Domain: prawda.pl
Stories and comments across the archive that link to prawda.pl.
Comments · 45
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Win2K Hatefest
In all these instances the Windows2000 answer could have included a reboot as well.
I can't seem to understand where people's hatred for Win2K comes from, especially when they haven't used it. It's not *nix but there's no need to reboot after *any* of these tasks, as well as network configuration changes, disk formats, re-partitions, software installation. In fact, many programs that claim you need to reboot after installation can be ignored, the software will work.
I get good, multi-week uptimes on my Win2K at home. In fact, I move my computer around more often then I 'need' to reset.
I'm not saying that Win2K is the cure all, the best OS on the market, bla bla bla. I'm just saying that it's not the demon you make it out to be.
-- jedrek
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Mozilla 0.7 is it...
This is the first version of Mozilla (including that NS6.0 bullshit) that will render my personal link page correctly (or at all actually). Compared to 0.6 it's great, I'm really satisified.
Lets see how it goes after I put it through it's paces, maybe I'll finally be able to change...
I wish.
jedrek
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Re:pop, what about hip-hop?
When many of you were dicking around with a guitar, learning to play chords 'Ironman' and 'Smoke on the Water' (c'mon, you know you did it) I was writing up rhymes in my rhyme book, working on a mic I managed to find, borrowing singles from friends because they had instrumental tracks. Of course, I soon realized I have no buisness being on the mic, and I killed that idea.
I've been listening to hip-hop, r&b, soul, blues, whatever, about as long as I've been computing, something around 12 years. So yeah, I guess there's someone out there like you Mike.
Hip-hop culture is as much a reality as geek culture. I've been involved in both, although the former is much more creative. And doesn't pay as well =). But it's hip-hop (actually, graffiti) that got me into what I feed myself and my close ones with, and that's web design and web development.
Anyway, as I sit here, writing this, I'm humming along to the new Outkast single 'Ms. Jackson'. Incredible track, just incredible.
jedrek
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Re:Those smart commies
Yeah, nothing like some good old lack of knowledge to get me started in the morning. Although a lot of Slashdoters would have anything east of the Oder River to be BFE I assure you it's not. The hardware we have (and have had for more than 10 years [at least that's when I moved back]) has been par for course with our American counterparts (that would be you, mofo).
After I finish writing this reply on my dual celeron 20gb 256mb dual-monitored machine I'll head over to my p3-733 at work. After comming home after some socializing I'll probably turn on my dreamcast or my new PS2.
Eastern Europe has gone ahead leaps and bounds over the last 10 years, don't negate that.
jedrek
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Re:Score one for the Gang
I have a friend that works in graphic design and won't even consider the gimp
Along with many friends, I too work in graphic design. Most of us have had contact with Linux at some time or another (I played around with GIMP quite a bit last summer) and I've only heard one opinion: Linux is not ready for prime time as a graphics design platform.
Why? Problems with fonts. A total lack of graphic card support (especially for the ultra-high-end graphics cards). An appaling lack of software. Where I can chose among two excellent vector editing apps on the PC (Freehand and Illustrator) Linux gives me Corel Draw. Corel Draw is crap, it's one of the most unstable and buggy software packages I've ever seen. (The running joke is that we've all been Corel Beta Testers since Corel Draw 3.0 because every release since then has been a beta.) Two 3D modeling packages (as opposed to at least *FOUR* excellent packages on the Wintel platform). GIMP's serious lack of pre-press tools... The list goes on.
Anyway, I think that Linux is great as far as server/programming stuff goes. Hell, I use it myself - always SSHing into servers, writing PHP scripts.
But to do graphics professionaly... No. Not gonna do it.
BTW, as far as stability goes, I've run Photoshops 3.0 -> 5.5 on my NT box and have had something like 10 crashes over the past three *years*. Somehow, that downtime doesn't scare me.
jedrek
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Re:And the answer is....
