I completely understand that a lot of people rightfully wish to have some things removed. The problem is the risks that is included with this kind of legislation. Being able to demand that public information about you is removed solely because you don't like it is a gigantic door-opener for all kinds of future abuse.
But it is out there. Sorry but you can't remove it no matter how many laws you have that says you can. You ruined the right to freely exchange information for what?
You can always ask for information to be removed. You don't need a law for that. But this has to remain a privilege, not a right. The free exchange of information is much more important than yours or mines interest in keeping that information hidden.
1. Keep information from being disclosed. 2. Remove information from the web.
If it is important that the information is kept secret then it should not be on the web to begin with. I'm totally fine with 1. up to a point. But 2. terrifies me, that's an extremely slipper slope we're going down there.
Shell scripting usually works fine until you want to 1. be portable or 2. work with strings. You can do both with shell but I usually go with something like Perl when it happens.
There are many other benefits to systemd. Just a quick example that helped me recently; limit the amount of memory used by all apache processes and its descendants. Yes you can do this on your own but systemd makes it quick and easy.
Where I come from we don't actually have computer science, only computing science. I've always liked that name better and used it as a reminder that what I'm doing is not really about computers although the tool I'm using usually is one.
I'm occationally using Ubuntu 14.04 and Firefox works just great for me on it. Sorry but I really think there's something wrong with your system. Try if for a while without any addons just for reference, and check about:crashes to see if you can get more details from it.
Firefox has grown to the point were it is more about money than the users. Google's dominance was the first big shot across the bow of its mission. Now this and the continued Chromification of the UI.
So it is decision time. Abandon the mission or the money. Unfortunately, I've seen this movie before and I know how it ends.
Mission is still the same, regardless if you're on the train or not.
Time for a fork...
People have already done this long ago. Not a lot of poeple using them though. Turns out most people may actually like these changes.
I completely understand that a lot of people rightfully wish to have some things removed. The problem is the risks that is included with this kind of legislation. Being able to demand that public information about you is removed solely because you don't like it is a gigantic door-opener for all kinds of future abuse.
I'm mad here in the EU. I hope google.com will be unaffected of this nonsense.
But it is out there. Sorry but you can't remove it no matter how many laws you have that says you can. You ruined the right to freely exchange information for what?
You can always ask for information to be removed. You don't need a law for that. But this has to remain a privilege, not a right. The free exchange of information is much more important than yours or mines interest in keeping that information hidden.
There are two things here.
1. Keep information from being disclosed.
2. Remove information from the web.
If it is important that the information is kept secret then it should not be on the web to begin with. I'm totally fine with 1. up to a point. But 2. terrifies me, that's an extremely slipper slope we're going down there.
It's no all fine, but what do you think you can do about it? The information won't just magically dissapear.
Shell scripting usually works fine until you want to 1. be portable or 2. work with strings. You can do both with shell but I usually go with something like Perl when it happens.
Do they work perfectly under Windows?
Probably not. The NSA is not allowed to spy on Americans.
Because robbers don't read /.
A user preference would be appropriate.
So what you're saying is that cloud services only exist in the US?
What's so specific about the US? I really don't understand why cloud computing would be dead for people outside the US.
Systemd had over 500 contributors last time I checked.
Absolutely. This specific case is mitigation while we're trying to narrow down a bug.
No they didn't, cloud computing is definitly a big thing even after we learned that the NSA is doing more less what they are supposed to do.
Sorry to crush your dreams but prostitution is not dating.
There are many other benefits to systemd. Just a quick example that helped me recently; limit the amount of memory used by all apache processes and its descendants. Yes you can do this on your own but systemd makes it quick and easy.
Where I come from we don't actually have computer science, only computing science. I've always liked that name better and used it as a reminder that what I'm doing is not really about computers although the tool I'm using usually is one.
The only differences I've noticed is that they made the tabs almost impossible to distinguish, because Flat Is Cool!
I've found that it's now much easier to see the active tab.
and they appear to have moved the back and forward buttons.
They are still where they used to be, on the left side of the address bar.
Hmm, looks like it's not updated anymore so probably not ideal.
Not to mention GnuZilla.
Last time it did a dramatic change was with 4.0 in 2011. That's hardly "every two weeks."
I'm occationally using Ubuntu 14.04 and Firefox works just great for me on it. Sorry but I really think there's something wrong with your system. Try if for a while without any addons just for reference, and check about:crashes to see if you can get more details from it.
Firefox has grown to the point were it is more about money than the users. Google's dominance was the first big shot across the bow of its mission. Now this and the continued Chromification of the UI.
So it is decision time. Abandon the mission or the money. Unfortunately, I've seen this movie before and I know how it ends.
Mission is still the same, regardless if you're on the train or not.
Time for a fork...
People have already done this long ago. Not a lot of poeple using them though. Turns out most people may actually like these changes.