Due to the vast quantity and abundance of material, music has become commoditized and people don't give it the value it used to have. So, fewer people are prepared to pay essentially a high price for a cd.
Version 9.21 on kubuntu feisty. You play the wack-a-mole, but of course no c:\ contents is displayed cause that's windows-only
my safest option is Konqueror, the default kubuntu browser
The one thing that you cannot configure in FF is the order or preference of plugins. Say that you have 2 or 3 plugins that support the same filetypes, you can't configure if which filetype opens with which plugin. In situations where the support is broken by a plugin, as it often happens in linux with eg. streaming windows media, you are stuck with the plugin that doesn't work and you can't change it. If you remove it, then you loose functionality, because the others might not work with filetypes that this one supported well.
Everything he says applies to server>client. Producers>consumers. And he proposes a change to the current model of conversation to a model of multicast the same data to many consumers. And support this by findings that 99% of data is structured that way. I guess that's wishful thinking though, because he works at google, the massive meta-producer of data we all consume.
What about bittorrent though? Uses the same TCP/IP protocol, trusts the data, not the source (like he says we must do), answers to the contemporary question "Who has the time" (ditto) AND DELIVERS.
They are also other decentralization options to bittorrent, like trackerless torrents (DHT) and torrentless torrents (Magnet links)
Ditto there are implementations for p2p phones, p2p tv, etc.
I think google and other big companies are just pushing a way to change the Internet to suit their business models and nothing more.
My feisty has a 35% chance of mounting correctly the swap and ntfs partitions. On other occasions it boots ok, most of the times displays error and I have to reboot. I have the ext3 and swap partitions on PATA disk and ntfs on a SATA. Anyone else experienced that?
I also notice the new feisty to be much faster, but when under load, desktop slows down considerably. On edgy, however hard you loaded the machine, there was always the extra power for sth else if you wanted.
Or even tuxracer (proprietary driver FREEZES my machine but I have to install it cause I want to use the tv)
If you google around you'll see many people that wanted to run linux on a machine that initially had windows installed, to curse at the ati incompetence.
ATI cards are 50% of the market, and if you happen to be in that, you have a good chance that
1. You can't start the machine at all 2. Your 3d would freeze 3. Your tv wouldn't work (no tv-out for the open source driver) 4. If you manage to get the tv going with the proprietary driver, there is no hardware acceleration.
So Linux with an ati card is a very poor experience indeed
The guy's job is to analyze the industry and consult for placing of (software) products. The whole marketing concept of free software is that software is a commodity and the differentiating stuff is developed and used in-house (like PageRank). What kind of a future this guy would have in such an IT world? No wonder his hostility against FOSS. In fact, FOSS with its customizations increases jobs for programmers since the majority is employed in IT, not in software houses.
Exactly one (1) day before the invasion, Ecevit visited No10. All parties admitted (now in 2006, not then) that invasion was unavoidable in the way things had turned out.
Yes, the greek military regime conspired with the British and Kissinger to establish the current status quo in the island. They had started 6 years before with the withdrawal of Greek Army from Cyprus.
(From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Northern_I reland) Northern Ireland was created as a political entity in 1921. Once the bedrock of Irish resistance to the advance of the English state in Ireland, the Plantation of Ulster by Scottish and English colonists resulted in it following a different economic, religious and cultural trajectory to the rest of the island.
How is that different to the Irish problem?
The Cyprus problem now is that now (33 years after) there are two distinct parts, one an independent state and one occupied from another country (with 40.000 troops) who refuses to withdraw from its occupation. Unlike Ireland, there was a population exchange and there is virtually no Greek minority in the Turkish part.
