nemouse-old
neMouse
nemouse-old

@Sakilla: Since iCoder sells code and coding services this should be a particularly black eye for them. Why would you deal with them knowing that they might rip off your assets or resell the code to a competitor?

@lonewanderer: They only GPL'd the source code. Not the art assets. iCoder is using the entire package, which is clearly a violation of the stated license.

@RyanBaer: They released the source code. The very post that iCoder's rep links to states that the assets (art, music, name, etc) are NOT part of the open source, and CANNOT be resold.

The 'two Crichtons' sequence is probably my favorite run of episodes in the entire series. The series had some of the most alien aliens of any sci-fi shows, even the ones who were just 'humans of unusual color'.

Just looked it up on a wiki for Andromeda. Apparently they were a form of physical shielding, with a mesh of monofilament running between them. The intent was that missiles or asteroids would impact that first, rather than the hull.

RTFA: "And for the purposes of this list, we're going by the definition of "starship" from the venerable "Starship Smackdown" event. Which means, a starship has to travel between star systems, and ideally ought to have a crew and a mission. So no Serenity, sorry."

Ugh, his plans for Battle Angel sound like what seems to happen over and over for movie-adaptations of manga (or most any long-running serials, like Avatar). Gut the character and plot development and go straight to the flashy bits.

Looks like it's going to be top of the pile for features, which usually translates to top of the pile for price too. I'm going to guess $850. Just low enough to get a comparison with the current iPad 64/3G

@Geisrud: As an individual, he found that some places would let him return unscratched tickets. So he could feed the 'losers' back into the system.

@FloppyRocks: Because someone else has already gone through them and pulled the winners. Duh.

@syronimus: Or say, offer the guy behind the counter a bribe that's significantly more than the minimum wage he'd usually make in an hour.

@mrjeremiahross: There's also Crashplan, which, at worst, lets you back up all of the drives on all of the computers in an entire house-hold for $120 per year.

@RDRR: Carbonite only backs up internal drives (though the business edition might make an exception).

@cxwong: If Bing was actually spell checking, why wouldn't it do so to return the 22,000 potential results for the correct term, or at least suggest the correct term, rather than putting the user to a page with 4 results, based on the misspelled term, one of which is arbitrary (and probably a result of Google's

@Goopplesoft - Reliant Robin of whitenoise: It looks like Google's theory is that the Bing toolbar is monitoring the sequence of URLs a user visits and then feeds that sequence back to Microsoft and gets incorporated into Bing results.

@Zilla_Killa: And there's really no reason for that result to come up in the Bing search, because it has nothing to do with the term Bing is running the search on.

@geolemon: Google tested it with completely arbitrary character strings paired with arbitrary results.

@2 replies: If you look closely at both screen shots you'll see that aside from the first result, everything else in the Bing search is based on the misspelling.