If you do need a host that will babysit those processes for you, I strongly recommend WebFaction. They have the best support, best documentation and easiest management console for deploying multiple sites that I've ever had from any host, hands-down. They give you guaranteed memory, shell access, the ability to compile your own code on the server and a low number of accounts-per-server (meaning noticebly faster page-loads than my previous host). Under $10/month.
I hope that this whole Secure Boot issue pushes more people to buy computers with Linux (or whatever other open system) pre-installed. Even if you need to dual boot, buying a copy of windows that's not pre-installed is reasonably cheap nowadays. Buy a free-as-in-speech laptop and install Windows as the secondary OS. This would be in contrast to the old days where you'd generally get windows pre-installed (because it was cheaper that way) then install Linux later.
Qt is a great platform/API, would love to see a Qt based platform in the smartphone market with some significant market-share. I feel Qt (qnd QtQuick) deserves more usage in the commercial space than it gets.
Interestingly for the nostalgic amongst us, creation.com today released a story about the first edition of Britannica, published 1771, which speaks of Noah's flood as having covered the globe (with an illustration) and suggests a creation date of around 4007BC.
Imagine living back when these things were part of the mainstream understanding of world history.
People buy your products because they are original, innovative and useful. Litigation for profit is not original. Litigation for profit is not innovative. Litigation for profit is not useful. Please, oh please, just get back to doing what people love you for.
Xubuntu is good, its clean, functional and doesn't load you up with broken crap just for the sake of being shiny. Stuff that should work, does.
As another interesting option, I would actually recommend Crunchbang Linux for enterprise desktops. It's based on Debian Stable, so the support period is very long, its rock solid and you know it will stay that way through any security updates. But its a lot more out-of-the-box functional than straight-up Debian. Many of the post-install chores typical to desktop installations (like installing multimedia codecs, configuring a nice desktop, etc) are done for you. It's clean, fast and there's also an XFCE version (I think XFCE is better for newbies than Openbox, because there are integrated GUI tools for things that should be simple - like setting keyboard shortcuts, adding panel items, etc).
The XBMC team has already (IMHO) conquered the issue of providing intuitive access to all its features with a very simple remote. Really, you can do everything in XBMC with four cursor-keys plus four control keys (Space, Return, Backspace and a key for the context menu). Map these onto virtually any remote control (I even did it with a Wiimote once) and you have yourself an unbelievably intuitive system with tactile buttons you can use without looking.
Win.
Trying to have more complexity in the remote is a move in the wrong direction.
I absolutely agree that there are a lot of translations (English in particular has a wealth of them). In general though there are good reasons. A translation project is no small undertaking, and not generally done without reason. From my research over the last few years (I'm writing bible software, and reviewing translations for a church to use in their pews), the major reasons for separate translations are as follows:
* Philosophy of Communication: translations exist on a sliding scale between "formal equivalence" (word-for-word) and "dynamic equivalence" (thought-for-thought). This is the reason that the ESV and KJV (more formal-equivalence) use the technical theological word "propitiation" in Romans 3:25, whereas the NIV (more dynamic-equivalence) uses the phrase "sacrifice of atonement". Both have their place, and are preferred in different contexts.
* Evolution of Language Usage: as great as the KJV was for its time (1611), it may confuse many people if modern English translations rendered James 2:3 as "And ye have respect to him that weareth the gay clothing". The ESV instead says "and if you pay attention to the one who wears the fine clothing".
* Disagreement over Manuscript Significance: Some people regard what has been called the "majority text" as the true critical text of the original new testament. Therefore, they prefer English translations based on this text (generally the KJV, but also including the WEB and EMT) rather than translations based on other critical greek texts (e.g. Wescott-Hort, Nestle-Aland). The reasons for this dispute are fairly involved. A good book, summarising academia on the topic for the lay person, is D.A. Carson's The King James Version Debate.
* Ideological Preference: Some people do seem to stand by the KJV through thick and thin, as though it were a matter of faithfulness to God, without much in the way of actual rational arguments why it is a better translation. This may also include a sentimental desire to remain connected to the history of christendom.
