d *down*load data to your phone or tablet.
If the devices are of comparable size and power, you aren't upping or
downing anything - you're just transferring data from one computer to
another. I suppose we could say "crossloading"?
--
Richard Heathfield
Email: rjh at cpax d
cognised only by some well-educated
people, and there are precious few of those), so why not use it?
I always leave my PC's clock set to GMT, partly out of this desire to
support a single timestamp standard, and (it must be said) partly out
of general cussedness.
--
Richard Heathfield <
Peter J. Holzer said:
> On 2007-07-03 08:57, Richard Heathfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Paul Rubin said:
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>>>> As for the primacy of UTC vs. TAI, this is the classical chicken
>>>> and
>>>> egg p
pecialist in the field. When I talk about GMT, I mean GMT,
not UTC. Therefore, I am a counter-example to your claim.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -www. +rjh@
Google users: <http://www.cpax.org.uk/prg/writings/googly.php>
"Usenet is a strange place" -
a no-brainer: 13,7 and 8,7 is
far and away the best move.
> I know this is kind of off-topic here. Please redirect me, if there
> are more appropriate newsgroup.
comp.programming is probably where you want to be, at least to start off
with.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.o
[comp.programming added, and followups set to that group]
v4vijayakumar said:
> On Apr 14, 12:35 pm, Richard Heathfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> v4vijayakumar said:
>> > In computer based, two player, board games, how to make computer play?
>>
>> Wri
one by one.
Tigers appear only to be able to move orthogonally (up/down/left/right) -
although they can use the horn to whizz across the chest (e.g. CHEST-1 to
HORN, HORN to CHEST-4, in two moves).
The rest of the rules are beyond me, I'm afraid. It's not clear how tigers
eat goats o
d you even
> think about that?).
>
> Unfortunately one then also get responses from trolls, small kids,
> idiots, etc..
In my experience, mensanator doesn't usually behave trollishly.
Perhaps he's just rubbing you up the wrong way accidentally. It might
be worth it for both yo
7;s parallel comment along similar lines, and Jon
Clements's reply - which appears to solve the problem, albeit in a
semi-proprietary way. So I'm not asking for a solutio, just adding my
vote for "let's try to keep the Web as open to everyone as we can".
--
Richard Heat
http://preview.tinyurl.com/progintro
>>
>> Cheers,
>
> Why is chapter 2 called "ASD"?
Presumably its subtitle is "Introducing UPPER CASE".
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
"Usenet is a strange place" - dmr 29 July 1999
Sig line vacant - apply within
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
larly enjoy relying on proprietary non-text
formats, however, is not crippled, just cautious.
A man who cannot express what he needs to express /without/ resorting
to .pdf format is computer-illiterate.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
"Usenet is a
In <7ktsj6f3bciq...@mid.individual.net>, osmium wrote:
> "Richard Heathfield" wrote:
>
>> A man who cannot express what he needs to express /without/
>> resorting to .pdf format is computer-illiterate.
>
> What format do you suggest?
Firstly, I want to
In <7ku6jhf3a23e...@mid.individual.net>, osmium wrote:
> "Richard Heathfield" wrote:
>
>>> if the OP had just been smarter.
>>
>> Er, no, I didn't have that in mind at all.
>
> In some cultures, implying that someone is illiterate sugges
In , Richard Heathfield
wrote:
> In <7ku6jhf3a23e...@mid.individual.net>, osmium wrote:
>>
>> In some cultures, implying that someone is illiterate suggests "not
>> smart".
>
> I don't see that at all. Babies are illiterate. Nobody knows wheth
But why should you have to?
>
> As opposed to...?
Something you can grep.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
"Usenet is a strange place" - dmr 29 July 1999
Sig line vacant - apply within
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
, so every book /should/
have an errata list - at least until such time as an author can
correct errors in already-sold books. That not every book does have
such a list is therefore of some concern.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
"Usenet is
n.
The gap between nought and one is much greater than the gap between
one and a thousand.
> It's like
> the difference between driving a car and designing one. You don't
> need an engineering degree to drive a car. :-)
Right. Nowadays, you need a degree in electronics ins
u must be an idiot, that's entirely up to you, but I would take it
as a personal favour if you could be an idiot *somewhere else*. If you
don't like GNU software, fine - don't use it. End of problem.
--
Richard Heathfield <http://www.cpax.org.uk>
Email: -http://www. +rjh@
&qu
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