any particular reason why they need to be running? put the movies on the array, then stow the drives in a fancy climate controlled warehouse with their location indexed in a catalog system.
the DownloadHelper addon for firefox tends to work fairly well for me, though it gives you a list of the videos in each tab, and being as the names are usually just effectively random alphanumeric strings, it's hard to tell which videos you've downloaded and which you still need to get if you're wanting to grab a bunch of videos at a time.
the online converter at vixy.net also works, though it tends to get flaky at times (cutting off your download in the middle or throwing "invalid video ID" when the url is perfectly fine.) and is slow at best.
"Rights" they gained by breaking the Constitution. Sounds like they don't truly have those rights. how so? while i may not like current US copyright law, it remains within the letter, if not the spirit, of the constition.
week before last. we've been doing this sort of thing all semester in my digital logic class. re-creating (in discrete form) and testing/examining systems from various families of digital logic, ranging from RTL, DTL, TTL, ECL, and finally CMOS.
we've also used transitors a lot just as simple current switches, both last semester with PICs and this semester when we were working with SDK-86's.
hate replying to myself, but i forgot to mention that the OPAL has been down since July and isn't expected to be back up until sometime next year, making this reactor that much more important.
we do (the Petten reactor in the Netherlands and the OPAL in Australia), but these things are relatively expensive to build and run, as they don't produce power. beyond isotopes and some heavy water, these things are for nuclear physics experiments, so these things have very low return on investment and thus most aren't real interested in building/running them.
Do you have an argument for a different age? 14 has been working fine up here (Canada) for a century and a bit, though "exploitative activity" (prostitution, pornography or where there is a relationship of trust, authority or dependency) is limited to 18.
That's easy. Our society believes assault-and-battery and murder are lesser crimes than public urination a little looking into this quickly reveals how fucking broken this entire damn thing is. the registry has been so damn screwed up that a complete rewrite is about the only way to fix it.
oh yes. the backup systems on the POTS around here is quite stunning. the batteries alone (a few racks of 48V ones about the size of beer kegs) will run the system for about 8 hours and they have a pair of nice big diesel generators for after that (one is more than enough to run everything (including the offices!), but redundancy is good in emergency systems), with about 2 weeks worth of fuel, with electrical and manual pumps to the gravity-feed day tanks. redundancy in spades.
significantly less backup for rural areas (the concentrators have about 10 hours of battery), but they'll usually be out with a generator within 5 hours if the power co. says it'll be out longer than 8.
this same program runs quite happily under a limited account on XP. and the prompts are random as hell. it'll often go for over a week without prompting me, then start prompting out of the blue.
I hear people rant against it all the time but I still dont know why it is inferior to other models.
it's a fine idea, but it's too prompt-happy IMO. it prompts for things it shouldn't need permission for. with KiCAD (a PCB design program), it randomly prompts when you open the program, and i can't think of anything that it would need permission for. another friend of mine has it prompting him for permission everytime he compiles a program (using code::blocks (forget what build) and gcc. though i haven't heard of anyone else getting this, so i think it's just something odd with his system/configuration.)
the frequency of the prompts effectively trains user oh-it's-bugging-me-again-just-hit-allow, which completely defeats the purpose.
I believe it was the March 19th LA times where I read that, though I can't view the full article in the archives, so I'm not entirely sure if I'm remembering right.
any particular reason why they need to be running? put the movies on the array, then stow the drives in a fancy climate controlled warehouse with their location indexed in a catalog system.
the DownloadHelper addon for firefox tends to work fairly well for me, though it gives you a list of the videos in each tab, and being as the names are usually just effectively random alphanumeric strings, it's hard to tell which videos you've downloaded and which you still need to get if you're wanting to grab a bunch of videos at a time.
the online converter at vixy.net also works, though it tends to get flaky at times (cutting off your download in the middle or throwing "invalid video ID" when the url is perfectly fine.) and is slow at best.
unfortunately part is, the courts decided exactly opposite to that same argument during a challenge to the sonny bono act (Eldred v. Ashcroft).
though i agree with you, but it's definitely an uphill battle.
i used up all mine this morning.
week before last. we've been doing this sort of thing all semester in my digital logic class. re-creating (in discrete form) and testing/examining systems from various families of digital logic, ranging from RTL, DTL, TTL, ECL, and finally CMOS.
we've also used transitors a lot just as simple current switches, both last semester with PICs and this semester when we were working with SDK-86's.
though the standards for the jury are different. IIRC, it has to be unanimous in a criminal trial vs. a mere majority in a civil trial.
also the fact that you have the right to a lawyer in a criminal trial.
hate replying to myself, but i forgot to mention that the OPAL has been down since July and isn't expected to be back up until sometime next year, making this reactor that much more important.
we do (the Petten reactor in the Netherlands and the OPAL in Australia), but these things are relatively expensive to build and run, as they don't produce power. beyond isotopes and some heavy water, these things are for nuclear physics experiments, so these things have very low return on investment and thus most aren't real interested in building/running them.
depends on what man page you're refering to and and what you mean by "worse".
i wouldn't put it past them to do that.
his link works just fine for me and i get the "password please" from the summery's link.
an IP block maybe? do you live somewhere around LA?
and do you know what he was convicted of?
oh yes. the backup systems on the POTS around here is quite stunning. the batteries alone (a few racks of 48V ones about the size of beer kegs) will run the system for about 8 hours and they have a pair of nice big diesel generators for after that (one is more than enough to run everything (including the offices!), but redundancy is good in emergency systems), with about 2 weeks worth of fuel, with electrical and manual pumps to the gravity-feed day tanks. redundancy in spades.
significantly less backup for rural areas (the concentrators have about 10 hours of battery), but they'll usually be out with a generator within 5 hours if the power co. says it'll be out longer than 8.
i doubt its doing anything with the registry or program files, as it's just an "unzip somewhere and run" and runs on linux as well.
we use it as it plays nice with our PCB mill and its software. it saves us from having to manually screw around with the gerber files.
this is the site for it here http://www.lis.inpg.fr/realise_au_lis/kicad/
probably. you'd need to strip down the kernal quite a bit though.
it's from a webcomic.
http://www.ohmygods.co.uk/
i was sure it was hemp paper. or am i getting that mixed up with another document?
this same program runs quite happily under a limited account on XP. and the prompts are random as hell. it'll often go for over a week without prompting me, then start prompting out of the blue.
I hear people rant against it all the time but I still dont know why it is inferior to other models.
it's a fine idea, but it's too prompt-happy IMO. it prompts for things it shouldn't need permission for. with KiCAD (a PCB design program), it randomly prompts when you open the program, and i can't think of anything that it would need permission for. another friend of mine has it prompting him for permission everytime he compiles a program (using code::blocks (forget what build) and gcc. though i haven't heard of anyone else getting this, so i think it's just something odd with his system/configuration.)
the frequency of the prompts effectively trains user oh-it's-bugging-me-again-just-hit-allow, which completely defeats the purpose.
I believe it was the March 19th LA times where I read that, though I can't view the full article in the archives, so I'm not entirely sure if I'm remembering right.
here's the archive link.
and colon/rectal cancer, but the vaccine is marketed at young girls, so it won't be approved for any uses that may help men as well...
trials for its use in men are still underway.