These are generally not bad reasons to create a new translation. Now, some of the arguments do become petty (particularly under the Ideological Preference heading). But generally, translators have good reasons for thinking that more people will understand the content of the Bible much better, because another translation is made available that attempts to communicate the same ideas to a slightly different demographic.
If I was in the UK, now would certainly be the time to release a copyrighted sound-effect pack containing each note on the musical scale (let's say one set on piano and one on a slightly distorted guitar). Bam. Now I can apparently legitimately claim that essentially every song in existence infringes my copyright. Sure, the song uses my copyrighted notes in a particular arrangement, but they still recorded their own copy of middle-C to avoid paying the 100-euro-per-play licensing fee for using the middle-C from my sound-effect pack.
Ummm... hence the reason for my qualifier "at least a component of [a belief system]". Obviously there can be different broad worldviews that have atheism as a common element. For instance, as far as I understand his arguments, Sam Harris seems to hold that morality is objective. Michael Ruse, on the other hand, seems to hold that morality is a darwinian adaptation, subject to evolutionary change and therefore subjective. On the basis of that rather large distinguishing factor, it may be worth classifying these as different belief systems/worldviews/philosophies. But they are both atheistic. They both hold that the non-existence of god(s) is propositionally true. What's more, in common discussion, we would generally not have a problem with the phrase "Harris and Ruse are both atheists", as though we were oversimplifying the issue using the term "atheist" as a broad categorisation of multiple worldviews with common elements.
Claiming that atheism is not a metaphysical belief is very much like claiming "pro-life" is not a belief about abortion, but rather the absence of belief that abortion is acceptable. Such claims involve assuming the a priori correctness of the position in question, so as to frame the opposing position as a perversion of natural or self-evident logic. It's circular reasoning, assuming the conclusion in the premise.
To put it another way, when an otherwise articulate person defends their position by saying it is "just obvious", it is probably because they lack any legitimate arguments to defend it.
By that same logic couldn't we also argue that flat-earthism is the most persecuted belief system still in practice?
As insane and counter-intuitive as it may sound, sometimes the majority rejects things because they are false. I'm just sayin'. Not to defend the ensuing behaviour of said majority in the slightest. I'm a christian, but I'm entirely in favour of freedom of religion (and I include the freedom to be an atheist, even a proselytising atheist, in that statement).
A belief that is true should welcome critical analysis. If christianity is true, then it should welcome the scrutiny of a Richard Dawkins or a Michael Shermer. But by the same token, if atheism is true, it should welcome the scrutiny of a Michael Behe or a William Lane Craig.
Oh, how I wish my mod points hadn't just expired. Mod^^^^^. Listen up slashdot nerds, we're doing symbolic logic. Let's call "god does not exist" proposition P.
* Atheism: the value of P is "true"
* Agnosticism: the value of P is "unknown"
Thus "atheism" is by definition a metaphysical belief system (or at least a component of one), because it affirms at least one particular propositional statement about metaphysics. Defining atheism as a lack of a belief system is merely a convenient way of using weasel-words to avoid having to defend the propositional statements contained in one's position.
"The misuse of language induces evil in the soul"
-Socrates
vanilla doesn't suit everyone. I've used Fedora, Debian, Ubuntu and Arch (and several of their derivatives) full-time. From that experience I've learned two things:
* Arch is my favourite distro.
* My life is better when I use Ubuntu full time.
Arch has a simpler init, a better config structure, a better filesystem layout, a simpler packaging format that's easy to create build scripts for and amazingly good documentation. Also, all the points people make about AUR are valid, its marvellous. Much to love there. And that would be enough to outweigh the initial time investment of a day or two to get the system up and running how I want. But the vanilla packages are what kills the experience for me.
That's sort-of a sad realisation to come to, but it is a practical reality for many. It's not that I don't have the skills to maintain an Arch system well (I used to do sysadmin for Debian and CentOS systems), it's just that I don't have the time. Nowadays, I genuinely appreciate the Debian packaging philosophy where the package maintainers go out of their way to make sure the package is compatible and well-integrated with the rest of the distribution. With Arch, installing a new package also often requires me to spend half an hour or so configuring it or figuring out some little compatibility issue with another application. The pain is ongoing.
