Wouldn't be too hard to implement, look into the Design Patterns book for some good ideas. Easily implementable in a scripting language with a GUI interface...
Is really here. Not to mention that ftp.freebsd.org isn't in the US of A anymore (traceroute it, no, really!). There are also the wonderful contributions of the Japanese FreeBSD users, like PAO, acpi,... (There are tons of Japanese FreeBSD books). The list goes on.
I'm saying that the disputed software was not used at all. Whether or not the police would have questioned him is an entirely different subject. What happened here is no different from randomly publishing somebody's photo from a public security camera.
Woman believes (mistakenly) that guy in picture is her ex and calls police.
Police go after man
Man gets angry
I don't see any mention of face-recognition software anywhere in that list (nor the article). The fact that the cameras were on the street is largely inconsequential because I've seen cameras on many, many, many pieces of public (and private) property in the Seattle area. None of these are hooked up to face-recognition software (AFAIK) and they can be used to find criminals just as easily.
Yeah! Now we can have a Mozilla-native sidebar panel rather than having to go through some kind of gateway RSS->RDF. This will be a big win. I'll have to code one now as an example...
BTW, RSS1.0 is RDF, not pseudo-RDF like some of the other RDF versions. There's info on dmoz.org, but I'm lazy. Find it yourself.
The MMPI is quite comprehensive. It is designed so that it is effectively impossible to hide anything. My psych professor said that he took one and (knowing how the test was designed) he tried to cover up that he had a major traumatic event in his life (which he did). The test showed it anyhow.
The test won't, however, say that you are a serial killer or homicidal maniac...
The true benefit of BSD code is that you don't have to publish your source if you use somebody else's code. Depending on the version of the BSD license you may have to obey the advertising clause, but other than that you're home free. Nothing to give back _ever_.
Yep, you heard it, this device uses Mozilla to render pages (or probably more likely just the gecko core functionality.)
Makes you wonder why all these people have been saying Mozilla is dead, Mozilla sucks, Mozilla is bloated. A non-released product chosen over IE as an embedded browser is certainly not going to die very soon.
Yep, this very page was posted with the 2000090604 nightly. And we are rapidly approaching M18 (perhaps even today.) Of course we'll get there sooner if you pop over onto irc.mozilla.org and join #mozillazine and start squashing bugs.
A recent Popular Science had an article on supersonic torpedoes that utilized cavitation, and they acted essentially like a gun. The nature of cavitation weaponry means you have very little control surface in the water, as the torpedo is surrounded by an air pocket, except for at the nose. If cavitation torpedoes are going to do any turning I doubt it will be any faster than 1% per foot for quite some time.
XML would be a good way to get things like this done. If you could find a common namespace applications would easily be able to converse with each other to use only what they want.
XPI is mozilla's cross (X) Platform Installer. It uses a combination of zip files with javascript and RDF to keep track of what you have installed so you can easily add and remove pieces of the browser.
What uses XPI? Well, the win32 and linux installers use it to install the application. This means that if you don't want to install ChatZilla (which rocks by the way, full IRC client in a 400k install, IIRC) you don't have to. Same with mail/news. Even the PSM comes as an XPI. And skins? Skins are wrappable in XPI.
Want more information about XPI? There's a tutorial written by kerz at MozillaZine
Oh, and by the way, I use Moz full time, and so does most everybody else on #mozillazine (irc.mozilla.org)
If you think that mozilla is wallowing under the problems of feature creep you are doing one of two things. 1) Smoking crack. 2) So uninformed you should be taken out in the streets and beaten with a wet noodle.
In three months of nightlies I have yet to see a new feature come into mozilla. What I have seen is buggy features become working like they should.
Recently skin switching has made its way into mozilla. This feature has been planned for since the beginning of the XPFE project with its XUL and whatnot. Skin switching is the closest thing to a `feature' that I have seen making it into the tree since M16.
Only a few more of what most people term `features' (you people really should go look at BugZilla the bug tracking system for Moz to see what is a new feature and what has been planed for) that are going to make it into moz are proxy auto-config, SVG, MathML and several others that only aren't in the nightlies because the builders don't want to push larger binaries. In fact most of these are almost done, but just have a few bugs to be worked out before they can be released unto the masses.
Remeber, before you open your mouth, keep your facts straight, check out bugzilla to find out what features are `creeping' and what appear to be creeping because you don't bother to adjust your build configuration.
The author is a daily downloader of Moz nighlies and finds it very strange why other people don't think moz is so very cool
For exploration there really is nothing better than the old text parsers like adventure, zork, HHGttG, old Sierra games, etc. They just have that extra bit of exploration to them because you can't just mouse around the screen all the time, you have to think about what you are doing. That barrier is what makes them fun, the thought involved, not the oh this looks cool what does it do when I click here element.