Actually, the answer is to read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
jedrek
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Re:Goal: Replace the VCR
Well, like I said, I've yet to see a PAL version of the TiVO. I don't care about the TV Guide listing crap, I just want to record.
Jay
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Goal: Replace the VCR
C'mon guys, this is the VCR replacement we've all been looking for. The only reason VCRs are still selling is because they are recordable. My mom isn't even considering a DVD right now, she wants a VCR for christmas. Why? Most of the movies she wants to see are on TV but usually at some late time. She just wants to record them and watch them at her convenience (I'd get her a TiVO but I haven't seen a PAL version yet)
The ability to record and re-record TV channels on a disc is the function most consumers have been looking for. They want to do more than just watch movies, they want to record Sex in the City, The Sopranos and watch them when they want to.
I can't wait till I can toss my VCR and free up an extra EuroSCART port.
Jay
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Re:Internut Exploder vs. Nutscrape Nab-a-gator!
HTML Source options: IE (IE opens the source in Notepad; Netscape just shows it to you)
One of this things I absolutely hate about IE is a lack of developer-friendy options. Netscape is much better about it.
When I do a 'view source' I want to SEE the source. I don't want to edit it. I just want to hit CTRL-U and see it in all it's glory. Hell, Netscape will even highlight more glaring syntax errors in the code.
When I view an image I like being able to see it's actual size. I like how I can view info about a page and see all it's dependencies. And I just love how when I right click on something the menu shows up right away, not after 10s.
Of course, this all pertains to Netscape 4.x because the 6.0 I just downloaded *blows*. Crashed on my 5 times, including 2 crashes while changing the skin.
Gotta love that Netscape Stability(tm).
Jay
ps. Netscape 6.0 on Win2K
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Re:Third world wisdom
I know this is a troll, I'm taking that bait, hook
,line and sinker.
If not for the despotism, lack of natural resources, and CIA interventions, the third world nations would have passed us up long ago while we were too busy hyping the latest useless product to even take notice.
At the end of the day it comes down to this: Third world countries rather buy weapons than food. Saying 'third world nations would have passed us up long ago' is just trolling, a lack of commercialism didn't help the Soviet Union. If you take away competition you take away reasons to excell, you push mediocracy and 'getting by' as opposed to 'doing your best'. But that's a whole different discussion.
IBM claimed there was a need for about 10 computers in the world. I've come to realize that they were right. What IBM forgot to take into account is the number of products you can sell to people who don't need them
<sarcasm>
Sure, you don't need a computer. All you do is troll on Slashdot, right? I, along with millions of other people don't need it, it's only our worktool. Small companies don't need them because all they do is increase efficency and let them be more competitive.
</sarcasm>
None of us *need* the cinema but it's alive and kicking. The same goes for cars, motorcycles, televisions, sports equipment, audio equipment, etc, etc. And I don't understand why that's such a problem.
jedrek
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Mozilla/Netscape policy branch?
Somehow I don't think this is the best thing Netscape should be doing. I recall a lot of people complaining that NSpr2 was 'too early' -- not ready enough for any kind of release -- even though it was released concurrently with Mozilla M17. Remember, this version is being dropped even though M18 hasn't come out yet.
As a 'business' decision I couldn't really care less about Netscape as a company. Politically though, NS6 is the browser to watch for for a lot of people, not Mozilla, and a lot of people are mistaking NS6prx with 'the new Netscape'. And they're getting scared off. As a webdesigner, I do not want to use MSIE but it's slowly getting so I have to use it more and more often - both professionally and personaly.
jedrek
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Re:Windows 2000 is good, Linux is good
Incidentally I have never seen any software that can take down win2k. One or two programs do appear to have memory and resource holes that drain the systems power away slowly but if you restart those apps then it springs back.
I run Windows 2000. Want to crash your system? Watch two Real Video movies under Real Player 7 without restarting RP between them. It'd reset my system every time. Nowe, after installing SP1 and removing the offending RP the only thing that crashes my system is WinOnCD 3.7 and my Hollywood+ MPEG decoding card software.
