basicly conforms to all standards It does do one thing that I can find that's non-standard: moz-box-sizing. Which is CSS. I think Mozilla will drop this pretty soon when CSS3 is completely ready (because it will have a standard box-sizing.)
Yeah, my roommates here at college are from Riverside. So I have been hearing about it for a bit now. My roommates do point out that the people of Riverside are kinda strange, but that people in the Midwest in general would probably react similarly if a big star like that came to film a movie there. One thing that is nice to point out is they gave the town of Riverside about $100k. (from what I've been told)
When the advertised size of email accounts becomes larger than most people's hard drives Yeah man, I'm tired of them rubbing it in my face that I'm still running a 512 megabyte hard drive.
Today, our goal is to be the best browsing solution on Windows and Linux, while at the same time striving to improve our functionality on MacOS X in order to be competitive.
So, it may have started wanting a competitive browser for Windows, but that IS NOT the goal anymore.
(quote from the first paragraph of http://www.mozilla.org/projects/firefox/charter.ht ml)
But by the time you emerge sync I could have already downloaded/configured/made/and installed gaim on my Slackware box. Of course, if you just download the individual ebuild, it'd be close.
You do realize that since NT crash rates for the systems have went up with every version, crash rates for NT were at about 4%, 2k was at about %8 maybe, and XP was at %12. But then again, the problem with the statistic is that most "normal" users weren't using NT or even 2k soooo. It's hard to say what the crash rate would be for normal users. BTW, I have had XP Pro blue screen on me for problems other than hardware. I wonder, have you ever checked the uptime on "any of your XP machines" because when the blue screen hits it reboots automatically, and if you have it either log in automatically or go to the login screen when the screensaver hits, you might have never noticed the blue screen. Just because it doesn't happen to you doesn't mean it doesn't happen right?
One last thing, why they thought it was a good idea to write 32bit code on top of 16 bit code in the case of Windows 95-ME is beyond me. That's the main reason why the NT based systems are more stable is because they didn't build the code on top of the old 16 bit code
Is there really much difference between a "Technology Preview" and a beta? Honestly they are both just out there so people can see how the new features are coming around and that it still has bugs. So, I think Firefox is still considered Beta because it hasn't gone "gold."
Firefox by version 1.0 will have automatic update checks it runs (if enabled.) Firefox has actually had it since 0.9 but it didn't work well at all (if it worked.) How many times do people have to use the term BETA before people understand? I just don't get it. I mean, Firefox is already quite stable and quite feature rich, but... but, not everything is perfect yet being BETA. So you can keep complaining about your mom not being able to update, or if you're that concerned don't let her use it till 1.0 comes out and it's "ready" for people. Last option, let her use IE again and get bombarded with spyware and lots of other nice addon's which users like to click yes to. "Do you want to install this?"
Errr.... Slackware is possibly the most UNIX like Linux. Though I would think if you want a more classic UNIX system to get a BSD which was at one point actually UNIX. Call me crazy. (Just so you know, I'm running Slack 10 right now:P)
I agree, I like Slackware for my desktop. It works well IMHO. Just as well as Gentoo or Mandrake or Debian or Redhat or.... anyways, I believe Slackware makes a fine desktop environment if you install the second CD also (it includes GNOME and KDE.)
basicly conforms to all standards
It does do one thing that I can find that's non-standard: moz-box-sizing. Which is CSS. I think Mozilla will drop this pretty soon when CSS3 is completely ready (because it will have a standard box-sizing.)
I got canned
I thought he had been the spokesman for over four years.... Is that really fast to you?really fast by priceline..
Yeah, my roommates here at college are from Riverside. So I have been hearing about it for a bit now. My roommates do point out that the people of Riverside are kinda strange, but that people in the Midwest in general would probably react similarly if a big star like that came to film a movie there. One thing that is nice to point out is they gave the town of Riverside about $100k. (from what I've been told)
When the advertised size of email accounts becomes larger than most people's hard drives
Yeah man, I'm tired of them rubbing it in my face that I'm still running a 512 megabyte hard drive.
Or he could just mail the memory stick back to them.... *cough* cause I know if I was the one who lost the memory stick that's what I'd want done....
if you read a bit further down it says:
t ml)
Today, our goal is to be the best browsing solution on Windows and Linux, while at the same time striving to improve our functionality on MacOS X in order to be competitive.
So, it may have started wanting a competitive browser for Windows, but that IS NOT the goal anymore. (quote from the first paragraph of http://www.mozilla.org/projects/firefox/charter.h
Is it any wonder that when I got a free XP Service Pack 2 cd from school this is what became of it? Before After
But by the time you emerge sync I could have already downloaded/configured/made/and installed gaim on my Slackware box. Of course, if you just download the individual ebuild, it'd be close.
You do realize that since NT crash rates for the systems have went up with every version, crash rates for NT were at about 4%, 2k was at about %8 maybe, and XP was at %12. But then again, the problem with the statistic is that most "normal" users weren't using NT or even 2k soooo. It's hard to say what the crash rate would be for normal users. BTW, I have had XP Pro blue screen on me for problems other than hardware. I wonder, have you ever checked the uptime on "any of your XP machines" because when the blue screen hits it reboots automatically, and if you have it either log in automatically or go to the login screen when the screensaver hits, you might have never noticed the blue screen. Just because it doesn't happen to you doesn't mean it doesn't happen right? One last thing, why they thought it was a good idea to write 32bit code on top of 16 bit code in the case of Windows 95-ME is beyond me. That's the main reason why the NT based systems are more stable is because they didn't build the code on top of the old 16 bit code
Is there really much difference between a "Technology Preview" and a beta? Honestly they are both just out there so people can see how the new features are coming around and that it still has bugs. So, I think Firefox is still considered Beta because it hasn't gone "gold."
Firefox by version 1.0 will have automatic update checks it runs (if enabled.) Firefox has actually had it since 0.9 but it didn't work well at all (if it worked.) How many times do people have to use the term BETA before people understand? I just don't get it. I mean, Firefox is already quite stable and quite feature rich, but... but, not everything is perfect yet being BETA. So you can keep complaining about your mom not being able to update, or if you're that concerned don't let her use it till 1.0 comes out and it's "ready" for people. Last option, let her use IE again and get bombarded with spyware and lots of other nice addon's which users like to click yes to. "Do you want to install this?"
Try saying that if you used a 133 up until a year and half ago. On that, JAVA is slow....
I bought an AMD 2500+ XP because it was cheaper than the comparable Intels.
that explains the bad photography right? Cause we all know astronauts can hold a camera centered.
Errr.... Slackware is possibly the most UNIX like Linux. Though I would think if you want a more classic UNIX system to get a BSD which was at one point actually UNIX. Call me crazy. (Just so you know, I'm running Slack 10 right now :P)
I agree, I like Slackware for my desktop. It works well IMHO. Just as well as Gentoo or Mandrake or Debian or Redhat or.... anyways, I believe Slackware makes a fine desktop environment if you install the second CD also (it includes GNOME and KDE.)