I was under the impression that court specifically ordered the EFF not to release the documents.
Now, I am not a lawyer, but Wired News != The EFF. Sure, it might be abusing the legal system but doesn't ATT (and other big corperations) do that all the time?
What in the blue hell? Someone's going through modding everything troll. Methinks the GNAA got ahold of some modpoints.
Either way, the PS2 does have a lot of reliability issues, the first time mine broke I pulled the ole switcharoo at Wal-Mart. Then I learned more about the PS2 and since then I've opened mine up and used canned air on it several times (and I took some rubbing alcohol to the lens. Fixed it up every time.
Sorry buddy, but you need to get your facts straight. 98 out of the the 100 Senators voted in favor of the Patriot Act in 2001. Right Wing Warmongers, eh? Like, Kerry, Leiberman, Edwards, Hillard Clinton, Kennedy, and Feinstein, eh? Source
To be honest, the term "homeland security" just makes the country feel less like my own home. It has a vague nuerolinguistic programming sound to it. It sounds antiforeign and hyperguarded. For starters, no American uses the term "homeland."
The term Homeland Security sounds like another politically correct nonsensical term being forced out of the Government that provides no obvious answer as to what it does. That's not something you can blame on just Republicans, bub.
If the government turns AGAINST us? Really, what have you been smoking? This isn't 1984. Bush sucks as a President, we get it. He's not Hitler. Hell, he isn't SMART enough to be another Hitler.
As for civil liberties, this isn't in your lifetime, but read up about the Alien and Sedation Act sometime.
I'm half way through reading Phantom of the Opera on my PSP using a homebrew app. I've got something close to 40 out-of-copyright books that I've been reading via PSPReader, ranging from War of the Worlds to a rather large collection of Shakespeare plays, all that fit just fine on the PSPs screen.
Now, the PSP isn't the best thing to read on, but as long as the room is rather well lit, I avoid headaches/eyestrain and it's not that much different than reading from an actual book.
There is some benefit to the Homebrew, though, I could certainly read the book via the web broswer on the 2.0 firmware, it's less convienient and doesn't have as many features.
There were way more than one thousand people, and if you don't believe I was there, how exactly did I take those pictures?
Either way, I had seen a report saying estimates of 12,000 but I can no longer find it, now I'm seeing numbers more in the 5,500 range. I think after the first thousand people running behind you, it kind of stops mattering how many people there are.
Heard a report about one person hitting others with folding chairs to stop them from passing him.
Some of my own pictures! I don't know how much imageshack likes Slashdot, but oh well.
There was some sort of line that was formed by the people ariving early in the morning.
But then people started just ignoring the line and wandering around, even forming a second line!
After the mob rush, we got stuck in the hugecrowd.
The people formed a line several thousand people long!
Then, the cops in riot gear started doing crowd control, brought in lots of metal baracades way too late. There is no way the Henrico County earned money on this sale. There were people getting heat exhaustion, the palms of my hands were turning white from lack of oxygen. It was just horrible, and the worst part of it was that if someone moved, you had to move too. Even if you didn't want to.
Yeah, it was a riot. Maybe not to the scale of the LA ones, but dayum.
I happen to live in the Henrico area, and honestly - a fifty dollar computer is a deal you can't beat. I went there with my mother and my sister, however, after people started running, I just wanted out. I only stayed for my sister.
It was chaos. The first people who started running, I don't know what they were thinking, but after that, you HAD to run. There is just something about 12,000 people running at you from behind that kind of makes you run away.
Ended up getting stuck in a huge crowd for several hours, left when the police in riot gear started telling us they only had 300 left.
I don't know if imageshack likes Slashdot or not, but it's worth a try.
I took some pictures of the crowd, I'll post them if anyone is interested. Mine aren't as good as the ones from the times dispatch, but they gave a decent view of how many people were packed in.
I honestly only got... two chapters into the book, I think. Harry Potter grabbed my attention away and I haven't tried to go back to my copy of JS&MN.
It did seem like it should be rather good, I just couldn't get into it.
I guess Mr without a fullstop wasn't really what I'd consider weirding me out, but it was something I'd never seen before. The weird use of commas was probably the most jarring part of the book. It's a shame, though, as it seemed rather good.