On the other hand, Win98SE will lock up afterbeing on over the weekend while Win98 has been up on my home DVD/MP3/scanner machine for the past couple of weeks without a reset.
Blabber, blabber, blabber.
Jay
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Re:Can't be too surprised
How come you didn't start questioning these things when you started paying tens of thousands of dollars per annum to go to the college as opposed to us Europeans
Please, cut the 'Europe is so cool' bullshit. The art school I wanted to go to in England costs 16,000 GBP per year. Why? Although I'm a European, I'm not a European Union Brand (tm) European. Besides, scholarships in America are a *dream*. My brother got a 25% scholarship at the school of his choice through some bullshit foundation just for writing a letter.
Blah...
Jay
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Re:MTV blurrs all logos on all shows...
It seems that every piece of video shot by or broadcast by MTV has the clothing logos (actually all logos) blurred out.
(This is an observation from 1-2 years ago, I don't watch MTV much anymore)
Maybe I was over-sensitive but I noticed something else. Instead of bluring out all logos and ofensive behavior (eg. making a pot-smoking gesture) I noticed that MTV does this explicitly in rap videos. While Primus had a cartoon charachter puffing away on a monster joint, Nas got blurred for putting his hands to his lips. While brit pop acts were all decked out in Adidas, Puma and Nike hiphopers became a blur as all their clothes were blocked.
As I recall, one of the ways to get arround being 'censored' was to show your logos backwards. One of the hits od 97 or 98, 'If I Ruled The World' was shot almost entirely right-to-left so nothing was blurred, even while the camera rolled through times square.
Jedrek
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Re:No drama movies I see
I think we need to remember that is a list of the 50 least influental movies, not of the 50 worst.
Forrest Gump: How many Academy Awards do you need to get before you're considered influential? FG scored *five* with another *five* nominations. Although this may mean little to you, we are talking about the effect a film has on its audience.
Face/Off: Utter crap, I agree.
Driving Miss Daisy: Another Academy Award winner. This time four Oscars and another five nominations.
Lion King: The kids you know must be on something. You don't get huge ticket sales ($700+ worldwide) like LK did without having repeat viewers. Besides, LK was one of the movies that is credited for reviving animation on the big screen. Those 2 Oscars didn't hurt either.
Barney, Teletubies: Didn't see either.
I realize I just probably got caught hook line and sinker. Oh well.
jedrek
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Web sites are not too expensive
While I too used to belive that web site design is 'easy' and should be 'inexpensive' let me break it down for you:
When you hire a company to design a website you're paying for the salaries of the graphics designer, the coder(s), the project manager + company overhead (usually at least 50%). This is the same as in any other industry, be it a law firm, a doctor's office, etc...
In addition to this, you're providing a service to a company which will be used to increase the company's income. What's $40,000 for a site if the company will get an extra $300,000 in income because of orders comming in through it?
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Re:Endangering lives
My experience shows otherwise.
Obviously our experience differs.
Besides that, let's be honest: no one is universaly liked. And it's like with Microsoft. If any other company where Microsoft they'd act the same way and if any other country was as powerful as the USA they'd act the same way. Actually, the only other countries of America's size and strength in the past 3 years (China, India and the USSR) have been quite agressive externally and/or opressive to their own people.
What kind of world do you live in? All countries invaded by US in its history except Japan were weaker than US -- and only Japan happened to actually start a war with US.
There is NO honor in war. You don't start wars to engage in a far battle, you start wars to achive political or military interests. You don't go picking on the big bully on the block because if you lose it'll cost you a couple thousand lives, at the least.
You want war to be fair? War will never be fair. To paraphrase one of the generals during Desert Storm: 'This isn't about a fair fight. It's about overpowering the enemy to the point that they have no chance to react. It's about bringing as many soilders back home as possible.'
More likely treating US as "ridiculously overpowered character" in world politics.
So what, the US should reliniquish some power? Buahah... that's a good one.
