I was an OS/2 guy out of the gate in my career, and when Windows 95 was released I was blown away at how innovative it was when it came to a consumer operating system. I remember being surprised at how much people praised windows 95 when it came out. When I first used it I remember thinking "wow, MS decided to make windows more like the Mac OS." Most of the Win 95 user interface seemed to be a copy of Mac OS to me but with a few new features, and some areas lacking. I agree that it was certainly an improvement over previous versions of windows, but I wouldn't call it innovative.
Why? Because we can't find people to train employees in SO8, which means our training funds from the state are wasted and because we are completely unsupported. A quick google search turned up this: http://www.getopenoffice.org/training.html
I'm sure if you have the money to spend, you can find someone who will do star office training for you.
Look, with Vista they have a vested interest in correcting the bugs. For those in Linux I cannot overcome I can only hope someone else sees it as important enough to warrant a fix. There are many vested interests in Linux as well. If you buy a support contract from Red Hat or Novell, you can do more than just hope that someone will fix it. You can tell the vendor to fix it, and cancel the contract if they don't. In this case you probably have more leverage than you would with Microsoft. And you have the ability to follow the status of the issue, possibly test a fix before it is released, and actually be involved in the process. Compare this to filling a bug with Microsoft and hoping that someday it will be included in an update.
Saying "with Linux you can just change it" is akin to handing someone a bunch of parts and telling them if they don't like the car they can fix it. It's more like someone giving you a free car that is working pretty well for most requirements. And having the option to pay for upgrades, repairs, etc. Which you might have had to do if you had bought a non-free car anyway.
Bill Gates and Warren Buffect cannot even spend their own money fast enough on personal stuff because they have so much. A 300 room mansion is merely a status symbol because they get lost in their own house if they actually try to use such rooms.
Warren Buffet is actually very frugal with his money. He lives in a relatively modest house in Omaha, and has a low salary compared to people in similar positions. He is also a proponent of higher taxes on the rich, and has been critical of Bush's tax cuts.
The theory of an Earth centered universe is not a good example of a scientific theory. Science did not exist in it's current form in that time. In fact it was Copernicus and his Heliocentric theory that sparked a revolution in science because he used the available data at the time in a scientific way (instead of blindly following the church's teachings) to conclude that the Earth was not the center of the universe. Galileo then used a telescope to provide additional evidence that the Earth and other planets revolved around the Sun.
But I understand your point that we do not always have enough evidence to make the correct conclusion in science. In that case we have to make the best judgment that we can based on the evidence we do have, and act on it. In regards to global warming we know that the temperatures and CO2 levels in recent years have increased faster than we have ever seen before. So based on the evidence we have, I would say we better do something about it.
They will tell you which haplogroup your y chromosome belongs to, and determine your ancient lineage (up to about 10,000 years ago). The results from the national geographic project do not tell you about more recent ancestors. You can also do a more detailed dna analysis here. They can analyze your paternal and maternal line, and link you up with relatives who have also sent in their dna.
I did the national geographic study myself, and I find it very interesting. According to the national geographic project, our common ancestors of all humans lived about 50,000 years ago in Africa.
If your primary need is document management (version control, approval process, etc.) I have found Knowledge Tree to work pretty well. We've been using it for about one year, and it's fairly easy to set up and we haven't had too many bugs.
Maybe not exactly what you are looking for, but take a look at this:
Muvium. Click on products and then click on uVM-Microcontrollers.
And you can see other devices here
While Java is not available for every possible platform, it is available for a large number of platforms including embedded devices.
Usually the term cross-platform in Java refers to the ability to transfer compiled code from one system to another. Something you will never be able to do with C.
And he did. At least for Episode 2 I remember a lot of reviews that said the movie was great, and made up for everything from the first . Then the movie was actually released and you had some un-biased reviewers seeing the movie. That's when the bad reviews started to come out.
Even here
and here
the reviews didn't look to bad.
I saw the other 5, and I am not planning to see this one. I loved the first 3, but hated Episode 1. I was planning to not see episode 2, but then all the reviews came out saying how the second episode would bring everthing together and make up for the first one. It wasn't until after the movie was released that the bad reviews started to come out.
