I think Dillo does this, or at least it did a couple years ago. It's really handy. If I recall correctly (at 5:30 AM), it shows an icon with the number of HTML bugs, and when you click on the icon, it lists the bugs for you. Absolutely wonderful.
Anyone else find it ironic that the processor itself is acclaimed for being open-sourced, among other things, while the podcast of the announcement is only available in Realplayer format?
There are metal safety wires that go across the hub between opposing pairs of blades; even if the hose clamps come off, the blades will just come out a little and wobble.
Sorry; I meant no offense. I only ever really do security updates on stable for servers, and we have servers that are dedicated (one service per machine), so updates are few and far between. I was just curious about what you were using -- but if you run your servers on testing, OK.
Slightly offtopic, but the DSL version of dillo is not the standard version; it's patched to support frames and tabs . . . which makes it a heck of a lot nicer to use (albeit bigger) than the standard dillo.
A bunch of supposedly gifted students can't figure out how to study on their own? A bunch of "gifted" students can't find their own intellectual challenges? A bunch of "gifted" students have to wait to be told what to do before they can progress? Give me a flippin' break! If you are not being challenged in your high school classes, seek challenges elsewhere - it should be easy: you're the intellectual elite! If you choose to off yourself over *that*, you obviously haven't tried hard enough.
That's true . . . except when you have to be in the building, doing a specific mindless activity, no exceptions just because you could have done it just as easily eleven years earlier, for EIGHT HOURS A DAY. Ah, right, and if you want to attend a good college, let's face it: you MUST participate in extracurricular activities. Whoops, there goes self-study time! These are not necessarily boring activites -- but they're not intellectually stimulating, particularly when your school won't hear of math or science teams, engineering competitions, or anything like that. "It costs money? Screw that! Let's buy new pads for the football team! Maybe this season they'll win a game, unlike the past three!" Quite frankly, maybe gifted kids would be better off without school.
There's no new feature or new design that can be done only on Linux, and not on Microsoft.
He may be right at the moment . . . but there's still all the OLD stuff that can be done on Linux and not on Microsoft.
Example? I just recompiled my kernel two days ago, bitch!
That'd be truly ridiculous. They'd probably call it something like "Anno Domini" to emphasize it. Then you could abbreviate it "A.D."
wait a minute . . .
It's not your right to have a job no matter what. I apologize if this makes you feel badly. If you're a liability to the company, the company ought to fire you. They have no reason to keep you on. In fact, I'd say it's uncivilized for a company to behave otherwise (acting in the employee's interest and not its own).
Sorry; my last post was unclear. Such a submarine would use an MHD as a drive system, not for cooling. The sub would take the water in towards her bows; seawater contains ions, so the two fields would accelerate these ions towards the stern of the sub where the water is allowed to exhaust. It really would require no moving parts, and I can't think how a sub like this would generate a back-pressure wave like Jones hears in the movie/book. It would make the sub really vulnerable to magnetic anomaly detectors though.
They used a magnetohydrodynamic drive to push the ions in the seawater out the back of the sub with perpendicular magnetic and electric fields. The U.S. Navy is actually still working with this technology. You don't need electromagnets or lots of power; some large permanent magnets and rectified AC from your wall would work OK. So you could, in theory, make a pump for a water-cooled system using a MHD, and it would have no moving parts, but the magnetic field required (my friend and I built a fairly weak one for science fair and it took two 1.2T NdFeB magnets) might make the computer silent but not useable.
I think Dillo does this, or at least it did a couple years ago. It's really handy. If I recall correctly (at 5:30 AM), it shows an icon with the number of HTML bugs, and when you click on the icon, it lists the bugs for you. Absolutely wonderful.
Anyone else find it ironic that the processor itself is acclaimed for being open-sourced, among other things, while the podcast of the announcement is only available in Realplayer format?
There are metal safety wires that go across the hub between opposing pairs of blades; even if the hose clamps come off, the blades will just come out a little and wobble.
