Well Duh! When using my Win 7 box from a terminal session (from an XP box) I get the title in the title bar. When logged on directly it is missing. Sorry for any confusion! Will
dbJeebus
Well Duh! When using my Win 7 box from a terminal session (from an XP box) I get the title in the title bar. When logged on directly it is missing. Sorry for any confusion! Will
dbJeebus
I couldn't open that link, page not available or some such. Do you suppose it has something to do with a setting that's 'grandfathered' in from IE8?
dbJeebus
Maybe I'm doing something wrong but my copy of IE9 puts the title in the title bar and supports CTRL-INS. I'm using Windows 7 with IE9.:confused: Will
dbJeebus
It's a lot better than the last release. Very fast, no crashes yet (one week in) and not a lot of wasted screen space. I like Firefox and Chrome too but basically I am just used to IE. Pathetic isn't it?
dbJeebus
From Microsoft quoted from this page[^] "Note: There's no SP3 for the 64-bit version of Windows XP. If you’re running the 64-bit version of Windows XP with SP2, you have the latest service pack and will continue to be eligible for support and receive updates until April 8, 2014." I use Windows 7 now but I keep my HDD with xp64 on it just in case, maybe because I may have sustained a bit of brain damblage getting it working. :confused:
dbJeebus
I STILL like 95 osr2, but Windows 7 has grown on me. In any case I think there's a clinic that can help you with that addiction but I don't know if it's covered by insurance. :)
dbJeebus
There are some caves on the eastern side in Porto Christo. It was many years ago but we rented a car and drove to the caves through the city of Manacor to Porto Christo, then back across the island through Inca then into the mountains to Palma (nice city). Very beautiful place, for sure you will spend some time doing nothing on the beach but there is a lot more to see there than beaches and hotels. The beach was awesome, the hotel nice but when I think of Mallorca, I remember that drive.
dbJeebus
Yes, I have an MFA in Printmaking. I got into computers by accident and what it weird is that programming is a very similar challenge as art. It's problem solving. I would say learn a few basics, perspective, color etc. Get a book from a college bookstore for a beginning course, that is ALL you need to get going. Here's the part you do or don't want to hear:It will take time and you will need to have something to 'say' and this will develope over time so don't fret over it. I think it was Miro who said that art is a great profession if you can get through the first 40 years. You WILL NOT get it from any book(s), you will get it from doing it. Art is about SEEING, you don't see with your eyes, you see with your brain. Suggestion:Pick an idea, like advance/retreat. In visual arts light tends to advance, dark tends to retreat (lighter objects appear closer) but this can also be applied to greater things, like, uh, life, for instance. This rule can be broken and eventually you will break it. Then take a year and make some sketches with that theme on paper (or wood, canvas, etc) with whatever, pencil, pen, paint collage, it doesn't matter. Just SEE where it goes. Then lay the works out and look at them, look at the progression. One of the best things to do is get way back every once in a while and see the big picture, a bricklayer won't know how straight the bricks are unless he/she stands back fifty feet and looks at it. The other thing is to look at art, look at a LOT of it, look at Van Gogh (especially his progression in a very short time), look at the masters, look at the moderns (Mondrian and Klee are very rich sources for seeing), look at folk art, look at 'Outsider' art. Talk to 'art people' about art (don't talk to computer people about art unless they actually know something about it. I don't talk to artists about computers, waste of time). Also 'Fine' art is not anywhere near 'graphic' art. You can know the pantone color matching system by heart and all the space/design theorys in the world and you can decorate a room, or illustrate an article but it probably won't be art. Some programmers probably have vast programming knowledge but are completely unable to program 'elegantly', same is true in art. One last thing, I am programming novice, you people could whoop me good me, but I like my little 'programming', I think it's cool and I keep plugging away in my feeble manner, but I could probably whoop you at painting. :-D
dbJeebus
Maybe they're from virtual boxes. I know when I loaded up 95 (don't ask) and NT 4 server (don't tell) I just couldn't resist a look at the ancientness of the browsers. Try it!
dbJeebus