When I got FiOS I looked up my apartment in their system, found it was not available. Except I could see it running to my building to the other person who had it next door. After a call, they put my apartment in their system and said they'd call me when their technicians could see if it was available. Two weeks later I called again and finally got them to send a guy out to actually put the box in so I had Internet (he was amazed when I managed to configure the router he plugged in with my iPod before his laptop booted).
Even with those problems, the tech guy showed up within a one hour window, and the services has been great since then. I called up their support line with a billing question once and got someone who knew exactly what to do on the first try.
I've always thought Google was known for their simple to use interfaces. Just look at their home page or Gmail for a couple examples.
Even on a lot of their other services like custom search engines and Google Analytics they have a UI that's simple to use. Sure some of their things start out a little rocky for developers, but that's the case for most services. Given time they'll improve.
That looks like the bug in resynthesizer where it samples the content from the top left of the image instead of around the selection. The script needs modifications to get it to work correctly.
A while back I decided to try this out on Windows. Well the first step was to find a version that would be compatible with windows, then I had to get a mirror, figure out the install location, research why it wasn't the latest version, download a newer version from another site, research why it wasn't working (was sampling from the top left corner only), find a fix, modify script files to include the fix, and finally it was working.
While I did find it really cool once I had it working, it's not the easy process that I would have gotten with a feature in photoshop. I'm guessing the typical user would have given up at stop one or at most 3 of that process.
Flash drives are getting cheaper, but floppies are still cheaper for the 2MB size file. I worked in a lab one summer that I needed to copy files onto a classified machine. It was only about 1 MB of files (a program I was creating), so I'd just copy it onto a floppy, move it to the secured machine, then file the disk in the safe to be destroyed (once it's touched the classified machine, it can't be used on a non-classified machine).
Yes, I find it very amusing that there are about 50 posts by people showing they can do basic math. Probably should have just modded them all redundant instead of posting, but oh well.
It might just be that the porn industry backs the format that looks like it's going to win. They don't really have enough pull compared to non-porn to sway the market.
That seems equally likely seeing as how the case was brought to court SIX years after the event happened. Must have really stuck in her mind if she remembered some event that long ago that she could place blame on.
And at that price point, you could buy a few drives plus the RAID controller and still have money left over for power costs and replacements for several years.
With this system, they can have one person controlling a whole fleet of robots. And by controlling, I mean he presses start on the computer. That's quite an advantage over having 20 people that you're not even allowed to shoot at.
I really want the anti carbon copy that makes sure an email is never delivered to an address. Would be good for those mailing lists that you want to email all except for one person.
Yep it sure is! I can tell you with great certainty that barbarians engaged in sex.
Of course now we also have to throw other acts like eating and sleeping in there as barbaric acts, but that happens when you broaden the scope on things.
Don't forget the slew of meaningless titles for various committees or for students, clubs that many people feel it necessary to tell me for each email sent.
I was curious about this, so I gave it a shot. Turns out it doesn't work by default in the windows version, it always samples the top left part of the screen.
Looks like they're giving out a free iPhone if you guess closest to the release time on the link in the summary. Looks like "Never" isn't an option so they're optimistic.
I'm sure they're going to be using both for a while, but eventually they'll be able to phase out expensive radar systems as they upgrade airports and planes. Currently planes are identified by their transponders, so this will be a much better system.
One would hope that we're not monitoring for incoming air strikes using the same system/people who are monitoring air traffic control in a 100 mile radius
When I got FiOS I looked up my apartment in their system, found it was not available. Except I could see it running to my building to the other person who had it next door. After a call, they put my apartment in their system and said they'd call me when their technicians could see if it was available. Two weeks later I called again and finally got them to send a guy out to actually put the box in so I had Internet (he was amazed when I managed to configure the router he plugged in with my iPod before his laptop booted).
Even with those problems, the tech guy showed up within a one hour window, and the services has been great since then. I called up their support line with a billing question once and got someone who knew exactly what to do on the first try.
