When I worked for the BYU IT department a couple of years back, Linux was all that was running on everyones work machines. In fact, it was essentially required if you were a developer there. So that's a big yes for BYU and Linux support.
OK, I live in Idaho. My email addresses are Gmail and me.com accounts. How would they know that those email addresses belong to someone in Idaho? I assume the email servers where the email is delivered probably aren't even in this state.
Furthermore, Google's spam filtering is pretty darn good and I rarely see any spam. Not sure what difference it makes where you live.
I also believe that the idea "The color UPS Brown is trademark, which prevents other delivery companies from using it" is important. For example, if you are a school and choose to use the UPS Brown as one of your colors, it probably wouldn't be infringement.
When I worked for the BYU IT department a couple of years back, Linux was all that was running on everyones work machines. In fact, it was essentially required if you were a developer there. So that's a big yes for BYU and Linux support.
OK, I live in Idaho. My email addresses are Gmail and me.com accounts. How would they know that those email addresses belong to someone in Idaho? I assume the email servers where the email is delivered probably aren't even in this state. Furthermore, Google's spam filtering is pretty darn good and I rarely see any spam. Not sure what difference it makes where you live.
Wow Kimball, Thank you. I missed this comment the first time around.
I also believe that the idea "The color UPS Brown is trademark, which prevents other delivery companies from using it" is important. For example, if you are a school and choose to use the UPS Brown as one of your colors, it probably wouldn't be infringement.