I think you missed the point, you can have a, by your definition, "secure" system with SSL, but still have gaping holes in whatever is at the other end. Such as, idk. . some well meaning Russian with lots of money to pay thepiratebay to join their "network". But with the business that thepiratebay is in, nothing in secure while in their hands in the first place.
Sad that people are even taking anything that Peter Sunde, or anyone that has anything to do with thepiratebay, as serious. It's simply a publicity stunt because they haven't been in the media for a while.
The government wouldn't be this stupid, there are DDoS mitigation services that routs all traffic through their service and filters it out without causing much economic damage.
But I agree with your post, don't like where all this "internet age" thing is going. Soon we'll see a facebook icon by default on the desktop, or something.
No, this is the birth of new opportunities in the java landscape, this is a clear sign of Oracle's dedication to the java community. The high-end Mercedes offering will finally allow you to look down on those Fiat drivers and know that your money is well spent.
I'll agree with that, Google also seems to be attempting to segment the java ecosystem into google-java and normal-java, Nokia is the only one that doesn't feel the need to redefine programming, and open.
The picture I got of this OS X app store was that of iPhone's app store, _the_ place to go for apps and where all developers get rich, a place you do not want to get shut out from.
Sure you can download anything you want from other places, but as a developer you will want to utilize apple's distribution channels to reach a large audience, something like apt-get, but if your apt-get can only download applications that are exclusively developed with Apple's iOS SDK and apples programming languages from apple servers then as a developer your choices are limited to making an Apple version of the app and a cross-platform version for all other platforms.
"Sun MicroSystems and now Oracle develops JVMs for all the OSs EXCEPT Apple"
I think I wasn't very clear with what I meant in my reply, Apple isn't allowing anything into their app stores that doesn't use some apple developed API, it locks out those that want to create stuff for multiple platforms, and it locks in all those developing for OS X that now are forced to use Objective C.
I'm sure you're also mad at Adobe for not making you a version of flash too, right? But that's another discussion;)
It looks like they don't want any non exclusively-for-apple developers. I'm glad Android is gaining momentum, and that MeeGo is soon to be released, so people have a choice of using open platforms.
lol, as a European I usually find it painful to discuss with, or read, with/from an American because of their constant wittyness and irrelevant crap that they have to say, I blame Americanization for this painful-to-read chat log;)
From what I understand for example with WiFi only the drivers put a limit on the radio, the rest is in the drivers (Including frequency selection and power management with limitations that must meet regulations). So I guess I was thinking of it more like a re-usable Open GSM stack.
Google is creating the same situation as Microsoft did with their custom HTML standards, once Googles implementation starts being used in other google products, and people start using that instead, it will create all kinds of problems for everyone (non-inter-operating libraries, for example).
Even if they use the standard APIs, they do other things differently so that the software might not run, try running Vuze on IBM JDK, it will crash or not download anything [iirc. after a while].
As if nobody can snoop on, and redirect traffic, with tor...
I think you missed the point, you can have a, by your definition, "secure" system with SSL, but still have gaping holes in whatever is at the other end. Such as, idk. . some well meaning Russian with lots of money to pay thepiratebay to join their "network". But with the business that thepiratebay is in, nothing in secure while in their hands in the first place.
Sad that people are even taking anything that Peter Sunde, or anyone that has anything to do with thepiratebay, as serious. It's simply a publicity stunt because they haven't been in the media for a while.
The government wouldn't be this stupid, there are DDoS mitigation services that routs all traffic through their service and filters it out without causing much economic damage.
Is a mass distributed denial of service like a distributed denial of service of distributed denial of services?
*than ..
than solid rational
But I agree with your post, don't like where all this "internet age" thing is going. Soon we'll see a facebook icon by default on the desktop, or something.
That reminds me of Fedora Rawhide, people should try that if they want the "constant updates" model.
With my new 100/100mbit broadband, and the fastest SSD, and this hack, I'm not sure I'm noticing anything ;O
Haha, that would have been hillarious. All that security and someone compromising it with a simple 6letter pass :D
no classes, no game
No, this is the birth of new opportunities in the java landscape, this is a clear sign of Oracle's dedication to the java community. The high-end Mercedes offering will finally allow you to look down on those Fiat drivers and know that your money is well spent.
You make a good point, I tried but can't rationalize it when thinking of these individual tests.
Just tried with latest chromium, it passwed all random tests I clicked on, that the tested chrome failed on.
I'll agree with that, Google also seems to be attempting to segment the java ecosystem into google-java and normal-java, Nokia is the only one that doesn't feel the need to redefine programming, and open.
Funny, I just saw this article:
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9192331/Mac_App_Store_disruptive_say_experts
It's very related to what I said and I'm glad others are also thinking about it.
The picture I got of this OS X app store was that of iPhone's app store, _the_ place to go for apps and where all developers get rich, a place you do not want to get shut out from.
Sure you can download anything you want from other places, but as a developer you will want to utilize apple's distribution channels to reach a large audience, something like apt-get, but if your apt-get can only download applications that are exclusively developed with Apple's iOS SDK and apples programming languages from apple servers then as a developer your choices are limited to making an Apple version of the app and a cross-platform version for all other platforms.
"Sun MicroSystems and now Oracle develops JVMs for all the OSs EXCEPT Apple"
I think I wasn't very clear with what I meant in my reply, Apple isn't allowing anything into their app stores that doesn't use some apple developed API, it locks out those that want to create stuff for multiple platforms, and it locks in all those developing for OS X that now are forced to use Objective C.
I'm sure you're also mad at Adobe for not making you a version of flash too, right? But that's another discussion ;)
It looks like they don't want any non exclusively-for-apple developers. I'm glad Android is gaining momentum, and that MeeGo is soon to be released, so people have a choice of using open platforms.
lol, as a European I usually find it painful to discuss with, or read, with/from an American because of their constant wittyness and irrelevant crap that they have to say, I blame Americanization for this painful-to-read chat log ;)
From what I understand for example with WiFi only the drivers put a limit on the radio, the rest is in the drivers (Including frequency selection and power management with limitations that must meet regulations). So I guess I was thinking of it more like a re-usable Open GSM stack.
Can't 4G be implemented in software? With the N900 that can also run Android, can't I just install Android and use 4g?
Yum is still nicer because it's transactional, feels more safe at least.
Google is creating the same situation as Microsoft did with their custom HTML standards, once Googles implementation starts being used in other google products, and people start using that instead, it will create all kinds of problems for everyone (non-inter-operating libraries, for example).
Even if they use the standard APIs, they do other things differently so that the software might not run, try running Vuze on IBM JDK, it will crash or not download anything [iirc. after a while].
Have you ever touched the box after installation? It is unlikely that you haven't had problems with apt..