Comment Obvious reason (Score 5, Funny) 725
The navy liked their version of minesweeper best.
The navy liked their version of minesweeper best.
Seriously, if you break your TV with a remote, its your fault.
I disagree. Clearly my inability to hold on to a remote with my greasy cheetos-covered hand is a fundamental online rights issue. Hence the tags for this story.
Ahhh arts students, the sort of people who fall for...
At least they make good venti iced soy mochas
... that they have names (Antu, Kueyen, Melipal, Yepun) for the individual telescopes in the VLT, but could only come up with "very large telescope" for the whole array.
Please include at least a transformers reference in the next one. Thanks.
You can't actually tell people they can directly buy XP increases. You have to setup something to obscure the issue and pretend it has a legitimate usage...
*cough* WoW recruit-a-friend *cough*
He's just welcoming our new Zombie Overlords
.
Exactly - it's not too much Java, it's students not understanding the libraries they're using:
I'm not sure how much of the problem is Java itself and how much is the emphasis on using libraries, though. The trouble is that Java has in many places been used to dumb down the curriculum while at the same time increasing the apparent level of delivered goods. It is good to be able to (quickly) build new things by calling libraries, but often that's not a skilled, challenging job. If that's all you have seen, you are completely lost when faced with a job for which a pre-packaged solution does not exist.
The sloppy fat geek computer genius semi-buried in a pile of pizza boxes and cola cans is a mythical creature, best buried deep, never to be seen again
Be careful. They're easily frightened, but they'll soon be back, and in greater numbers.
I don't think anyone's found a overflow in notepad either djb!
I wouldn't doubt it - try typing in "this app can break" (without quotes) or another string in that format. Save the file and reopen.
So a government backed initiative supported by domain name vendors accounting for 65% of domain names and it says:
Dan Bernstein's push for DNSCurve might face an uphill slog.
I think that might be understating it a bit. If it's not, I'm joining Dan's fan club.
At 0.3 kelvin - just above absolute zero - these electrons flow without resistance and so create a superconductor.
So my stock fan won't quite cut it this time?
F.E.A.R. , short for First Encounter Assault Recon
Combine that with such gems as:
players view the virtual world from the perspective of the characters they manipulate, making Counter-Strike an example of what's known as a first-person-shooter game.
and I'm not sure that belongs here.
Then again, maybe I'm just bitter that I still can't beat GNU chess.
The person whose data are processed - the data subject - enjoys a number of enforceable rights. This includes, for instance, the right to be informed about the processing and the right to correct data.
Now how do you apply that to remote searches? Will they inform people they mistakenly "search" due to incorrect information?
The EU said controls were in place to ensure that data protection laws were not breached as this information was gathered and shared.
I'll go out on a limb here and say the controls aren't going to ensure this.
steamclient_linux.so is used by the dedicated linux servers to connect to steam and check for updates and such, it was probably just included by mistake..
The article quotes a large string of names and says:
These strings plus hundreds of other technically shouldn't be needed if this were simply for Linux server usage -- even though no Linux server binary ships with the Windows game on Steam.
Not sure if that's reasonable grounds for their assumption, but is worth considering.
Numeric stability is probably not all that important when you're guessing.