But do the graphics/sound designers actually understand Newtonian physics? A physicist certainly would. A better person to ask would be a physics teacher, because they would know and be familiar with the physics that these kids would benefit most from (likely basic mechanics).
Some of the bits of rotational mechanics are not entirely obvious without additional teaching.
You seem to not understand insurance. The ENTIRE point is so that people like you subsidize people who get into a wreck a week.
That and take the unknown risk of a car accident (in financial terms) and package it into a nice monthly fee.
Compulsory insurance means that you pay much less, because the pool of risk is much larger. And realistically everyone who drives needs auto insurance because accidents can be very expensive.
Yes, but for somewhat different reasons. I recall a page (don't remember where) that said that viral licenses were incompatible with the iPhone developer SDK license. If this is still the case, (and I think it is), then don't expect to see much free as in speech software.
There are licenses which work, but much of OSS is GPL or similar, which would cause problems.
For Linux, Agreed. But when is Evince going to work in Windows ? Oh. Never ?? So what choice does a person using windows have ?
When KDE 4 hits stability, Okular (or whatever kpdf has become). Which runs on everything (supposedly)
For Linux, Agreed. But when is Amarok going to work in Windows or with people's iPods? Oh. Never ?? So what alternateive choice does a person using windows have ?
I believe there are third party libraries so that Amarok works with iPods. It works with my Creative Zen, and with at least a few types of iPod. And as for windows, see above.
No repeated system restarts, but none ? What about when your kernel is updated ? What about VMWare needing to be recompiled once you HAVE rebooted ?
See development into a hot-moddable kernel. And since there is a script that handles the recompilation of the modules (not the whole thing IIRC), that becomes relatively simple.
You are kidding right ? What do you do when you have a company that USES Yahoo for its "approved" IM provider ? Use pidgin. Which handles the Yahoo protocol, runs on windows, etc.
It is strongly dependent on system. I run FF2 on x86_64 under Archlinux (probably less stable than other more static distros), and I cannot remember it crashing (it has probably happened, but not with much frequency).
However, someone I know, running it on 32-bit Ubuntu (or some other Debian-based system) has it crash all the time.
Google it. Seriously. Google Kolob (the planet where god lives), or how Joseph Smith wrote the book of Mormon. Without the belief telling you that this is clearly true, it sounds pretty out there.
Aside from the "well-documented fraudster" part (of which I don't know anything), the AC was mostly right. Mormons do have some weird beliefs.
And while it is true that the FLDS is not the LDS, they are a splinter group. Probably akin to fundies (but since LDS has some weirder scripture, the come across as much, much weirder than fundies)
The trouble with this is that many of the Mormon beliefs are, to the unconverted, batshit insane.
They don't want you to read the weird stuff before you actually believe. Otherwise, you probably won't. (Milk before meat, google it)
KDE sort of has something like this in konqueror. You can split a window into panes, and put different ioslaves in differnt panes (ftp, filesystem, html are the only one's I've tested). You might even be able to get something like Kwriter in one, and I'm sure that kpdf and the integrated text editor would work.
It is called "KParts", and seems to have been designed with this kind of thing in mind.
But do the graphics/sound designers actually understand Newtonian physics? A physicist certainly would. A better person to ask would be a physics teacher, because they would know and be familiar with the physics that these kids would benefit most from (likely basic mechanics).
Some of the bits of rotational mechanics are not entirely obvious without additional teaching.
You seem to not understand insurance. The ENTIRE point is so that people like you subsidize people who get into a wreck a week.
That and take the unknown risk of a car accident (in financial terms) and package it into a nice monthly fee.
Compulsory insurance means that you pay much less, because the pool of risk is much larger. And realistically everyone who drives needs auto insurance because accidents can be very expensive.
I don't know what editor you use for your LaTeX, but in mine a simple
!pdflatex $title.tex && kpdf $title.pdf
(actual commands may vary)
lets me see what it outputs. I imagine if you're using a good text editor you can do the same thing.
This then gets you both advantages, you get to see what you write AND you get the prettification of LaTeX
Yes, but for somewhat different reasons. I recall a page (don't remember where) that said that viral licenses were incompatible with the iPhone developer SDK license. If this is still the case, (and I think it is), then don't expect to see much free as in speech software.
There are licenses which work, but much of OSS is GPL or similar, which would cause problems.
For Linux, Agreed. But when is Evince going to work in Windows ? Oh. Never ?? So what choice does a person using windows have ?
When KDE 4 hits stability, Okular (or whatever kpdf has become). Which runs on everything (supposedly)For Linux, Agreed. But when is Amarok going to work in Windows or with people's iPods? Oh. Never ?? So what alternateive choice does a person using windows have ?
I believe there are third party libraries so that Amarok works with iPods. It works with my Creative Zen, and with at least a few types of iPod. And as for windows, see above.No repeated system restarts, but none ? What about when your kernel is updated ? What about VMWare needing to be recompiled once you HAVE rebooted ?
See development into a hot-moddable kernel. And since there is a script that handles the recompilation of the modules (not the whole thing IIRC), that becomes relatively simple. You are kidding right ? What do you do when you have a company that USES Yahoo for its "approved" IM provider ? Use pidgin. Which handles the Yahoo protocol, runs on windows, etc.It is strongly dependent on system. I run FF2 on x86_64 under Archlinux (probably less stable than other more static distros), and I cannot remember it crashing (it has probably happened, but not with much frequency).
However, someone I know, running it on 32-bit Ubuntu (or some other Debian-based system) has it crash all the time.
Google it. Seriously. Google Kolob (the planet where god lives), or how Joseph Smith wrote the book of Mormon. Without the belief telling you that this is clearly true, it sounds pretty out there.
But here's a nice link for you Some beliefs
Aside from the "well-documented fraudster" part (of which I don't know anything), the AC was mostly right. Mormons do have some weird beliefs.
And while it is true that the FLDS is not the LDS, they are a splinter group. Probably akin to fundies (but since LDS has some weirder scripture, the come across as much, much weirder than fundies)
The trouble with this is that many of the Mormon beliefs are, to the unconverted, batshit insane. They don't want you to read the weird stuff before you actually believe. Otherwise, you probably won't. (Milk before meat, google it)
KDE sort of has something like this in konqueror. You can split a window into panes, and put different ioslaves in differnt panes (ftp, filesystem, html are the only one's I've tested). You might even be able to get something like Kwriter in one, and I'm sure that kpdf and the integrated text editor would work. It is called "KParts", and seems to have been designed with this kind of thing in mind.
1: This device may not cause harmful interference
2: This device must accept all interference, even interference which may cause undesired operation.
So it looks like the do actually have something to say about what a device produces. Who would've thought?
First link is Defense Mechanism: Circumcision averts some HIV infections
Circumcision apperently *does* prevent HIV transmission.
Defense Mechanism: Circumcision averts some HIV infections
Better-Off Circumcised? Foreskin may permit HIV entry, infection
Male circumcision could avert millions of HIV infections
All links from Science News online website (www.sciencenews.org). Note that the final two links are subscriber only.