omg! I though I won't live to the day to hear this insanity about speculators creating house bubble;D It's so funny.... "I wish I could wet myself"...:D
I believe the only regulation needed is to keep morans off Slashdot
Not particularly true, actually. Yes, 7.62 round can and in many cases will go through a body. However, the bullet delivers about 2KJ of energy at the impact point. Which momentarily creates so called hydrostatic shock... And you, perhaps, know the rest.
So, the moral of the story: 7.62x39 caliber is very bad one. And unlike 5.56mm it goes through any bushes, Kevlar body armor and all that crap:-)
> it seems that the courts haven't ruled that in game money is "real"...
It sounds like the paper crap which accepted as a legal tender in most countries is any more real than these candy wrappers from S. Korea:-(
It looks like BS, guys.
According to the company LDAP DB this person is still here:-)
Sounds like a typical case of FUD, which works as you can see from the comments...
Well, I happen to know Russian fluently and I'd say that most of these translations are baloney... About 80% of those make no sense at all compare to the original text. So, relax - it just doesn't work:-)
Well, let's see....
Osetia counts for about 70K of total population. Many of them are ethnic Russians. So, do you have any idea what percentage of the whole nation those 1,500 were?
What I'm seeing here is pure propaganda: Russia is bad, because it dares to do same things as US is magically allowed to do elsewhere.
I thought slash-dotters are smarter than this. Looks like I was mistaken...
Too bad that Osetia's citizens are cut off the communications of any kind: they have no infrastrucure left in the city because of Georgian's missile attacks.
Otherwise you'd be trilled by the stories they could tell.
Get this: if Russian air-force would start bombing georgians they won't be any left by now. Do you have any idea what a wing Tu-22s can do? Probably not: you're getting your information from CNN and Fox News. Oh and Twitter, of course.
What own territory? Osetia is de-facto independent country since 1992. You are afraid of next year Russian ride? Well, let's see what US was doing in Georgia since 2002: military training and aid, CIA presence, etc. Any comments on that, Mr. So-Smart-Man?
Hey, wise boy: what the hell that chilling story about traffic incidents (posted by Washington Post - LOL: wanna share with us something from Faux News too?) has to do with Georgian murderers killing 2,000+ civilians in Osetia?
Russia had stopped the genocide there, you brain washed punk
Have a nice day
I'm not sure about kernel's version underneath Gutsy, but my Suse10.2 supports SATA DVD flawlessly. So, I guess you might need just rebuild the kernel. Douh...
Hmm, last I heard, Sun does a lot of interesting devices based both on sparc and amd/intel architectures. As well, it sells it servers equipped with Solaris AND Linux. I guess MS Windows is coming along too...
Well, I remember when Sun had put it there: right after Google was mentioning that they are going to build mobile data centers. Sun's idea was to use its server factories to quickly put together a bunch of those 'black boxes' and start selling it like crazy to Google (how weird) and other big data hogs.
JS (I heard that this nick name of Sun's CEO stands for Jack asS, but don't quote my words) and some of his lieutenants went event further and had announced 'mobile office' concept. One of those creatures stands in Menlo Park central court right now. And along with the other comment in this thread, NAVY's idea about modular habitats had really gotten into Sun executives' heads.
I think Sun's getting quite bored of doing just few things - it has to go our there and pick up something else. Good old days of successful real estate venture are in the past. What's next? Moon travel? Interstellar ships?
Being in somewhat an agreement with the overall approach to make two operating systems more alike, I just was wandering what kind of a$$hole had written the original article? Did he (or she) ever saw Solaris and Linux not mentioning do something with those? Or such called modern journalists are just fine with putting together a few words from one guy and few from another and make their own semi-baked ignorant conclusions? What an outrage:-(
I'm pretty sure that he can't "just let it go", because he needs as much noise about this as he can create. Questionable publicity for so called "public people" is pretty much the same as food and water for the rest of us: if they don't get any of it, they're gonna stale and an average "Sports illustrated" or any other tabloid magazine will forget about their existence the very same day.
