Comment Re:In nature - I give you, Brassica oleracea! (Score 1) 255
Well, didn't think of Giger, but Gaudi sprung to mind at once.The Brassica is also impressive in real life.
Well, didn't think of Giger, but Gaudi sprung to mind at once.The Brassica is also impressive in real life.
Scientific truth is a different sort of truth to Mathematical truth. Literary truth is again a different sort of truth. Stories can be true and represent truth in powerful ways. Your life story would be true if you told it? (Even if parts of it were not entirely accurate...)
I was intrigued to see the following tucked away in the "Other Features" section http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Features_new_to_Windows_7#Other_features:
A new font "Gabriola" is included.[63] There is also Office Open XML and ODF support in WordPad.
If ODF is built into Win 7 at this level then a lot of things change. Admittedly WordPad's new ribbon interface gets higher billing up on the page, but the ODF support is the real gem. And a surprise for me to see it included.
A Russian theorist Alexei Olovnikov was the first to recognize (1971) the problem of how chromosomes could replicate right to the tip, as such was impossible with replication in a 3' to 5' direction. To solve this and to accommodate Leonard Hayflick's idea of limited somatic cell division, Olovnikov suggested that DNA sequences would be lost in every replicative phase until they reached a critical level, at which point cell division would stop.[1][2]
During cell division, the enzymes that duplicate the chromosome and its DNA cannot continue their duplication all the way to the end of the chromosome. If cells divided without telomeres, they would lose the end of their chromosomes, and the necessary information it contains. (In 1972, James Watson named this phenomenon the "end replication problem".) The telomeres are disposable buffers blocking the ends of the chromosomes and are consumed during cell division and replenished by an enzyme, the telomerase reverse transcriptase.
Elizabeth Blackburn compared telomeres to the tips on the ends of shoelaces that keep them from unravelling.[3]
Well, if Microsoft can't manage something this simple without it being a
total security disaster then perhaps it's time for more people to start
using Linux or MacOS. This is nothing to "sweep under the rug". This is
stuff that should be getting more rubust and more safe over time as more
people and companies get used to using features like this.
Oddly enough it's pretty easy to enable the ssh server in MacOS. It's there
but not turned on by default and very easy to switch on. You don't have to
make it a disaster to make it easy. Apple has been proving this for decades.
I imagine any CS dept (and maybe other technical departments) will support Linux.
Outside of that, its probably potluck between Windows and OS X.
Read the afterward (or is it the forward? Haven't read it in a while) to Cory Doctorow's Little Brother, where he explains why he gives his books away for free on his website in lots of different formats. He's a best seller, BTW, a VERY good writer.
If I've never heard of your game I'm not very likely to buy it, now am I? I used to be an avid gamer, and shareware was the way to go (I bought a copy of Duke Nukem when he was a squeaky little side scroller after trying it). Demos sucked; often the demo was the only good two minutes of a long bad game.
If I haven't played your game, I'm not buying it. If I play it and hate it, I'm not buying it. If I play it and like it, I'll buy it. You're shooting yourself in the foot with your greedy attitude. Sure, there are people who are going to get a free copy and play and not buy, but you're not going to get a sale from them at any rate.
Your attitude also makes me think that maybe your games aren't really all that good -- a really good artist wants everyone to be exposed to their art. You sound like you're just after the money, and I've never seen good art come from anyone who was just out for the money.
Watch a few episodes of Shark's Tank or Dragon's Den, then you will know what to do.
TO put it simply - go to a VC. License your patent for say 10%. Sit back and collect your cheques while in the beach in Maui - let the VC worry about the infrastructure / marketing / other BS.
I REALLY want a Netbook like you are describing!!! I already have a EEE PC and I hardly use it, the screen is poor for reading, battery life too, plus it is HOT. I also have a Nokia N810 and use that a lot, despite the tiny screen; it is more comfortable and more portable.(And the good battery life makes a big difference)
Your description of an e-ink Netbook is really the sort of device that I would like now I have had some experience of small devices.
I was interested in some other posts that describe the desirability of reading many small PDF's on an e-ink device. I can see the benefit of an e-book type device in comparison with carrying all the small papers around, as in printed form they are extremely cumbersome. On the other hand for casual reading a paperback book is hard to beat and generally I only need one of them at a time as it takes so long to read comparatively (that was the way "1984" was designed to be read eh?!) But for small papers and research I can see the niche an e-ink Netbook would fill.
Early adoption of these small devices has refined and developed their purpose and that will continue. I will be interested to see if this is the way newspapers will go. Although, I doubt that printed newspapers will vanish in the same way that I doubt that paper books will vanish. After all, I wont want to swat flies or cover the base of the budgie cage with a Netbook.
No, I wouldn't. But I have listened to a friends choice of music on Last.fm.
Interesting point on patents - will contributing to the kernel mean MS will downplay their patent threats? I can imagine them contributing and sueing but the more contributions then the less credence they will gain in court?
The Windows 7 icons make me scared: surely if you turn a folder on it's side like that all the bits will fall out? Is that what will happen to me with Windows? I don't want gravity pulling my bits out!
>
Perhaps the EU won't let them?
Over-inflating prices is not a great strategy for a previously convicted monopolist and will cost EU businesses millions. This could possibly be the start of another anti-trust case. And (potentially) wonderfully ironic.
I too have switched to Gnome (with great reluctance) over KDE4. I have followed KDE4 from 4.0.0 days to 4.2.x and I have so many problems that it makes me very unproductive. Sound is not working, new plasma networkmanager applet is weird, overcomplex and incomplete all at the same time, Kmail crashes consistently, effects keep going off, knotify uses all the processor, python keeps hanging.I spend all my time in krunner killing off rogue processes.
I was very reluctant to switch to Gnome. I have never felt comfortable with it. BUT it is currently very stable, firefox and thunderbird look at treat on it, my mail is stable, my sound works, my wifi works etc. I will switch back when KDE matures (most likely).
I was getting seriously frustrated with the KDE4 releases. Switching to Gnome made me realise why I love FLOSS as it is rock solid and reliable. (And the windows wobble better!)
I as a user of KDE4 feel very much dis-enfranchised by the current way it is going. I think if they were to actively seek feedback from users (who are not developers) with some form of satisfaction survey they would gain some very valuable knowledge, probably solve the top 10 annoyances and with back a whole lot of goodwill that I fear may be erroded.
Hackers of the world, unite!