Rolling release doesn't help me either. I used to think it was a great idea. "Never need to reinstall again!", not like Ubuntu where I tend to reinstall every 6 months when there's a new release. However, in practice the releases give packagers some idea of the environment they are creating packages for and actually result in less time spent tinkering with the system.
Arch is a magnificent vision for what a distro could be, but it is geared a little too strongly to hobby purposes for my needs. I have work to do. Maybe Slackware would fill in the niche I've been describing, but it seems to be even less up-to-date than Debian stable.
I think parent's question may be somewhat rhetorical, but I think it could be an interesting discussion, so here's one non-American's idea (having said that, we face a similar issue in Australia, we voted in Rudd to spend our surplus without providing any *new* services. But I can't think of a truly unbiased way to measure who's voting population is "dumber" on average).
This problem took significant time to develop, and it will take time to resolve. I feel that neglecting the subject of formal logic in modern education is near the root of the problem. I am strongly reminded of Professor Diggory's furrowed-brow wondering "what do they teach them in these schools?" What then can we do? I would love to see a twofold solution.
Training in formal logic in schools. Teach children (maybe as part of the mathematics curriculum, since I suppose this is applied mathematics) to recognize and reject common logical fallacies like false equivocation, affirming the consequent, denying the antecedent and the non-sequitur.
Reference to these principles in political debate(s). If a politician gives a speech or presentation where they use flagrantly poor logic, their opponent could (should) point these out and force the presenter to attempt to persuade the public of their position on more rational grounds.
Would this fix every problem even if executed perfectly? No. Evidence could still be fabricated to support false premises, while maintaining logical validity. But it would be better than the current situation where flawed logic and emotive non-answers are consistently employed to sway an uncritical public. Is this a pipe dream that will never happen? Maybe. But if we have a goal we can at least work towards it.
I think parent's question may be somewhat rhetorical, but I think it could be an interesting discussion, so here's one non-American's idea (having said that, we face a similar issue in Australia, we voted in Rudd to spend our surplus without providing any *new* services. But I can't think of a truly unbiased way to measure who's voting population is "dumber" on average).
This problem took significant time to develop, and it will take time to resolve. I feel that neglecting the subject of formal logic in modern education is near the root of the problem. I am strongly reminded of Professor Diggory's furrowed-brow wondering "what do they teach them in these schools?" What then can we do? I would love to see a twofold solution.
Training in formal logic in schools. Teach children (maybe as part of the mathematics curriculum, since I suppose this is applied mathematics) to recognize and reject common logical fallacies like false equivocation, affirming the consequent, denying the antecedent and the non-sequitur.
Reference to these principles in political debate(s). If a politician gives a speech or presentation where they use flagrantly poor logic, their opponent could (should) point these out and force the presenter to attempt to persuade the public of their position on more rational grounds.
Would this fix every problem even if executed perfectly? No. Evidence could still be fabricated to support false premises, while maintaining logical validity. But it would be better than the current situation where flawed logic and emotive non-answers are consistently employed to sway an uncritical public. Is this a pipe dream that will never happen? Maybe. But if we have a goal we can at least work towards it.
I disagree. While legalisation might seem like a good idea at first, I don't think it will dry up the black-market for prostitution very much.
1) Johns still want the discretion afforded by the black market (legalisation will likely lead to at least some minimal paper trails, etc.)
2) People's requirements in a prostitution experience get kinkier over time as they become jaded (same thing as with drugs, it takes a harder hit to get the same high). This will inevitably lead to a black market where prostitution involves acts that are outlawed within the confines of the law (such as pedophilia). I'm given to understand that beyond the confines of the well-known red light district, there are places in amsterdam that are home to this kind of thing already, with girls as young as 18 months being used for prostitution. Note that this is in a place where adult prostitutes are already readily available, so legitimising adult prostitution obviously has not alleviated the problem.