Jay
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Re:Short answer: No.
I am unable to tune [my Dodge '96]. BUT I STILL KNOW HOW TO DRIVE!
Great. You're not stupid. If you were one of the 'stupid users' we're talking about you wouldn't know how to drive. In fact, you'd be shouting at some poor sap at the Dodge Helpdesk, complaining that: a) you couldn't outrun the BMW M5. b) reverse would only let you go backwards and c) 'What do you mean I need to pour gasoline, I already bought the car!'.
The people that are being talked about here are not stupid because they don't know. They're stupid because they refuse to learn, refuse to understand, refuse to follow directions. I used to work as a teacher, teaching english to professionals here in Poland. I didn't mind the students who had problems, I didn't mind the students who had a hard time. But I had a serious problem teaching people who didn't do their homework and didn't pay attention or participate during lessons. Those were the 'stupid students' and I think you'd be surprised how many of them there are.
Jay
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Re:A strange notion of "reasonable"
Jesus christ, that's just DIRT-CHEAP.
I live in Warsaw, Poland. The average sallary here is aprox. $550-600US/month. Rent (many people own) for a 2 bedroom apt. on the outskirts of the city is about $300/month. A bit closer to the city center you get prices ~$450-550. This is for a 2 room, 50sq m. apt. I managed to find a 'cheap' apt. for $400 (I make about 3x the national avg) in the city center but I ran out of there 4 months later after I decided I couldn't handle the *rats* anymore.
And you're going to be renting a HOUSE for $400?
Jay
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Re:F-451
I recall reading Animal Farm in the 7th grade while I was attending a public middle school in Oregon. At the same time my teachers encouraged me (and gave extra credit) for reading and refering Orwell's '1984'. I think it all depends on where you are -- there is no one, single, unified 'American School System'.
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Re:Excellent reference
When I tried registering a domain via Joker.com, I was never able to make it work because apparently you have to register your name servers using some horribly confusing process that apparently required that I use servers that were never, ever used for a NSI domain, which I couldn't do.
That's just plain wrong. The only trick with joker.com is that you have to register name servers (takes about 8-12h) and get them CORE handles (if they don't have them already) - then you can re-use the handles, so if you're registering more domains it's a breeze.
I love joker.com! I've already registered 3 domains with them and have had *NO* problems. Damn cheap too...
Jay
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Re:gaurded pessimism
IANAL, but if I were a judge in this case, I would find him guilty of SOMETHING for so doing things which so clearly violate the spirit of the laws Japan has made.
In most western democracies (especially in America) there's a notion known as the 'Rule of Law'. This doesn't mean that Law Rul3z! but that Laws are in fact Rules. You break the rule then you break the law. What it means in this case is: While you may undermine the spirit of the law, unless you break it you cannot be found guilty. And that's how it should be.
I find that what I see very often in Poland is that you have 'goverment intervention' or 'exceptions' in the process of law and I find that to be appaling. Laws are rules that everyone should play by equaly. A lack of rule of is probably one of the main causes of corruption.
Jay
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This isn't new.
Scientists have been using lasers to slow atoms down to near absolute zero for quite a while. I remember my science teacher telling me about it TEN YEARS ago. I know that lasers are cool, yada yada but this isn't anything new.
Jay
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We're exhibitionists...
I think that jennicam is what the web is all about. It's just a single person who's made a site about her life. Nothing more, nothing less. Think about it, 4 years ago (40 internet years) jenni pushed the limits.
Some of you who've been online as long or longer than I have (11 years) will probably remember the way the web looked back in 93-94. Lots and lots of .edu sites, lots of papers about computers, biology, chemistry and the like. Every now and then you'd get a home page along the lines of 'This is me, this is my cat, I like to watch the Simpsons.'
Jenni [and the hordes (just look at Blogger) that have followed her] did it differenetly - and I am one of those who followed. We represent a much more human side of the internet. Sites like these show that people are more than the sum of our experience and interests and that's what makes us human. That's what makes us special.