Well, the problem is that static ananlysis tools sometimes are having quite high level of false positives. Sometimes it might be about 80%, e.g. if a particular software uses it's own custom exception handling mechanism, etc. From what I saw in the report: most of those are 'possible dereferencing of NULL return' and such.
So, unless we can see a details of those 600+ bugs it's hard to tell if Firefox is buggy. I know for sure, that Coverity does analysis of Mozilla's software on a regular basis and the situation isn't that bad.
My point is that one shouldn't be in hurry of making conclusions;-)
Funny but especially that particular build has very bad problems with networking stack, e.g. it isn't possible to open Datagram socket from a user application. Which wasn't a problem before.
So, Vista sucks long time. How much they paid for the spam, pal?
Well, $250,000 for a T1 isn't possible, because of the free market competition and everything. However, if there will be an FCC regulation asking every ISP to set a limit of free emails coming out of a person each months it might help.
Say, one can send 2000 emails a month for free and can have unlimited number of incoming emails. Then every email message above the limit will cost you $0.20 or something. So, if you're a spammer and are sending 150K+ messages every day - your business won't pay back.
One of the main historic lessons we can learn from, is that the crime is getting faint when there are no favorable economic conditions for it to blossom. E.g. US (and Russia lately) had the restrictions on distribution of heavy liquors. As the result - a lot of bootleggers' activity, huge wave of the crime in that field, and so on. Is there many bootleggers around nowadays when you can go to Safeway and get yourself whatever you feel like right now almost 24/7 ?
Hmm, I afraid you're losing me: why they have to use SMS for audio features? I'm not telling, that they shouldn't use SMS at all: what I'm saying is that Java platform has a better capabilities compare to what pure SMS can do...
I wonder when/if someone will bring criminal charges against this deepsh*t for his apparent cyber-terrorism acts?
omg! I though I won't live to the day to hear this insanity about speculators creating house bubble ;D It's so funny.... "I wish I could wet myself"... :D
I believe the only regulation needed is to keep morans off Slashdot
Not particularly true, actually. Yes, 7.62 round can and in many cases will go through a body. However, the bullet delivers about 2KJ of energy at the impact point. Which momentarily creates so called hydrostatic shock... And you, perhaps, know the rest. So, the moral of the story: 7.62x39 caliber is very bad one. And unlike 5.56mm it goes through any bushes, Kevlar body armor and all that crap :-)
get job at Yahoo!: plenty of opportunities and a way better pay than at scroodgi Google with its privacy hating CEO :(
> it seems that the courts haven't ruled that in game money is "real"... It sounds like the paper crap which accepted as a legal tender in most countries is any more real than these candy wrappers from S. Korea :-(
Convert to Java which part? LDAP server? :-D
It's simply not true. LDAP (shown through namefinder) is updated very quickly. I have a number of proofs of this :-)
It looks like BS, guys. According to the company LDAP DB this person is still here :-)
Sounds like a typical case of FUD, which works as you can see from the comments...
What did you have expected from a moran teaching business and writing for NYT? An unexpected strike of intelligence? LOL...
Well, I happen to know Russian fluently and I'd say that most of these translations are baloney... About 80% of those make no sense at all compare to the original text. So, relax - it just doesn't work :-)
Well, let's see.... Osetia counts for about 70K of total population. Many of them are ethnic Russians. So, do you have any idea what percentage of the whole nation those 1,500 were? What I'm seeing here is pure propaganda: Russia is bad, because it dares to do same things as US is magically allowed to do elsewhere. I thought slash-dotters are smarter than this. Looks like I was mistaken...
"Oh, next!" (C) Robot Bender, Futurama
Too bad that Osetia's citizens are cut off the communications of any kind: they have no infrastrucure left in the city because of Georgian's missile attacks. Otherwise you'd be trilled by the stories they could tell. Get this: if Russian air-force would start bombing georgians they won't be any left by now. Do you have any idea what a wing Tu-22s can do? Probably not: you're getting your information from CNN and Fox News. Oh and Twitter, of course.
