I recently sold the machine, but here is AWeb running in Amiga Forever. HTML 3.2 rules...
I recently sold the machine, but here is AWeb running in Amiga Forever. HTML 3.2 rules...
I just tried it from a nexus 4 and it worked.
I installed Box from the Play store and created an account using a GMail account.
The upgrade happened the first time I logged in with the app.If your using Notes, wasn't it made for doing form based workflows? It almost seems like the email part was an afterthought.
@Jedalyzer said:
So I'll try the direct download from Microsoft.com. But lookie here: microsoft.com doesn't work in IE6.
I remember that fun in the '90s. I installed NT4.0 on an old 486 (*). It came with IE2. I tried to go and download whatever the current version was but microsoft.com was completely unusable. I think I had to download netscape first in order to get all the updates.
(*) A really wierd one too. Microchannel bus, SCSI drives and *not* made by IBM. Who knew NCR made crappy computers too...
@Lorne Kates said:
Hypothesis two: One man show
The address looks like a house on Google Maps. Very small bussiness?
@TDWTF123 said:
All Tor traffic is compromised, given that the whole thing is an NSA project.
Actually, it came from the US Navy (From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tor_(anonymity_network)#History).
@db2 said:
What year is that browser from? I never understood why old browsers defaulted the page background to grey.
That is AWeb 3.4APL from 2002.
Grey was the default background in AmigaOS 2.0 and later. Note that many users would be running a 4 colour display due to hardware limits which give you grey, black, white and cyan. That screenshot is with the emulator's simulated 24 bit graphics card.
AmigaOS 1.x used a blue background, white text and black and orange decorations. Too bad I can't think of any browsers that would run on it.
I recently sold the machine, but here is AWeb running in Amiga Forever. HTML 3.2 rules...
@DaveK said:
An EE is someone who, when you tell him the "true / false / file_not_found" joke, laughs at you, not the joke, for thinking a boolean could have only as few as three states!
In VHDL (a language used to describe logic circuits for simulation or implementation) the most common type used to represent a boolean value is std_logic. It has 9 values:
@Cassidy said:
I recall reading that it's not possible to create a file called "prn" under windows - something to do with legacy reasons, but I don't fully understand them.
In MS-DOS PRN is the character device file for the printer, similar to /dev/lp0 on *nix. Since subdirectories didn`t exist until MS-DOS 2 it works in any directory. The other common ones are CON (console), COMx (serial ports) and LPTx (parallel ports).
@blakeyrat said:
You use Unix?
Started with Solaris in university, now a heavy Linux user with some OpenBSD use in the past. I guess Linux should be called Unixish.
@blakeyrat said:
@ShawnD said:I am still useing a 101 key Model MNatch.
Found it in a trashcan years ago. It is one of the ones with a built in trackpoint, but the ribbon cable to the buttons is broken and I haven't got around to trying to fix them yet. Otherwise it has been perfect.