|
|
|
Prog.Hu
|
Csak 2006 után érkezik a következõ Windows változat (Oct 15 2003 08:50 GMT) - Többszöri csúsztatás után a Microsoft ismét arrébb tolta következõ Windows operációs rendszerének várható kiadási dátumát. A legújabb tervek szerint a Longhorn kódnéven ismert, következõ generációs kliens operációs rendszer megjelenése csak 2006 végén várható. Ezt a Microsoft vezetõi jelentették b.. |
Site Concept Scan
|
Clampdown on street dealers is hailed a success (Oct 15 2003 08:49 GMT) - (UK) 'We are taking out of the market a considerable amount of drug dealers.[$drug_related(100%), $drugwar_propaganda(100%), $propaganda_theme1(100%), $propaganda_theme2(50%), $propaganda_theme3(60%), $propaganda_theme5(60%), $illegal_drugs(100%), $drugs(95%), $various_drugs(95%), $various_illegal_drugs(100%)] |
onlineblog.com
|
Vanity searching made easy (Oct 15 2003 08:49 GMT) - Googlealert, a Google-tracking service that is not Google itself, has announced upgrades to its services which should appeal to plenty of fellow hacks and bloggers. The service searches Google daily for you, checking the terms you want and seeing if anything new has cropped up in the last 24-hours. Previously, it would let you know the results by email, but now it's offering a variety of feeds - including HTML, RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0 and TrackBack, which means you can incorporate its results into your webpages. |
Variety.com - Chasing Pirates
|
U inks deal for anti-piracy technology (Oct 15 2003 08:48 GMT) - Chasing Pirates: Watermark technology to be used throughout pic cycle Deploying another method to combat piracy, Universal Pictures has inked a multi-year deal with Verance Corp. to use the company's watermarking technology to copy-protect its pics. |
Associated Press headlines via GoUpstate.com
|
Saudi Arabia Arrests 150 Protesters (Oct 15 2003 08:47 GMT) - Saudi police arrested up to 150 people for staging a rare public protest in the capital to call for reforms in the conservative Islamic kingdom, the interior minister said Wednesday. Tuesday's protest in central Riyadh was the first such large-scale demonstration in a kingdom that has been under internal and external pressure to reform. |
Neil's World,
|
Sucky websites (Oct 15 2003 08:46 GMT) - You know, considering the BCS is supposed to be the UK's only professional society for people involved in IT, you'd expect it to have a better site. (237 words) |
Niutopia/Jouebs
|
babsy : Génèse (Oct 15 2003 08:46 GMT) - Coucou tout le monde!! Je me présente, babsy. Surnom donné par mes amis lié à une histoire qui remonte très très loin ; laquelle j'espère vous en faire part un jour! Je me présente, on va faire dans l'original, comme dans toute présentation : |
Looking Out
|
New location (Oct 15 2003 08:45 GMT) - Pssst all the action is over here and I managed to do it all by myself without help from anyone.... |
WebLogs @ DotNetJunkies.com
|
Another INTP! (Oct 15 2003 08:45 GMT) - Your Type is INTP Introverted Intuitive Thinking Perceiving Strength of the preferences % 11 33 33 22 Qualitative analysis of your type formula You are: slightly expressed introvert moderately expressed intuitive personality moderately expressed thinking personality slightly expressed perceiving personality |
Ecademy: user blogs
|
Important messages and the failure to communicate [Michael Bond] (Oct 15 2003 08:43 GMT) - What is it about modern speakers and writers that they insist on adopting the most obscure words and terms from English to express their ideas? Just reading through one article and although I vaguely understood the content I was so irritated by their adoption of "pop words" that the core arguement they were trying to express missed me entirely. Having had a poor educashun in English like wot it is spoke as a result of many years of government effort to make us all thick, I find it a major distraction when plain simple and previously common terms are substituted with the most obscure words in the dictionary. I am aware of the need of the modern business manager, politician, etc., to screw his staff, shareholders and others by trying to put on the guise of the educated and distract us all from the true circumstances, but it's a dangerous habit to get in to when you finally have to say something important. |
Ecademy: user blogs
|
Important messages and the failure to communicate [Michael Bond] (Oct 15 2003 08:43 GMT) - What is it about modern speakers and writers that they insist on adopting the most obscure words and terms from English to express their ideas? Just reading through one article and although I vaguely understood the content I was so irritated by their adoption of "pop words" that the core arguement they were trying to express missed me entirely. Having had a poor educashun in English like wot it is spoke as a result of many years of government effort to make us all thick, I find it a major distraction when plain simple and previously common terms are substituted with the most obscure words in the dictionary. I am aware of the need of the modern business manager, politician, etc., to screw his staff, shareholders and others by trying to put on the guise of the educated and distract us all from the true circumstances, but it's a dangerous habit to get in to when you finally have to say something important. |
|