VLC is a long way from a perfect DVD player - it's mostly good enough but has some irritating shortfalls - the main one I run into is subtitle handling is not as good as it should be (lack of support for embedded "Forced" subs is a real pain at times).
I've lived in Sheffield for just under 18 years. I love to visit London (tend to come down at least a couple of times a year) but I could never live there - too crowded and too noisy for my tastes.
Sheffield's a great place to live (like a lot of folk, I came here for the university and then never left).
Not just China - in the UK this was done too (at least it was when I was in school back in the 80's/90's) - I had several vaccinations done while I was in secondary school.
I would say these days most folk have HDTV's rather than SDTV (at least among my family and friends that's certainly true) but *most* of them don't have access to a HD playback device - there are a decent number of PS3 owners out there (including myself) that use that for BR playback but I only know one guy with a dedicated BR player - everyone else seems happy to stick to DVD (or Netflix/Lovefilm/Sky Now)
The service runs in the background and launches iTunes when the phone is plugged in. It's quite handy.
That's your opinion. I always found it to be incredibly annoying, as it launches that shitty app every time you plug it in. You can't charge your Ipad without firing off ITunes.
Yet another example of Apple's holier than thou concept of design: "We know better than you do, about how you want to use our products."
You can turn that behavior off on a per-device basis:
Plug in device and load iTunes
Find and select device in sidebar
On the device summary screen untick "automatically sync this $iShiny when connected"
You're slightly out of date here - as of late last year you can now pre-book online with Unlimited cards and then use the card machines in the foyer to collect them.
My wife and I have been Unlimited members for ages now and we find it's really handy, particularly as I work right next to the local Cineworld cinema, a 20-screen monster including an IMAX screen (not *true* IMAX but the IMAX Digital system which, while not as good, is certainly good enough to make it no longer worth the long drive to the nearest true IMAX theatre which is a couple of cities away). Unfortunately the IMAX screen isn't free with the Unlimited card but you do get a hefty discount.
There are a few value-adds to the subscription that are quite nice too - for example there are semi-regular preview shows that are open to cardholders only and a number of money-off deals for food both at the cinema and local restaurants.
FWIW I got in the habit of adding the disc number to the track number (both ID3 and filename). (ie "203 - foo.mp3" would be disk 2 track 3). I've found this method was most tolerant of a wide variety of players (some of which don't handle discnumber all that well).
In terms of file/folder structure I use "album artist/album name/track number - track name.ext"
MP3Tag on Windows (mentioned elsewhere) makes this trivial to do.
The Blaster worm back in 2003 - it used a vulnerability in the RPC system to spread. Caused absolute chaos within the University I worked in back then.
Respectfully, I suggest you try reading it a little more carefully:
"The last time I took the wheel in the UK I made a 220 km journey, over mostly M roads, in an hour"
If the journey took an hour and the distance was 220km then speed (well, mean speed over the distance) is 220km (which as you say is just under twice the speed limit on the M-roads he mentioned).
Personally I think that's a load of bollocks - you can get away with around 80mph on the motorway (limit is 70) without pissing off the police here in the UK but 137mph? no chance at all - that far in excess of the limit puts at risk of immediate ban and charges of dangerous driving are likely at that point.
Change back from what? From the original blog post one of the things the transit security wombles picked up on was that she had a different name to him:
The female transit cop found it more than a little bit suspicious that this woman claiming to be my wife didnâ(TM)t share my last name. She proceeded to question me about it further. âoeAnd sheâ(TM)s your wife? How long have you been married? And she refused to take your name? "WHY wouldn't she?â
.
Admittedly that's being pretty pedantic for which I apologize, but it did catch my attention...
No matter what your other achievements, if you appeared in Star Wars that is what gets talked about when you die.
I wonder if reports of Alec Guinness' death talked about "the actor who immortalised Obi-Wan Kenobi".
Yes, extensively the obits I read for Alec Guinness at the time of his death in 2000 focused on his role in Star Wars. I often wondered what he would have thought about that given his later distate for the role and the attention it brought on him.
Yep, thats fairly common - when a film first opens the majority of the money goes to the studio. As the run continues the split of revenue steadily moves in the cinema's favour - its one of the reasons why the concessions cost so bloody much (along with the usual 'captive audience' type stuff.
