QMurphy
QMurphy
QMurphy

Now would be a good time to repost this article:

Yeah. I almost agreed with Fairen and Schultze-Makuch until I read that.

Python, C++, or Java are all great choices in my mind.

Living up north where it gets below freezing often, I need to know if I should be expecting the roads to be icy. If your argument for Fahrenheit is that it gives closer measurements, you just need to go by half degrees Celsius, and suddenly you have more precision than full degrees Fahrenheit. Already in your life you

Regarding 3rd party TVs, I got a 50" Sceptre earlier this year for dirt cheap, and it's great. 4 HDMI inputs, great blacks. Only downside is that the speakers face backwards, so I highly suggest getting a stereo system for your audio.


What about "fookin'"? No love for South Africa.

He's touching the monitor... *shudders*

Everything except anti-aliasing...

That actually sounds great. My desktop and laptop have multiple operating systems, why don't phones have a choice?

But how does the US have access to the server?

Was the server domestic? If not, as I assume it isn't, how did they seize it without jurisdiction?

Today's word is... INCEST!

Well, difficulty getting a job after school hasn't dissuaded hordes of people from studying philosophy, so I don't foresee this happening with STEM.

Love this. I've recently been trying to consolidate my online presence, and while I was able to add a secondary account, my @live.com address remained primary (didn't necessarily affect me, but it was a little nagging). Now if only I could remove my @gmail.com address from my Google account.

That is not what I'm saying, please just read the post. What I am saying is that he defined Free Market wrong. He is saying that the Free Market should be defined as his idea of an ideal market, where I am saying that it is defined as a market without intervention. Yes, there needs to be oversight (though not as much

And yet, no one is forcing you to use those services. So what is your definition of a free market? One where the government steps in and tells companies what they can and cannot do? It sounds like you have your definition wrong.

Free market at work.

I understand, but that's not the point that S_T_R was making. He was saying that it was impossible for them to log all unencrypted emails, and I said that it was possible.

It's not all internet traffic, it's emails. With the majority of emails being just text (assuming pictures in signatures are not included), it's not a lot of storage needed. No one is sending 5GB files via email.

Never heard of them before. Thanks for the heads up!