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teh silly

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  1. How very silly. Peer-to-peer file sharing itself violates no laws and no regulations. It's simply a protocol through which people can convey information in a somewhat efficient manner. It's ridiculous to say file sharing violates any rights, because it does not (it's the people who make the violations). This is a terribly important distinction to make.
  2. Actually most of these make perfect sense and are not new sins at all. Like Kyougi made note of, most of them already exist. They're pretty much corollaries to the original sins, restated because apparently people aren't getting the idea. However, I don't get the pollution thing. Of course, the Church has done silly, unChurch-like things in the past, sticking their noses places they don't belong. I think this may be another instance (or rather, I unless I hear a good explanation). Oh well, I was never a big "green earth"-type guy anyway.
  3. Light does have mass...in a sense. For instance, if you were in the unlikely situation where you were stranded (stationary) a couple of feet from your spacecraft (also stationary) with a flashlight, you could move yourself back to the craft simply by turning on the flashlight and pointing it in a direction opposite the craft. Of course it would be much easier and more effective to simply throw the flashlight in that direction.... But light always moves, so its rest mass cannot be measured. So in a sense it also has no mass. It depends on your definition of mass.
  4. This may help explain. Kilobyte
  5. Haha, that cartoon is funny. Oh, and the Air has very little real utility, except as a conversation piece. It is teh silly.
  6. I see what you mean I guess. I'm talking free beer. Still, I think it's kind of silly to make these kinds of generalizations for a Microsoft product, any of which are normally immediately associated with a hefty price tag. By the way, an interesting side note: "free" software (in the GNU sense) is very rarely, in my opinion, "better" than proprietary software. It's true that Linux, for example, is great and free and stuff. It has many utilities and little programs like [bleeped!], which make me chuckle. I often write code on Linux. But I would never forgo my Windows installations for it. Nor would I stop using .NET, which I view as a better IDE than anything I've found in Linux. In fact, were I forced to choose between Linux and Windows, I would most likely go with Windows. EDIT: I forgot about the bleeping... well, the program name is the acronym for the three letter "WT..."
  7. I guess it's not free if you count the effort and cost you put into verifying you are a student and downloading it? Of course the software itself is not universally free...
  8. I'm gonna have to go with Crysis. Best I've seen.
  9. Ok kiddies, listen up. Microsoft Dreamspark. All of the good and useful Microsoft software. Legitimate. For free. Microsoft Dreamspark The catch is you have to be a student.
  10. To Wizard: the fact that evolution hasn't been disproved doesn't make it 100% guaranteed truth, either...but it does seem (all religious beliefs aside), the most viable theory for this particular brand of "What-happened-before-we-started-keeping-records-of-everything." But I believe the idea of evolution can easily be reconciled with religion (yes, Christianity too).
  11. Personally, I was not impressed. Kinda silly.
  12. What language to use depend totally on the semantics of your website. However, if you just want to learn stuff, you should check out as many things as possible. Try making a simple script with each one (usually 90% of the work is getting that first working site up). For a personal site without any content engine, Flash can make a simple HTML/CSS site snazzy. If you want to have some application in there, you can do PHP or ASP. ColdFusion is an option, but it doesn't play nicely with IIS 6! Use Apache! If you're just learning, I suggest sticking with PHP, it's very easy and very useful. ASP is, in my humble opinion, much more powerful, though. A note on Flash: it looks amazing for simple sites. Doing a small site completely in Flash is feasible. Flash also works with databases, yay. However, if you wish to have a large-scale website, along the lines of an online business (like anything even remotely resembling Newegg), use ASP. You can still stick in Flash banners and buttons for decor. If you're writing a backend for some content system, don't use Flash, that would be silly.
  13. These days it's much harder to do any optimizing of the code by knowing assembly. The compilers are quite advanced today. You never know how they'll assemble your code. You're absolutely correct: compilers do an amazing job optimizing code these days. Very few programmers have the natural talent to even think about trying to do better than the compiler (but it would be a very long, tedious job). Anyway, the point is not be going around writing assembly all the time (that would be silly; only a few people have an actual job where they write assembly). The idea is that if you just know how to write assembly, you will write better C++ or whatever.
  14. Monitor what we download? Hmm...the "government." Which government? The internet is international! What if all major countries banned downloading everything illegal and tried to enforce it? Then could we all just go to a third-world countries with no internet laws and download (via satellite, probably) all we wanted without repercussion?
  15. foxxyD knows what's going on -- 3DS Max and Maya are quality products, if you're doing the render/animate models thing. If you're doing video editing, Adobe Premier and Final Cut do the same thing (that is, video editing) pretty much just as well as each other (all the people who say one is better than the other are usually just grousing over the one they dislike). As to the cost of these products ... yes, they are professional grade and come with a professional price tag. However, you can get the trials to see what they are about and, if you are in or are planning to attend college, many universities will give you these products or sell you them at a very discounted rate. For instance, I get Windows XP, Vista, Server, Office, .NET, etc, etc for free. Professional/Enterprise editions. And it's 100% legit; the only catch is I have to download the iso's off MSDN Alliance on the horribly slow (haha, just kidding) T3.
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