Seriously, what's the point? Are they actively trying to piss off every media and rights company in the world? Not saying that this isn't a noble goal, but that constant provocation from TPB's side will rear at some point.
And from where I live, an apartment house also got a GSM antenna, and oddly enough, people in the house and around started to feel ill weeks after it was set up. What they didn't know is that it wasn't powered, due to issues with the license to even run it in that town.
Did you look into Solaris Nevada before deciding to go with Redhat? I'm running it, can run most of the Linux packages (sometimes requiring some Makefile tweaking) including hardware accelerated Compiz, get ZFS and rocksolid stability.
From what I remember reading, the Windows Hypervisor will be a mini-OS below all VMs, including the host OS. But there has to be one designated VM to act as host OS, because it'll be the one responsible to host all drivers, that'll be accessible for the guest OSes via sort of proxy methods using the hypervisor (mainly only for the Windows based guest systems, unless other systems are going to implement the interfaces and functionality).
That's already been done in a science fiction novel. Forgot it's name though.
Seriously, what's the point? Are they actively trying to piss off every media and rights company in the world? Not saying that this isn't a noble goal, but that constant provocation from TPB's side will rear at some point.
And from where I live, an apartment house also got a GSM antenna, and oddly enough, people in the house and around started to feel ill weeks after it was set up. What they didn't know is that it wasn't powered, due to issues with the license to even run it in that town.
Did you look into Solaris Nevada before deciding to go with Redhat? I'm running it, can run most of the Linux packages (sometimes requiring some Makefile tweaking) including hardware accelerated Compiz, get ZFS and rocksolid stability.
From what I remember reading, the Windows Hypervisor will be a mini-OS below all VMs, including the host OS. But there has to be one designated VM to act as host OS, because it'll be the one responsible to host all drivers, that'll be accessible for the guest OSes via sort of proxy methods using the hypervisor (mainly only for the Windows based guest systems, unless other systems are going to implement the interfaces and functionality).