I appoligize if I've spelt the name incorrectly, but I purchased the book at some of the acclaim I heard about it, but does it's odd stylictic grammar happen to bother anyone else?
I'll be reading along and all of a sudden the lack of a period after Mr. or, if I quote the first sentence of the book, "Some years ago there was in the city of York a society of magicians." I must be dense, but I had to read it twice to actually understand what Clarke was saying. The sentence structure, the grammar, it all just appears very foreign. Is this a normal British thing? I'm honestly at a loss.
http://www.nato.int/docu/pub-form.htm/
You can get the periodic table in English or French (Bon Jour!). You can also get other such wonderful documents as "NATO after Istanbul" in languages varying from Azeri, Macedonian, and Ukranian!
(I don't know if it still works, I did it several months back. It takes several weeks to get the package to you from, I believe, Sweden.)
I was rather scared at the idea of Link being a wolf, at first. People turning into animals is rather.... cliche and dull. And, I really don't want to spend TOO much time as a wolf. I enjoy playing as Link... not a wolf. Mainly, though, I was concerned he was a werewolf, because that was the way the trailer seemed to show it.
However, as that doesn't appear to be the case, I'm slightly relieved.
Does ColdFusion actively compete with an Adobe product?
I don't believe it does, so it seems to me it'd be in their best interest to keep ColdFusion around, even if it's isn't THAT popular.
We've finally found that mysterious step 2!
Bob Marley developed skin cancer under his right big toe that eventually led to his death. So yes, I've heard of foot cancer.
You can only burn the music from Yahoo! Unlimited if you pay 79 cents for the song. Otherwise you're limited to putting it on certain MP3 players.
I was under the impression that court specifically ordered the EFF not to release the documents.
Now, I am not a lawyer, but Wired News != The EFF. Sure, it might be abusing the legal system but doesn't ATT (and other big corperations) do that all the time?
Sometimes you have to fight fire with fire.
Will you be my father?
Wasn't CIPA found unconstitutional?
What in the blue hell? Someone's going through modding everything troll. Methinks the GNAA got ahold of some modpoints.
/ ps2diy/ looks like a decent guide. It does void your warranty, but IIRC, the PS2s only have a 90 day warranty anyway.
Either way, the PS2 does have a lot of reliability issues, the first time mine broke I pulled the ole switcharoo at Wal-Mart. Then I learned more about the PS2 and since then I've opened mine up and used canned air on it several times (and I took some rubbing alcohol to the lens. Fixed it up every time.
http://www.neoseeker.com/Articles/Hardware/Guides
Sorry buddy, but you need to get your facts straight. 98 out of the the 100 Senators voted in favor of the Patriot Act in 2001. Right Wing Warmongers, eh? Like, Kerry, Leiberman, Edwards, Hillard Clinton, Kennedy, and Feinstein, eh? Source
To be honest, the term "homeland security" just makes the country feel less like my own home. It has a vague nuerolinguistic programming sound to it. It sounds antiforeign and hyperguarded. For starters, no American uses the term "homeland."
The term Homeland Security sounds like another politically correct nonsensical term being forced out of the Government that provides no obvious answer as to what it does. That's not something you can blame on just Republicans, bub.
If the government turns AGAINST us? Really, what have you been smoking? This isn't 1984. Bush sucks as a President, we get it. He's not Hitler. Hell, he isn't SMART enough to be another Hitler.
As for civil liberties, this isn't in your lifetime, but read up about the Alien and Sedation Act sometime.
I'm half way through reading Phantom of the Opera on my PSP using a homebrew app. I've got something close to 40 out-of-copyright books that I've been reading via PSPReader, ranging from War of the Worlds to a rather large collection of Shakespeare plays, all that fit just fine on the PSPs screen.
Now, the PSP isn't the best thing to read on, but as long as the room is rather well lit, I avoid headaches/eyestrain and it's not that much different than reading from an actual book.
There is some benefit to the Homebrew, though, I could certainly read the book via the web broswer on the 2.0 firmware, it's less convienient and doesn't have as many features.
