Who the f... modded it as Insightful???? Principle of relativity is widely known.
This matter won't go much faster because c is the higher bound to speed of massive particles. Now please mod me as Insightful, Informative and Interesting.
It works with simple documents only. I once had to move a large document with lots of tab formatting (it had to be done that way, since there was no regularity in the required formatting) and inserted special symbols between Word 2.0 and Word 95, using the latter's "export" feature. It was one hell of a nightmare.
It is the perfect tool to frag a comander that you don't like. Or to settle scores. Though that is more novel stuff, give it time, and someone will probably try it.
It's not new. People in the armies have been doing such things since ancient times.
There aren't as many people retiring as there are entering the workforce.
Man, one of the biggest problems of Western societies is that there more people retiring than starting to work. That's what makes people worry about pension systems blowing up.
The author is also a bit wrong in writing that the brighter the monitor, the better. Actually, some LCD monitors can be just too bright. You have to remember that LCD works by blocking light generated by lamps, so if the lamps are too bright, you won't block enough light to make black appear really black (it is especially visible in darkened room). Another caveat is that LCDs perform worse at representing a whole spectrum of colors (they're worse at representing warm colors). And that modern LCDs often do not show full 16.4 million RGB spectrum, only a subset of it and interpolate inbetween, which makes gradients worse.
Having said that, I wouldn't give back my 17" LCD for any CRT, my eyes are too precious for me.
I bought a model that was reviewed on newegg.com by umpteen people and many said they had no dead pixels.
I tend to ignore such reviews. First of all, I have no guarantee that shop owners do not edit/cut out bad reviews. Second, a sizeable chunk of the reviews is written like "Hey, I just bought it 4 hours ago and it looks GREAT!!!! No more headaches and the fonts look so sharp!! Whopeee!". Sorry, this is not my idea of a noteworthy review.
From the article: Liekens does caution that not all of the pictures will be scientifically reliable, something that ESA and NASA obviously have to take care over.
"We're impressed with their ability and enthusiasm, and looked at their images with great interest," says Bashar Rizk, part of the Huygens imaging team from the University of Arizona, Tucson.
A key paragraph. Does fater always means better? Before we jump on the NASA/ESA bashing bandwagon, we should remember that both are renowned scientific institutions that gain reputation not by doing everything as fast as possible, but as accurately and precisely as possible.
I read the paper version of the said newspaper sometimes and very rarely notice a misprint. They come much more often in the online version. What's more, they are not corrected after being pointed out by readers.
The content provider can embed the ads in the page without using pop-ups. Like Google ads, for example. I've used one major Polish newspare as a newssource, but they started forcing on me pop-ups in such quantities that I no longer read it. Another good newspaper has ads on a sidebar - doesn't bother me at all, and I still sometimes take a look at the ads, because they "behave nicely" and don't put me off at the first moment because of the rude way the pop-ups present themselves to the viewer.
The consequence of the ad-blockers will be ad developers realising you shouldn't push something right in front of another person's nose, if you want that person to take any interest in what you're showing.
In Fallujah, US military wanted to all cars from the citizens and make them wear indetyfying badges (like in ghetto). You way out would be much easier if you kept such ideas in the place where they belong (dustbin). I understand that the US can't move out today, but it should do it as fast as possible without causing civil war. What makes me angry that nobody in the US thinks that something should be done to atone for the damage they've done to Iraq and the world (the second: by undermining international law).
BTW, you mistaken Serbia with former Yugoslavian Republic, which Serbia was a part of.
A new URL for preprint archive is http://www.arxiv.org/.
Who the f... modded it as Insightful???? Principle of relativity is widely known.
This matter won't go much faster because c is the higher bound to speed of massive particles. Now please mod me as Insightful, Informative and Interesting.
It works with simple documents only. I once had to move a large document with lots of tab formatting (it had to be done that way, since there was no regularity in the required formatting) and inserted special symbols between Word 2.0 and Word 95, using the latter's "export" feature. It was one hell of a nightmare.
"War on terror" is pure PR in itself.
Sometimes you have to scare people, and riskless killing from heartless robots would probably break morale very quickly.
Isn't it what we have now the grunts for?
http://www.killology.com/
It is the perfect tool to frag a comander that you don't like. Or to settle scores. Though that is more novel stuff, give it time, and someone will probably try it.