Yes, by mistake you draw similarities between the Cyprus and the Irish problems. Or may be it's not really a mistake since both problems and solutions were crafted by the British Foreign Ministry sometime ago. The division line (green line) has been drawn by the British, The Cyprus Independence Treaty was drawn by the British, even the Turkish invasion had been cleared by the British before it was executed. Even now on 2007 the British Government is the strongest obstacle to the solution of the Cyprus problem (because they created it). They are also the strongest supporters to the European accession of Turkey, even without conforming to the European standards
There's not one single tongue (and policy) in Turk
on
Turkey Censors YouTube
·
· Score: 1
On one hand you have the Kemal Establishment which is the military and the deep state, and on the other you have the progressive elements that want EU accession. The establishment don't believe in tight integration with Europe because it would restrict their powers and the way they run things. They want a close cooperation (with the EU) and to be left alone to carry on with their oppressive behavior.
And it's a pity because most of big European countries want also the same. They want free customs and free trade, but not accession, because it would mean free movement of people, and they are not ready to accept 65 mil. poor people into the heart of Europe.
Glyphosate containing products are acutely toxic to animals, including humans". She goes on to state that it has conclusively demonstrated adverse effects in "all standards of laboratory toxicology testing" including medium term toxicity, long-term toxicity, genetic damage, reproductive toxicity, and carcinogenicity.
Due to the vast quantity and abundance of material, music has become commoditized and people don't give it the value it used to have. So, fewer people are prepared to pay essentially a high price for a cd.
http://img367.imageshack.us/img367/9813/snapshot9j p4.png
Version 9.21 on kubuntu feisty. You play the wack-a-mole, but of course no c:\ contents is displayed cause that's windows-only my safest option is Konqueror, the default kubuntu browser
Third exploit works on opera but it doesn't work on FF for me
For mms or rtsp there is the option of launching external players through about:config as in http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Ubuntu:Feisty#How_to_h andle_mms_protocol_in_Mozilla_Firefoxh andle_rtsp_.28realmedia.29_protocol_in_Mozilla_Fir efox
http://ubuntuguide.org/wiki/Ubuntu:Feisty#How_to_
But there is no option for the plugins, ie viewing the content inside the browser.
Konqueror is more helpful in that respect, ie it can associate immediately with mimetypes because of its integration with the KDE desktop manager.
http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/2126971/linux-re vs-renault-f1-testing
The one thing that you cannot configure in FF is the order or preference of plugins. Say that you have 2 or 3 plugins that support the same filetypes, you can't configure if which filetype opens with which plugin. In situations where the support is broken by a plugin, as it often happens in linux with eg. streaming windows media, you are stuck with the plugin that doesn't work and you can't change it. If you remove it, then you loose functionality, because the others might not work with filetypes that this one supported well.
So everytime you fire up your pick-up or SUV you'll feel less guilty knowing that the Vietnamese got their share first.
You have to leave Iraq because it's wrong, to plunder other peoples' wealth. Not because of terrorism or preventive warfare.
Everything he says applies to server>client. Producers>consumers. And he proposes a change to the current model of conversation to a model of multicast the same data to many consumers. And support this by findings that 99% of data is structured that way. I guess that's wishful thinking though, because he works at google, the massive meta-producer of data we all consume.
What about bittorrent though? Uses the same TCP/IP protocol, trusts the data, not the source (like he says we must do), answers to the contemporary question "Who has the time" (ditto) AND DELIVERS.
They are also other decentralization options to bittorrent, like trackerless torrents (DHT) and torrentless torrents (Magnet links)
Ditto there are implementations for p2p phones, p2p tv, etc.
I think google and other big companies are just pushing a way to change the Internet to suit their business models and nothing more.
My feisty has a 35% chance of mounting correctly the swap and ntfs partitions. On other occasions it boots ok, most of the times displays error and I have to reboot. I have the ext3 and swap partitions on PATA disk and ntfs on a SATA. Anyone else experienced that?
I also notice the new feisty to be much faster, but when under load, desktop slows down considerably. On edgy, however hard you loaded the machine, there was always the extra power for sth else if you wanted.
Feisty looks feels like a windows machine now.