Its also one of the reasons a lot of the cinemas got pissed at Disney when they wanted to drastically bring forward the home-media release of Alice in Wonderland as would havecut off the period in which they make their money.
Hop was the easter one wasn't it? My guess it'll show up on DVD/BR/whatever else about a month before Easter - Seasonal films rarely come out on home media until the next iteration of the respective season roll around as theres not much interest in them otherwise.
Like I said, all other things being equal. They aren't - Firewire and USB handle data transfer in *very* different ways - I can't remember the specifics but from memory assuming a common total file size USB2 is faster for a small number of large files while Firewire is faster for lots of smaller files
Well, that's not exactly suprising - USB2 tops out at 480MBit while FW800 runs at.... yep, you guessed it, 800Mbit - All other things being equal you'd expect it to be roughly double the speed...
The only problem I've run into with BF2 is Punkbuster - I'm not certain why but the client built into the game can't update itself from a fresh install to the current version (at least it never works when I get nostalgic and install the game again). This meant I got kicked on connection from the vast majority of servers out there. After a bit of googling I ran into PBSetup which happily updated the PB files and it worked fine thereafter.
A quick googling has shown that you can still download dedicated server tools for BF2...
Before MS had an operating system called Windows no-one ever said 'I am going to buy a copy of Windows', or 'How do I install Windows', or 'Windows crashed'. The term 'Windows' was never used to refer to an operating system until MS named theirs. The term is not generic when referring to an OS. People may have said 'How do I close a window', etc but that was always in reference to either a physical window, or the UI element called a window, never an OS.
Of course they did - I remember the release of Windows 3 and 3.1 being big news (I remember news broadcasts about the release on TV) and they were windowing environments on top of DOS *not* an OS in their own right.
Personally I've gone with Ion-based nettops running Ubuntu linux and XBMC with vdpau enabled. VDPAU offloads the video processing onto the onboard graphics and means that the machine can handle playing HD streams quite happily. It was pretty much off the shelf and required next to no special skills to get it working. The machines are cheap (£150 and up) and almost silent.
VLC is a long way from a perfect DVD player - it's mostly good enough but has some irritating shortfalls - the main one I run into is subtitle handling is not as good as it should be (lack of support for embedded "Forced" subs is a real pain at times).
I've lived in Sheffield for just under 18 years. I love to visit London (tend to come down at least a couple of times a year) but I could never live there - too crowded and too noisy for my tastes. Sheffield's a great place to live (like a lot of folk, I came here for the university and then never left).
Not just China - in the UK this was done too (at least it was when I was in school back in the 80's/90's) - I had several vaccinations done while I was in secondary school.
I would say these days most folk have HDTV's rather than SDTV (at least among my family and friends that's certainly true) but *most* of them don't have access to a HD playback device - there are a decent number of PS3 owners out there (including myself) that use that for BR playback but I only know one guy with a dedicated BR player - everyone else seems happy to stick to DVD (or Netflix/Lovefilm/Sky Now)
And iOS too, for that matter :)
The service runs in the background and launches iTunes when the phone is plugged in. It's quite handy.
That's your opinion. I always found it to be incredibly annoying, as it launches that shitty app every time you plug it in. You can't charge your Ipad without firing off ITunes. Yet another example of Apple's holier than thou concept of design: "We know better than you do, about how you want to use our products."
You can turn that behavior off on a per-device basis:
The 3D becomes inclusive once you've been a member for a year as well, but you still have to pay the IMAX upgrade cost (about £4.50 I think).
You're slightly out of date here - as of late last year you can now pre-book online with Unlimited cards and then use the card machines in the foyer to collect them.
My wife and I have been Unlimited members for ages now and we find it's really handy, particularly as I work right next to the local Cineworld cinema, a 20-screen monster including an IMAX screen (not *true* IMAX but the IMAX Digital system which, while not as good, is certainly good enough to make it no longer worth the long drive to the nearest true IMAX theatre which is a couple of cities away). Unfortunately the IMAX screen isn't free with the Unlimited card but you do get a hefty discount.
There are a few value-adds to the subscription that are quite nice too - for example there are semi-regular preview shows that are open to cardholders only and a number of money-off deals for food both at the cinema and local restaurants.
FWIW I got in the habit of adding the disc number to the track number (both ID3 and filename). (ie "203 - foo.mp3" would be disk 2 track 3). I've found this method was most tolerant of a wide variety of players (some of which don't handle discnumber all that well).
