RoadRunner now has fairly detailed instructions on dealing with the "why are you blocking my email" situation. The linked example is for residential users. Commercial users complaining about blocks are referred to their own ISP and told to have them get in touch with RoadRunner (this may be just for businesses that have been misidentified as being in a residential IP block).
Having a web-based email account can come in handy, especially if you choose a reputable (no hotguy68734@) handle and a known provider (Yahoo, Fastmail).Besides, this gives you an alternate means of contact if your own mail servers become unavailable (blackout, crash, backhoe).
The public needs to be made aware that 'A' isn't SCO's code, not given the license(s) it's been released under. It doesn't matter that 'B' is really in Linux (2.4) if 'A' isn't SCO's code (in the 'hasn't been freely licensed' sense).
Gunship on the C64 was awesome. I spent the better part of a semester down the hall locked up with Gunship. We saw a couple of MiGs, but nobody ever shot one down with anyone watching.
Jumping puzzles can reeeeeeally suck. I truly loved Kingdom Hearts because it had tough jumping puzzles and no falling damage. Well, a few falls kill you but if you can see the bottom you're usually ok. I found this to be very liberating, since it took a lot of the fear out of jumping around like a madman (you do get in some fights near bottomless drops, but towards the very end). It was also pretty cool, falling a great distance and landing safely.
I'm still used to the old Claris conventions. Option to move a word, command to move to end of line, shift to select in that fashion. And up and down worked too. It was great for manipulation text from the keyboard. I really should file a Mozilla bug about this.
That's extactly why I bought a PS2. I could have run a cable from my PC to my TV to watch DVDs on the couch. Nahhh. There were some games I wanted to play (Gundam notably, even if they all suck, and other anime-themed games, plus Kingdom Hearts and FF X), so picking up a PS2 made sense. The fact that the company I work for has Sony as a client merely provided some bonuses later on.
They sure did. I "ran" a media lab at a university for a couple semesters, and the department just wouldn't spring for more than one copy. So students would turn Appletalk off and fire up Photoshop (4.0 if memory serves, these were 6100s). Then they'd try and print and come crying.
Tell me, exactly what do I put into my.sig to keep them from indexing my correspondence ?
robots.txt is a well-established standard. Microsoft has been analyzing Usenet and mailing list postings *without* publicizing what the equivalent is for their system.
All the Rendezvous services (printer sharing, iTunes, iChat et al) are off by default. You have to tell it you're online, you have to tun on msuic sharing.
It's all off. In the sense that I haven't read the book. Yet.
Yup. I'm one of the happy crowd who preordered it. I could see a pattern in magazine previews of areas of the game that were either talked around or panned (sadly, rare).
I can just about manage to excuse everone who gave it a good preview though. It has a lot of promise. If they'd "shipped it when it [was] done" it could have been the game of the year. I mean, the developers *tried* to give us the Matrix experience in a console game.
If they put another six months into it and released a "gold edition" when Revolutions comes out... I'd seriously consider picking up a *finished* version of this game. For, like $20 mind you. $30 if they find a good way to tie in a little Revolutions material, a couple levels would be nice.
There you go, a short game based on Revolutions, with a finished version of the game on the disc. The sets are gone, but just bluescreen the actors. Bill the costs of finishing the engine to the new project, polish the old levels, the in-engine cutscenes take care of themselves when the engine gets fixed.
Call it the "We're sorry" edition. Enter the Matrix: Revised.
If this is ethereal, then the MTU must be 420. This is some weird stuff.
I can't wait till the books start coming out. Ken Burns will do a documentary that weighs in at over 175 hours; the computerized renditions of SCOs legal theories will be classified under Schedule I for their hallucinatory effects.
Michael Moore will do a Broadway musical that runs longer than Cats and the Producers combined. But it's only in production for six weeks:-)
Ubi gets at least one thing right, their WW2 flight sim Forgotten Battlesgets good support from Ubi, mostly by letting the developers have useful amounts of leeway and in introducing free goodies.
1. Buy a Mac. Get HTML editing software of your choice. 2. Format your HTML as beautifully as possible. 3. Print it to PDF. Optimize PDF as desired. 4. Post HTML and PDF to website.
Four steps, one of them expensive, two of them you'd do anyway. One of them supports shareware.
It's the "get [it] right first" attitude that I really like. I'm starting to thing of the yearly releases as buying an OS that really is worth the $300 even if it did take three years, that's faster than Daikatana or DNF [1] made it out the door [2].
[1] Duke Nukem Forever will be released the same day that Arnold Schwarzenegger is elected governor of California.
[2] And you'll have more fun with the chess game that comes with OS X.
If memory serves, the receiver is the part with the serial number, so some jurisdictions may consider that to be legally the entire gun.
I'm voting for that !
RoadRunner now has fairly detailed instructions on dealing with the "why are you blocking my email" situation. The linked example is for residential users. Commercial users complaining about blocks are referred to their own ISP and told to have them get in touch with RoadRunner (this may be just for businesses that have been misidentified as being in a residential IP block).