Bloomberg is American
Funny how it would seem to you, it connects if you replace ht with f. New firefox ignores PASV address and connects to localhost http://img260.imageshack.us/img260/8889/screenshot ie5.png
Rich=2d+3d+tv
Poor=2d-3d-tv
And you are not entitled to watch a movie on your tv that you play from your computer? Windows has been doing that for 10 years.
http://ati.cchtml.com/show_bug.cgi?id=309
http://folk.uio.no/henger/htpc/ati-pal-tvout.jpg
Or even tuxracer (proprietary driver FREEZES my machine but I have to install it cause I want to use the tv)
If you google around you'll see many people that wanted to run linux on a machine that initially had windows installed, to curse at the ati incompetence.
ATI cards are 50% of the market, and if you happen to be in that, you have a good chance that
2 7
1. You can't start the machine at all
2. Your 3d would freeze
3. Your tv wouldn't work (no tv-out for the open source driver)
4. If you manage to get the tv going with the proprietary driver, there is no hardware acceleration.
So Linux with an ati card is a very poor experience indeed
http://www.michaellarabel.com/index.php?k=blog&i=
They even fund antigravity research http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-gravity
The guy's job is to analyze the industry and consult for placing of (software) products. The whole marketing concept of free software is that software is a commodity and the differentiating stuff is developed and used in-house (like PageRank). What kind of a future this guy would have in such an IT world? No wonder his hostility against FOSS. In fact, FOSS with its customizations increases jobs for programmers since the majority is employed in IT, not in software houses.
Does it do that when you update via the Baseline Security Analyzer also? http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/tools/mb sahome.mspx
I am not a historian, don't look for citaions.
I reland)
Exactly one (1) day before the invasion, Ecevit visited No10. All parties admitted (now in 2006, not then) that invasion was unavoidable in the way things had turned out.
Yes, the greek military regime conspired with the British and Kissinger to establish the current status quo in the island. They had started 6 years before with the withdrawal of Greek Army from Cyprus.
(From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Northern_
Northern Ireland was created as a political entity in 1921. Once the bedrock of Irish resistance to the advance of the English state in Ireland, the Plantation of Ulster by Scottish and English colonists resulted in it following a different economic, religious and cultural trajectory to the rest of the island.
How is that different to the Irish problem?
The Cyprus problem now is that now (33 years after) there are two distinct parts, one an independent state and one occupied from another country (with 40.000 troops) who refuses to withdraw from its occupation. Unlike Ireland, there was a population exchange and there is virtually no Greek minority in the Turkish part.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyprus_dispute
Yes, by mistake you draw similarities between the Cyprus and the Irish problems. Or may be it's not really a mistake since both problems and solutions were crafted by the British Foreign Ministry sometime ago. The division line (green line) has been drawn by the British, The Cyprus Independence Treaty was drawn by the British, even the Turkish invasion had been cleared by the British before it was executed. Even now on 2007 the British Government is the strongest obstacle to the solution of the Cyprus problem (because they created it). They are also the strongest supporters to the European accession of Turkey, even without conforming to the European standards
On one hand you have the Kemal Establishment which is the military and the deep state, and on the other you have the progressive elements that want EU accession. The establishment don't believe in tight integration with Europe because it would restrict their powers and the way they run things. They want a close cooperation (with the EU) and to be left alone to carry on with their oppressive behavior. And it's a pity because most of big European countries want also the same. They want free customs and free trade, but not accession, because it would mean free movement of people, and they are not ready to accept 65 mil. poor people into the heart of Europe.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composition_(music)
This is digital sound synthesis and manipulation, but not music
t 1lx3.png is software for composing music. There is nothing equivalent in the OSS world, and there's no finale for linux either.
Finale http://img470.imageshack.us/img470/7861/screensho
Glyphosate containing products are acutely toxic to animals, including humans". She goes on to state that it has conclusively demonstrated adverse effects in "all standards of laboratory toxicology testing" including medium term toxicity, long-term toxicity, genetic damage, reproductive toxicity, and carcinogenicity.