The people of Uruguay have been oppressed for too long. This attempt to trademark Linux is the last straw. We must bomb them!
We in the Northern Hemisphere are tired of continuously mistreating our brothers to the South, and we think it's time to end it. Uruguayan Linux is a perversion of our latest attempt. It has absolutely nothing to do with food subsidies.
I went to the website. All I found out is that these machines have a bunch of processors, and they run at 637 MHz.
What the hell are they? PowerPC's? If not, won't IBM have a hell of a time porting glibc, gcc, binutils, XFree86, the kernel, etc. etc. etc. to the new CPU and architecture. Are they going to get SMP running? Methinks that's a hard task.
By the time they get done porting Linux, it'll basically be a new operating system.
I'd like to see it, but it seems like a lot of work for very little profit.
So I hope I can use it when they sell it. I just need to get some money first. Unless I steal a copy when the office supply truck pulls up. Like, he'll open the back of the truck and then he'll turn his back on it. He'll be thinking things like "I wonder if that girl was 18" or "I sure like muffins". And when he's doing that, it'll be like "Yoink! sorry, sucker! You had your chance!"
That would be so sweet. And I know I can do it because I'm pretty crafty.
Then I'll be Lotus-Notesing all over the place. This is what I do.
The people of Uruguay have been oppressed for too long. This attempt to trademark Linux is the last straw. We must bomb them!
We in the Northern Hemisphere are tired of continuously mistreating our brothers to the South, and we think it's time to end it. Uruguayan Linux is a perversion of our latest attempt. It has absolutely nothing to do with food subsidies.
Overwhelming credit for the Internet should go to Al Gore, who (as everyone knows) is UNIX-based.
I went to the website. All I found out is that these machines have a bunch of processors, and they run at 637 MHz.
What the hell are they? PowerPC's? If not, won't IBM have a hell of a time porting glibc, gcc, binutils, XFree86, the kernel, etc. etc. etc. to the new CPU and architecture. Are they going to get SMP running? Methinks that's a hard task.
By the time they get done porting Linux, it'll basically be a new operating system.
I'd like to see it, but it seems like a lot of work for very little profit.
My password is "password".
I use this on a couple of machines (198.137.240.91 and 198.137.240.92), and it seems to work pretty well.
BTW, I haven't told you my login name
Lotus notes is nice stuff, I like it a lot.
So I hope I can use it when they sell it. I just need to get some money first. Unless I steal a copy when the office supply truck pulls up. Like, he'll open the back of the truck and then he'll turn his back on it. He'll be thinking things like "I wonder if that girl was 18" or "I sure like muffins". And when he's doing that, it'll be like "Yoink! sorry, sucker! You had your chance!"
That would be so sweet. And I know I can do it because I'm pretty crafty.
Then I'll be Lotus-Notesing all over the place. This is what I do.