While I don't deny the power of the internet as a tool for the distribution of facts and knowledge a lot of geeks need to remember that it can be used to distribute emotions. That's what jennicam's been doing for the past 4 years and that's what hundereds of sites who've followed her lead (and not only) are doing (and will keep doing) as well.
Jay
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Piracy is W*R*O*N*G
change from something people did furtively on IRC, to an absolute right of the people to have whatever they want, whenever they want? I guess when programs like Napster make it possible for any clueless newbie on cable or University ethernet to serve up mp3s to the masses, it becomes acceptable?
I think that the biggest problem with piracy a tthe moment is that it's stopped being this thing that only a few select people do to a massive social occurance. Piracy groups have been around for at least two decades (probably longer) but never before have more than a handful of people even known of their existence. C'mon, did anyone here, before they used a computer, know that there were organized international groups who's main activity was the release distribution of software as soon as it comes out?
The internet has definately increased tenfold (if not more) the ammount of piracy in America and Western Europe. Before, people were restricted to copying a cassette or video from a friend, or a friend of a friend - it was usually no more than 2 degrees of separation. Now, with our incredibly far reaching distributed network bootleggers from Tiwan are finding clients in the USA. Professionally produced pirated CDs and movies are finding their way into smalltown America, not just the big cities (where they've been for years).
People's greed coupled with the internet is causing artist to lose control of their work. Just look at how a bootleg copy of Nas' album in '99 was stolen and distributed online. The artist was forced to re-record an entire album (which was worse than the bootleg) causing paying fans to lose out because of the delay.
The truth is this. Most people still get their music by buying CDs or MCs just as most people watch movies by renting DVDs or video tapes. Internet piracy is hurting those people and the artist they support by causing the people who buy legaly to pay more and the artist to get less. I'm all for changing the system, using the internet for distribution, bla bla bla but right now hard working artist are losing out because of piracy and that's the bottom line.
Jay
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Please stop dissing the USA
The United States of America may tout it's capitalist infranstructure as the Glorious Saviour of Mankind, but they are closer to communists and fascists than many of their citizens are willing to admint to themselves.
I'm not an American but I grew up there. The truth is that the American political system, no matter how much everyone bitches and whines, is one of the most liberal and open systems in the world! You vote for INDIVIDUALS. You cast your vote and get a person that is 'responsible/accountable' to you because you voted for HIM/HER, not the party. You don't get this anywhere in Europe where you vote for these huge religous-ideological blocks. Bleh.
The US also has very good separation of church and state. Do laws that support a certain church's preaching get passed? Of course they do, but only because the people who voted wanted it this way. Each election has propositions, or laws directly voted on by the people. In any European country you'd need a referendum to get an issue passed, and even then the exact wording of the bill would be left up to the politicans.
The truth is this. Every election, Americans make choices concerning their freedoms and restrictions. They have the power to directly influence both, including allowing themselves to exchange some freedom for a feeling of safety. You don't get this in a lot of European and Asian nations. And you certainly don't get it in Africa.
I'm not saying that the US political system is perfect in any way, I'm just saying that you need to remember that the grass is always greener on the other side of the fence.
Remember to VOTE!
Jay
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Re:I agree wholeheartedly !!
Get your head out of the sewer! Rap is not about 'Gangstas'.
> We never need to show our "machoness"
That's bunk. The open source community is all about pose. It's all about fame and making something that your fellow geeks will enjoy.
Rap USED to be like open source because:
a) Good rap (like good software) was very often non-mainstream.
b) They're both politicaly charged.
c) Very often there's no funding. (You've heard of Master P? He started his record label by selling tapes out of the back of his car.)
d) There's still a die-hard cult following.
I don't think Corporate America was scared of rap, I think they just didn't care. Rap wasn't moving the units (or so they claimed) and they didn't need to support it. Now...
Jay
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Re:not quite right to compare software to music...
