My high school (well, Arkansas state law, IIRC) required four years of math courses. Generally that ended up being something like Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II, and Trig. Sometimes people would take College Algebra their senior year, but most of the class ended up taking Trig. A good third of my class probably took Trig their junior year to fit AP Calculus their senior year. (Some people took Cal their junior year, but anyway.)
Mod up! I saw this and laughed for a solid minute.
Friendly dog: Free to good home.
Go Kart: Fairly cheap.
Using your dog as koopa shell practice: priceless.
Many of those would be features that you'd need rather quickly, so you'd miss them rather quickly. Going back and changing something will be missed a lot sooner than imbedding a picture of a purple llama, for example.
I believe it was closer to hyperbole. There would be obvious disadvantages to using a typewriter, but for some people, the disadvantages would never be noticed as long as missing features aren't needed. It goes back to the original question: What they're using it for.
Also, as an in-home salesman, I would like to meet his friends.;)
In my opinion (emphasized for flame retardance), we'd be best off just throwing out any party system, period. The more I see the results of permanent divisions within the political system, the more I feel George Washington (I'm pretty sure) was right to warn the country against forming political parties to begin with.
The fact that all of those games are Nintendo games brings up the reason I like Nintendo: say what you want about the consoles, but the games Nintendo itself puts out are nearly always original. Maybe it's the fact that the limitations of the system force more creativity in making the game, or maybe it's been Nintendo's kid-friendly policies forcing creativity over blood, but the majority of their games are top-notch.
I think that the point is that it is better to learn through working, not through memorization. You best understand something if you find it yourself, not if you just memorize a few sentences.
The only problem with that is that sometimes the power button is set to do something else besides shutdown. I have mine set to hibernate. (Granted, this is a laptop.)
Exactly my point. I honestly think that to stop this type of abuse towards honest systems like BT by the MPAA someone is going to have to take them to task, and the only people I can see doing that is those who the MPAA wrongly attacks.
Out of curiosity, could the MPAA be sued by Bittorrent, Inc. for slander/libel/defamation-of-character/whatever because of this? It's clearly not true. Get the EFF or FSF or someone/something to back it. You'd probably get quite a bit of press for it.
Well, Azureus is just a BitTorrent client. BitTorrent is just a method/protocol for downloading a (large) file. What this seems to me is a p2p system using the BitTorrent protocol. Turning BitTorrent itself into an all-in-one network would put it in the same legal shaky ground as the others.
There's also the Azureus plugin, if you RTFA.
All applicable acronyms probably apply.
My high school (well, Arkansas state law, IIRC) required four years of math courses. Generally that ended up being something like Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II, and Trig. Sometimes people would take College Algebra their senior year, but most of the class ended up taking Trig. A good third of my class probably took Trig their junior year to fit AP Calculus their senior year. (Some people took Cal their junior year, but anyway.)
Get something with lines as it sometimes encourages non-slanty and non-slacky writing you can't read anymore 3 days later.
Apparently you haven't seen my handwriting.
Mod up! I saw this and laughed for a solid minute. Friendly dog: Free to good home. Go Kart: Fairly cheap. Using your dog as koopa shell practice: priceless.
Oh, sure. Next thing you're gonna tell me is that "ATM machine" is wrong!
How about this?
;)
friction: f=un
or, friction (f)=the coefficient of friction (u) times the normal force (n).
At least, that's what my high school physics taught me.
Many of those would be features that you'd need rather quickly, so you'd miss them rather quickly. Going back and changing something will be missed a lot sooner than imbedding a picture of a purple llama, for example.
I believe it was closer to hyperbole. There would be obvious disadvantages to using a typewriter, but for some people, the disadvantages would never be noticed as long as missing features aren't needed. It goes back to the original question: What they're using it for. Also, as an in-home salesman, I would like to meet his friends. ;)
In my opinion (emphasized for flame retardance), we'd be best off just throwing out any party system, period. The more I see the results of permanent divisions within the political system, the more I feel George Washington (I'm pretty sure) was right to warn the country against forming political parties to begin with.
Of course. That's the only way people get any drama on the inter nets.
Just find a repack. Try here. I'm pretty sure that's it. If not, google it.
The fact that all of those games are Nintendo games brings up the reason I like Nintendo: say what you want about the consoles, but the games Nintendo itself puts out are nearly always original. Maybe it's the fact that the limitations of the system force more creativity in making the game, or maybe it's been Nintendo's kid-friendly policies forcing creativity over blood, but the majority of their games are top-notch.
I think that the point is that it is better to learn through working, not through memorization. You best understand something if you find it yourself, not if you just memorize a few sentences.
IANAS, if it matters.
The only problem with that is that sometimes the power button is set to do something else besides shutdown. I have mine set to hibernate. (Granted, this is a laptop.)
Great. It's Sliders all over again...
Exactly my point. I honestly think that to stop this type of abuse towards honest systems like BT by the MPAA someone is going to have to take them to task, and the only people I can see doing that is those who the MPAA wrongly attacks.
So I realized after posting that. I was just too lazy to write back. ;)
Out of curiosity, could the MPAA be sued by Bittorrent, Inc. for slander/libel/defamation-of-character/whatever because of this? It's clearly not true. Get the EFF or FSF or someone/something to back it. You'd probably get quite a bit of press for it.
Well, Azureus is just a BitTorrent client. BitTorrent is just a method/protocol for downloading a (large) file. What this seems to me is a p2p system using the BitTorrent protocol. Turning BitTorrent itself into an all-in-one network would put it in the same legal shaky ground as the others. There's also the Azureus plugin, if you RTFA. All applicable acronyms probably apply.
Y'know, that link would probably be great if I was on your computer. Granted, this is /., but not all of us are 1337 h4xx0rs. ;)
Slashdot a site where the images are already down? That's no fun.
Five Minutes!? Develop your stamina, man!
Does Congress follow RRO? It seems like it would be good if they did.
Better futzing with a keypad than some other things...
I for one welcome our new "Dick and Jane"-reading overlords.
Bah. Everyone knows preschoolers aren't human.