According to #kde on openproject.net, an uncommitted fix already exists for Konqueror. I'm sure more details will be posted when it has been tested and committed.
I was reading over some of the "dump laws" that we have here in Canada, and I noticed one that kept popping up was one about, and let me paraphrase, "It is the homeowner's responsibility to clear snow from municipal sidewalks within 24 hours of the snowfall..." Although this may seem like a dumb law to some people, it actually makes a lot of sense in places where we get heavy snow. Most people, in addition to their private sidewalk/driveway have a strip of city sidewalk running adjacent to their property. After a heavy snowfal, it would unreasonable to expect that the city should be responsible for clearing all of the sidewalk _and_ all of the roadways, which they do. Also, with all of the litigating going around these days, you wouldn't want someone to slip in front of your house. If the snow is not cleared - you're at fault; that means you're getting sued.
He should of used this to host his website instead...
Actually, it's for his Hauppauge WinTV card. You can clearly see here
According to #kde on openproject.net, an uncommitted fix already exists for Konqueror. I'm sure more details will be posted when it has been tested and committed.
I can just see it now...
"Warning, unable to connect: Connection reset by pier"...
I was reading over some of the "dump laws" that we have here in Canada, and I noticed one that kept popping up was one about, and let me paraphrase, "It is the homeowner's responsibility to clear snow from municipal sidewalks within 24 hours of the snowfall..." Although this may seem like a dumb law to some people, it actually makes a lot of sense in places where we get heavy snow. Most people, in addition to their private sidewalk/driveway have a strip of city sidewalk running adjacent to their property. After a heavy snowfal, it would unreasonable to expect that the city should be responsible for clearing all of the sidewalk _and_ all of the roadways, which they do. Also, with all of the litigating going around these days, you wouldn't want someone to slip in front of your house. If the snow is not cleared - you're at fault; that means you're getting sued.