In message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
James A. Donald [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Searching GG on don frederickson got tim is maybe more reliable than
pasting this URL.
For long urls, compress with tinuyurl.com
http://tinyurl.com/yc3s
If you do that, you have to rely on both the Google URL not
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Mike Rosing [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yeah, and it takes a second or 2 to find the bar code. That's got
to cost a few pennies doesn't it :-)
It adds up, especially in low-margin businesses. Groceries are a good
example; unpacking every cart, scanning, and bagging
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Adam Shostack [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
(New York just
announced the abolition of tokens, making all subway travel
linkable.)
The last time I was in New York, you could buy a Metrocard for cash.
As far as I know, there are no plans to change this.
--
Shields.
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Bill Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now, 712 Mbit/sec is about 90 MByte/sec, which means if it
were doing 3DES, it'd probably be about 30 MByte/sec,
which is no longer fast enough to be entertaining.
Yes, it is. Despite the disk manufacturers' intentionally
In article 003301c2c7c2$c734bbe0$0301000a@thishost,
Steve Mynott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The Palms do have fairly slow processors so checking keys may take a while
and generating them probably quite a long time.
For perspective, however, current-model Palms have 33 MHz Motorola 68k
processors,
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Marc de Piolenc [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The US Constitution prohibits ex post facto laws.
It seems to me that works could be removed from the public domain
without passing an ex post facto law, as long as this hypothetical law
did not affect works created or copies
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Peter Fairbrother [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Get the pull from a party popper and wrap it in a dollar bill. Record
the serial number of the bill (some crypto here maybe). Make it impossible
to open the closet without setting the pull off, ie no trapdoor.
Fairly