Re: Difficult strings

2005-06-09 Thread Simos Xenitellis
Keld Jørn Simonsen wrote: On Thu, Jun 09, 2005 at 04:30:31PM +0800, Funda Wang wrote: Clytie> WAN cards: Wide Area Network cards, Funda, AFAIK. Thanks. I was thing of it at first. But what is that? Are the LAN cards really different from the WAN cards? I've never heard of such a device named

Difficult strings (was: Re[2]: i18n and GNOME hackers)

2005-06-08 Thread Clytie Siddall
ss Local Area Network. A local area network can be reached _without_ going online: a business, school or organization may have several computers in that one place, linked by Ethernet or wireless networking, and thus they form a network of their own, independent of the Net if necessary.

Re: Difficult strings (was: Re[2]: i18n and GNOME hackers)

2005-06-09 Thread Funda Wang
Clytie> WAN cards: Wide Area Network cards, Funda, AFAIK. Thanks. I was thing of it at first. But what is that? Are the LAN cards really different from the WAN cards? I've never heard of such a device named as "WAN cards", besides ADSL modem, Cable modem, ATM adaptor, etc. The real problem is that

Re: Difficult strings (was: Re[2]: i18n and GNOME hackers)

2005-06-09 Thread Clytie Siddall
On 09/06/2005, at 6:00 PM, Funda Wang wrote: Thanks. I was thing of it at first. But what is that? Are the LAN cards really different from the WAN cards? I've never heard of such a device named as "WAN cards", besides ADSL modem, Cable modem, ATM adaptor, etc. Some adaptors or modems get

Re: Difficult strings (was: Re[2]: i18n and GNOME hackers)

2005-06-09 Thread Keld Jørn Simonsen
On Thu, Jun 09, 2005 at 04:30:31PM +0800, Funda Wang wrote: > Clytie> WAN cards: Wide Area Network cards, Funda, AFAIK. > Thanks. I was thing of it at first. But what is that? Are the LAN cards > really different from the WAN cards? I've never heard of such a device > named as "WAN cards", besides

Re: Difficult strings (was: Re[2]: i18n and GNOME hackers)

2005-06-09 Thread Yavor Doganov
On Thu, 09 Jun 2005 16:30:31 +0800, Funda Wang wrote: > The real problem is that, the developers are creating words which are not > commonly used, such as spatial mode of Nautilus. Why it is called spatial > mode, rather than "creating seperated window for every folder"? IMHO, "spatial mode" is