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"It was complicated." They said no, pretty simple.

@pagan_god: He also said "The people who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything."

@pagan_god: Just an FYI, Flickr has 5 billion total photos as of September 2010. Facebook? 3 billion photo uploads a month.

@TheCrudMan: Ok, I'll try to be more clear. Your original argument that the death of 1U XSERVES means the death of FCP is absolutely stupid. What FCP production houses care most about is RAID storage, and the only thing changing here is the size of the management (OS X server) box.

That seems crazy complicated. Possible over-engineering?

@Wrathernaut: They are represented by the blue background

@benjgvps: OK THANKS GRANDPA BETTER GET TO THAT PARK BENCH BEFORE THE BIRDS DO

@chatterboxwriting: To be clear, you can still sue if you did not previously register the work. By going in front of the court, you are effectively registering your work (and will be asked to do so). If you register within 5 years, that document becomes prima facie (top teir) evidence in your case. After such time, or

@Stevox: You are, naturally, wrong. I work in copyright. First, section "§ 104. Subject matter of copyright: National origin" clearly states that copyright is based on nationality, i.e. published in, for, or by U.S. citizens, OR by nationals with any treaty to the U.S., and does not in any way require registration

@drstein: Biden was selected and ran as VP for his foreign policy experience, not his position on copyright.

@topsully: Regarding computers: "I am an illiterate that has to rely on my wife for all of the assistance that I can get." Jon McCain, January 2008.

@Phatric: The area is owned and operated by the Port of Seattle, so the government is responsible. And in this case, sounds like the Pentagon is footing the bill.

@planetarian: I'm not sure you can make that assumption. Being inside China's firewall can significantly complicate things.

@twophrasebark: I don't think the TOS for Android US Marketplace allow for international access either. Laws and taxes are different in every country, which is why we don't see HULU worldwide.

I don't like how the controls are inverted. Up means down, down means up. Good chance it would feel natural to me once I was sitting in front of it though, but in terms of gaming and stuff, I can't stand inverted. Flight simulators though, yes.

I work in copyright so I feel I should clarify:

I'm confused. Is their tax rate 2.4% on total earnings, including world-wide revenue? Or is it 2.4% on earnings generated from within the U.S. border? I'm trying to understand this.

Is that a pine cone fountain?