Having a web-based email account can come in handy, especially if you choose a reputable (no hotguy68734@) handle and a known provider (Yahoo, Fastmail).Besides, this gives you an alternate means of contact if your own mail servers become unavailable (blackout, crash, backhoe).
Calling a RoadRunner 800# might have helped.
The public needs to be made aware that 'A' isn't SCO's code, not given the license(s) it's been released under. It doesn't matter that 'B' is really in Linux (2.4) if 'A' isn't SCO's code (in the 'hasn't been freely licensed' sense).
You mean that wizard over there ?
Gunship on the C64 was awesome. I spent the better part of a semester down the hall locked up with Gunship. We saw a couple of MiGs, but nobody ever shot one down with anyone watching.
Jumping puzzles can reeeeeeally suck. I truly loved Kingdom Hearts because it had tough jumping puzzles and no falling damage. Well, a few falls kill you but if you can see the bottom you're usually ok. I found this to be very liberating, since it took a lot of the fear out of jumping around like a madman (you do get in some fights near bottomless drops, but towards the very end). It was also pretty cool, falling a great distance and landing safely.
I'm still used to the old Claris conventions. Option to move a word, command to move to end of line, shift to select in that fashion. And up and down worked too. It was great for manipulation text from the keyboard. I really should file a Mozilla bug about this.
That's extactly why I bought a PS2. I could have run a cable from my PC to my TV to watch DVDs on the couch. Nahhh. There were some games I wanted to play (Gundam notably, even if they all suck, and other anime-themed games, plus Kingdom Hearts and FF X), so picking up a PS2 made sense. The fact that the company I work for has Sony as a client merely provided some bonuses later on.
They sure did. I "ran" a media lab at a university for a couple semesters, and the department just wouldn't spring for more than one copy. So students would turn Appletalk off and fire up Photoshop (4.0 if memory serves, these were 6100s). Then they'd try and print and come crying.
I haven't tried it on Office X, but "all ones" was a valid Office 2001 site license code.
Re-link the kernel to change the IP address ?
I thought NT4 was bad...
Ah yes, the old "sounds right" rule.
nt
Freudian what ?
Tell me, exactly what do I put into my .sig to keep them from indexing my correspondence ?
robots.txt is a well-established standard. Microsoft has been analyzing Usenet and mailing list postings *without* publicizing what the equivalent is for their system.
That's what bothers people.
All the Rendezvous services (printer sharing, iTunes, iChat et al) are off by default. You have to tell it you're online, you have to tun on msuic sharing.
It's all off. In the sense that I haven't read the book. Yet.
You just keeeeeeeep saying that.
So how long until he's burning CD-Rs in his den ?
Yup. I'm one of the happy crowd who preordered it. I could see a pattern in magazine previews of areas of the game that were either talked around or panned (sadly, rare).
I can just about manage to excuse everone who gave it a good preview though. It has a lot of promise. If they'd "shipped it when it [was] done" it could have been the game of the year. I mean, the developers *tried* to give us the Matrix experience in a console game.
If they put another six months into it and released a "gold edition" when Revolutions comes out... I'd seriously consider picking up a *finished* version of this game. For, like $20 mind you. $30 if they find a good way to tie in a little Revolutions material, a couple levels would be nice.
There you go, a short game based on Revolutions, with a finished version of the game on the disc. The sets are gone, but just bluescreen the actors. Bill the costs of finishing the engine to the new project, polish the old levels, the in-engine cutscenes take care of themselves when the engine gets fixed.
Call it the "We're sorry" edition. Enter the Matrix: Revised.
If this is ethereal, then the MTU must be 420. This is some weird stuff.
:-)
I can't wait till the books start coming out. Ken Burns will do a documentary that weighs in at over 175 hours; the computerized renditions of SCOs legal theories will be classified under Schedule I for their hallucinatory effects.
Michael Moore will do a Broadway musical that runs longer than Cats and the Producers combined. But it's only in production for six weeks
Hmmm Jock Mormons. Well, BYU usually has a good football team. Then there was Steve Young...
But maybe it is a good example, I don't miss Steve like I do Joe. And he did get a law degree...
Ubi gets at least one thing right, their WW2 flight sim Forgotten Battlesgets good support from Ubi, mostly by letting the developers have useful amounts of leeway and in introducing free goodies.
1. Buy a Mac. Get HTML editing software of your choice.
2. Format your HTML as beautifully as possible.
3. Print it to PDF. Optimize PDF as desired.
4. Post HTML and PDF to website.
Four steps, one of them expensive, two of them you'd do anyway. One of them supports shareware.
It's the "get [it] right first" attitude that I really like. I'm starting to thing of the yearly releases as buying an OS that really is worth the $300 even if it did take three years, that's faster than Daikatana or DNF [1] made it out the door [2].
[1] Duke Nukem Forever will be released the same day that Arnold Schwarzenegger is elected governor of California.
[2] And you'll have more fun with the chess game that comes with OS X.