I'm still waiting for Stealth 2 after that little scene they put in at the end of the credits where the North Koreans find the still working AI unit!
I've always thought Google was known for their simple to use interfaces. Just look at their home page or Gmail for a couple examples. Even on a lot of their other services like custom search engines and Google Analytics they have a UI that's simple to use. Sure some of their things start out a little rocky for developers, but that's the case for most services. Given time they'll improve.
In the US, our right to guns is so we can have them to kill people, not sports or hunting.
Pascal/Delphi is very much still used by companies. Perhaps you've heard of Skype? It's not like the old Pascal of the 80s anymore.
That looks like the bug in resynthesizer where it samples the content from the top left of the image instead of around the selection. The script needs modifications to get it to work correctly.
A while back I decided to try this out on Windows. Well the first step was to find a version that would be compatible with windows, then I had to get a mirror, figure out the install location, research why it wasn't the latest version, download a newer version from another site, research why it wasn't working (was sampling from the top left corner only), find a fix, modify script files to include the fix, and finally it was working. While I did find it really cool once I had it working, it's not the easy process that I would have gotten with a feature in photoshop. I'm guessing the typical user would have given up at stop one or at most 3 of that process.
Flash drives are getting cheaper, but floppies are still cheaper for the 2MB size file. I worked in a lab one summer that I needed to copy files onto a classified machine. It was only about 1 MB of files (a program I was creating), so I'd just copy it onto a floppy, move it to the secured machine, then file the disk in the safe to be destroyed (once it's touched the classified machine, it can't be used on a non-classified machine).
Yes, I find it very amusing that there are about 50 posts by people showing they can do basic math. Probably should have just modded them all redundant instead of posting, but oh well.
It might just be that the porn industry backs the format that looks like it's going to win. They don't really have enough pull compared to non-porn to sway the market.
That seems equally likely seeing as how the case was brought to court SIX years after the event happened. Must have really stuck in her mind if she remembered some event that long ago that she could place blame on.
And at that price point, you could buy a few drives plus the RAID controller and still have money left over for power costs and replacements for several years.
It doesn't even provide for javascript/AJAX support so I don't think it's even close to an issue. Would be nice if webapps worked in it.
With this system, they can have one person controlling a whole fleet of robots. And by controlling, I mean he presses start on the computer. That's quite an advantage over having 20 people that you're not even allowed to shoot at.
I really want the anti carbon copy that makes sure an email is never delivered to an address. Would be good for those mailing lists that you want to email all except for one person.
That's not such an interesting read these days it seems.
Do a search for articles with MIT in the title and you'll find that's a pretty common story here.
Yep it sure is! I can tell you with great certainty that barbarians engaged in sex.
Of course now we also have to throw other acts like eating and sleeping in there as barbaric acts, but that happens when you broaden the scope on things.
Don't forget the slew of meaningless titles for various committees or for students, clubs that many people feel it necessary to tell me for each email sent.
But they didn't mandate that all papers must use the new font, just the font in emails.
Indeed, I got a script to do it after manually hiding several variations of "What kind of flower would X be?" and "Take the color poll!"
I was curious about this, so I gave it a shot. Turns out it doesn't work by default in the windows version, it always samples the top left part of the screen.
Was a real disappointment so I searched around a bit and found someone made a fix for the script:
http://registry.gimp.org/node/15118
This solves that issue so it works great! Had a fun time editing people out of photos and such.
Looks like they're giving out a free iPhone if you guess closest to the release time on the link in the summary. Looks like "Never" isn't an option so they're optimistic.
I'm sure they're going to be using both for a while, but eventually they'll be able to phase out expensive radar systems as they upgrade airports and planes. Currently planes are identified by their transponders, so this will be a much better system.
One would hope that we're not monitoring for incoming air strikes using the same system/people who are monitoring air traffic control in a 100 mile radius