Now I am hearing the same garbage about how this movie will make up for the two previous movies. This time I'm not falling for it.
I did read the script posted here.
And it looks to me like the third prequel has the same problems as the first two. The first 30 minutes of the movie appear to have about 28 minutes of rediculous light saber action and about 2 minutes of plot development.
Anyway, I refuse to give any more money to Lucas' empire. Even though the reviews look good at this point, just wait until after the release, and I have a feeling you will be seeing a lot more negative reviews.
Bill Gates and Warren Buffect cannot even spend their own money fast enough on personal stuff because they have so much. A 300 room mansion is merely a status symbol because they get lost in their own house if they actually try to use such rooms.
Warren Buffet is actually very frugal with his money. He lives in a relatively modest house in Omaha, and has a low salary compared to people in similar positions. He is also a proponent of higher taxes on the rich, and has been critical of Bush's tax cuts.
I, for one, welcome our new cliche using overlords.
Not sure what sites you explored, but if you go to http://fedoraproject.org/
a /7/
You can find the download links pretty quickly "Get Fedora".
You can get the torrents for F7 here: http://torrent.fedoraproject.org/
Or download the isos from here: http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/publiclist/Fedor
The theory of an Earth centered universe is not a good example of a scientific theory. Science did not exist in it's current form in that time. In fact it was Copernicus and his Heliocentric theory that sparked a revolution in science because he used the available data at the time in a scientific way (instead of blindly following the church's teachings) to conclude that the Earth was not the center of the universe. Galileo then used a telescope to provide additional evidence that the Earth and other planets revolved around the Sun.
But I understand your point that we do not always have enough evidence to make the correct conclusion in science. In that case we have to make the best judgment that we can based on the evidence we do have, and act on it. In regards to global warming we know that the temperatures and CO2 levels in recent years have increased faster than we have ever seen before. So based on the evidence we have, I would say we better do something about it.
They will tell you which haplogroup your y chromosome belongs to, and determine your ancient lineage (up to about 10,000 years ago). The results from the national geographic project do not tell you about more recent ancestors. You can also do a more detailed dna analysis here. They can analyze your paternal and maternal line, and link you up with relatives who have also sent in their dna.
I did the national geographic study myself, and I find it very interesting. According to the national geographic project, our common ancestors of all humans lived about 50,000 years ago in Africa.
If your primary need is document management (version control, approval process, etc.) I have found Knowledge Tree to work pretty well. We've been using it for about one year, and it's fairly easy to set up and we haven't had too many bugs.
Maybe not exactly what you are looking for, but take a look at this: Muvium. Click on products and then click on uVM-Microcontrollers.
And you can see other devices here While Java is not available for every possible platform, it is available for a large number of platforms including embedded devices.
Usually the term cross-platform in Java refers to the ability to transfer compiled code from one system to another. Something you will never be able to do with C.
And he did.
At least for Episode 2 I remember a lot of reviews that said the movie was great, and made up for everything from the first . Then the movie was actually released and you had some un-biased reviewers seeing the movie. That's when the bad reviews started to come out.
Even here and here the reviews didn't look to bad.
I saw the other 5, and I am not planning to see this one. I loved the first 3, but hated Episode 1. I was planning to not see episode 2, but then all the reviews came out saying how the second episode would bring everthing together and make up for the first one. It wasn't until after the movie was released that the bad reviews started to come out.
Now I am hearing the same garbage about how this movie will make up for the two previous movies. This time I'm not falling for it. I did read the script posted here. And it looks to me like the third prequel has the same problems as the first two. The first 30 minutes of the movie appear to have about 28 minutes of rediculous light saber action and about 2 minutes of plot development.
Anyway, I refuse to give any more money to Lucas' empire. Even though the reviews look good at this point, just wait until after the release, and I have a feeling you will be seeing a lot more negative reviews.
What's a liger? It's pretty much my favorite animal. It's like a lion and a tiger mixed... bred for its skills in magic.
The Canadians must bomb the Baldwins!