Comment Re:No (Score 1) 824
I think most of the work is done by Mozilla's own paid engineers, except on community projects like Seamonkey and, now, Thunderbird. I could be wrong.
I think most of the work is done by Mozilla's own paid engineers, except on community projects like Seamonkey and, now, Thunderbird. I could be wrong.
If you're going to buy cheapo electronic parts, you should buy a decent multimeter for testing.
These are photographs, not telescopic images of the universe. How many megapixels does a camera phone need? Are people going to be sending me the full pictures and then I have to spend time reducing them to a reasonable size?
Where is this magical place you think the Social Security Administration should have been saving your contributions? In the stock market? Cubes of cash? Mutual funds? Maybe something safer? Treasury bonds? Well, that's what they did.
And any email system is a PITA to run. And if your spam filtering is not as good as Gmail's, you will hear about it. I'm surprised web host ISP's have not outsourced this stuff off their servers - except the 3rd party email companies cost as much as web hosting itself. That tells you it is expensive to run an email service.
Product page says "BoomerangIt Packs and Subscriptions are no longer available for purchase." I can't find anything written about it in the last seven years, except this: http://boomerangit.wordpress.c...
Even its offshoot the National Bike Registry seems a it moribund.
SamTrans runs an express bus between from SF and Palo Alto, but that's only halfway to San Jose. Too many counties!
NPR ran without follow-up a rail industry spokesperson saying "99.9997% of all rail trips occur without serious incident." Without giant fireballs in the sky? Yes, we knew that already!
The workers on the train managed to unhook some of the cars that had not yet caught fire. No free speech for them though, so we get the shill.
But did snakes specifically evolve to lie in wait for primates and their delicious x-factor blood? Snakes as we know them would not have evolved without delicious primate blood. Which also explains vampires.
Deplorable network competence there, but it does bring up an unrelated issue. Like most people I've been tending away the "www." in canonical site addresses, but it does have nice redundancy in meaning. Terseness is not always the bestness.
Let the puns begin. Isn't that just Pentium? Is that the same as unAMD?
Windows 8 has a command line.
So your dead Geocities site will probably be seen by very few if anyone, but it may be available to the diligent researcher. Whatever the space the Google does not index is called.
On that topic, have you ever noticed Google Books sometimes gives better results than Google?
Actually, Geocities sites are better archived than most dead content, due to the uproar. There are at least four projects, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeoCities#Archiving_GeoCities_Web_sites They are incomplete, since they rely on incoming links, but massive. And if you've used the Wayback Machine, which is one of the stores, you know archived pages in general are not always functional past the first link.
On Wikipedia it became controversial whether to allow Geocities archive mirrors as links and references, since... there is money at stake! Presumably for advertising, one of the archives ran a bot to mass edit change "Geocities.com" to its own domain.
Happiness is twin floppies.