SourceForge's Hottest Five Apps
davidmwilliams points us to his story up on IT Wire about the top five most active open source projects on SourceForge. (Sourceforge.net and Slashdot are both owned by SourceForge Inc.) He writes, "It explains what they do and why they're useful. Most of these will be new to most people but all are definitely bursting with potential."
All they did was take the most active projects this week and commented on them.
What was the point in this?
SourceForge.net and Slashdot are both owned by OSTG.
Also, this is neither news (let alone for nerds) or stuff that matters.
Sometimes, life itself is sarcasm...
Your problem is that you waste too much time bothering and then commenting. Yes, this news is sort of questionable but so is some news at CNN, CNet and other networks too.
The trick is to waste as little time as possible per news item you do not find interesting. No one gives a shit if you stop visiting Slashdot. I know I will, because I really enjoy the service as it is.
Perfection is an illusion.
Full Tilt
One word: Bandwidth.
Let me tell you, I've always wanted a Java P2P client. My biggest irk with uTorrent is it doesn't take up enough resources. Honestly, I can't believe the developers of uTorrent had the nerve to not put an entire plug-in architecture into it. They're totally missing the boat here.
Besides, everyone KNOWS that the more design patterns you use, the better your program is!
When there are new releases of a Linux distro, lots of people want to try it out. Despite having lots of mirrors, projects can crumble.
BitTorrent helps.