I want one of these, with the ability to:
1) Connect it to a Mouse/Keyboard/Monitor to act as a desktop via HDMI/USB/Bluetooth/whatever.
2) Dock it into a 10" touchscreen to act as a tablet.
We still don't have enough postcards from all over the world. Therefore the annual special task remains: You are encouraged to send us a nice postcard. If the postcard arrives before the contest, your team will be awarded -60 penalty minutes. Our address: KSP, KZVI FMFI UK, Mlynska dolina, 842 48 Bratislava, Slovak Republic
To save team costs for sending in postcards, we would like to send a single envelope from one team to the next, in which each team may deposit their postcard before forwarding onward to the next team. Please order the list of team addresses in order to minimize the postage costs required to accomplish this task.
We just had an article showing how you can pretty much compile Flash to run as HTML5 - so, I think this is just arguing for better (Flash quality) authoring tools for HTML5 technology?
Alfresco takes what is essentially an unstable snapshot of the publicly available and GPL'd Community Edition, branches it into a private source repository, stabilizes that private codebase, and makes stable point releases of the commercially licensed Enterprise Edition from that. Sure, fixes from Enterprise Edition are eventually rolled back into the unstable Community Edition trunk, but there is never a stable point release made for the GPL licensed Community Edition. So, if our company wants open source (ie GPL) code for all the products we use in production, we can't get it from Alfresco!
Alfresco partner companies are banned from providing services to clients against the open source Community Edition.
If I fix a critical bug by patching the code for my licensed copy of Enterprise Edition, then I can no longer receive support from Alfresco for the product.
If I try to take part in the open source community and send patches for the product upstream to Alfresco, they either languish untouched:
So, it seems to me Mr Asay, that although you really like to talk the talk, and although you might just meet the basic legal requirements to qualify as Open Source, when it comes to the spirit and community surrounding Free Software, I don't think you really understand how to walk the walk?
Oracle plans to not only broaden and accelerate its own investment in the Java platform, but also plans to increase the commitment to the community that helps make Java an ubiquitous, innovative platform unified around open standards.
Dude, we have cut down half the rain forests, paved over, through, and around half the planet, sprawled our cities and homes through the habitat of countless animal species, destroyed the ozone layer, polluted the oceans... and you think _steak_ is the problem? How about we quit having babies until we reduce the worlds population from 7 billion to 1 billion, and eat all the steak we want! I think a billion people would probably be more than enough (and we can engineer them all to be smarter while we are at it).
Exactly, everyone quit having babies already!! We need to shrink the population, consolidate people around fewer urban centres with mass transit, reverse the sprawl, dig up most the roads, and let a few continents just totally grow over with rain forests again, where we can all just go to visit on vacation.
For the record, I (who started this thread) am the commenter you cite as "spot-on", I just added more info about my problems in the comments, I didn't file the bug:)
First off, the whole damn thing was so FUBAR, reports from users surely aren't even needed at all! The slightest bit of rudimentary testing reveals obvious breakage in multiple serious ways! You are getting hung up on all the details nice users like me took the time to write in there, when in reality we should have all just reported "all of us think this thing sucks for totally obvious reasons, have you even tried it? Fix your broken shit.".
"I will ignore all other issues mentioned in comments here."
Second of all, if I want to communicate with the developer by submitting bug reports written on a fricken paper aeroplane, then that's my prerogative - 1 report, 10 reports, initial bug, in the comments, it doesn't matter. The bottom line is that users are communicating serious problems to the developer, and the developer is *ignoring* them, because he doesn't care for how they were submitted. And, yeah, sure, that's his prerogative too, but it doesn't change the fact that the software sucks, problems are being brought to his attention, and he's not acting on them.
