* KOA, but you'll find the road noise will make it hard to sleep. If you are from NYC, that may not be an issue. I always travel with earplugs.
* KOA, but you'll find the road noise will make it hard to sleep. If you are from NYC, that may not be an issue. I always travel with earplugs.
Excellent points.
Are you an expert on this or just an observer nearly run over by talkers?
No, not every flight, just the saved flights previously viewed map resolutions. Estiamted tracking and estimating a location should be possible without a data connection. It makes no sense to search for a flight without a data connection. OTOH, caching a single day of all flight schedules for a single airline…
THANK YOU! That helps big-time. The option isn't hidden, but that area of the UI doesn't jump out as a button or tab either.
Bought FlightTrack today. It doesn't work at all without a data connection. Not exactly useful for for wifi-only android devices on the go. With a solid data connection is it fairly nice. I've been watching a few overseas flights today for fun - Korean Air to ICN and a Delta flight to NRT.
Neither of those work
I'd say that the most secure browser is lynx. It is text-based, doesn't support javascript or any plugins, so it is nearly impossible to get infected via images, plugins, PDF, java, flash, or javascript.
I have a few questions for everyone here too:
IME, they aren't interested in learning. They've accepted that not understanding is their lot in life. They don't know how automobiles work, so this isn't any different. When their car stops going they take it to a mechanic and pay lots of money. Computers aren't any different except that computers seem to limp along…
The Google Python class looks awesome. Lectures and exercises for 2 days!
Allowing remote access to your home computer is not the best advice, especially for someone new to programming and security. However, we all do it. Just be aware that you are risking all the data and probably all the other systems on your home network in doing this.
msinfo32.exe - it is built in for XP and Win7. It works on Win7 x64 too.
* Mac = $1200 (assuming min Java/IDE Devel RAM) [www.apple.com]
There really aren't any compatible file systems across those platforms for booting. You cannot boot Linux from NTFS (without some hacks like WUBI). Windows file permissions aren't compatible with UNIX-based OSes.
Accountants get proprietary data from clients all the time.
I'm sure others will say this.
Closed Captioning Question:
IMHO,
Add diced Kielbasa sausage or hot dogs if you'd like a little meat-like addition.