What about Yuri Gagarin? He was the first person into space! Have some respect when it comes to space travel and try to think about who did what first.
I agree that you use the best tool for the best job. And I feel that mozilla is the best web browser available. For me this isn't about standards support, its about features. With Moz I can get:
MapQuest maps from the sidebar, or any of several other apps just from two clicks. The extensible nature of mozilla allows many powerful things to be done with the sidebar. Its like having a mini-app inside your browser.
More control over my browsing experience through cookie managment and image managment (no banners).
Full NS4.x plugin compatability. Yes it works even now. Today and installed and used the flash plugin. It works well.
I feel that the disadvantages of the minor instabilities that occur from time to time (up till today's builds everything was very smooth) are very minor compared to the configurability I get from mozilla. I started on mozilla due to its standards support. I've stayed with mozilla because it is a fast, powerful web browser, among other things.
One problem with today's builds, crash on submit. Your comment will make it, but mozilla dies in the process. Maybe wait a few hours for the next build.
There is a flaw in your logic. How do you know what is in the bag? How do you know it isn't somebody's gym bag full of dirty laundry? There is no way you can tell unless you invade somebody's privacy, and there is no reason to invade privacy unless suspicious things start happening.
Being online just gives new methods of doing the same thing poeple have been doing for Millenia. It has been demonstrated that some things are always going to be able to slip around the backs of whoever the authority is.
No. He would not have. Part of almost any computer policy any work you work (probably the place where you work too) says that company resources may not be used for personal use. Lets see:
He had a university computer
He was using it for personal use (and quite a bit no less, thousands of pictures!)
End of story. It does not matter if it was a laptop he was hauling around with him or if he was in his office. He was using company property for personal use. Violation of policy and grounds for termination.
Wouldn't be too hard to implement, look into the Design Patterns book for some good ideas. Easily implementable in a scripting language with a GUI interface...
Is really here. Not to mention that ftp.freebsd.org isn't in the US of A anymore (traceroute it, no, really!). There are also the wonderful contributions of the Japanese FreeBSD users, like PAO, acpi, ... (There are tons of Japanese FreeBSD books). The list goes on.
I'm saying that the disputed software was not used at all. Whether or not the police would have questioned him is an entirely different subject. What happened here is no different from randomly publishing somebody's photo from a public security camera.
- Police install cameras
- Police take picture of guy
- Police put guy's picture in a magazine
- Woman buys magazine, reads article
- Woman believes (mistakenly) that guy in picture is her ex and calls police.
- Police go after man
- Man gets angry
I don't see any mention of face-recognition software anywhere in that list (nor the article). The fact that the cameras were on the street is largely inconsequential because I've seen cameras on many, many, many pieces of public (and private) property in the Seattle area. None of these are hooked up to face-recognition software (AFAIK) and they can be used to find criminals just as easily.Why didn't FreeBSD also get a letter? (or did it? I'm not in the lists).
Yeah! Now we can have a Mozilla-native sidebar panel rather than having to go through some kind of gateway RSS->RDF. This will be a big win. I'll have to code one now as an example...
BTW, RSS1.0 is RDF, not pseudo-RDF like some of the other RDF versions. There's info on dmoz.org, but I'm lazy. Find it yourself.
The MMPI is quite comprehensive. It is designed so that it is effectively impossible to hide anything. My psych professor said that he took one and (knowing how the test was designed) he tried to cover up that he had a major traumatic event in his life (which he did). The test showed it anyhow.
The test won't, however, say that you are a serial killer or homicidal maniac...
That is assuming you can get an MSCE to read a book...
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
The true benefit of BSD code is that you don't have to publish your source if you use somebody else's code. Depending on the version of the BSD license you may have to obey the advertising clause, but other than that you're home free. Nothing to give back _ever_.
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
I've created a Links Panel for Mozilla (works with nightlies, Moz0.6 and NS6) and I've wrapped up the History Panel RFE from bug 32594
Other packages/projects can be retrieved from mozdev.org and a very cool forum reader called Forumzilla
Enjoy!
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
http://segment7.net/mozilla/links/l ink s.html It displays all of the links from a document in the sidebar, and can be insanely useful. Go check it out!
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
Yep, you heard it, this device uses Mozilla to render pages (or probably more likely just the gecko core functionality.)
Makes you wonder why all these people have been saying Mozilla is dead, Mozilla sucks, Mozilla is bloated. A non-released product chosen over IE as an embedded browser is certainly not going to die very soon.