Third, you can't expect users to file separate reports for separate issues if they aren't capable of discerning how many issues there are! I already spent an hour identifying and writing down all the problematic and erratic behaviour I was seeing - and I have no idea how many different bugs that actually is. He should be thankful for receiving carefully specified reports at all, and use his knowledge of the system to immediately identify how many bugs there are, and go file separate bug reports himself, rather than expecting me to somehow slog through figuring it all out. He's not being paid to write software for me, but I'm also not being paid to do QA for him.
Agreed. I always had worries about the Mono+Patent situation, but when MS announced Silverlight and "de Icaza, who is attending Mix, was able to commit without hesitating" [1] to implementing it for Linux as Moonlight, I then immediately knew that he couldn't possibly have any idea of the patent situation surrounding that technology, and thus that he ultimately doesn't have any regard for the threat such things represent to the Free Software community.
Just install Free Software and GNU/Linux and forget about all these stupid games! Take control of your computing with an platform created by the people, for the people. Use something which is designed to enable you, rather than restrict you - locking you in and exploiting you for cash.
I think that saddest part is the shame causing your cringe, which society has taught people regarding any sexuality. I like to think of a world where one would be no more ashamed of the porn site popping up than your favorite music site. Hell, even as it stands, after you are done cringing, your guest probably just goes home and checks out whatever site they saw the link to themselves;)
Well, I'm not entirely comfortable drawing a line in the sand (above cows/dogs but below human fetus) saying it's relatively ok to terminate any life form with less than that much "potential".
I do not disagree with you regarding potential, but I do think it's fair to argue the point, based on the fact that the level of cruelty and suffering involved in the termination of a life can be somewhat measured by the intelligence and self-awareness of that life at the moment of termination.
This makes me wonder how aborting a human life far less developed than a toddler can still draw so much debate, while relatively little concern is shown for the thousands of lost lives of unwanted pets euthanized every year in animal shelters.
Java technology is both created and licensed under the GPL by Sun - meaning they, the creators, have licensed any patents they may have obtained while creating Java.
.NET technology was created by Microsoft, but the Mono implementation was created by Miguel/Novell (and licensed under the GPL by them). So, although Novell's GPL license gives you a patent license on any patents _Novell_ has covering the technology (none) - it is completely meaningless with regards to any _Microsoft_ patents covering the technology (likely many).
Sun can use the GPL to license their own patents, but Novell can't license what isn't theirs!
Citing third party patents to make it sound like these two technologies are in the same Patent situation is just disingenuous handwaving, as they aren't anywhere near being the primary concern in this scenario. With all the fuss, Microsoft could easily ship Mono themselves under the GPL or make some kind of libre patent license/declaration surrounding the technology - and they have NOT. If you read the remarks surrounding the MS/Novell deal, they have done exactly the opposite.
The really important point that page fails to mention is that neither ECMA nor ISO require patent disclosure, let alone a grant, on a submission being standardized!
And just three articles back ( http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/01/31/1859200 ) Slashdot is discussing the "Bloody Mess" that is the Intel Poulsbo driver, which it's worth noting, is provided as part of the Moblin project.
I'm thinking Moblin may need quite some more polish, and that perhaps they may be a little under-staffed?
I fell in love with the Poulsbo based Panasonic CF-U1 ruggedized MID. Once I saw Intel did the graphics hardware and that they had a Linux driver, I bought the thing. Knowing Intel has been doing such a great job maintaining their desktop Linux stuff (i810 driver, etc) I just trusted them, and as you can see by this article, what a mistake that turned out to be.
I want one of these, with the ability to: 1) Connect it to a Mouse/Keyboard/Monitor to act as a desktop via HDMI/USB/Bluetooth/whatever. 2) Dock it into a 10" touchscreen to act as a tablet.
Now we just have to wait for the generation of programmers educated/weaned on MS tools to die off, and we're good :)
To save team costs for sending in postcards, we would like to send a single envelope from one team to the next, in which each team may deposit their postcard before forwarding onward to the next team. Please order the list of team addresses in order to minimize the postage costs required to accomplish this task.
