You can still modify the INI file and change all the various paths. It's just that now (assuming you chose to allow multiple profiles) the INI file is stored in Documents & Settings instead of under Program Files. Make sure hidden files are visible and search for opera6.ini and edit away.
I don't think you can simply refuse to provide any evidence that might incriminate yourself.
They already have all the evidence they need. They're simply warning him that he's been caught red handed and that he shouldn't do it again. Next time, they *will* take further action, cutting him off at the very least.
It doesn't really matter whether or not he thinks he did something wrong/illegal, the fact is that it *is* illegal (and certainly violates comcast's terms of service and acceptable use policies) and he has been caught.
My guess is because Tomcat is the official Servlet/JSP reference implementation while Jetty is a "real" impelementation, though that doesn't stop people from using Tomcat in production anyway.
Do you know how long it takes save a PNG file? RAW and JPG need a LOT less CPU power and cycles compared to PNG. PNG just wouldn't work very well in a digital camera especially when you want to snap very quickly.
RAW vs PNG is (IMO) like comparing, say, HuffyYUV and DIVX codecs for video. You can save the raw video stream much more quickly using the former than you can with the latter. Once you have that raw stream you can compress it very nicely later on in post.
I've seen job requirements that required experience in products less than a week old (W2K3 Server)
I especially love when they wan't 5 years experience in a rather new product. Especially one with the year it was released in its name. 5 years experience on Windows 2000? Sure, I got that.
Look out for JSP2 which is going to add a lot of the nice, friendly features already seen in other templating engines like Velocity and FreeMarker. The big one is the new JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library (JSTL) and it's included expression language which gives you easy access to objects using the familiar ${object} syntax.
See chapter 16 here
Re:We didn't know we were doing anything special..
on
Code Generation in Action
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· Score: 2, Informative
You might want to check out XDoclet next time rather than write your own parser/generator. It's pretty widely used now and has lots of tags for many common uses like EJBs, Hibernate, web.xml generation for all the major appservers, etc. It's also integrated with Ant and it looks like Sun is going to be borrowing some ideas for use in Java 1.5+.
PS: Ever had a searchengine that won't lead you to the homepage of the manufacterer Quantum every time you search something about "quantum computing"? This one will, I hope, just like SubMe did...
You got greedy when you threw that last bit in there. I just googled "quantum computing" and quantum.com isn't even in the first 250 results, if it's there at all.
Unless I'm misunderstanding you and you actually want to see quantum.com in which case you're just setting yourself up to fail with that query.
By the way, Google has attempted to acheive this concept of human ranking by watching to see how long you stay at a page you clicked on. If they rank a page 1, and you click it, and immediately return to the search page, they penalize that page. So if even Google is trying the same abstract concept, it probably has a future on the web.
They've gone one step further and implemented the exact same thing whittlebit is providing and it's been around a lot longer too. If you use IE, just install the Google Toolbar and enable the Voting buttons. From the toolbar help:
Voting Buttons - You can vote for or against a page or search result by using these buttons. Click the happy or unhappy faces to tell Google that you like or dislike a particular page. These buttons also can be used to report especially good or bad results after searching with Google. Indicate satisfaction or dissatisfaction with your results by clicking the appropriate button while still on the search results page. This feature is in test mode for now, so you won't see any immediate effects by voting for or against a page.
For one thing, JBoss is under the LGPL and if I'm not mistaken Apache projects only use code released under the Apache Software License (ASL) or other suitably compatible license such as MPL or BSD.
Secondly, a lot of people seem to have objections over how the JBoss Group (allegedly) runs its business. Enough so as to stop them from using the product.
Re:Screw multimedia; how about software?
on
P2P Meets Push
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· Score: 1
I think the main advantage is that it would take a lot of pressure off the download servers. Can you imagine how much bandwith is used whenever a new version of KDE, Gnome, OpenOffice.org, Mozilla, etc comes out?
This is something that was given away for free,
and no mention was ever made that future updates may cost money. Of course the possibility was always there, but as they were only available with Macs, I'd guess most people assumed the cost was a part of the hardware.
No mention was ever made that the product would continue to be updated, either. Of course the possibility was always there...
I often have over 100 tabs open in Opera at any given time. Mostly due to laziness but that's neither here nor there.
link
You can still modify the INI file and change all the various paths. It's just that now (assuming you chose to allow multiple profiles) the INI file is stored in Documents & Settings instead of under Program Files. Make sure hidden files are visible and search for opera6.ini and edit away.
Tell it to the judge
I just saw over on TSS that they are planning to support Tomcat alongside Jetty in the future.
My guess is because Tomcat is the official Servlet/JSP reference implementation while Jetty is a "real" impelementation, though that doesn't stop people from using Tomcat in production anyway.
RAW vs PNG is (IMO) like comparing, say, HuffyYUV and DIVX codecs for video. You can save the raw video stream much more quickly using the former than you can with the latter. Once you have that raw stream you can compress it very nicely later on in post.
That quote shows his obvious bias towards XP and most likely all things Microsoft.
IMAP still has to store it's messages some how. Both mbox and maildir work with courier-imap. Not sure about others..
Right, because when borland.com goes down all copies of their compilers *everywhere* immediately cease to exist! How's that for DRM?
It happened to Amazon Canada so only like 5 people saw it.
How about no.
I thought everyone knew that Wired.com *is* an Apple commercial..
Look out for JSP2 which is going to add a lot of the nice, friendly features already seen in other templating engines like Velocity and FreeMarker. The big one is the new JavaServer Pages Standard Tag Library (JSTL) and it's included expression language which gives you easy access to objects using the familiar ${object} syntax. See chapter 16 here
You might want to check out XDoclet next time rather than write your own parser/generator. It's pretty widely used now and has lots of tags for many common uses like EJBs, Hibernate, web.xml generation for all the major appservers, etc. It's also integrated with Ant and it looks like Sun is going to be borrowing some ideas for use in Java 1.5+.
PS: Ever had a searchengine that won't lead you to the homepage of the manufacterer Quantum every time you search something about "quantum computing"? This one will, I hope, just like SubMe did...
You got greedy when you threw that last bit in there. I just googled "quantum computing" and quantum.com isn't even in the first 250 results, if it's there at all.
Unless I'm misunderstanding you and you actually want to see quantum.com in which case you're just setting yourself up to fail with that query.
They've gone one step further and implemented the exact same thing whittlebit is providing and it's been around a lot longer too. If you use IE, just install the Google Toolbar and enable the Voting buttons. From the toolbar help:
For one thing, JBoss is under the LGPL and if I'm not mistaken Apache projects only use code released under the Apache Software License (ASL) or other suitably compatible license such as MPL or BSD.
Secondly, a lot of people seem to have objections over how the JBoss Group (allegedly) runs its business. Enough so as to stop them from using the product.
I think the main advantage is that it would take a lot of pressure off the download servers. Can you imagine how much bandwith is used whenever a new version of KDE, Gnome, OpenOffice.org, Mozilla, etc comes out?
Delete's the current word. Like control+backspace in Windows..
Most people want something thin (plasma) because they're short on space. How can they possibly have the room for front projection? I know I don't...