Yes. You can rebind your keys for TL2. I haven't played D3 since getting TL2 and I've been playing D3 since release. I'll probably skip D3 until patch 1.05 is released.
Re:Hate to put a damper on the celebration
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Diablo III Released
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· Score: 4, Funny
I doubt you will be missed. They obviously have sold enough copies to melt their servers without your purchase.
I don't care what the reasons are as long as my Obi 110 keeps giving me free VoIP using Google Voice. I have my Obi hooked into my home phone line so every phone in the house can use it to make and receive calls just like the landline service that I cancelled. It works great and helps me keep our mobile minutes on the minimum plan.
How would they receive the $50K anyway? Split it up between all members who are supposed to be anonymous?
Symantec/Police: Who do we make this check out to?
Anonymous: Cash.
Symantec/Police: Damn, foiled again!
Or people like me that are stuck with AT&T so a contract extension is meaningless. Also for each release AT&T has allowed early adopters to purchase the new model with no upgrade penalty.
When the iPhone 4 was released I sold my iPhone 3G for ~$250 and got a new iPhone 4 for $200.
When the iPhone 5 is released I can sell my iPhone 4 for ~$250 and get a new iPhone 5 for $200.
Why would you be checking fuel in a BGE? Do you have a small or mini? My large BGE can go over 20 hours on a load of lump at around 250F.
Before I got my Stoker I would get it stable at my target temperature. Then before bed I'd go out and open the bottom vent a small bit. I'd rather it creep up than down during the night and that usually worked very well. I'd also have the Maverick ET73 to check the temperatures, however running out of fuel was never a concern.
You hook a blower to the bottom "intake" of the smoker and you put a temperature probe at the grid where the meat is located. The controller turns the blower on to force air into the smoker which feeds the fire making it hotter. Once the probe reads the target temperature it shuts off the blower until the probe reading is below the target.
This is a DIY version of the Stoker from Rock's Barbeque (https://www.rocksbarbque.com/). It costs $340 to get the basics, pit thermometer, food thermometer, and fan. So add up the DIY costs and you could see some savings if your time is of no value or you just love doing things like this.
I purchased the Stoker before its WiFi version was announced. I found a cheap WiFi adapter and hooked it up the the Stoker's Ethernet port. Once connected you can monitor your pit and food temperatures and control the pit temperature using any web browser and/or a program called StokerLog. If you really wanted to you can access it via telnet and do the same things. My Stoker keeps my large Big Green Egg to with +/- 3 degrees of my pit probe target over what is usually a 16 hour cook. Using my iPhone I'm able to check the food probe temperature and if needed change the target pit temperature, all from anywhere I have data access. With StokerLog running on my laptop it will create a graph of your cook showing the temp probe temperatures and fan power cycles over time. It also has open lid detection where it will pause the temperature control until you close the lid and the smoker stabilizes, not that you should be opening the lid during the cook.
The main point of the ATCs is to give a steady pit temperature and allow you to get some sleep during the overnight cooks.
I have a local backup to an external HDD. Plus I have another external HDD that I seeded and took to my parents' house in another state.
I now have three copies of my important data, two local (original and backup) and one off-site with CrashPlan.
This gives me the ability to quickly restore using my local backup. If the house catches on fire then I can use the off-site to restore. I'd probably have it mailed back to me once the fire is put out...
If I had to deal with 20 discs each time I created a backup then I probably wouldn't do it or it would be way out of date. Now it is all automated plus has a low $/GB.
Nothing like backing up to ~20 discs.
I think I'll stick with my nightly backups to my external HDD and off-site external HDD connected with CrashPlan.
Probably symlinks for the Amazon purchased music only. If 100,000 users uploaded a file with the same name then it would be 100,000 individual copies of the same file.
I use an Obi110 device to make and receive calls on my home phone using Google Voice. It was the best $50 I've spent on a VoIP solution. It will remain free until at least the end of the year while GV is still free. Before that I used a Linksys PAP2 connected to an Asterisk server to do the same thing.
IIRC the Xbox 360 ban-hammer of fall 2009 took out the ability to install game discs to the hdd, use the Media Center Extender, and corrupted the user profiles so they cannot be transferred to another console (you have to restore from your Live online profile). A later update restored the install to hdd option, but the profile was still corrupt.
Actually it is pretty close. A DVD is about 8,000 MB and 10% of that is 800 MB.
Yes. You can rebind your keys for TL2. I haven't played D3 since getting TL2 and I've been playing D3 since release. I'll probably skip D3 until patch 1.05 is released.
I doubt you will be missed. They obviously have sold enough copies to melt their servers without your purchase.