What own territory? Osetia is de-facto independent country since 1992. You are afraid of next year Russian ride? Well, let's see what US was doing in Georgia since 2002: military training and aid, CIA presence, etc. Any comments on that, Mr. So-Smart-Man?
Hey, wise boy: what the hell that chilling story about traffic incidents (posted by Washington Post - LOL: wanna share with us something from Faux News too?) has to do with Georgian murderers killing 2,000+ civilians in Osetia? Russia had stopped the genocide there, you brain washed punk Have a nice day
I'm not sure about kernel's version underneath Gutsy, but my Suse10.2 supports SATA DVD flawlessly. So, I guess you might need just rebuild the kernel. Douh...
Yes, I agree. Except that T1 cpus were kinda weak, per say :-). However, T2 seems to rock enough!
Hmm, last I heard, Sun does a lot of interesting devices based both on sparc and amd/intel architectures. As well, it sells it servers equipped with Solaris AND Linux. I guess MS Windows is coming along too...
JS (I heard that this nick name of Sun's CEO stands for Jack asS, but don't quote my words) and some of his lieutenants went event further and had announced 'mobile office' concept. One of those creatures stands in Menlo Park central court right now. And along with the other comment in this thread, NAVY's idea about modular habitats had really gotten into Sun executives' heads.
I think Sun's getting quite bored of doing just few things - it has to go our there and pick up something else. Good old days of successful real estate venture are in the past. What's next? Moon travel? Interstellar ships?
Being in somewhat an agreement with the overall approach to make two operating systems more alike, I just was wandering what kind of a$$hole had written the original article? Did he (or she) ever saw Solaris and Linux not mentioning do something with those? Or such called modern journalists are just fine with putting together a few words from one guy and few from another and make their own semi-baked ignorant conclusions? What an outrage :-(
I'm pretty sure that he can't "just let it go", because he needs as much noise about this as he can create. Questionable publicity for so called "public people" is pretty much the same as food and water for the rest of us: if they don't get any of it, they're gonna stale and an average "Sports illustrated" or any other tabloid magazine will forget about their existence the very same day.
Well, the problem is that static ananlysis tools sometimes are having quite high level of false positives. Sometimes it might be about 80%, e.g. if a particular software uses it's own custom exception handling mechanism, etc. From what I saw in the report: most of those are 'possible dereferencing of NULL return' and such.
;-)
So, unless we can see a details of those 600+ bugs it's hard to tell if Firefox is buggy. I know for sure, that Coverity does analysis of Mozilla's software on a regular basis and the situation isn't that bad.
My point is that one shouldn't be in hurry of making conclusions
Funny but especially that particular build has very bad problems with networking stack, e.g. it isn't possible to open Datagram socket from a user application. Which wasn't a problem before. So, Vista sucks long time. How much they paid for the spam, pal?
Well, $250,000 for a T1 isn't possible, because of the free market competition and everything. However, if there will be an FCC regulation asking every ISP to set a limit of free emails coming out of a person each months it might help.
Say, one can send 2000 emails a month for free and can have unlimited number of incoming emails. Then every email message above the limit will cost you $0.20 or something. So, if you're a spammer and are sending 150K+ messages every day - your business won't pay back.
One of the main historic lessons we can learn from, is that the crime is getting faint when there are no favorable economic conditions for it to blossom. E.g. US (and Russia lately) had the restrictions on distribution of heavy liquors. As the result - a lot of bootleggers' activity, huge wave of the crime in that field, and so on. Is there many bootleggers around nowadays when you can go to Safeway and get yourself whatever you feel like right now almost 24/7 ?
I think you got the idea.
Hmm, I afraid you're losing me: why they have to use SMS for audio features?
I'm not telling, that they shouldn't use SMS at all: what I'm saying is that Java platform has a better capabilities compare to what pure SMS can do...