I find that DVDs are too small and tend to get lost, so I stick to laserdiscs...let me know when that's out.
On a side note, why is this noteworthy, again, when this is the second such occurrence? Wasn't this supposed to be expected with movies being done entirely digitally, anymore?
I still laugh whenever I select a screensaver or background image, thinking back to my IRIX 6.2 box (a wonderful Indigo2 Extreme that now collects dust:|) and the "CPU Eater" background - a 3-D realtime-rendered SGI logo. And eat the CPU it certainly did.
Define "GUI support". I'd say that certain aspects of the Windows GUI are preferable to the comparable aspects of any GUI available to Linux users, but I'd also say that certain GUIs available for Linux have just as many features that are preferable to their cousins in Windows.
Everyone hates Napster. Because it's gone. We hate technologies we can no longer use to get all the music we want, and so on. Other examples include FM radio and dance clubs.
There should be a solution possible by allowing AddType and/or AddHandler in users'.htaccess files or setting it in their VirtualHost section.
Re:Household Appliances
on
42-Volt Autos
·
· Score: 1
Hey, that's a damn good idea! I forgot about those things. Maybe a mini-donut machine would fit in the back seat, though...too many decisions to make! I need a bigger car. (Cue Canyonero theme song.)
I've personally changed every item of clothing except for my underwear while driving. Being late for school and having a 17-mile rural drive to get there teaches you these things. And I'm a man - so that means I did all this while actually watching the road instead of looking in the driver's-side makeup mirror that has NO business being in any car.
You have no creativity at all, my friend. What you really want to plug in is a toaster. Imagine making your Pillsbury Toaster Strudels or toasted bagels while driving to work! Or a guitar amp. You could even take your home stereo on the road, and only need one CD change, XM radio, or whatever. Personally, I'm particularly excited to finally be able to have lava lamps in my car. Oh, and the toaster, of course.
Ah, yes...the martini. Its definition is so far lost to most people now that a dead rat in a cocktail glass can be called a "martini".
On a side note, the interesting bit about martinis is that, although most consider gin to be "correct" for one, and that is indeed what will go into a "martini" if you just order it by name, the earliest martinis were made with vodka, as it was around for many a long year before gin came about.
90% of the time? I was in a bar two nights ago that had nothing but beer. Their sole form of advertising outside is a dated lit-up PBR sign (their name is not even visible from outside), and as I do not drink beer the best they could do for me was a can of Pepsi, which I believe may have been the bartender's personal for-lunch can.
But what I prefer is a bar with some good rock music, maybe live bands a night or two a week, and that part of the college-and-on crowd that, like me, never did like the techno/DJ/other-abuse-of-the-word-"music" places. A place where you can call the bartender by name the second time you go in, and he knows you like your Jack & Cokes a little on the strong side because you're only mixing 'em to avoid looking like the alcoholic you are.
No, I just went to regular bartending school - you learn all the necessary skills and about 80-100 different drinks (depending on how you qualify 'different'), and are then tested on your ability to efficiently (quickly, accurately, and without touching any bottle more than once while making a round) put those skills to work.
For flair, I was having a discussion with some of the teachers at the school I attended, and if you've seen the movie "Cocktail", the whole idea of it (as well as training for the actors, see this story for more specific info) came from T.G.I. Fridays.
Having never afforded to hit expensive night clubs in Europe and preferring instead to concentrate my travels on old pieces of rock, I don't know how big flair or even cocktails are over there. But I do know that it'd be fun to be able to confidently throw bottles around without spilling.;-D
Not to give up my secret or anything, but I've figured out how to get through this, for me at least...
When you were laid off/graduated college to discover no jobs available/etc., where did you go first? Same place I did, I bet. The bar. And you probably spend most of the money you do come up with right there, tipping those bartenders that best help you drink away the economy...
So I just completed bartending school, and I'm already fighting off job offers. A perfect complement to my CS degree for sure, based on my new economic theory.
You sound like you could borrow my Rubik's Square. It only took me about half an hour to solve, once I realized that all the squares are the same color.
what is generally intended in a browser vulnerability is that IE *will* be affected
Explain how the intention behind every browser vulnerability is IE-centrism, please. Perhaps you meant 'expected' here? Regardless, this isn't ironic. What would make it ironic would be if Microsoft publicly badmouthed all other browsers on account of this vulnerability and then we found that IE is susceptible to essentially the same bug a week later.
So what I should have said is that it isn't ironic yet.:)
Thanks...now I don't have to go to the UK to find that out. ;)
I thought the Aero was confined to Canadia. If I'm mistaken, can someone right this wrong and confine that crap to the wasteland where it belongs?
Did you read the story? This spello was both on-topic and in perfect context.
That's how much GNU/Linux has evolved since the early days...
If that were evolution, then we'd all weigh 73 tons.
Forcing? More money? I saw the first one on VHS and that's the extent of my direct experience with The Matrix.
I find that DVDs are too small and tend to get lost, so I stick to laserdiscs...let me know when that's out.