True, but not full playback that supports Blu-ray menus.
I don't care what the reasons are as long as my Obi 110 keeps giving me free VoIP using Google Voice. I have my Obi hooked into my home phone line so every phone in the house can use it to make and receive calls just like the landline service that I cancelled. It works great and helps me keep our mobile minutes on the minimum plan.
How would they receive the $50K anyway? Split it up between all members who are supposed to be anonymous? Symantec/Police: Who do we make this check out to? Anonymous: Cash. Symantec/Police: Damn, foiled again!
It actually costs more to fly unmanned aircraft. You now have two support teams, one in country fielding the aircraft and another flying the thing.
Your RT-N16 must be different than mine. It is only 2.4 GHz N, not dual band.
Or people like me that are stuck with AT&T so a contract extension is meaningless. Also for each release AT&T has allowed early adopters to purchase the new model with no upgrade penalty.
When the iPhone 4 was released I sold my iPhone 3G for ~$250 and got a new iPhone 4 for $200.
When the iPhone 5 is released I can sell my iPhone 4 for ~$250 and get a new iPhone 5 for $200.
So yes, I'd like $50 and a brand new phone.
Please send an invite to bryansj @ the G.
Looking for an invite here... bryansj at the G.
I'd say that the Maverick ET-732 is better.
Bob's BBQ Shack is too far away from where I live. My Stoker would pay for itself in a single meal considering the airfare cost from ATL to NY.
Why would you be checking fuel in a BGE? Do you have a small or mini? My large BGE can go over 20 hours on a load of lump at around 250F. Before I got my Stoker I would get it stable at my target temperature. Then before bed I'd go out and open the bottom vent a small bit. I'd rather it creep up than down during the night and that usually worked very well. I'd also have the Maverick ET73 to check the temperatures, however running out of fuel was never a concern.
You hook a blower to the bottom "intake" of the smoker and you put a temperature probe at the grid where the meat is located. The controller turns the blower on to force air into the smoker which feeds the fire making it hotter. Once the probe reads the target temperature it shuts off the blower until the probe reading is below the target.
This is a DIY version of the Stoker from Rock's Barbeque (https://www.rocksbarbque.com/). It costs $340 to get the basics, pit thermometer, food thermometer, and fan. So add up the DIY costs and you could see some savings if your time is of no value or you just love doing things like this. I purchased the Stoker before its WiFi version was announced. I found a cheap WiFi adapter and hooked it up the the Stoker's Ethernet port. Once connected you can monitor your pit and food temperatures and control the pit temperature using any web browser and/or a program called StokerLog. If you really wanted to you can access it via telnet and do the same things. My Stoker keeps my large Big Green Egg to with +/- 3 degrees of my pit probe target over what is usually a 16 hour cook. Using my iPhone I'm able to check the food probe temperature and if needed change the target pit temperature, all from anywhere I have data access. With StokerLog running on my laptop it will create a graph of your cook showing the temp probe temperatures and fan power cycles over time. It also has open lid detection where it will pause the temperature control until you close the lid and the smoker stabilizes, not that you should be opening the lid during the cook. The main point of the ATCs is to give a steady pit temperature and allow you to get some sleep during the overnight cooks.
Just make it USB powered and then you can connect it to your laptop's USB ports... no more cables!
I have a local backup to an external HDD. Plus I have another external HDD that I seeded and took to my parents' house in another state. I now have three copies of my important data, two local (original and backup) and one off-site with CrashPlan. This gives me the ability to quickly restore using my local backup. If the house catches on fire then I can use the off-site to restore. I'd probably have it mailed back to me once the fire is put out... If I had to deal with 20 discs each time I created a backup then I probably wouldn't do it or it would be way out of date. Now it is all automated plus has a low $/GB.
Nothing like backing up to ~20 discs. I think I'll stick with my nightly backups to my external HDD and off-site external HDD connected with CrashPlan.
Wow, a 35 year old CD. Where is that time machine located?
Probably symlinks for the Amazon purchased music only. If 100,000 users uploaded a file with the same name then it would be 100,000 individual copies of the same file.
From the PS3's ability to be linked together...
I use an Obi110 device to make and receive calls on my home phone using Google Voice. It was the best $50 I've spent on a VoIP solution. It will remain free until at least the end of the year while GV is still free. Before that I used a Linksys PAP2 connected to an Asterisk server to do the same thing.
IIRC the Xbox 360 ban-hammer of fall 2009 took out the ability to install game discs to the hdd, use the Media Center Extender, and corrupted the user profiles so they cannot be transferred to another console (you have to restore from your Live online profile). A later update restored the install to hdd option, but the profile was still corrupt.
I see what you did there.