I don't think that this is quite right. Rap music, like all music, is just a fad... something that will go away eventually and only be looked back on with fondness by a select group of people.
Let me hit you over the head with my reality stick. Not all music is a fad. Remember when rock & roll was that crazy new music that was never going to last? Now a very large part of the music industry is rock & roll, and they're calling other forms of music 'fads'. Remember that rap/hip-hop has been around for over 20 years and has been extrememly popular for the last 8 or so.
Let's remember that people are very impervious to change.
Jay
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Re:mmmmm
Come to think of it, if you stick a 64Bit processor in a 32 bit cluster, will it even work ?
I don't know why it shouldn't. If I'm not mistaken Beowulf clusters exist are made up of independent computers conected via network connections. As long as your code can run the software you should be able to run a Beowulf.
On the other haand, I could be just running my mouth, pretending I know something when in reality I have no idea what I'm doing.
Jay
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Prove it...
Yes, communism ultimatly failed, but, in a perfect world without corruption and greed, it would make for a perfect system.
This is a common aruguement about communisim. Too bad it's so flawed. For comparison:
I have a method of generating unlimited supplies of energy using 2 cans of soda and three pounds of sugar. Great idea, right? But until I actually go and prove my experiment all my argumenting that this really is a great idea is pointless, because everyone knows that my idea sucks.
Communism has been implemented over the past 70 years by a mirad of countries and EVERY SINGLE TIME it has failed miserably, taking thousands of innocent lies along with it. The power of democracy is not that it is 'the one true system' but a SELF CORRECTING system that encompasses ideas from virtualy every other political system.
Jay
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Re:3D + TV -- still not ready for prime time?
You're making the right choice. ASUS isn't really known for high-quality video capture while the Matrox Marvell line is renowned for bringing an on-board hardware MJPEG codec for such a low price. Even on relatively weak machine the Matrox should be able to rip full screen NTSC or PAL without dropping frames.
Jay
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Re:Why the Celebration?
Exactly.
I'd like to add that Real Player (in general) has to be the most unstable piece of software I've ever used and RP7 doesn't ease up. I can watch one clip under Win2K (reading off a disk) before I have to close and reopen it. Why? If I play more than two clips in a row RP7 resets my computer!
Or how about that annoying desynch if you watch realvideo for more than 2-3 minutes?
You wanna know how Microsoft's going to win the streaming media war? By creating a non-obtrusive player that sits quiet until media is presented. A player that won't spam the user with ads, make the system unstable or preload on startup.
Looks like real.com is just making it easier for them.
Jay
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Re:GIMP
Why does support in the industry mean that the program isn't good?
I'm not saying that it's a factor in the quality of the software as much as it's one of the reasons people are not using it. The PSD file format is pretty much as portable (except for TIF and PS) as you get in the graphics world. Gimp supports it with a plugin but it's not native.
Actually, the biggest problem is the lack of a stable Win32 port. And that's a fact.
Jay
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Re:Always in twenty years
Our present level of technology
hardly makes us any less vulnerable to extinction-level events such as major climatic change.
Uhm... actually, it does.
Let's remind ourselves that people saved themselves from starvation (or at least major food shortages) by improving agricultural techniques. Irrigation, crop rotation, fertalizer all allow us to sustain more people from a single portion of land then animals that require the same caloric intake.
We can wear sunscreen to protect ourselves from increased UV rays. We can build shelter to keep us warm when it's cold. We build computers so that our time could be used more effectively.
It's an unpopular view, but we really do rule the earth.
Jay
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Re:GIMP
I dunno. I'm not too hot on Gimp for a few reasons.
a) Gimp has almost no support in the industry. I don't know more than 2-3 people who make a living doing graphics who actually use Gimp day-to-day. And they only use it for web graphics.
b) CMYK support is weak. From what I last remember CMYK support in Gimp is pretty much restriced to converting RGB => CMYK. If you're working in print you need to see your work in the restricted pallette that CMYK offers.
c) Large files. I've heard many potential users complain about Gimp's handling of large files. When you start getting into 120-160MB files (posters and such) it can barely chug along while Photoshop steams on by.
d) Color calibration. Does Gimp even have this?