On a side note, why is this noteworthy, again, when this is the second such occurrence? Wasn't this supposed to be expected with movies being done entirely digitally, anymore?
I want a Crimson RE, too. If you find one, maybe I can rent out the loft? ;-D
I still laugh whenever I select a screensaver or background image, thinking back to my IRIX 6.2 box (a wonderful Indigo2 Extreme that now collects dust :|) and the "CPU Eater" background - a 3-D realtime-rendered SGI logo. And eat the CPU it certainly did.
Define "GUI support". I'd say that certain aspects of the Windows GUI are preferable to the comparable aspects of any GUI available to Linux users, but I'd also say that certain GUIs available for Linux have just as many features that are preferable to their cousins in Windows.
How about stick to LINUX...
Linux Is Not Using
Everyone hates Napster. Because it's gone. We hate technologies we can no longer use to get all the music we want, and so on. Other examples include FM radio and dance clubs.
There should be a solution possible by allowing AddType and/or AddHandler in users' .htaccess files or setting it in their VirtualHost section.
Hey, that's a damn good idea! I forgot about those things. Maybe a mini-donut machine would fit in the back seat, though...too many decisions to make! I need a bigger car. (Cue Canyonero theme song.)
I've personally changed every item of clothing except for my underwear while driving. Being late for school and having a 17-mile rural drive to get there teaches you these things. And I'm a man - so that means I did all this while actually watching the road instead of looking in the driver's-side makeup mirror that has NO business being in any car.
You have no creativity at all, my friend. What you really want to plug in is a toaster. Imagine making your Pillsbury Toaster Strudels or toasted bagels while driving to work! Or a guitar amp. You could even take your home stereo on the road, and only need one CD change, XM radio, or whatever. Personally, I'm particularly excited to finally be able to have lava lamps in my car. Oh, and the toaster, of course.
Yeah, and all the drinks we invent will have cool names like a "Pentium", or an "Athlon" if it's a hot drink consisting mostly of Chinese hot mustard.
Ah, yes...the martini. Its definition is so far lost to most people now that a dead rat in a cocktail glass can be called a "martini".
On a side note, the interesting bit about martinis is that, although most consider gin to be "correct" for one, and that is indeed what will go into a "martini" if you just order it by name, the earliest martinis were made with vodka, as it was around for many a long year before gin came about.
90% of the time? I was in a bar two nights ago that had nothing but beer. Their sole form of advertising outside is a dated lit-up PBR sign (their name is not even visible from outside), and as I do not drink beer the best they could do for me was a can of Pepsi, which I believe may have been the bartender's personal for-lunch can.
But what I prefer is a bar with some good rock music, maybe live bands a night or two a week, and that part of the college-and-on crowd that, like me, never did like the techno/DJ/other-abuse-of-the-word-"music" places. A place where you can call the bartender by name the second time you go in, and he knows you like your Jack & Cokes a little on the strong side because you're only mixing 'em to avoid looking like the alcoholic you are.
No, I just went to regular bartending school - you learn all the necessary skills and about 80-100 different drinks (depending on how you qualify 'different'), and are then tested on your ability to efficiently (quickly, accurately, and without touching any bottle more than once while making a round) put those skills to work.
;-D
For flair, I was having a discussion with some of the teachers at the school I attended, and if you've seen the movie "Cocktail", the whole idea of it (as well as training for the actors, see this story for more specific info) came from T.G.I. Fridays.
Having never afforded to hit expensive night clubs in Europe and preferring instead to concentrate my travels on old pieces of rock, I don't know how big flair or even cocktails are over there. But I do know that it'd be fun to be able to confidently throw bottles around without spilling.
Not to give up my secret or anything, but I've figured out how to get through this, for me at least...
When you were laid off/graduated college to discover no jobs available/etc., where did you go first? Same place I did, I bet. The bar. And you probably spend most of the money you do come up with right there, tipping those bartenders that best help you drink away the economy...
So I just completed bartending school, and I'm already fighting off job offers. A perfect complement to my CS degree for sure, based on my new economic theory.
You sound like you could borrow my Rubik's Square. It only took me about half an hour to solve, once I realized that all the squares are the same color.
Ah yes...I got the order backwards. Regardless, ECMA is the best of the names.
But Alanis still has no clue. :) And thanks for recognizing a joke as a joke and still being constructive. What are you doing on Slashdot? ;)
what is generally intended in a browser vulnerability is that IE *will* be affected
:)
Explain how the intention behind every browser vulnerability is IE-centrism, please. Perhaps you meant 'expected' here? Regardless, this isn't ironic. What would make it ironic would be if Microsoft publicly badmouthed all other browsers on account of this vulnerability and then we found that IE is susceptible to essentially the same bug a week later.
So what I should have said is that it isn't ironic yet.
I think ECMA sounds cooler than Java, don't you?
Whoever wrote this article has a third-grade knowledge of English and way too many rap CDs. "Werd"!!!