Yep, this very page was posted with the 2000090604 nightly. And we are rapidly approaching M18 (perhaps even today.) Of course we'll get there sooner if you pop over onto irc.mozilla.org and join #mozillazine and start squashing bugs.
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
Handkey - mouse, keyboard and shortcut device operated by one hand.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
A recent Popular Science had an article on supersonic torpedoes that utilized cavitation, and they acted essentially like a gun. The nature of cavitation weaponry means you have very little control surface in the water, as the torpedo is surrounded by an air pocket, except for at the nose. If cavitation torpedoes are going to do any turning I doubt it will be any faster than 1% per foot for quite some time.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
SpaceBalls 2 - Rise of the Umpire
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
XML would be a good way to get things like this done. If you could find a common namespace applications would easily be able to converse with each other to use only what they want.
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
XPI is mozilla's cross (X) Platform Installer. It uses a combination of zip files with javascript and RDF to keep track of what you have installed so you can easily add and remove pieces of the browser.
What uses XPI? Well, the win32 and linux installers use it to install the application. This means that if you don't want to install ChatZilla (which rocks by the way, full IRC client in a 400k install, IIRC) you don't have to. Same with mail/news. Even the PSM comes as an XPI. And skins? Skins are wrappable in XPI.
Want more information about XPI? There's a tutorial written by kerz at MozillaZine
Oh, and by the way, I use Moz full time, and so does most everybody else on #mozillazine (irc.mozilla.org)
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
If you think that mozilla is wallowing under the problems of feature creep you are doing one of two things. 1) Smoking crack. 2) So uninformed you should be taken out in the streets and beaten with a wet noodle.
In three months of nightlies I have yet to see a new feature come into mozilla. What I have seen is buggy features become working like they should.
Recently skin switching has made its way into mozilla. This feature has been planned for since the beginning of the XPFE project with its XUL and whatnot. Skin switching is the closest thing to a `feature' that I have seen making it into the tree since M16.
Only a few more of what most people term `features' (you people really should go look at BugZilla the bug tracking system for Moz to see what is a new feature and what has been planed for) that are going to make it into moz are proxy auto-config, SVG, MathML and several others that only aren't in the nightlies because the builders don't want to push larger binaries. In fact most of these are almost done, but just have a few bugs to be worked out before they can be released unto the masses.
Remeber, before you open your mouth, keep your facts straight, check out bugzilla to find out what features are `creeping' and what appear to be creeping because you don't bother to adjust your build configuration.
The author is a daily downloader of Moz nighlies and finds it very strange why other people don't think moz is so very cool
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
For exploration there really is nothing better than the old text parsers like adventure, zork, HHGttG, old Sierra games, etc. They just have that extra bit of exploration to them because you can't just mouse around the screen all the time, you have to think about what you are doing. That barrier is what makes them fun, the thought involved, not the oh this looks cool what does it do when I click here element.
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
What about Yuri Gagarin? He was the first person into space! Have some respect when it comes to space travel and try to think about who did what first.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
I agree that you use the best tool for the best job. And I feel that mozilla is the best web browser available. For me this isn't about standards support, its about features. With Moz I can get:
MapQuest maps from the sidebar, or any of several other apps just from two clicks. The extensible nature of mozilla allows many powerful things to be done with the sidebar. Its like having a mini-app inside your browser.
More control over my browsing experience through cookie managment and image managment (no banners).
Full NS4.x plugin compatability. Yes it works even now. Today and installed and used the flash plugin. It works well.
I feel that the disadvantages of the minor instabilities that occur from time to time (up till today's builds everything was very smooth) are very minor compared to the configurability I get from mozilla. I started on mozilla due to its standards support. I've stayed with mozilla because it is a fast, powerful web browser, among other things.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
One problem with today's builds, crash on submit. Your comment will make it, but mozilla dies in the process. Maybe wait a few hours for the next build.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
I use it for everything now. Most of the major bugs are worked out and only in occasional nightlies does something weird happen.
GO GET ONE YOURSELF - NIGHTLY BUILDS
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
There is a flaw in your logic. How do you know what is in the bag? How do you know it isn't somebody's gym bag full of dirty laundry? There is no way you can tell unless you invade somebody's privacy, and there is no reason to invade privacy unless suspicious things start happening.
Being online just gives new methods of doing the same thing poeple have been doing for Millenia. It has been demonstrated that some things are always going to be able to slip around the backs of whoever the authority is.
--
Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess
No. He would not have. Part of almost any computer policy any work you work (probably the place where you work too) says that company resources may not be used for personal use. Lets see:
End of story. It does not matter if it was a laptop he was hauling around with him or if he was in his office. He was using company property for personal use. Violation of policy and grounds for termination.
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Eric is chisled like a Greek Godess