search for: scariest

Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "scariest".

2005 Aug 19
2
The scariest set up of all: Printer Support
My experience with printers is that of all the peripherals, regardless of OS, they are the trickiest to install, configure, and use. So I'm expecting a battle here. What I have is a Canon Pixus iP3100. It's a Japanese model, but it's the same model as the US Canon Pixma iP3000, just a different name. First, I plugged in the USB cable. CentOS seemed to detect it, and gave me a
2007 Jul 12
1
ggplot2 / reshape / Question on manipulating data
...2004 8 'Allo 'Allo! (1982) 0000000125 829 8.6 1982 50 .hack//SIGN (2002) 0000001113 150 7.0 2002 56 1-800-Missing (2003) 0000000103 118 5.4 2003 66 Greatest Artists (2000) (mini) 00..000016 110 7.8 2000 77 00 Scariest Movie (2004) (mini) 00..000115 256 8.6 2004 The above data is not aggregated. So after playing around with basic R functionality, I stumbled across the 'aggregate' function and was able to see the information in the manner I desired (average movie rating by year). > byYear...
2006 Jun 30
50
Time To Pick the Mongrel BUGS Mascot!
Bradley Taylor shot me this *goldmine* of ugly ugly ugly dogs: http://www.sonoma-marinfair.org/uglydogvote.shtml I *have* to use one of these for the Mongrel BUGS Mascot. He''ll go on our bug list page and replace the little beetles on the left. Pick the dog you think best represents a lovable but defective pooch and reply to this with your +1. Let the voting begin! -- Zed A. Shaw
2010 May 12
0
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] New libc++ LLVM Subproject
...Wouldn't it be nice if it were 100% self hosting at some point? (I think > so.) Define self-hosting. LLVM is already self-hosting in the sense that it compiles itself. > Not having to depend on anyone else to make your stuff work is, well, > liberating. Yikes! To me that is the scariest scenario I can imagine. The best technical interview question I've ever been asked is, "what code would you never write?" Standard library functionality is at the top of my list. Why would anyone replace rigorously tested code with something not as widely tested that one has to mai...
2010 May 12
2
[LLVMdev] [cfe-dev] New libc++ LLVM Subproject
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 5:40 PM, Andrew Sutton <andrew.n.sutton at gmail.com>wrote: > > What's driving libc++? >> >> The possibility of being a superior solution. >> > > I thought "to support Apple applications" from the previous post was > sufficient motivation :) Either way, I'm excited about a new library. Plus, > it looks a little
2006 Jun 30
0
Mongrel-users Digest, Vol 5, Issue 24
...;us-ascii" > > Heh. I like http://brainspl.at/louie.jpg. He''s not happy about a bug > being found. Is he? Oh no he isn''t! > > Can I change my vote to http://samugliestdog.com/Sam162edited.jpg ? > He reminds me of Nicodemus from Nimh. He''s by far the scariest thing > I''ve seen since Zed showed me how his shark bite scar has totally > screwed up his crazy Yakuza tattoos. > > On Jun 30, 2006, at 11:50 AM, Ezra Zygmuntowicz wrote: > > > > > Well I might be biased but I vote for one of my own dogs ;) > > >...
2010 May 11
9
[LLVMdev] New libc++ LLVM Subproject
Hi All, LLVM now includes a C++ standard library, written by Howard Hinnant. You can read about it here: http://blog.llvm.org/2010/05/new-libc-c-standard-library.html Or get the code here: svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/libcxx/trunk libcxx If you have questions or comments, please direct them to one of the clang mailing lists. Thanks! -Chris