If they were to account for the duped articles and inherently duped comments, I think that the number would be significantly less - somewhere around 2^22
These are the dying pleas from strategy officers. Although I hate to mention it, there are some serious (kernel patch protection) security improvements for Vista - and if they cannot adapt to the way their 'piggy backing' is being jeopardized, they'll just have to crumple. They are however well known security groups, so entering into new medias wouldn't be a terrible idea.
And who says their gonna be losing business within the first, one, two, or three years after Vista's release. What about home users and, the elderly.
There is no excuse for the diabetes pre-epidemic, that is certain to grow rapidly in the next 10+ years. There are definitely safer ways to sweeten foods and drink products, but the higher margins are of course with the good old cheap-o-corn syrup extract, by-products. There has got to be some regulation here sooner or latter, or are kids are in for a horrible middle age.
'It looks like Microsoft was really testing the waters here, sort of pushing the limits of antitrust and decided they probably couldn't cross that line just yet.'
Just like I test the waters before I dump the bodies... Oh, wait I better not cross that line
Firefox 2.0 has been more than stable for me. I've been using it for maybe 2-3 months now to do everything I need to do online. I must have visited hundreds of new sites, never encountered with 1.5.x. Noticeable performance enhancements for style sheets, and in my opinion, a much more intuitive 'tab' layout. I think it's an answer for IE7, ready to ship.
I am not one for more nukes anywhere on earth, but think about it...
Realistically this is an 'upper hand' move towards South Korea, and any opposing countries for that matter, which really are very high considering North Korea is one of the most successful communist states in the world.
North Korea has what some might call a penis envy towards many of the nations that oppose their regime. But, believe it or not, they have a very democratic approach for citizens to voice their opinion.
I would be highly sceptical of any provocative nuclear attacks any time in the future. There is just too much at stake, even an 'insane dictator' would be hesitant to instigate half the UN into militarization. But that's me. Why a country would need such military muscle is up to the people, for a lot of nations at least.
Re:So where's the .torrent?
on
IE7 Leaked
·
· Score: -1
Anything else to help you with sir?
Re:So where's the .torrent?
on
IE7 Leaked
·
· Score: -1
I agree with most of your post. But what happens when "SmartBox" manufacturers are able to bring the total cost for the dealerships down to near or equal the cost of loss from late payments, bounced checks, etc. Some cost benefit analysis in two or three years may put these units into the majority of car dealerships.
- Clippy, the "looks like you wanna print an envelope" I wont leave you alone fellow.
It will be interesting to see if Microsoft will use their entrance to the HPC market as a second chance to utilize true open XML, and play well with the others. To survive this market takes a lot of teamwork with proprietary vendors. This could be Microsoft's attempt at saving face.
The ATM was outside of the bank, where the "executive" worked.. Maybe he meant manager.
I thought Larry Ellison hates cloud computing?
Who procrastinated on closing the 'span' tag?
If they were to account for the duped articles and inherently duped comments, I think that the number would be significantly less - somewhere around 2^22
Hell, I can't even tell if this is a dupe!
I wonder how Ballmer pronounces SuSE, something in between
"SOOSAY" and.. "OMG Schmidt! we have linux now! Die *chair toss* die"
These are the dying pleas from strategy officers. Although I hate to mention it, there are some serious (kernel patch protection) security improvements for Vista - and if they cannot adapt to the way their 'piggy backing' is being jeopardized, they'll just have to crumple. They are however well known security groups, so entering into new medias wouldn't be a terrible idea.
And who says their gonna be losing business within the first, one, two, or three years after Vista's release. What about home users and, the elderly.
- cam
Harmless, speedy download... Why no slashdotting, you want web standards?
There is no excuse for the diabetes pre-epidemic, that is certain to grow rapidly in the next 10+ years. There are definitely safer ways to sweeten foods and drink products, but the higher margins are of course with the good old cheap-o-corn syrup extract, by-products. There has got to be some regulation here sooner or latter, or are kids are in for a horrible middle age.
'It looks like Microsoft was really testing the waters here, sort of pushing the limits of antitrust and decided they probably couldn't cross that line just yet.'
Just like I test the waters before I dump the bodies... Oh, wait I better not cross that line
Bigger refrigerators hold more food!
This is completely impossible, and a waste of resources from Yahoo and everyone involved. Sounds cool though.
Firefox 2.0 has been more than stable for me. I've been using it for maybe 2-3 months now to do everything I need to do online. I must have visited hundreds of new sites, never encountered with 1.5.x. Noticeable performance enhancements for style sheets, and in my opinion, a much more intuitive 'tab' layout. I think it's an answer for IE7, ready to ship.
I am not one for more nukes anywhere on earth, but think about it...
Realistically this is an 'upper hand' move towards South Korea, and any opposing countries for that matter, which really are very high considering North Korea is one of the most successful communist states in the world. North Korea has what some might call a penis envy towards many of the nations that oppose their regime. But, believe it or not, they have a very democratic approach for citizens to voice their opinion. I would be highly sceptical of any provocative nuclear attacks any time in the future. There is just too much at stake, even an 'insane dictator' would be hesitant to instigate half the UN into militarization. But that's me. Why a country would need such military muscle is up to the people, for a lot of nations at least.
Anything else to help you with sir?
Here you go...
it runs on linux...
I agree with most of your post. But what happens when "SmartBox" manufacturers are able to bring the total cost for the dealerships down to near or equal the cost of loss from late payments, bounced checks, etc. Some cost benefit analysis in two or three years may put these units into the majority of car dealerships.
Just use the planned "TPC 360" SmartBox by Microsoft, only $199 per unit wholesale.
Order now and receive free box or string with your purchase!
You forgot
- Clippy, the "looks like you wanna print an envelope" I wont leave you alone fellow.
It will be interesting to see if Microsoft will use their entrance to the HPC market as a second chance to utilize true open XML, and play well with the others. To survive this market takes a lot of teamwork with proprietary vendors. This could be Microsoft's attempt at saving face.
You insensitive clod!
My computing engine needs an oil change!
how can this thing possibly be any larger than two maybe three feet? ;)
we can no longer steal cable either? =)
It's only 10x easier to pirate the digital media, but it is 100x easier to seed the torrent =)
Can it travel back in time?