You know if this.NET thing works out it could lead to truly cross-platform apps. That could realistically lead to it backfiring on Microsoft and allow alternate systems like Linux, like FreeBSD to come in and steal MS's pride and joy, the Windows Market Share. So think about it that way when criticizing Mono and DotGNU.
Go to this (link below) e-the people petition and sign it then pass it on to others that would be interested in signing. Do this if you want to petition the US Government about saving Napster and P2P File Sharing and Networking. The Internet was created around P2P Sharing.
E-The People Napster Petition
I think the domain names that expire should be thrown back out into the pool of availible names. However this is should be only after a grace period of sorts, maybe 3 months in which time the original owners have a chance to reconsider, continuation of ownership of the domain(s). After that they should be availible as if they were brand spanking new.
Hardly, the main focuses in the Mozilla Project are speed, standards-compliancy, and adding important new features like MIME Types. That's for right now. I believe they're getting ready for NS Beta 2, so they need it to be speedy.
Nanotechnology stands to benfit humanity in countless amazing and countless woophee doo ways. One of the most amazing and beneficial way it affects us is its easy ability to send a bunch of the nanobots up to the ozone and repair it by seperating that extra oxygen from the CFC and putting it back together with standard oxygen molecules. It would also carry back down the CFCs and dismember them as well. However if you read last nights article about making nanites to be injected into the body, if they hooked those up to the internet some l33t hax0r could use the ping of death to kill you. To think all this time it only damaged intellectual property. Those are one of the ways it could backfire. Nanotechnology could be a formidable warfare technology as well especially against countries w/o the technology. It has its good and bad applied uses.
You know if this .NET thing works out it could lead to truly cross-platform apps. That could realistically lead to it backfiring on Microsoft and allow alternate systems like Linux, like FreeBSD to come in and steal MS's pride and joy, the Windows Market Share. So think about it that way when criticizing Mono and DotGNU.
Go to this (link below) e-the people petition and sign it then pass it on to others that would be interested in signing. Do this if you want to petition the US Government about saving Napster and P2P File Sharing and Networking. The Internet was created around P2P Sharing. E-The People Napster Petition
I think the domain names that expire should be thrown back out into the pool of availible names. However this is should be only after a grace period of sorts, maybe 3 months in which time the original owners have a chance to reconsider, continuation of ownership of the domain(s). After that they should be availible as if they were brand spanking new.
Hardly, the main focuses in the Mozilla Project are speed, standards-compliancy, and adding important new features like MIME Types. That's for right now. I believe they're getting ready for NS Beta 2, so they need it to be speedy.
Nanotechnology stands to benfit humanity in countless amazing and countless woophee doo ways. One of the most amazing and beneficial way it affects us is its easy ability to send a bunch of the nanobots up to the ozone and repair it by seperating that extra oxygen from the CFC and putting it back together with standard oxygen molecules. It would also carry back down the CFCs and dismember them as well. However if you read last nights article about making nanites to be injected into the body, if they hooked those up to the internet some l33t hax0r could use the ping of death to kill you. To think all this time it only damaged intellectual property. Those are one of the ways it could backfire. Nanotechnology could be a formidable warfare technology as well especially against countries w/o the technology. It has its good and bad applied uses.