Parent should be marked as troll. "Microsoft has never really locked down their desktop OS"? It "lets you run anything you want"? Please. OSX is just as open as Windows in that sense. All "open" means in this context is that they release a compiler for it (so technically you can run any "app" you want). What that doesn't give you is the ability to not run things on the system that you don't want to run. You only get that privilege with a real open source system.
Not trying to come across as a FOSS hippie, just saying that the parent is plugging Microsoft on flashy-sounding but quite invalid reasoning. I call troll.
Why Fedora?
I was reading a lot about the Gnome 3 PPA being broken and didn't want to have to set up a whole spare partition just to try out a desktop ui. So I just used the LiveCD image from gnome.org Figured the difference between Ubuntu and Fedora bases wasn't going to actually affect these numbers much.
Why VLC?
It's what I actually play my videos in, and so its yields the numbers I care about.
Why not Totem? / Why do I say software rendering?
I chose not to make comments about using Totem from the liveCD because (and this is just a guess) I thought they may be skewed significantly by the lack of propietary drivers. Running glxinfo on the Fedora LiveCD shows SGI as the vendor (i.e. the free 3D drivers were not in use).
Yes that's a lot of caveats, but given the wide disparity in the figures, I think the point largely still stands. These variables should collectively yield only fairly negligible differences. If you want more thorough tests, you're totally welcome to put the time and energy into running them. I just wanted to do other things with the rest of my day off:)
Its not actually that ridiculous. I pay for hosting for my personal website now, and have done for about six years. This hosting includes email, there's no reason it couldn't include calendaring, social-networking, etc. through some open source web apps. I still primarily use gmail, mainly because I genuinely think they're less likely than me to screw up the backup procedure, lol. But it has crossed my mind a number of times to go entirely self-hosted. I don't necessarily mind targeted advertising either. It tends to be a lot more tasteful than non-targeted advertising for some crazy sexual performance product.
There is a video lecture I watched recently called "What does Linux prove" from an old linux.conf.au event. In this lecture, the speaker shows how to use lamda calculus to implement the C language from scratch - including implementing the "if (boolean)" functionality using only pure functions with parameters and return values.
It's not something immediately obvious to every high school kid, but conditionals apparently are available in pure mathematics.
For all the panic about losing some of the networked functionality and Canonical doesn't care about non-traditional desktop setups (with mounted networked home dirs, etc), no one seems to have brought up Ubuntu Server. Ubuntu is not just a desktop OS, the server variant is looking more formidable all the time. Do we really expect Canonical to take its actively maintained server version (which they're pushing for cloud applications) and neuter the ability to deploy it in big server environments where home dirs are NFS mounted and people want to use GUI config tools on headless servers?
I have just finished several years of distro hopping because I felt Ubuntu (my first full-time Linux) wasn't hardcore enough for my taste. After moving to Debian, then Arch, then Fedora for 6-12 months each, I'm now back at Ubuntu with a renewed appreciation for how good a distro it is.
I give Canonical more credit than to screw it up that badly after getting so many things right over the last few years.
+1 to Internode. Been with them for 6 months. Pricing is great, what little support I've needed has been prompt and very useful. And I've been positively abusing the unmetered content (Arch, Debian and Ubuntu mirrors in particular).
I call hogwash. How many Microsoft employees must be posting in this forum. The measure that matters is the real world. I've been working in a university I.T. dept, thats a LOT of machines spread amongst a huge breadth of user skill levels (our particular uni consists of roughly 40% OSX, 50% Windows (XP and 7) and 10% Fedora Linux (and yes, we do put end users on the Fedora boxes for classwork). I am yet to see a Linux or OSX machine get with a hijacked browser session.
I'd be very interested in a show of hands. Linux does have a decent share of the server market, and systems running it do get exploited (but my bet is that its very predominantly from exploits in sloppy PHP web apps and the like). But aside from that, how many of you out there have *ever* had malware get on to your Linux desktop and start hijacking your browser? My bet is very nearly zero. Windows is as secure as anything else? You may like to think that in principle it could be, but the experimental evidence strongly disagrees.
