"TekNET" <teknet@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:%%23duDXrK$IHA.3396@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl... Hi, I have to test one security application and I need to install a AD in my notebook to performance this task, someone in the past talk me about some AD "lite" normally use for development. Suggesting are appreciate, and thanks in advance. Although you do not provide much info
On Jul 27, 4:12 pm, "Spaceman" <space...@yourclockmalfunctioned.duh> wrote: Chalky wrote: I think (and hope) that what Uncle Al is tryinig to say here (in his own inimicable style) is that locally, physics is unchanged. It is just for observers at a distance and/or in different states of motion that such clocks appear to run fast or slow. Having said that, it is true
Chalky wrote: I think (and hope) that what Uncle Al is tryinig to say here (in his own inimicable style) is that locally, physics is unchanged. It is just for observers at a distance and/or in different states of motion that such clocks appear to run fast or slow. Having said that, it is true that if you accelerate in a jet plane, travel at high speed for a while, then decelerate
On Jul 26, 7:48 pm, Chalky <chalkys...@bleachboys.co.uk> wrote: On Jul 27, 4:29 am, Chalky <chalkys...@bleachboys.co.uk> wrote: I think (and hope) that what Uncle Al is tryinig to say here (in his own inimicable style) is that locally, physics is unchanged. It is just for observers at a distance and/or in different states of motion that such clocks appear to run fast or slow
On Jul 27, 4:29 am, Chalky <chalkys...@bleachboys.co.uk> wrote: I think (and hope) that what Uncle Al is tryinig to say here (in his own inimicable style) is that locally, physics is unchanged. It is just for observers at a distance and/or in different states of motion that such clocks appear to run fast or slow. Having said that, it is true that if you accelerate in a jet plane