It's not new. People in the armies have been doing such things since ancient times.
Do you vote on everything personally in your country? Those ministers that are pushing the directive through didn't come from Mars, did they?
Sure. The directive will probably pass to second reading, because Poland will not block it this time -- too much pressure from other countries.
Because? I'm against this directive, but why does passing it mean that EU democratic principles are dead?
Other kinds of products don't get double IP coverage; why should software?
They sometimes do. You can patent a particular way of producing something, and explain this way in a book. This book will be protected by copyright.
Oh, you're so... caustic.
Means you've simply seen not enough.
There aren't as many people retiring as there are entering the workforce.
Man, one of the biggest problems of Western societies is that there more people retiring than starting to work. That's what makes people worry about pension systems blowing up.
Water is the new hotness.
We even had a few wars about water.
The author is also a bit wrong in writing that the brighter the monitor, the better. Actually, some LCD monitors can be just too bright. You have to remember that LCD works by blocking light generated by lamps, so if the lamps are too bright, you won't block enough light to make black appear really black (it is especially visible in darkened room). Another caveat is that LCDs perform worse at representing a whole spectrum of colors (they're worse at representing warm colors). And that modern LCDs often do not show full 16.4 million RGB spectrum, only a subset of it and interpolate inbetween, which makes gradients worse.
Having said that, I wouldn't give back my 17" LCD for any CRT, my eyes are too precious for me.
I bought a model that was reviewed on newegg.com by umpteen people and many said they had no dead pixels.
I tend to ignore such reviews. First of all, I have no guarantee that shop owners do not edit/cut out bad reviews. Second, a sizeable chunk of the reviews is written like "Hey, I just bought it 4 hours ago and it looks GREAT!!!! No more headaches and the fonts look so sharp!! Whopeee!". Sorry, this is not my idea of a noteworthy review.
Most countries have a system to sell off debt. This is a solution to get some part of money back.
I hate it when people don't take losing their livelyhoods like good little sheep, too.
And I hate it when people accept the notion of free market and competition only when they are on the winning side.
From the article:
Liekens does caution that not all of the pictures will be scientifically reliable, something that ESA and NASA obviously have to take care over.
"We're impressed with their ability and enthusiasm, and looked at their images with great interest," says Bashar Rizk, part of the Huygens imaging team from the University of Arizona, Tucson.
A key paragraph. Does fater always means better? Before we jump on the NASA/ESA bashing bandwagon, we should remember that both are renowned scientific institutions that gain reputation not by doing everything as fast as possible, but as accurately and precisely as possible.
I read the paper version of the said newspaper sometimes and very rarely notice a misprint. They come much more often in the online version. What's more, they are not corrected after being pointed out by readers.
Sometimes yes, sometimes not. I noticed that some newspapers have much more errors in their online version.
The content provider can embed the ads in the page without using pop-ups. Like Google ads, for example. I've used one major Polish newspare as a newssource, but they started forcing on me pop-ups in such quantities that I no longer read it. Another good newspaper has ads on a sidebar - doesn't bother me at all, and I still sometimes take a look at the ads, because they "behave nicely" and don't put me off at the first moment because of the rude way the pop-ups present themselves to the viewer.
The consequence of the ad-blockers will be ad developers realising you shouldn't push something right in front of another person's nose, if you want that person to take any interest in what you're showing.
Download copies of interesting documents + sign them electronically.
I use sometimes rox-filer and the only good thing about it it's speed. Otherwise, it is rather poor.
In Fallujah, US military wanted to all cars from the citizens and make them wear indetyfying badges (like in ghetto). You way out would be much easier if you kept such ideas in the place where they belong (dustbin). I understand that the US can't move out today, but it should do it as fast as possible without causing civil war. What makes me angry that nobody in the US thinks that something should be done to atone for the damage they've done to Iraq and the world (the second: by undermining international law).
BTW, you mistaken Serbia with former Yugoslavian Republic, which Serbia was a part of.
Of course it was! Only recently, Lukashenko is inviting people to settle in these areas, stupid bastard he is.
Which does not change the truthfulness of the previous post. The fallout was taken by the wind to Byelaruss.