Many other registrars are inexpensive too like NameCheap and Gandi and BigRock.
The Raspberry Pi cannot play all of the formats the OP desires. For example, it cannot play large AVIs streamed over SMB, only certain formats the hardware can handle.
OpenSSL to the rescue!
$ openssl s_client -connect pop.gmail.com:995
What controller do you use to run them?
Mostly correct, with lomoco you get only the following CPI choices: 400, 800, 1200 and 1600 (as of my old 2005 version). The +/- buttons do change DPI on-the-fly, and with Xorg (and others), you can map the buttons.
For example, in Open Arena I map the back-button to zoom. (And the back/forward buttons work while web browsing, etc.)
With Linux, there is no over-arching driver that "knows" you are running game X and changes the key mapping, while game Y has a separate mapping. One would need to run a tiny script when launching the game or set the keys in-game.
$ man lomoco
NAME
lomoco - Logitech Mouse Control for USB Mice
SYNOPSIS
lomoco [OPTIONS]
DESCRIPTION
lomoco can configure vendor-specific options on Logitech USB mice (or dual-personality mice plugged into
the USB port). A number of recent devices are supported. The program is mostly useful in setting the
resolution to 800 cpi or higher on mice that boot at 400 cpi (such as the MX500, MX510, MX1000 etc.), and
disabling SmartScroll or Cruise Control for those who would rather use the two extra buttons as ordinary
mouse buttons.
Hint 1: use a Linux kernel with Event Interface support (the evdev module) if you want full access to the
numerous buttons on these mice.
Hint 2: on Linux, the usbmouse driver ignores the extra buttons altogether. Don't let it handle your
Logitech mice -- use the generic hid driver for USB HID devices instead.
Most large/corporate installs of Windows manage updates via server-determined policies, not by individual users.
One would assume LiMux is managed the same way: an IT team is constantly pushing out updates to their 14,800 desktops. If they made their own distribution, they probably manage their own auto-updates.
You can easily run ghostery, request policy, refcontrol, noscript, https everywhere, cookie monster, and BetterPrivacy all at the same time.
How does anyone browse without these? I setup all of those, except request policy and noscript, for every user I help. They're nearly all passive.
This is d3.js at it's finest.
The code is very readable with decent comments like:
function merge_destinations(a, b) {
How about:
- TabKit (tabs on the side, how does anyone browse without this?!!)
- FoxyProxy
- NoScript (it's not the same on Chrome)
- Redirector
- Screen Capture Elite
- HTML Validator
- Refcontrol (blocks/fakes referrer header)
- Better Privacy (flash cookie blocker/sanitizer)
The list goes on...
Wow, that sounds incredibly horrendous.
Hopefully just like Gnome2 -> 3, there will be a large community supported fork to maintain a customizable browser.
Every November, Mozilla releases its financial report for the previous year.
FTFA.
You obviously do not use, nor rely on, extensions. Extensions for Chrome/Chromium pale in comparison to what extensions for Firefox can do.
Want tabs on the side? Good luck with Chrome. Good luck with alternate Webkit browsers with not enough marketshare to attract extensions.
Simple things like holding control (and optionally shift!) to select cell values or entire columns in a table are what set Firefox apart from other browsers.
It is impossible to enjoy idling thoroughly unless one has plenty of work to do. -- Jerome Klapka Jerome