A U.S. soldier recently, not the most recent, was awarded the Medal of Honor because his group was pinned down and he needed to call in help. He had to go out in the open to get a call through and knew he'd get the shit shot out of him. He did it anyway and got killed but I think the rest of his guys received help.
What is it about a particle that makes it have a particular charge? What is charge fundamentally? Are these known things or just stupid questions on my part? It seems to me if two particles can be different (positive or negative) then they must consist of something smaller that makes them that way.
By embiggening the cellular infrastructure, they might be enabling potential bombers who otherwise might not be able to get their detonation call through.
I thought Symbian was that sex toy that Howard Stern is always trying to get his "female" guests to try out...and I thought, good move, way to diversify AT&T.
To me, the biggest problem with Linux is a lack of hardware support. There is a little bit, but not until these companies are finished supporting Windows then Mac. Linux does amazing things considering how much reverse engineering has to go into it. If someone started a company (AMD) that made all the requisite hardware devices to work with the Linux kernel "out of the box" both they and Linux would zoom to be the mainly used computing platform.
I don't know how complicated elevator control is, but, most of the bloat from Windows is about the GUI and backwards compatibility. The reason (I am guessing) that most of these places are using Windows, is because they are buying off-the-shelf technology which will often be pre-loaded with some sort of Windows. Writing fresh code for a freshly designed embedded system is simpler and probably better but is way more expensive than buying a Dell that can do the same thing with Visual C++. As long as people don't plug stuff in while its on or do other "crazy" stuff, it will be fine.
Yahoo is worth a lot to Microsoft and Google knows this. In a few years most people will have a small terminal with a free (linux) bootstrap OS to get them connected to the Internet. All apps and storage will take place there. Microsoft's entire business is about to go away. Google is already heading in this direction and Yahoo is the only other possibility for MS to get a foothold. The Internet is going to become a mainframe for everyone and who controls the apps you use and the storage you get will be very rich and powerful.
The keyboard doesn't have the best feel, and I would only want commercial companies to copy it when making a keyboard for children. It is spill-proof. When I've spilled hot coffee and cold soda on it, I just had to wipe it off. Again, this is unlike my Sony Vaio and Lenovo T-61 keyboards which I've had to replace when even take-it-apart-deep-cleaning did not restore functionality post spill. Dude, you need to be more careful around your computers.
I agree with everything else you said though.
...after Camel-toe of course was some sort of computer virus. I need to go to sleep..
...oh yeah, it's at the bottom of the lake.
Yeah, they should make him sit with a bar of soap in his CD-ROM drive for a while.
I pay a moderate amount of attention to tech stuff. I subscribe to Wired and I check out Slashdot regularly. I've never heard of an Ultrabook.
Forget school years, we need longer years. I'm tired of getting so old.
...Whatcha doin'?
...Google and Apple merge already and get it over with.
Shouldn't they be choosing a baby for this?
The woman who wrote it is freaking gorgeous and way smarter than me...which isn't saying much.
A U.S. soldier recently, not the most recent, was awarded the Medal of Honor because his group was pinned down and he needed to call in help. He had to go out in the open to get a call through and knew he'd get the shit shot out of him. He did it anyway and got killed but I think the rest of his guys received help.
While we will allow al-awlaki to say what he wants, we also have targeted him for assassination.
What is it about a particle that makes it have a particular charge? What is charge fundamentally? Are these known things or just stupid questions on my part? It seems to me if two particles can be different (positive or negative) then they must consist of something smaller that makes them that way.
Seems like Hollywood knows a thief when they see one: http://record-eagle.com/statenews/x151150327/Soldier-sues-makers-of-Hurt-Locker
Why on earth geeks continue to view Apple as a Good Company boggles my mind.
Loved Linux for years but also love ipod, itunes, garageband and imovie. Nothing on Linux comes close to these. Microsoft doesn't include a compiler.
By embiggening the cellular infrastructure, they might be enabling potential bombers who otherwise might not be able to get their detonation call through.
Why not bring in Woz for a while ... as ballast?
I thought Symbian was that sex toy that Howard Stern is always trying to get his "female" guests to try out...and I thought, good move, way to diversify AT&T.
This guy seems to disagree with the greatness of reprocessing. http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=rethinking-nuclear-fuel-recycling
To me, the biggest problem with Linux is a lack of hardware support. There is a little bit, but not until these companies are finished supporting Windows then Mac. Linux does amazing things considering how much reverse engineering has to go into it. If someone started a company (AMD) that made all the requisite hardware devices to work with the Linux kernel "out of the box" both they and Linux would zoom to be the mainly used computing platform.
I don't know how complicated elevator control is, but, most of the bloat from Windows is about the GUI and backwards compatibility. The reason (I am guessing) that most of these places are using Windows, is because they are buying off-the-shelf technology which will often be pre-loaded with some sort of Windows. Writing fresh code for a freshly designed embedded system is simpler and probably better but is way more expensive than buying a Dell that can do the same thing with Visual C++. As long as people don't plug stuff in while its on or do other "crazy" stuff, it will be fine.
But does it run on Lin...oh yeah, TFA says it does.
Linux may not be ready for the desktop, but it is ready for the surface of Mars.
-Me
This guy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Harris_Simons/ uses math to bring in the big dough.
Yahoo is worth a lot to Microsoft and Google knows this. In a few years most people will have a small terminal with a free (linux) bootstrap OS to get them connected to the Internet. All apps and storage will take place there. Microsoft's entire business is about to go away. Google is already heading in this direction and Yahoo is the only other possibility for MS to get a foothold. The Internet is going to become a mainframe for everyone and who controls the apps you use and the storage you get will be very rich and powerful.
My dad seemed to think that speaking louder made one more understandable to non-English speaking people.