... after considering switching back to vanilla debian for some time, this might be the straw that broke the camels back. Where free software meets the corporate world, trust is everything. And trust is not something I have for yahoo/bing search. I don't trust them to provide good, comprehensive search results (I DO trust google to do that), and I don't trust them not to screw the Ubuntu community (tests on google doing that are inconclusive thus far, but fairly promising).
If you do need a host that will babysit those processes for you, I strongly recommend WebFaction. They have the best support, best documentation and easiest management console for deploying multiple sites that I've ever had from any host, hands-down. They give you guaranteed memory, shell access, the ability to compile your own code on the server and a low number of accounts-per-server (meaning noticebly faster page-loads than my previous host). Under $10/month.
I hope that this whole Secure Boot issue pushes more people to buy computers with Linux (or whatever other open system) pre-installed. Even if you need to dual boot, buying a copy of windows that's not pre-installed is reasonably cheap nowadays. Buy a free-as-in-speech laptop and install Windows as the secondary OS. This would be in contrast to the old days where you'd generally get windows pre-installed (because it was cheaper that way) then install Linux later.
Qt is a great platform/API, would love to see a Qt based platform in the smartphone market with some significant market-share. I feel Qt (qnd QtQuick) deserves more usage in the commercial space than it gets.
Sweet merciful crudcakes, I wish I had modpoints. +1million
Interestingly for the nostalgic amongst us, creation.com today released a story about the first edition of Britannica, published 1771, which speaks of Noah's flood as having covered the globe (with an illustration) and suggests a creation date of around 4007BC.
Imagine living back when these things were part of the mainstream understanding of world history.
People buy your products because they are original, innovative and useful. Litigation for profit is not original. Litigation for profit is not innovative. Litigation for profit is not useful. Please, oh please, just get back to doing what people love you for.
Xubuntu is good, its clean, functional and doesn't load you up with broken crap just for the sake of being shiny. Stuff that should work, does.
As another interesting option, I would actually recommend Crunchbang Linux for enterprise desktops. It's based on Debian Stable, so the support period is very long, its rock solid and you know it will stay that way through any security updates. But its a lot more out-of-the-box functional than straight-up Debian. Many of the post-install chores typical to desktop installations (like installing multimedia codecs, configuring a nice desktop, etc) are done for you. It's clean, fast and there's also an XFCE version (I think XFCE is better for newbies than Openbox, because there are integrated GUI tools for things that should be simple - like setting keyboard shortcuts, adding panel items, etc).
The XBMC team has already (IMHO) conquered the issue of providing intuitive access to all its features with a very simple remote. Really, you can do everything in XBMC with four cursor-keys plus four control keys (Space, Return, Backspace and a key for the context menu). Map these onto virtually any remote control (I even did it with a Wiimote once) and you have yourself an unbelievably intuitive system with tactile buttons you can use without looking.
Win.
Trying to have more complexity in the remote is a move in the wrong direction.
I absolutely agree that there are a lot of translations (English in particular has a wealth of them). In general though there are good reasons. A translation project is no small undertaking, and not generally done without reason. From my research over the last few years (I'm writing bible software, and reviewing translations for a church to use in their pews), the major reasons for separate translations are as follows:
.
* Philosophy of Communication: translations exist on a sliding scale between "formal equivalence" (word-for-word) and "dynamic equivalence" (thought-for-thought). This is the reason that the ESV and KJV (more formal-equivalence) use the technical theological word "propitiation" in Romans 3:25, whereas the NIV (more dynamic-equivalence) uses the phrase "sacrifice of atonement". Both have their place, and are preferred in different contexts.
* Evolution of Language Usage: as great as the KJV was for its time (1611), it may confuse many people if modern English translations rendered James 2:3 as "And ye have respect to him that weareth the gay clothing". The ESV instead says "and if you pay attention to the one who wears the fine clothing".
