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|
| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 239 responses total. |
glenda
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response 75 of 239:
|
Oct 30 04:21 UTC 2003 |
Basically the same in win2k as in winXP. Have to do it every time I log in
at school, most students like icons so the images are set that way, changes
are only in effect until the machine is restarted. We ghost them every night.
It is a pain. Also have to set my monitor resolution every time, the image
is set at 800x600, I prefer 1152x864, will accept 1024x768 (especially as they
are 15" monitors and I use a 19" at home).
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jep
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response 76 of 239:
|
Oct 30 16:50 UTC 2003 |
All right, I've set my Windows Explorer at work to always use Details.
Thanks for all the help!
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tod
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response 77 of 239:
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Oct 30 21:51 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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goose
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response 78 of 239:
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Oct 31 03:58 UTC 2003 |
That question made my head hurt....;-)
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gull
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response 79 of 239:
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Oct 31 13:43 UTC 2003 |
Cygwin is the only decent freeware one I've found. I use it for the
application you mentioned, and also for doing SCP transfers.
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gull
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response 80 of 239:
|
Oct 31 13:44 UTC 2003 |
(In case you change your mind about not using Cygwin, there's a set of
setup instructions for a basic install with sshd running as a service
here: http://tech.erdelynet.com/cygwin-sshd.html)
|
eprom
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response 81 of 239:
|
Oct 31 16:52 UTC 2003 |
Can someone clearly explain meters per second per second?
We used it in Calc I, but I'd usually just plug-and chug and
write the m/s^2 after the anwser, without understanding it.
now i'm seeing it again, this time in referance to the
constant acceleration of gravity being 9.81m/sec^2, but
being a chemisty book, doesn't actually explain m/s^2.
|
keesan
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response 82 of 239:
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Oct 31 17:12 UTC 2003 |
Acceleration. Meters per second is velocity, acceleration is how fast your
velocity changes (as when dropping things from a height).
|
mcnally
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response 83 of 239:
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Oct 31 17:35 UTC 2003 |
Right. Assume you're travelling down a city street at 10 meters per
second ( * 3600 seconds per hour = 36,000 m/h or 36 kph, a bit over
20 mph.) You're not speeding up or slowing down, just travelling
the same amount of distance every second -- that's your velocity,
and velocity is distance over time - meters / second. [or if you
prefer other units, miles / hour, furlongs / fortnight, or
{any unit of distance} / {any unit of time}]
You come to a place where the speed limit changes and so you decide to
accelerate. Acceleration involves a change in velocity -- let's say
you want to double your speed to 20 meters / second (or around 45 mph..)
As anyone who's ever tried to stop suddenly before hitting something
can tell you, changing your velocity takes time, whether you wish to
increase or decrease it. Acceleration is the measure of how fast your
velocity changes, or put another way it's the measure of that change
in velocity with respect to the time it takes to effect the change.
So acceleration = (change in velocity) / time
or (m/s) / s
or m/(s^2)
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gelinas
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response 84 of 239:
|
Oct 31 17:41 UTC 2003 |
But let's take it a bit further: the slash means divide-by. So:
10 m / s / s = 10 m / s :- s
= 10 m / s x 1 / 1 s
= 10 m / (s x s)
= 10 m / s ** 2
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tod
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response 85 of 239:
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Oct 31 17:55 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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davel
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response 86 of 239:
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Nov 1 14:55 UTC 2003 |
Can anyone point me to a store, reasonably near Ann Arbor, that sells Lotsa
Cola (& other Lotsa flavors)? Never mind why, you really don't want to know.
|
other
|
|
response 87 of 239:
|
Nov 2 05:47 UTC 2003 |
I need suggestions for a good browser with which to do standards-
compliant DHTML/JavaScript development/debugging under Mac OS X.
Got any?
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gelinas
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response 88 of 239:
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Nov 2 05:53 UTC 2003 |
Safari?
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other
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response 89 of 239:
|
Nov 2 06:07 UTC 2003 |
There appears to be absolutely no facility within Safari for
reporting of Javascript errors, which makes it pretty useless for
the purposes I specified.
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gelinas
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response 90 of 239:
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Nov 2 06:16 UTC 2003 |
That's why I asked. Thanks.
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tod
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response 91 of 239:
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Nov 2 15:36 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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goose
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response 92 of 239:
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Nov 4 14:28 UTC 2003 |
VirtualDub?
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gull
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response 93 of 239:
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Nov 4 14:41 UTC 2003 |
I use VirtualDub for capturing and trimming video and it works well. If
you're looking for something along the lines of a nonlinear editing system
it will probably disappoint you, though.
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tod
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response 94 of 239:
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Nov 4 18:20 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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tsty
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response 95 of 239:
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Nov 6 10:54 UTC 2003 |
will cracklock kill taht 30-day bug?
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tod
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response 96 of 239:
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Nov 6 19:27 UTC 2003 |
This response has been erased.
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keesan
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response 97 of 239:
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Nov 16 16:48 UTC 2003 |
We are trying to diagnose/fix jep's Epson stylus C60, for which the printer
driver would be at least a half hour download. Is there some way to do a
self-test on this printer, or on other newer Epson printers?
|
jep
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response 98 of 239:
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Nov 17 03:38 UTC 2003 |
Turn off the printer, and disconnect the printer cable
Hold down the (strange rune button) and keep it held down
It has two symbols on it. One looks like a piece of paper with the
corner folded
Press and release the power button
Continue holding down the (strange rune button) until the green power
light starts to flash, then release it. It will print a diagnostic
page.
There's a 64 page PDF manual at the Epson WWW site if you look around
a bit, but that will take you a while to download, too.
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keesan
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response 99 of 239:
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Nov 17 15:35 UTC 2003 |
Thanks. I actually downloaded the printer driver (15 min once we got the 56K
winmodem to work -the only one of five we could get to work) and Win98 would
not print at all with that driver. Maybe we need a different cable.
I followed instructions and the cartridge moved back and forth but it did not
load paper or print. How do I load paper into it?
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