Anyone with a windows box and a firewall log knows that spyware has been around clicking on advertising links since before Google was around. But nobody said boo. Now the cat is out of the bag and we're in big big trouble.
I love this software more every day.
http://synergy2.sourceforge.net/
Control many comps with a single keyboard/mouse over your local lan. All they need is bidirectional support...
Most of the software on that top ten list has annoyed me at one point in time. Synergy is the complete opposite.
Yea I totally agree. I use gmail for the same reason. The article doesn't mention anything about the end of web based apps though. That was the submitter. Everyone I know already has a server at home.
First time poster, long time lurker. Just wanted to say grats grats to the Irish. Way to go. What kind of hardware spit out 7billion records in a second? I guess I'll have to read the article...:(
AND is it public? Can I hook up to it and send some queries just to see for myself how fast it is?
Anyone with a windows box and a firewall log knows that spyware has been around clicking on advertising links since before Google was around. But nobody said boo. Now the cat is out of the bag and we're in big big trouble.
I love this software more every day. http://synergy2.sourceforge.net/ Control many comps with a single keyboard/mouse over your local lan. All they need is bidirectional support... Most of the software on that top ten list has annoyed me at one point in time. Synergy is the complete opposite.
Yea I totally agree. I use gmail for the same reason. The article doesn't mention anything about the end of web based apps though. That was the submitter. Everyone I know already has a server at home.
Ok so it's not public and someone from the project posted a PDF with more information than the press release. http://www.deri.ie/fileadmin/documents/DERI-TR-200 7-04-20.pdf
I'd like to play with RDF someday when I have free time.
First time poster, long time lurker. Just wanted to say grats grats to the Irish. Way to go. What kind of hardware spit out 7billion records in a second? I guess I'll have to read the article... :(
AND is it public? Can I hook up to it and send some queries just to see for myself how fast it is?