* Disagreement over Manuscript Significance: Some people regard what has been called the "majority text" as the true critical text of the original new testament. Therefore, they prefer English translations based on this text (generally the KJV, but also including the WEB and EMT) rather than translations based on other critical greek texts (e.g. Wescott-Hort, Nestle-Aland). The reasons for this dispute are fairly involved. A good book, summarising academia on the topic for the lay person, is D.A. Carson's The King James Version Debate
* Ideological Preference: Some people do seem to stand by the KJV through thick and thin, as though it were a matter of faithfulness to God, without much in the way of actual rational arguments why it is a better translation. This may also include a sentimental desire to remain connected to the history of christendom.
These are generally not bad reasons to create a new translation. Now, some of the arguments do become petty (particularly under the Ideological Preference heading). But generally, translators have good reasons for thinking that more people will understand the content of the Bible much better, because another translation is made available that attempts to communicate the same ideas to a slightly different demographic.
If I was in the UK, now would certainly be the time to release a copyrighted sound-effect pack containing each note on the musical scale (let's say one set on piano and one on a slightly distorted guitar). Bam. Now I can apparently legitimately claim that essentially every song in existence infringes my copyright. Sure, the song uses my copyrighted notes in a particular arrangement, but they still recorded their own copy of middle-C to avoid paying the 100-euro-per-play licensing fee for using the middle-C from my sound-effect pack.
Ridiculous.
Ummm... hence the reason for my qualifier "at least a component of [a belief system]". Obviously there can be different broad worldviews that have atheism as a common element. For instance, as far as I understand his arguments, Sam Harris seems to hold that morality is objective. Michael Ruse, on the other hand, seems to hold that morality is a darwinian adaptation, subject to evolutionary change and therefore subjective. On the basis of that rather large distinguishing factor, it may be worth classifying these as different belief systems/worldviews/philosophies. But they are both atheistic. They both hold that the non-existence of god(s) is propositionally true. What's more, in common discussion, we would generally not have a problem with the phrase "Harris and Ruse are both atheists", as though we were oversimplifying the issue using the term "atheist" as a broad categorisation of multiple worldviews with common elements.
Claiming that atheism is not a metaphysical belief is very much like claiming "pro-life" is not a belief about abortion, but rather the absence of belief that abortion is acceptable. Such claims involve assuming the a priori correctness of the position in question, so as to frame the opposing position as a perversion of natural or self-evident logic. It's circular reasoning, assuming the conclusion in the premise.
To put it another way, when an otherwise articulate person defends their position by saying it is "just obvious", it is probably because they lack any legitimate arguments to defend it.
By that same logic couldn't we also argue that flat-earthism is the most persecuted belief system still in practice?
As insane and counter-intuitive as it may sound, sometimes the majority rejects things because they are false. I'm just sayin'. Not to defend the ensuing behaviour of said majority in the slightest. I'm a christian, but I'm entirely in favour of freedom of religion (and I include the freedom to be an atheist, even a proselytising atheist, in that statement).
A belief that is true should welcome critical analysis. If christianity is true, then it should welcome the scrutiny of a Richard Dawkins or a Michael Shermer. But by the same token, if atheism is true, it should welcome the scrutiny of a Michael Behe or a William Lane Craig.
Oh, how I wish my mod points hadn't just expired. Mod^^^^^. Listen up slashdot nerds, we're doing symbolic logic. Let's call "god does not exist" proposition P.
* Atheism: the value of P is "true"
* Agnosticism: the value of P is "unknown"
Thus "atheism" is by definition a metaphysical belief system (or at least a component of one), because it affirms at least one particular propositional statement about metaphysics. Defining atheism as a lack of a belief system is merely a convenient way of using weasel-words to avoid having to defend the propositional statements contained in one's position.
"The misuse of language induces evil in the soul" -Socrates
vanilla doesn't suit everyone. I've used Fedora, Debian, Ubuntu and Arch (and several of their derivatives) full-time. From that experience I've learned two things:
* Arch is my favourite distro.
* My life is better when I use Ubuntu full time.
Arch has a simpler init, a better config structure, a better filesystem layout, a simpler packaging format that's easy to create build scripts for and amazingly good documentation. Also, all the points people make about AUR are valid, its marvellous. Much to love there. And that would be enough to outweigh the initial time investment of a day or two to get the system up and running how I want. But the vanilla packages are what kills the experience for me.
