Comment Re:Translation (Score 1) 780
Webkit had to be contributed to comply with the licensing of KHTML.
Webkit had to be contributed to comply with the licensing of KHTML.
My Palm OS device preferred stylus, but could work (badly) with finger touch as well. Resistive touch screens.
Just use all that wonderful hydrogen to do this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fischer-Tropsch_process
While poking around a couple of weeks ago, I found a couple of HDL sources for MIPS R3000 cores. Would these run into licensing issues? They could be adapted to something similar, or perhaps other uses with the addition of on chip I/O and perhaps a vector unit, IMHO.
I take it nobody asked Douglas Rain to do the job?
Atlas V uses a Russian RD-180 LOX/Kerosene motor in it's first stage. It's derived from the RD-170 used in the Energia booster, except it runs two combustion chambers (instead of four) off a single turbo pump.
Yeah, I don't think he's suffered.
I mean, he did bone Princess Leia. Several times.
The word everyone is looking for would be obsolescent. Just because a newer processor comes out, it doesn't mean that the old ones stop working en masse.
The statement isn't even true, however. Not as long as the older gear is still useful and the inconvenience of replacement outweighs the advantages.
The days of gentlemen skippers are long gone. America's cup teams now use professional crews and professional skippers. USA 17 (the current cup holder) was helmed by Russell Coutts. Larry didn't "command the crew", Russell did. Larry's most important task was to support Russell financially and organizationally.
I don't mean to take away from Larry's abilities as a sailor, but simply to point out the commitment required of sailors at the top levels of competition. It's no longer the hobby it was 30 years ago. It is a life and a career.
The only "advantage" is when you're defaulted to Windows because an ISV has a required shrink wrap application available only for Windows.
I'm guessing this is the command that lit off the rocket. It seems like it's still used for a lot of weapons development testing.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/point-mugu.htm
The lady didn't die because of the bicycle accident. She died 3 months later due to an unrelated cause.
Math has an axiomatic basis, and those axioms have no natural validity to them. We don't strictly know any mathematical assertions are true, we believe they are true.
At this age, those teachings tend to be very concrete. "Don't play with matches." "Don't touch things on the stove." Being able to logically evaluate the consequences of a theoretical action in a situation with which a child is unfamiliar would be almost unheard of.
It actually does mean they can't plan evil. Within the Piaget model, children do not form the processes necessary to reasonably determine the consequences of their actions and furthermore do not have an understanding of right and wrong beyond an egocentric level.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_of_cognitive_development#Preoperational_stage
But you're right about the brain matter thing.
FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis