'local alternative' works a little differently, here in Portland. I daresay that things with those words on it outcirculate the more traditional products, so obsessed this city is with local and with alternative. Portland's meta-alternative paper is going to have the budget/performance/quality that you were expecting.
then maybe you should look at the screenshot for this main article-- the mails are sorted by date, with graphical cues to highlight the threadings. it actually looks like it captures the interlaced nature of the conversations pretty well.
hey, that's right! electricity turns into heat energy at the same rate, no matter what it did in the meantime. so for every watt of power your computer uses, that's one less watt of power your heater needs to crank out. (assuming you have it on a thermostat, and that the computer isn't hot enough to heat the room above its ideal temperature, and that air flow in your home is good enough that the heat from the computer affects the whole house)
actually, on rare occations parents have been arrested, here in the united states, who've taken photographs of their children in the bath, naked on the beach or running around in the garden who were by that definition child pronographers.
welll maybe we shouldn't try to fix HTML. perhaps it's just time to screw all backward compatability and make a small simple modular markup language from scratch with a well defined way to do scripts and other dynamic things from the beginning
I admit the Debian installation can be a bit hairy-- particularly disk partitioning and hardware installation but once you get a hang of the system, it has one distinct advantage-- it always works you always get to choose what to do next-- unlike, say, Mandrake, which is entirely automated, if something breaks, you don't have to give up.
in addition, there is a new modular installer in the works, that can serve the needs for 1. Pretty Graphics 2. hardware detection 3. automated installs 4. anything else imaginable. expect to see it in the next couple years...
I remember 1993... suddenly country was cool and every radio station within range dropped their Pop/Rock to play it. Country as people are down hear, there just weren't enough ears to go around. The fad ended, the stations didn't notice 1997 a few go back to what's now called "Top 40" but no one remembers to listen.
Falcon's eye has some problems... there are some concepts that work fine with keyboard/ascii that just dont translate to a mouse driven game. For example; casting spells takes a directional parameter; instread of just clicking in the general direction you want to shoot, you have to click the arrow for that direction that pops up in a dialog box.
Worse, the keyboard doesnt behave like ASCII or tile nethack, which is offencive to habitual players.
Email has an inherent security flaw that we would never accept in any other standard... we essentially give everyone in the world write access to our Inbox. We need to make a new standard, that makes it impossible for someone to send you a message without some sort of cryptographic authentication. Perhaps with third party servers that can authenticate "yes, this is a real person", plus any automated service that you gave a PGP signed certificate. Forever and ever, world without Spam. Amen.
I have one. You give up your scroll lock LED for a "Dvorak Lock" one that cannot be touched by software, with the Dvorak lock button taking the corner of the keypad-- shrinking the plus key in half.
All the keys have two letters on them, which is extremely confusing at first, and no one else can just sit down and use the keyboard without being really boggled.
really there isnt much advantage to this over just rearraging the keys on your qwerty board and changing the software.
i was scared out of my mind but a few people i was with had to ask "What was that thing she found?" "what's with the rocks?" "what was the thing about the tree?" "Why did so&so disappear first?" "what was going on in the last scene?"
sigh. they werent scared because they didnt get it.
this is how i set up my bookmarklet:
l &u rl='+encodeURIComponent(location.href)
javascript:location.href='http://del.icio.us/ur
it works.
I checked the source, it spoofs MAC address.
'local alternative' works a little differently, here in Portland. I daresay that things with those words on it outcirculate the more traditional products, so obsessed this city is with local and with alternative.
Portland's meta-alternative paper is going to have the budget/performance/quality that you were expecting.
hey, whoa, i don't like this line of reasoning.
...when i got a flat tire
I'M MALE AND I DON'T KNOW HOW TO CHANGE A TIRE
my wife came and changed it.
then maybe you should look at the screenshot for this main article-- the mails are sorted by date, with graphical cues to highlight the threadings. it actually looks like it captures the interlaced nature of the conversations pretty well.
hey, that's right! electricity turns into heat energy at the same rate, no matter what it did in the meantime. so for every watt of power your computer uses, that's one less watt of power your heater needs to crank out. (assuming you have it on a thermostat, and that the computer isn't hot enough to heat the room above its ideal temperature, and that air flow in your home is good enough that the heat from the computer affects the whole house)
actually, on rare occations parents have been arrested, here in the united states, who've taken photographs of their children in the bath, naked on the beach or running around in the garden who were by that definition child pronographers.
it's true, i saw it on television.
notice the most recent update to the site is almost
a year
stale
and despite how nice the screenshots look, there's no animation. chess boards are more exciting
wouldn't it be nice if when the message "The gnome drinks a bubbly potion" appears, you actually saw him do it?
but nethack code isn't designed for that as it stands.
even the sounds effects are a kludge
(it just watches the text output for "You hear a X")
and as far as I know, no one's working on this,
at all.
welll
maybe we shouldn't try to fix HTML.
perhaps it's just time to
screw all backward compatability
and make a
small
simple
modular
markup language
from scratch
with a well defined way to do scripts and other dynamic things from the beginning
er, actually, no, not sure
how would i tell?
usually i prefer subs too
but the ones on the DVD are so poorly translated
when compared to high-quality dubbing
i just couldnt put up with it
this may take a little time with a copiler to make run with windows, but Xscreensaver has a SONAR screensaver
part of a screenshot / description of entire package
there's not much to it, but it can render network ping times of other computers as if they were boats on the sonar display.
simple but cute
I admit the Debian installation can be a bit hairy-- particularly disk partitioning and hardware installation
but once you get a hang of the system, it has one distinct advantage-- it always works
you always get to choose what to do next-- unlike, say, Mandrake, which is entirely automated, if something breaks, you don't have to give up.
in addition, there is a new modular installer in the works, that can serve the needs for 1. Pretty Graphics 2. hardware detection 3. automated installs 4. anything else imaginable.
expect to see it in the next couple years...
I remember 1993... suddenly country was cool and every radio station within range dropped their Pop/Rock to play it. Country as people are down hear, there just weren't enough ears to go around.
The fad ended, the stations didn't notice
1997 a few go back to what's now called "Top 40"
but no one remembers to listen.
how much of that $19.98 per CD do the artists get?
it's my understanding that it's much less than 25 cents
Falcon's eye has some problems... there are some concepts that work fine with keyboard/ascii that just dont translate to a mouse driven game. For example; casting spells takes a directional parameter; instread of just clicking in the general direction you want to shoot, you have to click the arrow for that direction that pops up in a dialog box.
Worse, the keyboard doesnt behave like ASCII or tile nethack, which is offencive to habitual players.
Email has an inherent security flaw that we would never accept in any other standard... we essentially give everyone in the world write access to our Inbox.
We need to make a new standard, that makes it impossible for someone to send you a message without some sort of cryptographic authentication. Perhaps with third party servers that can authenticate "yes, this is a real person", plus any automated service that you gave a PGP signed certificate.
Forever and ever, world without Spam. Amen.
Wired magazine, January 2001 raves desktop manufacturing by 2005.
All the keys have two letters on them, which is extremely confusing at first, and no one else can just sit down and use the keyboard without being really boggled.
really there isnt much advantage to this over just rearraging the keys on your qwerty board and changing the software.
Yep. Linus doesn't use the American pronunciation of his name. The show did, though.
i was scared out of my mind
but a few people i was with
had to ask
"What was that thing she found?"
"what's with the rocks?"
"what was the thing about the tree?"
"Why did so&so disappear first?"
"what was going on in the last scene?"
sigh. they werent scared because they didnt get it.
jesse