I don't buy CDs because I don't want the clutter or the hassle of ripping them to a more practical location. The physical backup is nice, yes, but not worth the space it consumes.
Also, online downloads offer us the opportunity to surpass CD quality. It's time for the CD to die.
It's fairly absurd, really. The push that broke things did not seem to introduce any visible changes to the site, only internal changes that don't work in Opera. The errors also affect Facebook Connect, so every site on the Internet using Facebook connect suddenly no longer works in Opera.
The Windows desktop environment is at least as polished as GNOME, quite possibly more than GNOME as of Windows 7, and there are many shell replacements available if you don't like it.
This might be off topic, but there's a patch offers a Windows Live Messenger patch that can improve the interface slightly. Works very well from my experiences, and makes Messenger a lot more tolerable when I have to use it.
After two tremendous growth spurts -- one in size, followed by an even more important one in cognitive ability -- the human brain is now a lot like a teenage boy.
So, if this is true, it must be that the human brain is now losing its strength and metabolism from being middle aged. It all makes sense!
PETM (People for the Ethical Treatment of Martians) will focus its attention on whatever means of harming innocent Martians humanity may conceive. We will educate, protest, legislate, and even rescue Martians, with an undying dedication to preserving the valuable and sacred Martian life.
Specifically, the option is located in "Appearance" section of the preferences, which is a child of the "Image Windows" section. You can also toggle it per window via the "View" menu.
The neat tricks seem to be the most popular.... A blogger figured out how to batch convert e-books so they can be read on your PSP.... PSP Vault has a great story on how to Use Non-Duo Memory Sticks on a PSP!... Via Joystiq, a way to get Tivo content on your PSP.
That's great, but could somebody please teach me a trick to get it to play games!?
I'm a product of homeschooling. While I'm not to brag, in college, I dramatically outperform my peers at both writing and math. Guess how much time I've spent on my computer each day for the past several years? Usually at least 12 hours; I'm obsessed.
I actually use my computer to learn. I suspect that public school students focus too much on goofing off; there have been many times I've received IMs saying something along the lines of, "I'm in school! But I can't stay long or I might get caught."
I can't say I blame them, though, as I was never receptive to having my education stuffed down my throat, either.
It's not a CSS hack at all. Each page can have a different CSS for each different type of media, including screen, handheld, print, and more. It's up to your browser to decide which one to use.
In the case of a mobile Opera browser, it will use your page's handheld CSS, if it exists. If it does not exist, the way page elements are displayed is simply altered to the default. For example, table cells are all displayed in one column.
This is the way HTML is designed and meant to be. Pages should use a semantic structure, with elements such as <h1>, <p>, and so forth, leaving the way it's displayed up to the browser or a CSS file (separate presentation from content). Unfortunately, that's not the way most pages are written today, due to failing standards support on the part of Internet Exploiter and lack of willingness to adopt unfamiliar ways, so there's usually only one optimal presentation: your desktop's browser. For those pages, Opera's SSR simply does the best it can.
Has anybody seen DHTML pop-ups around? They effectively utilize JavaScript and CSS in collaboration to unhide a centered page element containing an ad. They tend to contain a link to activate a JavaScript function to hide the block. I've also seen them disappear after a short amount of time.
How is a web browser supposed to block that kind of pop-up? Why don't we just all disable JavaScript since it is going to be abused so much? And like a previous poster has mentioned, not too many sites seem to absolutely require it; I surf with JavaScript disabled for quite a while before remembering I turned it off.
I don't buy CDs because I don't want the clutter or the hassle of ripping them to a more practical location. The physical backup is nice, yes, but not worth the space it consumes.
Also, online downloads offer us the opportunity to surpass CD quality. It's time for the CD to die.
And their rendering engine is still worse than everybody else's. So IE9 can render broken pages faster than any other browser. Whoo!
No, DS and GBA use completely different plugs on the device's end.
"How To Make Science Popular Again?"
"Scientists Find Master Gene To Switch On Immune Cells"
Hey, that works!
Facebook's new brokenness in Opera has been driving me insane. You can join the discussion on it and bug report here: http://forum.developers.facebook.com/viewtopic.php?id=34783
It's fairly absurd, really. The push that broke things did not seem to introduce any visible changes to the site, only internal changes that don't work in Opera. The errors also affect Facebook Connect, so every site on the Internet using Facebook connect suddenly no longer works in Opera.
The Windows desktop environment is at least as polished as GNOME, quite possibly more than GNOME as of Windows 7, and there are many shell replacements available if you don't like it.
I'm not sure I understand what place free content has on The Pirate Bay...
You're not using Blu-ray, so no wonder you don't need a dedicated theater!
I was going to say use "musics". These are the Internets... saying stuff like "musics" fits right in! Loved the parody regardless. Made me smile.
Quoth Linus Torvalds, "I'm an egotistical bastard, and I name all my projects after myself. First Linux, now git." :)
If sarcasm is the lowest form of humor, irony must be pretty up there considering sarcasm + irony > all.
This might be off topic, but there's a patch offers a Windows Live Messenger patch that can improve the interface slightly. Works very well from my experiences, and makes Messenger a lot more tolerable when I have to use it.
What happens at exactly 90%?
So, if this is true, it must be that the human brain is now losing its strength and metabolism from being middle aged. It all makes sense!
PETM (People for the Ethical Treatment of Martians) will focus its attention on whatever means of harming innocent Martians humanity may conceive. We will educate, protest, legislate, and even rescue Martians, with an undying dedication to preserving the valuable and sacred Martian life.
...after reading Slashdot all day, I lost my ability to think.
What a bummer. Everybody knows spam scanners should find Butterball.
I'm a product of homeschooling. While I'm not to brag, in college, I dramatically outperform my peers at both writing and math. Guess how much time I've spent on my computer each day for the past several years? Usually at least 12 hours; I'm obsessed.
I actually use my computer to learn. I suspect that public school students focus too much on goofing off; there have been many times I've received IMs saying something along the lines of, "I'm in school! But I can't stay long or I might get caught."
I can't say I blame them, though, as I was never receptive to having my education stuffed down my throat, either.
It's not a CSS hack at all. Each page can have a different CSS for each different type of media, including screen, handheld, print, and more. It's up to your browser to decide which one to use.
In the case of a mobile Opera browser, it will use your page's handheld CSS, if it exists. If it does not exist, the way page elements are displayed is simply altered to the default. For example, table cells are all displayed in one column.
This is the way HTML is designed and meant to be. Pages should use a semantic structure, with elements such as <h1>, <p>, and so forth, leaving the way it's displayed up to the browser or a CSS file (separate presentation from content). Unfortunately, that's not the way most pages are written today, due to failing standards support on the part of Internet Exploiter and lack of willingness to adopt unfamiliar ways, so there's usually only one optimal presentation: your desktop's browser. For those pages, Opera's SSR simply does the best it can.
Do I get five dollars for every time IE incorrectly renders a standards compliant web page I write, thereby damaging the data by mangling it?
Has anybody seen DHTML pop-ups around? They effectively utilize JavaScript and CSS in collaboration to unhide a centered page element containing an ad. They tend to contain a link to activate a JavaScript function to hide the block. I've also seen them disappear after a short amount of time.
How is a web browser supposed to block that kind of pop-up? Why don't we just all disable JavaScript since it is going to be abused so much? And like a previous poster has mentioned, not too many sites seem to absolutely require it; I surf with JavaScript disabled for quite a while before remembering I turned it off.