ran well.
Thunderbird uses mbox format to store mail. There's nothing proprietary about it. I just copied the Inbox to a linux box and ran mail -f Inbox with no problems.
What are these tools going to do when they find out that people can get radio over the Internet? Open branch offices in other countries?
Isn't the point of radio to be listened to by as many people as possible. If your song gets airplay then people might buy your album. Wasn't that the whole point of payola? Plus, they get royalties each time the song is played.
This way they can cannibalize the radio audience for a few bucks and keep charging the same royalties. I think I should patent a business model.
I bet their next action is to sue people selling CDs. They'll go after a big offender like Virgin.
Start selling their singles for $9000 each. iTunes and others can raise their prices too.
The radio case is taken car of by royalties. If every kazaa user was required to pay royalties for every copy transferred then the RIAA would have a new business model.
I prefer "No representation without compensation," and they have a lot more money to give.
Until someone gets to the Blue Waters of Death. Even better, this gives someone a chance to pirate Windows for real.
I was talking about businesses who aren't getting stung by WG(D)A. These people have volume licenses that do allow audits and thus it's easy to go and ensure 'complete' compliance with licensing. I've never heard of personal licenses having audits in the EULA.
It's called getting caught.
You get a choice of pay up or go to court, unless their looking to make an example of someone. They've been doing it for a fairly long time here.
Just ask to look at her iPod. She's either a thief or doesn't support the poor music industry. Then out her for her crappy tastes.
Yeah, Cadmium, what the fsck was I smoking? Cadmium causes cancer but it's not radioactive.
Mod parent -1 Retarded.
Yes, the RIAA supports nuclear proliferation. They've sent their former head to Iraq and thats next to Iran. You know what that means.
You may have found a practical use for goatse man.
You know, pretty much all humor will offend someone if they're in a place to be offended.
Because you know me so well, I won't tell you about my great grandmother's last years or about her daughter who's getting to that age now.
Bottom line, if writing this helps you get by, then bring it on.
What was I doing?
The UI wouldn't be half as bad if they provided some decent documentation for it. As others have mentioned, the tutorials aren't a good source of help. Once you learn how to use Blender, it's pretty good, but the learning curve is really steep.
It's been a while, so maybe they have better resources now. I'd be happy if they did.
Don't worry, the has-beens have got another four weeks to decide if we keep doing it this year. Let's see if they give us five days notice like last year.