That's sort-of a sad realisation to come to, but it is a practical reality for many. It's not that I don't have the skills to maintain an Arch system well (I used to do sysadmin for Debian and CentOS systems), it's just that I don't have the time. Nowadays, I genuinely appreciate the Debian packaging philosophy where the package maintainers go out of their way to make sure the package is compatible and well-integrated with the rest of the distribution. With Arch, installing a new package also often requires me to spend half an hour or so configuring it or figuring out some little compatibility issue with another application. The pain is ongoing.
Rolling release doesn't help me either. I used to think it was a great idea. "Never need to reinstall again!", not like Ubuntu where I tend to reinstall every 6 months when there's a new release. However, in practice the releases give packagers some idea of the environment they are creating packages for and actually result in less time spent tinkering with the system.
Arch is a magnificent vision for what a distro could be, but it is geared a little too strongly to hobby purposes for my needs. I have work to do. Maybe Slackware would fill in the niche I've been describing, but it seems to be even less up-to-date than Debian stable.
I think parent's question may be somewhat rhetorical, but I think it could be an interesting discussion, so here's one non-American's idea (having said that, we face a similar issue in Australia, we voted in Rudd to spend our surplus without providing any *new* services. But I can't think of a truly unbiased way to measure who's voting population is "dumber" on average).
This problem took significant time to develop, and it will take time to resolve. I feel that neglecting the subject of formal logic in modern education is near the root of the problem. I am strongly reminded of Professor Diggory's furrowed-brow wondering "what do they teach them in these schools?" What then can we do? I would love to see a twofold solution.
Would this fix every problem even if executed perfectly? No. Evidence could still be fabricated to support false premises, while maintaining logical validity. But it would be better than the current situation where flawed logic and emotive non-answers are consistently employed to sway an uncritical public. Is this a pipe dream that will never happen? Maybe. But if we have a goal we can at least work towards it.
Thoughts slashdot?
I think parent's question may be somewhat rhetorical, but I think it could be an interesting discussion, so here's one non-American's idea (having said that, we face a similar issue in Australia, we voted in Rudd to spend our surplus without providing any *new* services. But I can't think of a truly unbiased way to measure who's voting population is "dumber" on average).
This problem took significant time to develop, and it will take time to resolve. I feel that neglecting the subject of formal logic in modern education is near the root of the problem. I am strongly reminded of Professor Diggory's furrowed-brow wondering "what do they teach them in these schools?" What then can we do? I would love to see a twofold solution.
Would this fix every problem even if executed perfectly? No. Evidence could still be fabricated to support false premises, while maintaining logical validity. But it would be better than the current situation where flawed logic and emotive non-answers are consistently employed to sway an uncritical public. Is this a pipe dream that will never happen? Maybe. But if we have a goal we can at least work towards it.
Thoughts slashdot?
I disagree. While legalisation might seem like a good idea at first, I don't think it will dry up the black-market for prostitution very much.
1) Johns still want the discretion afforded by the black market (legalisation will likely lead to at least some minimal paper trails, etc.)
2) People's requirements in a prostitution experience get kinkier over time as they become jaded (same thing as with drugs, it takes a harder hit to get the same high). This will inevitably lead to a black market where prostitution involves acts that are outlawed within the confines of the law (such as pedophilia). I'm given to understand that beyond the confines of the well-known red light district, there are places in amsterdam that are home to this kind of thing already, with girls as young as 18 months being used for prostitution. Note that this is in a place where adult prostitutes are already readily available, so legitimising adult prostitution obviously has not alleviated the problem.
Parent should be marked as troll. "Microsoft has never really locked down their desktop OS"? It "lets you run anything you want"? Please. OSX is just as open as Windows in that sense. All "open" means in this context is that they release a compiler for it (so technically you can run any "app" you want). What that doesn't give you is the ability to not run things on the system that you don't want to run. You only get that privilege with a real open source system. Not trying to come across as a FOSS hippie, just saying that the parent is plugging Microsoft on flashy-sounding but quite invalid reasoning. I call troll.
