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From: | Clement Merritt |
Subject: | [Fenfire-dev] northwestern |
Date: | Sat, 23 Sep 2006 23:18:57 -0200 |
There is still debate over whether this would be a
good thing. Requirements may conflict; our paper says you have to strike a balance
among all.
Have you thought about extra rewards for people who
go out and feed the Yoshis in the pouring rain?
We postulated that all preceding phases must be
passed successfully to reach a given phase.
A multi-car, high-speed, mobile Wi-Fi
network.
Our data comes fromdiaries, interviews, logs. I
have copies in hand, and boy does it look wonderful.
We wanted people to actually learn something about
wireless networks. Have you considered having different interfaces for different
users?
This is based on field experience, sitting down
with customers.
Requirements may conflict; our paper says you have
to strike a balance among all.
You get more points for feeding Yoshis multiple
fruits. You can also sow seeds at empty plantations.
I have copies in hand, and boy does it look
wonderful.
How do you measure adoption rates for this kind of
product?
You get more points for feeding Yoshis multiple
fruits. You can also sow seeds at empty plantations. There were distinctive patterns
of movement - shuttling back and forth, etc. Pull over and set a spell boys, and
spin us some bandwidth.
You can also contribute content of interest to them
to better spread the word. Do you have a product planning department? , you start
asking about a tag repository in general.
Have you considered having different interfaces for
different users?
Mesh networks are also inherently robust, as new
routes can be found if any one node goes down.
A multi-car, high-speed, mobile Wi-Fi network. Did
users continue to use their own browser bookmarks? You can also contribute content
of interest to them to better spread the word.
You can also contribute content of interest to them
to better spread the word.
, where their long association and their deep
generosity provides this kind of outcome.
You know, like Chad adds all the movies in
MovieLens. org is a site dedicated to educating people about the use of wireless
networks. This is based on field experience, sitting down with customers.
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