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User: kthreadd

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Comments · 1,958

  1. Re:so what does IOS 6 military have over on Apple Mobile Devices Cleared For Use On US Military Networks · · Score: 2

    Yes, enterprise customers can side load apps on iOS.

  2. Re:Not open source on NetBSD 6.1 Has Shipped · · Score: 1

    Firmware is not part of the kernel.

  3. Re:Not really a leak on Wikileaks Releases Docs Before Trial of TPB Founder Warg · · Score: 1

    I guess they want the documents to be public, but not too public.

  4. Re:Fine by me on Ubuntu Developers Revisit Replacing Firefox With Chromium · · Score: 1

    Firefox is updated about 1-2 times per year. We're at Firefox 17 right now and in a couple of months Firefox 24 will be released. Only use the glorified snapshots released in the meantime if you want to test what's new before you deploy the upcoming release.

  5. Re:Rob Weir, is that you? on Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year · · Score: 1

    For some it's a huge difference.

  6. Re:Rob Weir, is that you? on Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year · · Score: 1

    The primary difference is that LO is locked into LGPL, while AOO is free software under the Apache license.

  7. Re:Of course OO has a higher number of D/Ls... on Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year · · Score: 1

    /me raises hand

  8. Re:Meh... on Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year · · Score: 1

    Why is it better?

  9. Re:Marketing on Apache OpenOffice Downloaded 50 Million Times In a Year · · Score: 1

    Well, LO has better marketing. But OO exists and is going on strong.

  10. Re:Cool! All we have to do is create code to math. on Canada Courts, Patent Office Warns Against Trying To Patent Mathematics · · Score: 0

    printf("Hello World!\n");

    Convince me where the math is in that.

  11. Re:How ? on Apple Deluged By Police Demands To Decrypt iPhones · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not at all if the computer (I don't know why so many call modern hand-held computers phones since they are not very phone-like) is using strong and trustworthy encryption which you control. I don't know the details in this case (Slashdot is seldom trustworthy), but if anyone except you can decrypt it using something other than brute force then the encryption is certainly not trustworthy. If that's the case then putting secrets on this computer that you call phone is absolutely a terrible idea, but I see very little problem with it if it's actually good encryption.

  12. Re: Erm, yeah... "some" devices. on Cyanogenmod 10.1 RC1 Starts To Roll Out To Devices Near You · · Score: 1

    Actually, no. From what I've seen they are usually doing good work when rolling out updated to older devices. There have been a few that's not been optimal, such as iOS 4 on the 3G. But apart from that one it actually works just fine. There are many problems with iOS, but updates is not one of them.

  13. Re: Erm, yeah... "some" devices. on Cyanogenmod 10.1 RC1 Starts To Roll Out To Devices Near You · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So true. It's a shame that the original manufacturer won't support a device that came out just two years ago (HTC Desire S came out in 2011 if I'm correct).

    It's sad that the open alternative can't support it.

    In the meantime, the latest version of Apple iOS supports iPhones released back into 2009 with iPhone 3GS. If you bought the latest iPhone available in 2009, you would still get the latest OS today almost four years later.

    I *really* hope that the phone manufacturers will just drop the idea that everything that's not an x86 has to be specialized locked down hardware. It's a computer, start treating it like one.

  14. Re:Crunchbang is pretty decent on Debian + Openbox = CrunchBang Linux (Video) · · Score: 2

    Why does it have to be different?

    Of course it doesn't have to be different, but some might say that it's a bit wasteful to build a separate distribution when you're doing so few changes, changes that could instead be integrated in Debian itself or provided as a separate repository.

    They are a community providing support (arguably separate from Debian), the Debian distro is well supported (so making a destructive fork that you can't provide support for is discouraged), and it may be that the difference is in the defaults.

    90% of the complainers I hear about Ubuntu can't stand Unity, and an equal number complain about Gnome 3. (180%!)

    So, it sounds like Crunchbang capitalizes on that, to me.

    Debian doesn't have defaults. If you don't like Gnome then just install Openbox instead.

  15. Re:I don't get it on Debian + Openbox = CrunchBang Linux (Video) · · Score: 1

    So basically you could just install Debian, install openbox and pull down their configuration and you would end up with Crunchbang? I agree if it's that simple. Why not instead spend the effort on improving the experience with Debian? Is it really necessary to have a separate distribution just because of that?

  16. Re:I just don't get it? on Microsoft's Most Profitable Mobile Operating System: Android · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the legal system that we have created is designed to let companies like Microsoft do exactly what they are doing. This is completely normal.

  17. Re:Or Debian will release the "Un"Phone on Microsoft's Most Profitable Mobile Operating System: Android · · Score: 2

    The point of the GNU phone would of course be that it doesn't do that... and that the UI is based on Emacs.

  18. Re:Linux on Microsoft's Most Profitable Mobile Operating System: Android · · Score: 2

    The HyperV support is certainly appreciated by all users that are running Linux on HyperV.

  19. apt on Ubuntu Developing Its Own Package Format, Installer · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sounds like a complement to dpkg, not a replacement

  20. Re:Dear Mr. Mcafee on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 1

    Ehm, did you actually read the interview? It's not his antivirus, 21 years ago he sold that business off.

  21. Re:Paedophile, not a hero on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If she's 18 in 2012 then 16 in 2010 sounds reasonable. No problem there.

  22. Re:Interesting on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 3

    Absolutely. I got tired of the whole murder story a long time ago. That said, this particular interview by itself is interesting.

  23. Re:why he's a criminal.. on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 1

    I think he was pretty clear about the fact that he's not involved with the antivirus business anymore, and that anything that has happened to it for the past 21 years is not something he's responsible for.

  24. Re:Did he do it? on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 1

    If we assume that he did do that, then answering the question would be kind of stupid.

  25. Interesting on Interview: John McAfee Answers Your Questions · · Score: 3, Informative

    Thanks for making the interview. Highly interesting to read. Didn't actually know that he's not involved with the antivirus vusiness anymore.