Why Fedora?
I was reading a lot about the Gnome 3 PPA being broken and didn't want to have to set up a whole spare partition just to try out a desktop ui. So I just used the LiveCD image from gnome.org Figured the difference between Ubuntu and Fedora bases wasn't going to actually affect these numbers much.
Why VLC?
It's what I actually play my videos in, and so its yields the numbers I care about.
Why not Totem? / Why do I say software rendering?
I chose not to make comments about using Totem from the liveCD because (and this is just a guess) I thought they may be skewed significantly by the lack of propietary drivers. Running glxinfo on the Fedora LiveCD shows SGI as the vendor (i.e. the free 3D drivers were not in use).
Yes that's a lot of caveats, but given the wide disparity in the figures, I think the point largely still stands. These variables should collectively yield only fairly negligible differences. If you want more thorough tests, you're totally welcome to put the time and energy into running them. I just wanted to do other things with the rest of my day off :)
Its not actually that ridiculous. I pay for hosting for my personal website now, and have done for about six years. This hosting includes email, there's no reason it couldn't include calendaring, social-networking, etc. through some open source web apps. I still primarily use gmail, mainly because I genuinely think they're less likely than me to screw up the backup procedure, lol. But it has crossed my mind a number of times to go entirely self-hosted. I don't necessarily mind targeted advertising either. It tends to be a lot more tasteful than non-targeted advertising for some crazy sexual performance product.
There is a video lecture I watched recently called "What does Linux prove" from an old linux.conf.au event. In this lecture, the speaker shows how to use lamda calculus to implement the C language from scratch - including implementing the "if (boolean)" functionality using only pure functions with parameters and return values.
It's not something immediately obvious to every high school kid, but conditionals apparently are available in pure mathematics.
Link to lecture: http://lca2007.linux.org.au/talk/215.html
For all the panic about losing some of the networked functionality and Canonical doesn't care about non-traditional desktop setups (with mounted networked home dirs, etc), no one seems to have brought up Ubuntu Server. Ubuntu is not just a desktop OS, the server variant is looking more formidable all the time. Do we really expect Canonical to take its actively maintained server version (which they're pushing for cloud applications) and neuter the ability to deploy it in big server environments where home dirs are NFS mounted and people want to use GUI config tools on headless servers?
I have just finished several years of distro hopping because I felt Ubuntu (my first full-time Linux) wasn't hardcore enough for my taste. After moving to Debian, then Arch, then Fedora for 6-12 months each, I'm now back at Ubuntu with a renewed appreciation for how good a distro it is.
I give Canonical more credit than to screw it up that badly after getting so many things right over the last few years.
+1 to Internode. Been with them for 6 months. Pricing is great, what little support I've needed has been prompt and very useful. And I've been positively abusing the unmetered content (Arch, Debian and Ubuntu mirrors in particular).
I call hogwash. How many Microsoft employees must be posting in this forum. The measure that matters is the real world. I've been working in a university I.T. dept, thats a LOT of machines spread amongst a huge breadth of user skill levels (our particular uni consists of roughly 40% OSX, 50% Windows (XP and 7) and 10% Fedora Linux (and yes, we do put end users on the Fedora boxes for classwork). I am yet to see a Linux or OSX machine get with a hijacked browser session.
I'd be very interested in a show of hands. Linux does have a decent share of the server market, and systems running it do get exploited (but my bet is that its very predominantly from exploits in sloppy PHP web apps and the like). But aside from that, how many of you out there have *ever* had malware get on to your Linux desktop and start hijacking your browser? My bet is very nearly zero. Windows is as secure as anything else? You may like to think that in principle it could be, but the experimental evidence strongly disagrees.
... after considering switching back to vanilla debian for some time, this might be the straw that broke the camels back. Where free software meets the corporate world, trust is everything. And trust is not something I have for yahoo/bing search. I don't trust them to provide good, comprehensive search results (I DO trust google to do that), and I don't trust them not to screw the Ubuntu community (tests on google doing that are inconclusive thus far, but fairly promising).