You just put your feet down on the ground. If you pedal backwards, the chain falls off.
Sorry; I meant no offense. I only ever really do security updates on stable for servers, and we have servers that are dedicated (one service per machine), so updates are few and far between. I was just curious about what you were using -- but if you run your servers on testing, OK.
". . . in the 3 minutes it took me to type this post, I could update 5 servers that hadn't been updated in a week."
Why are you updating your production servers once a week? Are there that many security problems with the distribution you're using?
Slightly offtopic, but the DSL version of dillo is not the standard version; it's patched to support frames and tabs . . . which makes it a heck of a lot nicer to use (albeit bigger) than the standard dillo.
Interestingly enough, this story was posted by the girlfriend of one of the young engineers.
Imagine a beowulf cluster . . . sorry, someone had to do it.
Al Gore's still around, sort of . . . so I don't see why not.
Physics and aerospace engineering, actually . . . but I meant that the entire current freshman class is pretty close to even.
My class here (2009) is something like 57-43 guys-girls.
A bunch of supposedly gifted students can't figure out how to study on their own? A bunch of "gifted" students can't find their own intellectual challenges? A bunch of "gifted" students have to wait to be told what to do before they can progress? Give me a flippin' break! If you are not being challenged in your high school classes, seek challenges elsewhere - it should be easy: you're the intellectual elite! If you choose to off yourself over *that*, you obviously haven't tried hard enough.
That's true . . . except when you have to be in the building, doing a specific mindless activity, no exceptions just because you could have done it just as easily eleven years earlier, for EIGHT HOURS A DAY. Ah, right, and if you want to attend a good college, let's face it: you MUST participate in extracurricular activities. Whoops, there goes self-study time! These are not necessarily boring activites -- but they're not intellectually stimulating, particularly when your school won't hear of math or science teams, engineering competitions, or anything like that. "It costs money? Screw that! Let's buy new pads for the football team! Maybe this season they'll win a game, unlike the past three!" Quite frankly, maybe gifted kids would be better off without school.
the "genre-defying series" of "role-playing games." Huh?
Too bad it won't work on my XP Volume license anymore without a crack . . .
To ease the transition.
There's no new feature or new design that can be done only on Linux, and not on Microsoft. He may be right at the moment . . . but there's still all the OLD stuff that can be done on Linux and not on Microsoft. Example? I just recompiled my kernel two days ago, bitch!
That'd be truly ridiculous. They'd probably call it something like "Anno Domini" to emphasize it. Then you could abbreviate it "A.D." wait a minute . . .
You'll switch your WHOLE FAMILY to Linux . . . when they are able to watch porn like they do on Windows?
Here, looks like you need this.
(hands over tinfoil hat)
We use some sort of AFS-based system at MIT, although I haven't had occasion to use one yet. http://web.mit.edu/accounts/www/lockers.html
It's not your right to have a job no matter what. I apologize if this makes you feel badly. If you're a liability to the company, the company ought to fire you. They have no reason to keep you on. In fact, I'd say it's uncivilized for a company to behave otherwise (acting in the employee's interest and not its own).
Sorry; my last post was unclear. Such a submarine would use an MHD as a drive system, not for cooling. The sub would take the water in towards her bows; seawater contains ions, so the two fields would accelerate these ions towards the stern of the sub where the water is allowed to exhaust. It really would require no moving parts, and I can't think how a sub like this would generate a back-pressure wave like Jones hears in the movie/book. It would make the sub really vulnerable to magnetic anomaly detectors though.
They used a magnetohydrodynamic drive to push the ions in the seawater out the back of the sub with perpendicular magnetic and electric fields. The U.S. Navy is actually still working with this technology. You don't need electromagnets or lots of power; some large permanent magnets and rectified AC from your wall would work OK. So you could, in theory, make a pump for a water-cooled system using a MHD, and it would have no moving parts, but the magnetic field required (my friend and I built a fairly weak one for science fair and it took two 1.2T NdFeB magnets) might make the computer silent but not useable.