"Sure. Mozart had an impact. Then he died when he was thirty five. We'll never know if he was really any good because we'll never know whether the stuff he would have produced when he was fifty or sixty would be just as good."
Ugh, chances are, you definitely have no idea what you're talking about.
Considering Mozart, I'm assuming you're talking about W.A. Mozart, composed OVER 600 COMPOSITIONS
I had to write a research paper last year for my freshman English class, and I chose to write the paper on Digital Rights Management (and why it's bad). Obviously I had to defend my stance, which wasn't hard, except for the "making it easy to understand for non-technical people" part. It was easy finding a real world (non-technical) situation that a non-technical reader to relate to, but explaining, say, applications of DRM to digital music and rootkits (to explain the big Sony BMG rootkit fiasco). I know I'm a pretty bad writer anyway, but having to explain things to a big general audience that are easily understood by fellow peers is, well, hard. The best thing for technical people to do is to read a dictionary regularly...or at least learn new words frequently. The more ways you're able to express something the easier it'll be for you to when your boss asks you why you can't, I dunno, plug a toaster into a computer.
The FreeBSD build works great. I'm using it as of now. Although, some of the mirrors had the the names of packages incorrect and when I installed Opera the script complained about a missing icon directory..but it works fine so far..
I recently graduated high school and am currently pursuing a math degree...My high school didn't really have any decent computer classes, and offered zero programming classes. The computer classes that we did have you could basically not do anything and still get an A.
But I mean, you don't need a school to learn programming. I started in elementary school with the second edition of Kernighan & Ritchie's C programming language book and I've been hooked on coding ever since.
Actually, I'm pretty sure Mega Man has something like...15+ sequels.
There's the classic series (8 games total)
and the "X" series which is basically a continuation of the classic series (which is also up to 8)
plus various runoffs on GBA (Mega Man Zero, etc.) I don't know how many are in the zero series, but I'm very certain all of the games in the classic,zero, and X series tie into each other plot wise..
Heh, I could DEFINITELY see a little girl swinging around a baritone saxophone all over the place, and not living to tell about it.
Plus the saxophone that is played on the show SOUNDS like a tenor sax:-)
I really don't think they cared what it looked like as long as it resembled some sort of saxophone.
Linux works GREAT on older hardware, as well as probably all of the BSDs.
I actually prefer FreeBSD though, since it installs and runs on a plethora of old hardware without any hassle.
I remember I had two 30GB harddrives running in an old pentium I, packard bell box (with 32MB of RAM) running FreeBSD. I don't know why I did that...I probably just thought it was cool at the time.
I bolded it because it was an important part of the definition, to help show emphasis. I had no intention of using that to make what was stated in the article clearer..:-)
Sort of like.
"Hey, that guy has a very big ass!"
I did too many electrolysis problems in chemistry for it just to be a "seperation of Hydrogen and Oxygen".
If that statement were actually true, it would've made life easier for me:-\.
"Engineers have tried to overcome these limitations for many years now. Nuclear submarines and the international space station use systems that generate Oxygen from water by performing 'Electrolysis', which is chemical separation of Oxygen from Hydrogen." ~From http://www.isracast.com/tech_news/310505_tech.htm
The last time I checked..electrolysis was just forcing a current through a cell to cause a nonspontaneous chemical reaction..
They went a little too far with trying to simplify that..or they just didn't know what they were talking about...
"Sure. Mozart had an impact. Then he died when he was thirty five. We'll never know if he was really any good because we'll never know whether the stuff he would have produced when he was fifty or sixty would be just as good."
a rt
Ugh, chances are, you definitely have no idea what you're talking about.
Considering Mozart, I'm assuming you're talking about W.A. Mozart, composed OVER 600 COMPOSITIONS
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfgang_Amadeus_Moz
I'm pretty sure people who know what they're talking about have a good idea of his compositional abilities.
I had to write a research paper last year for my freshman English class, and I chose to write the paper on Digital Rights Management (and why it's bad). Obviously I had to defend my stance, which wasn't hard, except for the "making it easy to understand for non-technical people" part. It was easy finding a real world (non-technical) situation that a non-technical reader to relate to, but explaining, say, applications of DRM to digital music and rootkits (to explain the big Sony BMG rootkit fiasco).
I know I'm a pretty bad writer anyway, but having to explain things to a big general audience that are easily understood by fellow peers is, well, hard. The best thing for technical people to do is to read a dictionary regularly...or at least learn new words frequently. The more ways you're able to express something the easier it'll be for you to when your boss asks you why you can't, I dunno, plug a toaster into a computer.
The FreeBSD build works great. I'm using it as of now. Although, some of the mirrors had the the names of packages incorrect and when I installed Opera the script complained about a missing icon directory..but it works fine so far..
But I mean, you don't need a school to learn programming. I started in elementary school with the second edition of Kernighan & Ritchie's C programming language book and I've been hooked on coding ever since.
There's the classic series (8 games total)
and the "X" series which is basically a continuation of the classic series (which is also up to 8)
plus various runoffs on GBA (Mega Man Zero, etc.) I don't know how many are in the zero series, but I'm very certain all of the games in the classic,zero, and X series tie into each other plot wise..
Heh, I could DEFINITELY see a little girl swinging around a baritone saxophone all over the place, and not living to tell about it. :-)
Plus the saxophone that is played on the show SOUNDS like a tenor sax
I really don't think they cared what it looked like as long as it resembled some sort of saxophone.
I wonder if this new Origami product will be capable of playing paper mario...
Linux works GREAT on older hardware, as well as probably all of the BSDs. I actually prefer FreeBSD though, since it installs and runs on a plethora of old hardware without any hassle. I remember I had two 30GB harddrives running in an old pentium I, packard bell box (with 32MB of RAM) running FreeBSD. I don't know why I did that...I probably just thought it was cool at the time.
death due to pimp accessories is pretty bad ass.
I bolded it because it was an important part of the definition, to help show emphasis. I had no intention of using that to make what was stated in the article clearer.. :-)
:-\.
Sort of like.
"Hey, that guy has a very big ass!"
I did too many electrolysis problems in chemistry for it just to be a "seperation of Hydrogen and Oxygen".
If that statement were actually true, it would've made life easier for me
"Engineers have tried to overcome these limitations for many years now. Nuclear submarines and the international space station use systems that generate Oxygen from water by performing 'Electrolysis', which is chemical separation of Oxygen from Hydrogen." ~From http://www.isracast.com/tech_news/310505_tech.htm
The last time I checked..electrolysis was just forcing a current through a cell to cause a nonspontaneous chemical reaction.. They went a little too far with trying to simplify that..or they just didn't know what they were talking about...