That's not always correct.
That's not always correct.
Code or via an SSH session to a server: Vim (gVim on my workstation)
@dandavis: That's a great idea! I need to look into that.
Yes I agree, same with McDonalds that charge a daily or hourly fee. But I guess it's hard to recoup the cost of internet connectivity when your customers rarely spend more than $5 per visit.
Ah yes, the ol' nuke and boot. I had an unfixable issue with my XP install, after a few hours of troubleshooting I cut my losses, backed up my docs folder and nuked the install.
@schwnj: Careful with that advice. Most stereos with RCA jacks on the back are outputs for hooking up amplifiers. It's rare to find one with RCA inputs.
Lame... site is down - oh wait, it's a dyndns address so it's probably hosted on some old dusty P2 choking on a 128k DSL line.
I remember reading somewhere a long time ago that a CD (audio or data) could survive a 1/8" hole being drilled into it due to the way it writes data.
SumtraPDF Viewer is where it's at. A portable version is available on [portableapps.com]
Because its interesting tech news, albeit maybe not the core of LH content - but worthy of mentioning.
"Do no evil" now has a little more meaning.
I'm with Craig. I'd be fine calling it "Bacon"
I would never recommend hosting or running a wiki at home unless you have a dedicated server sitting on its own network (a wide open DMZ doesn't count).
For those too lazy to read the article before blaming Skype for blame shifting -
I use Texter for signing email -
I wouldn't waste my money on this for the kids - they'd hate me for it.
@cv: So cool... short sweet and to the point. Tricky Dick has left the building.
Some people have a natural gift for leadership and management... and the MBA is not really necessary.
PCTools has a great OLPG - I have it generate ten passwords then choose one. If someone's sniffing your traffic, they will have ten passwords to try. [www.pctools.com]