We just had an article showing how you can pretty much compile Flash to run as HTML5 - so, I think this is just arguing for better (Flash quality) authoring tools for HTML5 technology?
Alfresco takes what is essentially an unstable snapshot of the publicly available and GPL'd Community Edition, branches it into a private source repository, stabilizes that private codebase, and makes stable point releases of the commercially licensed Enterprise Edition from that. Sure, fixes from Enterprise Edition are eventually rolled back into the unstable Community Edition trunk, but there is never a stable point release made for the GPL licensed Community Edition. So, if our company wants open source (ie GPL) code for all the products we use in production, we can't get it from Alfresco!
Alfresco partner companies are banned from providing services to clients against the open source Community Edition.
If I fix a critical bug by patching the code for my licensed copy of Enterprise Edition, then I can no longer receive support from Alfresco for the product.
If I try to take part in the open source community and send patches for the product upstream to Alfresco, they either languish untouched:
https://issues.alfresco.com/jira/browse/ETWOTWO-1125
https://issues.alfresco.com/jira/browse/ALFCOM-2810
https://issues.alfresco.com/jira/browse/ALFCOM-3301
Or are just flat out closed with no reason given (despite being obvious problems):
https://issues.alfresco.com/jira/browse/ALFCOM-3308
So, it seems to me Mr Asay, that although you really like to talk the talk, and although you might just meet the basic legal requirements to qualify as Open Source, when it comes to the spirit and community surrounding Free Software, I don't think you really understand how to walk the walk?
This is an Intel chip we are talking about here... you can just round off that result ;)
This new Cloud processor should create synergies with my SOA Portal system and allow me to deploy Enterprise B2B Push based Web 2.0 technologies!
Does that mean Sun will now stop reneging on their promise to open source the new Java plugin? http://blogs.sun.com/darcy/entry/openjdk_and_the_new_plugin
Dude, we have cut down half the rain forests, paved over, through, and around half the planet, sprawled our cities and homes through the habitat of countless animal species, destroyed the ozone layer, polluted the oceans... and you think _steak_ is the problem? How about we quit having babies until we reduce the worlds population from 7 billion to 1 billion, and eat all the steak we want! I think a billion people would probably be more than enough (and we can engineer them all to be smarter while we are at it).
Exactly, everyone quit having babies already!! We need to shrink the population, consolidate people around fewer urban centres with mass transit, reverse the sprawl, dig up most the roads, and let a few continents just totally grow over with rain forests again, where we can all just go to visit on vacation.
For the record, I (who started this thread) am the commenter you cite as "spot-on", I just added more info about my problems in the comments, I didn't file the bug :)
Oh give me a break, what a crock!
First off, the whole damn thing was so FUBAR, reports from users surely aren't even needed at all! The slightest bit of rudimentary testing reveals obvious breakage in multiple serious ways! You are getting hung up on all the details nice users like me took the time to write in there, when in reality we should have all just reported "all of us think this thing sucks for totally obvious reasons, have you even tried it? Fix your broken shit.".
"I will ignore all other issues mentioned in comments here."
Second of all, if I want to communicate with the developer by submitting bug reports written on a fricken paper aeroplane, then that's my prerogative - 1 report, 10 reports, initial bug, in the comments, it doesn't matter. The bottom line is that users are communicating serious problems to the developer, and the developer is *ignoring* them, because he doesn't care for how they were submitted. And, yeah, sure, that's his prerogative too, but it doesn't change the fact that the software sucks, problems are being brought to his attention, and he's not acting on them.
Third, you can't expect users to file separate reports for separate issues if they aren't capable of discerning how many issues there are! I already spent an hour identifying and writing down all the problematic and erratic behaviour I was seeing - and I have no idea how many different bugs that actually is. He should be thankful for receiving carefully specified reports at all, and use his knowledge of the system to immediately identify how many bugs there are, and go file separate bug reports himself, rather than expecting me to somehow slog through figuring it all out. He's not being paid to write software for me, but I'm also not being paid to do QA for him.
