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That may be so, but it isn't any more likely than with vacuum bags designed for sous vide cooking - they are made out of the exact same kind of plastic. #ZIPLOC FREEZER BAGS ZIP#
It's surprisingly useful to see to where your computer is currently connected. We were able to connect to servers where we know their geographical location and confirm the accuracy. Over on the right is a vectorized rotating 3D image of Earth with small pins placed in specific geographical locations these turn out to be the endpoints of your current Internet connections. Beneath these is a graphical memory map showing which sections of your computer's memory are being used. In the top left, for example, is the time and details about your uptime, date, and CPU usage. On first glance, these panes look like graphical frippery, but they turn out to be both useful and interesting. As this really is your default terminal, it's perfectly possible to do real work here and forget that the terminal is really embedded within a selection of constantly moving and updating panes. This is your default terminal, and you can switch between various tabs using the buttons above. The functional part of the UI is a terminal placed in top center of the full-screen display. You then get a personalized welcome message, also uncanny, before the main application appears in its high-DPI vector glory. Back on Linux, the launch animation is a faux-retro boot sequence that ironically looks just like a booting Linux box. If you've not seen the film, the user interface (UI) feels a lot like something from the XCOM: Enemy Unknown game or the famous touch interface in Minority Report. It calls itself a "desktop application resembling a sci-fi computer interface," and it has taken more than naming inspiration from the DEX-UI interface in the Tron: Legacy film sequel to the original Tron. Its appearance is surely what we all imagined computer interfaces would look in the same year that Blade Runner was set – a combination of 1980s retro vectors with a touch interface, and waveforms for no other reason than they just look good. But this has to be one of the best looking and most original desktop replacements you can use on your Linux box. And it doesn't seem to be related to the release date of the OSM data.We admit this choice is mostly for the eye candy rather than the functionality. So there seems to go something wrong when using routino database files created from the Belgian osm data. Using (this data is more than 1 year old) downloaded from -> crash Using + (for a combined database) downloaded from -> crash #Qmapshack report bug Offline#Using downloaded from -> no problem, offline routing just works I did a couple of experiments with other database files: When I click "OK" I get a pop-up window with an error message saying that qmapshack doesn't work anymore and is closed (actual message is in Dutch). I see now that the path is added in the small window. Opening the small window where the user can add paths to the folders containing routino database files.īrowsing for my folder with the routino database files I just created and confirming by clicking the "select folder" button. The creation of the database works perfectly. I get a consistent crash when performing the following actions:Ĭreating a routino database for Belgium using the OSM file downloaded from I hope it is OK to report in English (I can read German). |
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