Now, I'm not saying Gimp will not own in the future, I'm just saying that it's got a way to go before being a viable alternative to the Photoshop. Especially to DTPers.
Cheers,
Jay
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Who the hell moderated this up!?
This trully is an interesting 'fact', too bad that it's not true. Bribery is illegal in many other countries (including Poland) and it is considered unethical all over the EU. Too bad that ethics seem to have no place in modern business anymore.
Jay
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Sad but true.
I remember talking 3 years back to my friend's uncle who works in the TV business (Mostly editing work for Poland's largest TV station) about buying a TV + VCR. When I asked him about Sony equipment he just laughed then said 'Think about all the Sony equipment your or someone you know has owned and think about how often you take it to get repaired.'
After talking with my friend we realized that every single piece of equipment we have from Sony has either broken down (walkmans) or has had to be repaired! EVERY SINGLE THING.
He recommended Thompson for the TV, Panasonic for the VCR.
Anyway, right now I have a 28" SABA TV (the insides made by Thompson - SABA is a company that wins awards every year for industrial design but they're fully owned by Thompson) that I've had for 3 years with no problems, my Technics stereos have been trouble free for over 4 years. Hell, I even have a 14 year old Panasonic boom box that runs on 110V.
I also have 3 trashed Sony walkmans (less than 1 year each) and memories of a simple 2 tape sony radio that just stopped working after 3 years.
In all truth, I'm quite surprised that
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Re:666? Not quite
ARGH! That should be 607.8... Not enough sleep
Jay
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666? Not quite
Well...
Take 1118. Shift it right one spot in base 10 and we get 111.8. Multiply that by 6(?) and we get... 670.4.
I don't get it.
Jay
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Re:Thanks!
Eventually I'll have to learn Perl. But I might wait for release 6.6.666, so that it runs on Windows properly.
;)
I don't know about you but I use the windows version (activestate) of perl everyday and am VERY happy with it.
Anyone know how it fares up in a production (WWW server) enviroment?
Jay
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Let's hope IT ACTUALLY WORKS
I'm sorry, but all of the software I've ever had from Real has been utter shit. It's bloated, it's non-intuitive, it has all the worst attributes of MS' software and it's unstable as hell. I won't even mention G2 and how it's probably one of the most unstable programs I've ever used. RP7 RESETS my Win2K machine if I watch more than two movies without closing it! It's INSANE!
As much as I don't like supporting MS, I chose ASF as my streaming format. It's it's only available in RM, I don't even bother...
Jay
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Re:tsx.org, cjb.net
A LOT!
I'm not sure about tsx.org but cjb.net 'domains' are usually just forwarders (either using a Redirect header or by making a 100% size frameset). This is a real-deal domain! Hi-Ho!
Jay
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European MTV
MTV Europe used to have a show with Ray Cokes... I forget the name - but it was along the lines of a talk show... argh... I can't remember the name right now. Anyway, they had a IRC/Ray Cokes split screen. I think it was unmoderated... anyway I recall a LOT of flooding with large, multiline letters (so it was visible on a normal tv). I also recall that one time the channel got taken over and the MTV session got ban/kicked... hehe...
Jay
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Re:Bob Metcalfe joins the tabloid press
Lemme pull up a quote I found from the esteemed Bob Metaclfe:
So, in 1996, CD-ROMs through Federal Express will emerge as the information superhighway. Instead of an Internet brimming with Web pages under construction, too few of us will haunt ghost pages.
Does he have a clue about technology? I guess co-inventing Ethernet is pretty important in our current computing world. Does he have a clue about trends and how people and technology interact? Your call.
Jay
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How to spend that money
Look, this is crazy. You could probably hire an OK 4 quartet for one year for the cost a listening room like that... But then they're probably bitch that the instruments are mistuned.
It takes all kinds...
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