Whenever a headline asks a question, the answer is always no.
yep. The only thing that's presented as a difference is a regular periodic update cycle, which is not really necessary as Mac security vulnerabilities are few and far between at this point. The other difference is code…
One only has to walk down Via dei Fori Imperiali in Rome (a 6 lane boulevard right through Ancient Rome) to understand to what extent Italian Governments (in that case, Mussolini) are willing to pave over their rich…
Does this mean that TZ database is back at elsie.nih.gov?
True, but not really a very good argument against the merge.
Steve Albini said it in the early 90s. http://www.negativland.com/albini.html
Not necessarily SF only. Zed blocked me from twitter because of some comment I made that I don't even recall. I actually like him, mostly.
Actually, it explains the trouble I've been having with double posts in my twitter client. To whoever wrote this, Thanks!
When they came out with the original timeline for integrating QNX onto the BB, I was excited. It was ambitious, but not impossible, and QNX is a fantastic OS that never found a niche. I was hoping RIM could revive it…
Anytime the headline is posed in the form of a question, the answer is no
a 15lb flywheel. Weight is death on a bicycle. As soon as you take that thing up any kind of incline it's like trying to dead-lift a barbell.
He was actually in 21st place at one point, which, because three drivers out of a field of 24 had dropped out, was last. It was an amazing 20 or so laps.
Nice to see Bram Cohen coming to the same conclusion I did. Having two branches constantly cross-merging is a bad idea, no matter what SCM you use.
I tried these instructions and got bupkis.
I say: "Shhh! Don't tell anyone, then they'll all want to do it!"
RunwayFinder replaced tens of thousands of dollars of hard-to-use maps and charts with a great free google maps interface. FlightPrep deserves to burn in hell as far as I'm concerned
Whenever a headline asks a question, the answer is always no.
yep. The only thing that's presented as a difference is a regular periodic update cycle, which is not really necessary as Mac security vulnerabilities are few and far between at this point. The other difference is code…
One only has to walk down Via dei Fori Imperiali in Rome (a 6 lane boulevard right through Ancient Rome) to understand to what extent Italian Governments (in that case, Mussolini) are willing to pave over their rich…
Does this mean that TZ database is back at elsie.nih.gov?
True, but not really a very good argument against the merge.
Steve Albini said it in the early 90s. http://www.negativland.com/albini.html
Not necessarily SF only. Zed blocked me from twitter because of some comment I made that I don't even recall. I actually like him, mostly.
Actually, it explains the trouble I've been having with double posts in my twitter client. To whoever wrote this, Thanks!
When they came out with the original timeline for integrating QNX onto the BB, I was excited. It was ambitious, but not impossible, and QNX is a fantastic OS that never found a niche. I was hoping RIM could revive it…
Anytime the headline is posed in the form of a question, the answer is no
a 15lb flywheel. Weight is death on a bicycle. As soon as you take that thing up any kind of incline it's like trying to dead-lift a barbell.
He was actually in 21st place at one point, which, because three drivers out of a field of 24 had dropped out, was last. It was an amazing 20 or so laps.
Nice to see Bram Cohen coming to the same conclusion I did. Having two branches constantly cross-merging is a bad idea, no matter what SCM you use.
I tried these instructions and got bupkis.
I say: "Shhh! Don't tell anyone, then they'll all want to do it!"
RunwayFinder replaced tens of thousands of dollars of hard-to-use maps and charts with a great free google maps interface. FlightPrep deserves to burn in hell as far as I'm concerned