Comment Re:Yeah, right (Score 3) 245
Don't forget facebook.net and fb.net! (probably fb.com too).
Not to mention anything that goes through EC2 or akamai.
(not so perfect a solution these days, is my point)
Don't forget facebook.net and fb.net! (probably fb.com too).
Not to mention anything that goes through EC2 or akamai.
(not so perfect a solution these days, is my point)
I am stating fact, not opinion. Sorry.
Then enforce your rules on your population and leave other countries alone.
"I do not agree with what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it." comes to mind!
Fine then, remove obesity from the list. Now we're down to homosexuality, ugliness, and mixed-race.
Well, that's one way. The real problem is the inconsistency.
Yes, can anyone summarize the summary for me? Jeez.
I suppose the fact that Personal Computers (PCs) are a subset of computers is entirely lost on you?
Yes, anything with a microcontroller can be a computer. That does not make them Personal Computers.
Computer and Personal Computer are not interchangeable terms.
Personal Computers are subsets of Computers. Calling your microwave a computer though doesn't really work. More than likely it just has a lot of complex digital logic circuits, but it is not a computer.
Your desktop and tablet can both be computers without them both being PCs (Personal Computer)
Wrong.
An open architecture is one that you are free to design peripherals for, such as ISA, PCI, PCIe cards in the x86 architecture.
I invite you to go watch Mad Max.
I'd be more concerned about the misuse of the word "create" in this case, to be honest.
That was a typo. I had intended to write 180 grain (which is what I have sitting at home, for my 30-06)
Which is why all the critical functions can be performed via HOTAS.
It seems to me that this could be greatly improved by displaying this information together on a glass MFD.
It's a trade-off. Tunnel vision isn't always bad, if you focus on this theoretical "omnibus" instrument you watch it more closely, but the other information is right there without you having to break your focus.
We warn the reader in advance that the proof presented here depends on a clever but highly unmotivated trick. -- Howard Anton, "Elementary Linear Algebra"