In terms of file/folder structure I use "album artist/album name/track number - track name.ext"
MP3Tag on Windows (mentioned elsewhere) makes this trivial to do.
The Blaster worm back in 2003 - it used a vulnerability in the RPC system to spread. Caused absolute chaos within the University I worked in back then.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remembrance_poppy
Respectfully, I suggest you try reading it a little more carefully:
"The last time I took the wheel in the UK I made a 220 km journey, over mostly M roads, in an hour"
If the journey took an hour and the distance was 220km then speed (well, mean speed over the distance) is 220km (which as you say is just under twice the speed limit on the M-roads he mentioned).
Personally I think that's a load of bollocks - you can get away with around 80mph on the motorway (limit is 70) without pissing off the police here in the UK but 137mph? no chance at all - that far in excess of the limit puts at risk of immediate ban and charges of dangerous driving are likely at that point.
Change back from what? From the original blog post one of the things the transit security wombles picked up on was that she had a different name to him:
.
Admittedly that's being pretty pedantic for which I apologize, but it did catch my attention...
Think you'll find that was 1997 not 2007 he returned to Apple...
No matter what your other achievements, if you appeared in Star Wars that is what gets talked about when you die.
I wonder if reports of Alec Guinness' death talked about "the actor who immortalised Obi-Wan Kenobi".
Yes, extensively the obits I read for Alec Guinness at the time of his death in 2000 focused on his role in Star Wars. I often wondered what he would have thought about that given his later distate for the role and the attention it brought on him.
Yep, thats fairly common - when a film first opens the majority of the money goes to the studio. As the run continues the split of revenue steadily moves in the cinema's favour - its one of the reasons why the concessions cost so bloody much (along with the usual 'captive audience' type stuff. Its also one of the reasons a lot of the cinemas got pissed at Disney when they wanted to drastically bring forward the home-media release of Alice in Wonderland as would havecut off the period in which they make their money.
Hop was the easter one wasn't it? My guess it'll show up on DVD/BR/whatever else about a month before Easter - Seasonal films rarely come out on home media until the next iteration of the respective season roll around as theres not much interest in them otherwise.
The most recent Mini you can get the HDD out without pulling the logic board - you need to remove the WLAN antenna but thats it - have a look here for a teardown of the newly released model: http://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Mac-Mini-Mid-2011-Teardown/6131/1
Like I said, all other things being equal. They aren't - Firewire and USB handle data transfer in *very* different ways - I can't remember the specifics but from memory assuming a common total file size USB2 is faster for a small number of large files while Firewire is faster for lots of smaller files
Depends where he is, over here in the UK bible-basher is used in the same way bible-thumper is used in the US
Two countries, separated by a common language...
Well, that's not exactly suprising - USB2 tops out at 480MBit while FW800 runs at.... yep, you guessed it, 800Mbit - All other things being equal you'd expect it to be roughly double the speed...
The only problem I've run into with BF2 is Punkbuster - I'm not certain why but the client built into the game can't update itself from a fresh install to the current version (at least it never works when I get nostalgic and install the game again). This meant I got kicked on connection from the vast majority of servers out there. After a bit of googling I ran into PBSetup which happily updated the PB files and it worked fine thereafter.
A quick googling has shown that you can still download dedicated server tools for BF2...
Before MS had an operating system called Windows no-one ever said 'I am going to buy a copy of Windows', or 'How do I install Windows', or 'Windows crashed'. The term 'Windows' was never used to refer to an operating system until MS named theirs. The term is not generic when referring to an OS. People may have said 'How do I close a window', etc but that was always in reference to either a physical window, or the UI element called a window, never an OS.
Of course they did - I remember the release of Windows 3 and 3.1 being big news (I remember news broadcasts about the release on TV) and they were windowing environments on top of DOS *not* an OS in their own right.
Personally I've gone with Ion-based nettops running Ubuntu linux and XBMC with vdpau enabled. VDPAU offloads the video processing onto the onboard graphics and means that the machine can handle playing HD streams quite happily. It was pretty much off the shelf and required next to no special skills to get it working. The machines are cheap (£150 and up) and almost silent.
Yeah, it seems thats been fixed - the protected apps I wanted to put on but couldn't are all available to me now.