There were way more than one thousand people, and if you don't believe I was there, how exactly did I take those pictures? Either way, I had seen a report saying estimates of 12,000 but I can no longer find it, now I'm seeing numbers more in the 5,500 range. I think after the first thousand people running behind you, it kind of stops mattering how many people there are. Heard a report about one person hitting others with folding chairs to stop them from passing him.
Mother was only staying for the sister, too, heh.
Some of my own pictures! I don't know how much imageshack likes Slashdot, but oh well.
There was some sort of line that was formed by the people ariving early in the morning.
But then people started just ignoring the line and wandering around, even forming a second line!
After the mob rush, we got stuck in the huge crowd.
The people formed a line several thousand people long!
Then, the cops in riot gear started doing crowd control, brought in lots of metal baracades way too late. There is no way the Henrico County earned money on this sale. There were people getting heat exhaustion, the palms of my hands were turning white from lack of oxygen. It was just horrible, and the worst part of it was that if someone moved, you had to move too. Even if you didn't want to.
Yeah, it was a riot. Maybe not to the scale of the LA ones, but dayum.
I happen to live in the Henrico area, and honestly - a fifty dollar computer is a deal you can't beat. I went there with my mother and my sister, however, after people started running, I just wanted out. I only stayed for my sister.
It was chaos. The first people who started running, I don't know what they were thinking, but after that, you HAD to run. There is just something about 12,000 people running at you from behind that kind of makes you run away.
Ended up getting stuck in a huge crowd for several hours, left when the police in riot gear started telling us they only had 300 left.
I don't know if imageshack likes Slashdot or not, but it's worth a try.
I took some pictures of the crowd, I'll post them if anyone is interested. Mine aren't as good as the ones from the times dispatch, but they gave a decent view of how many people were packed in.
I honestly only got... two chapters into the book, I think. Harry Potter grabbed my attention away and I haven't tried to go back to my copy of JS&MN. It did seem like it should be rather good, I just couldn't get into it.
I guess Mr without a fullstop wasn't really what I'd consider weirding me out, but it was something I'd never seen before. The weird use of commas was probably the most jarring part of the book. It's a shame, though, as it seemed rather good.
I appoligize if I've spelt the name incorrectly, but I purchased the book at some of the acclaim I heard about it, but does it's odd stylictic grammar happen to bother anyone else?
I'll be reading along and all of a sudden the lack of a period after Mr. or, if I quote the first sentence of the book, "Some years ago there was in the city of York a society of magicians." I must be dense, but I had to read it twice to actually understand what Clarke was saying. The sentence structure, the grammar, it all just appears very foreign. Is this a normal British thing? I'm honestly at a loss.
Whoops. I shouldn't have added that slash on the end of the URL. http://www.nato.int/docu/pub-form.htm This should work... hopefully.
http://www.nato.int/docu/pub-form.htm/
You can get the periodic table in English or French (Bon Jour!). You can also get other such wonderful documents as "NATO after Istanbul" in languages varying from Azeri, Macedonian, and Ukranian!
(I don't know if it still works, I did it several months back. It takes several weeks to get the package to you from, I believe, Sweden.)
It goes for $299 on Lego.com right now. Ouch.
Pssh, it just dawned on me that by original video you might have been refering to the huge one. In which case - I should have thunk before I posted.
They have a "huge" version, at original quality on their webserver. 31 megabytes. Just downloaded that and averaged at around 150 kB/s.
I agree. These guys deserve SOME applause, even though they're getting slashdotted at almost 5 am. Wait for the morning crowd. ^_^
It looks really fun, however, it's from 2003. We're a little late, guys. There is a girl, though. I'm going to go watch it again.
I pulled it off mirror three. The slowest transfer rate I saw was 362 kB/s. Not bad for a comcast connection.
I was rather scared at the idea of Link being a wolf, at first. People turning into animals is rather.... cliche and dull. And, I really don't want to spend TOO much time as a wolf. I enjoy playing as Link... not a wolf. Mainly, though, I was concerned he was a werewolf, because that was the way the trailer seemed to show it.
However, as that doesn't appear to be the case, I'm slightly relieved.
Does ColdFusion actively compete with an Adobe product? I don't believe it does, so it seems to me it'd be in their best interest to keep ColdFusion around, even if it's isn't THAT popular.