I think it is an absolute disaster, and outlined all the problems I had with it under Fedora 11 at https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=506213 and was totally ignored.
Agreed. I always had worries about the Mono+Patent situation, but when MS announced Silverlight and "de Icaza, who is attending Mix, was able to commit without hesitating" [1] to implementing it for Linux as Moonlight, I then immediately knew that he couldn't possibly have any idea of the patent situation surrounding that technology, and thus that he ultimately doesn't have any regard for the threat such things represent to the Free Software community.
[1] http://linux.slashdot.org/story/07/05/03/2033219/Miguel-Plans-Silverlight-on-Mono-amp-Linux-by-Years-End
Just install Free Software and GNU/Linux and forget about all these stupid games! Take control of your computing with an platform created by the people, for the people. Use something which is designed to enable you, rather than restrict you - locking you in and exploiting you for cash.
I think that saddest part is the shame causing your cringe, which society has taught people regarding any sexuality. I like to think of a world where one would be no more ashamed of the porn site popping up than your favorite music site. Hell, even as it stands, after you are done cringing, your guest probably just goes home and checks out whatever site they saw the link to themselves ;)
Well, I'm not entirely comfortable drawing a line in the sand (above cows/dogs but below human fetus) saying it's relatively ok to terminate any life form with less than that much "potential".
I do not disagree with you regarding potential, but I do think it's fair to argue the point, based on the fact that the level of cruelty and suffering involved in the termination of a life can be somewhat measured by the intelligence and self-awareness of that life at the moment of termination.
My question arises due to the fact that I, at least, generally hierarchicalize the value of life based on intelligence.
This makes me wonder how aborting a human life far less developed than a toddler can still draw so much debate, while relatively little concern is shown for the thousands of lost lives of unwanted pets euthanized every year in animal shelters.
Java technology is both created and licensed under the GPL by Sun - meaning they, the creators, have licensed any patents they may have obtained while creating Java.
.NET technology was created by Microsoft, but the Mono implementation was created by Miguel/Novell (and licensed under the GPL by them). So, although Novell's GPL license gives you a patent license on any patents _Novell_ has covering the technology (none) - it is completely meaningless with regards to any _Microsoft_ patents covering the technology (likely many).
Sun can use the GPL to license their own patents, but Novell can't license what isn't theirs!
Citing third party patents to make it sound like these two technologies are in the same Patent situation is just disingenuous handwaving, as they aren't anywhere near being the primary concern in this scenario. With all the fuss, Microsoft could easily ship Mono themselves under the GPL or make some kind of libre patent license/declaration surrounding the technology - and they have NOT. If you read the remarks surrounding the MS/Novell deal, they have done exactly the opposite.
I don't see the quoted text on the linked page.
The really important point that page fails to mention is that neither ECMA nor ISO require patent disclosure, let alone a grant, on a submission being standardized!
I tried to get Moblin working on my MID.
I couldn't even get the installer to boot (kernel panic).
I filed a bug ( http://bugzilla.moblin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=197 ) which, despite being a critical issue, hasn't had so much as a peep out of a developer yet (after several months).
And just three articles back ( http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/01/31/1859200 ) Slashdot is discussing the "Bloody Mess" that is the Intel Poulsbo driver, which it's worth noting, is provided as part of the Moblin project.
I'm thinking Moblin may need quite some more polish, and that perhaps they may be a little under-staffed?
I fell in love with the Poulsbo based Panasonic CF-U1 ruggedized MID. Once I saw Intel did the graphics hardware and that they had a Linux driver, I bought the thing. Knowing Intel has been doing such a great job maintaining their desktop Linux stuff (i810 driver, etc) I just trusted them, and as you can see by this article, what a mistake that turned out to be.
I was also able to open that URL in Totem and watch, thanks!