Flash works beautifully on my Nokia N95, both in the browser (youtube videos, etc.) and in the standalone flash player application.
Re:It shouldn't have happened yet
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SCO Offline
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· Score: 2, Interesting
I think SCO have took their site down themselves as the attack shouldn't have happened yet.
Did you even read the article? Obviously not, or you know that it explained why the attacks are happenening before 1609:
The MyDoom attack trigger was set for 1609 GMT Sunday. But with so many computer clocks incorrectly set, the infected machines began firing off data requests at SCO.com hours earlier, Hypponen said. "It will only get worse for SCO as time goes on," he added.
I use NetBeans daily for J2EE development. I'm always looking to use the best tool for the job and I have tried Eclipse. I found that for J2EE, NetBeans was far superior. Eclipse had some add-ons for J2EE but they were no comparison to NetBeans stock tools. NetBeans 3.4.x was quite slow, but 3.5.1 runs pretty much as fast as anything else on my machine (except during garbage collections... ugh), and I'm very happy using it.
But as I said... I'm always looking to use the best tools, I'm not religious about any one or the other. Can anyone give me some reasons why Eclipse might be better for these things? I'm NOT trying to start a war here, I'm honestly looking for the best tools to use. My experience has shown NetBeans to work best for me, but obviously a lot of people use Eclipse so I could be missing something there and would like some more information from people who have used both products.
I do a huge amount of J2EE development on both Windows and Linux/FreeBSD machines. Speed isn't too much of an issue since NetBeans runs fine for me. I just need whatever makes me the most productive and right now that is NetBeans. Can someone give me some factual and unbiased reasons for me to look at Eclipse again? (this is Slashdot so I know that's asking a lot...)
CA*net is Canada's (fairly slow) commerical Internet backbone. What you're referring to is CA*net3, which replaced CA*net2 as the national research/educational backbone in late 1999. At the time, it was the the fastest advanced network in the world.
I worked for the National Research Council at the time, in Halifax, and we were actually one of the first in Canada to be on CA*net3. My boss there was actually one of the big guys involved with it, so I got to see some of the early network maps, etc. It was quite interesting.
I believe that most of CA*net3 is still dark fiber though. There's a lot connected to it, but it has to potential for much, much more.
Flash works beautifully on my Nokia N95, both in the browser (youtube videos, etc.) and in the standalone flash player application.
I think SCO have took their site down themselves as the attack shouldn't have happened yet.
Did you even read the article? Obviously not, or you know that it explained why the attacks are happenening before 1609:
The MyDoom attack trigger was set for 1609 GMT Sunday. But with so many computer clocks incorrectly set, the infected machines began firing off data requests at SCO.com hours earlier, Hypponen said. "It will only get worse for SCO as time goes on," he added.
Thank you, come again.
I use NetBeans daily for J2EE development. I'm always looking to use the best tool for the job and I have tried Eclipse. I found that for J2EE, NetBeans was far superior. Eclipse had some add-ons for J2EE but they were no comparison to NetBeans stock tools. NetBeans 3.4.x was quite slow, but 3.5.1 runs pretty much as fast as anything else on my machine (except during garbage collections... ugh), and I'm very happy using it.
But as I said... I'm always looking to use the best tools, I'm not religious about any one or the other. Can anyone give me some reasons why Eclipse might be better for these things? I'm NOT trying to start a war here, I'm honestly looking for the best tools to use. My experience has shown NetBeans to work best for me, but obviously a lot of people use Eclipse so I could be missing something there and would like some more information from people who have used both products.
I do a huge amount of J2EE development on both Windows and Linux/FreeBSD machines. Speed isn't too much of an issue since NetBeans runs fine for me. I just need whatever makes me the most productive and right now that is NetBeans. Can someone give me some factual and unbiased reasons for me to look at Eclipse again? (this is Slashdot so I know that's asking a lot...)
I worked for the National Research Council at the time, in Halifax, and we were actually one of the first in Canada to be on CA*net3. My boss there was actually one of the big guys involved with it, so I got to see some of the early network maps, etc. It was quite interesting.
I believe that most of CA*net3 is still dark fiber though. There's a lot connected to it, but it has to potential for much, much more.