Somehow I don't think you have any idea about the topic you're writing about but bear with me if you do and you just have become lost somehow(??) Linux-only media players is superior in every way I can think of compared to Windows-only media players. Some of the best players for Windows started out being Linux-only. I just recently dropped Windows on our PC's, after a bit of Vista time, and my biggest problem with media players in Linux is that there's so damn many to chose from that are better than what I have used in years and years of agonizing bloated Windows software. Sure there's crap players in Linux too. It's just that you have to work hard to evade crappy software in Windows while in Linux you don't . And there isn't even a "Linux media player 18½ advanced version" forced on you at install that suck about as much as fanbois do.
And popping sound? Don't even get me started about how much popping I have had in Windows. Creative Soundblaster surround cards in Windows anyone??
But where do the line go? Is it responsible enough to update with automatic updates? Is a updated anti-virus product mandatory (I know who would love that idea!)? Or should software have an "Internet approved" certificate?
If the buyer is a/. reader perhaps they know. If they tell my mom that I'm sure she doesn't know what is so funny about it. If a seller says it's secure and it isn't then the seller is to blame not the buyer.
And just as the red dots it will only annoy people who actually go to the theatres. The pirated versions are cleaned from watermarkings before they are released. But looking at the game scene it does not look like the people in charge understand that once again they only hurt the wrong people.
Not too bad but not great either. My 20/1 DSL with no cap cost me 499DKK/month (that's $118AU) and I'm about to get fiber instead (50/50 for $150AU/month. No cap.) and that's including 25 digital TV channels and VoIP.
I think you are thinking about "boys" not men :-)
How about Norway? I'd rather move there but Switzerland could be okay too.
Somehow I don't think you have any idea about the topic you're writing about but bear with me if you do and you just have become lost somehow(??) Linux-only media players is superior in every way I can think of compared to Windows-only media players. Some of the best players for Windows started out being Linux-only. I just recently dropped Windows on our PC's, after a bit of Vista time, and my biggest problem with media players in Linux is that there's so damn many to chose from that are better than what I have used in years and years of agonizing bloated Windows software. Sure there's crap players in Linux too. It's just that you have to work hard to evade crappy software in Windows while in Linux you don't . And there isn't even a "Linux media player 18½ advanced version" forced on you at install that suck about as much as fanbois do. And popping sound? Don't even get me started about how much popping I have had in Windows. Creative Soundblaster surround cards in Windows anyone??
Or, you could just not hit the Play button.
Yeah I know how you feel. At least my new GPU is from ATI and doesn't have a dust collector twin beside it.
But where do the line go? Is it responsible enough to update with automatic updates? Is a updated anti-virus product mandatory (I know who would love that idea!)? Or should software have an "Internet approved" certificate?
If the buyer is a /. reader perhaps they know. If they tell my mom that I'm sure she doesn't know what is so funny about it. If a seller says it's secure and it isn't then the seller is to blame not the buyer.
And just as the red dots it will only annoy people who actually go to the theatres. The pirated versions are cleaned from watermarkings before they are released. But looking at the game scene it does not look like the people in charge understand that once again they only hurt the wrong people.
Not too bad but not great either. My 20/1 DSL with no cap cost me 499DKK/month (that's $118AU) and I'm about to get fiber instead (50/50 for $150AU/month. No cap.) and that's including 25 digital TV channels and VoIP.