They come from the legal realm, and they are definitely not a fallacy there. People attempt to push the limits of the law. Usually drawing a line means that, say, an erosion of rights will not go further than that point. Allowing something by one decision often makes it likely that more challenges will follow.
When backing up and recovering files with a SELinux system, care must be taken to preserve SELinux context information. Use the star command to backup SE Linux contexts on Fedora, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (and probably most systems with a recent version of star).
For example, star -xattr -H=exustar -c -f output.tar [files]
Also the dump and restore utilities for Ext2/3 have been updated to work with XATTRs (and therefore SE Linux contexts). They should work on all distributions now.
Bacula definitely supports ACL's. I'm not sure about SELinux labels, but it seems to be there are ways to back them up independently and then backup the file that is exported. I could be wrong, but I bet you that it's doable.
Two postings now and the obvious question is still not answered... where the hell are you supposed to get the fuel for these things? How are they supposed to be refilled? Still nothing.
Why not call it marriage then? The issue here is that it makes gay folks who want to get married feel as if we are discounting the value of their marriage just because they are different. If it's essentially marriage, why the need to call it anything but marriage? Who cares what it has been called?
Has Jack Meoff gotten onto the list yet? If so, and there are any TSA personnel reading this, please let him know I have a lot of his mail back at home next time he comes through the security gates.
I don't think it was interesting or insightful either (note that I am the parent poster). However, it IS true. When something goes wrong, it's because I've screwed it up. If I want to remove a piece of software, I remove it -- its impact on the system in the future is nil. In Windows, there is nearly guaranteed to be something left behind. This, over time, makes a system slower and slower. Maybe this isn't a problem if you run new equipment, but if you run on hardware that was near the bottom of the resource requirements to begin with and it gets consistently slower from there, you're in for it.
I guarantee if you re-install Windows right now, starting fresh, your system will be NOTICEABLY snappier. Simply does not work that way on Linux.
I suppose it has never happened to you? I've left my laptop in a restaurant more than once... have a drink or two and just have other things on your mind -- it can happen if you aren't careful. That's no reason to fuck someone over. Some morality on your part.
When you hear "you stole my phone, give it back" and you don't do anything about it, you are guilty. Maybe not in the eyes of the law, but a kid in kindergarten knows that you can't take things that aren't yours.
Lucent's Orinoco cards had a check box in the driver for "microwave oven robustness" or something similar. I don't know whether it did much of anything for me, but I suspect that things like this were what changed when it was enabled.
Dapper. It actually works pretty well. I've found that I've had more consistent luck since I switched to nvidia-glx (this is a new-to-me laptop at the same time as the Dapper "upgrade" so I'm not sure what is broken how yet). Suspend to RAM doesn't work at all with nvidia-glx (but did work somewhat with the nv driver, but it was unpredictable).
Part of the startup and shutdown time though is logging in and starting up all of your stuff. It's convenient not to have to do so because of hibernation (I know that I've been missing it since I switched to Linux -- only have just been tackling that now).
Useless for determining who's got a new account and who doesn't (and subsequently for deciding whose checks to accept), I believe the GP meant.
They come from the legal realm, and they are definitely not a fallacy there. People attempt to push the limits of the law. Usually drawing a line means that, say, an erosion of rights will not go further than that point. Allowing something by one decision often makes it likely that more challenges will follow.
FYI, from an SELinux FAQ:
What about backup and recovery ?
When backing up and recovering files with a SELinux system, care must be taken to preserve SELinux context information. Use the star command to backup SE Linux contexts on Fedora, Red Hat Enterprise Linux (and probably most systems with a recent version of star).
For example,
star -xattr -H=exustar -c -f output.tar [files]
Also the dump and restore utilities for Ext2/3 have been updated to work with XATTRs (and therefore SE Linux contexts). They should work on all distributions now.
Bacula definitely supports ACL's. I'm not sure about SELinux labels, but it seems to be there are ways to back them up independently and then backup the file that is exported. I could be wrong, but I bet you that it's doable.
Report it to the Bacula project then! It's not anti-Amanda propoganda, it was likely true at the time it was written.
And Victor Chavez is...?
Two postings now and the obvious question is still not answered... where the hell are you supposed to get the fuel for these things? How are they supposed to be refilled? Still nothing.
"Sorry! an unexpected error has occurred.
This error has been forwarded to MySpace's technical group."
Am I crazy, or maybe should daddy have told junior to get off that god damn video game system?
Where did junior get the thing in the first place (incidentally, a little ingrate, isn't he, likely killing the source of the free video games)?
Which does make you an evil bigot. No need to out-right articulate it -- we're smart enough to figure it out.
Why not call it marriage then? The issue here is that it makes gay folks who want to get married feel as if we are discounting the value of their marriage just because they are different. If it's essentially marriage, why the need to call it anything but marriage? Who cares what it has been called?
Has Jack Meoff gotten onto the list yet? If so, and there are any TSA personnel reading this, please let him know I have a lot of his mail back at home next time he comes through the security gates.
If paint is weight prohibitive, how would duct tape not be?
I assume you're actually speaking about Columbia, not the Discovery that's going to launch this week?
I don't think it was interesting or insightful either (note that I am the parent poster). However, it IS true. When something goes wrong, it's because I've screwed it up. If I want to remove a piece of software, I remove it -- its impact on the system in the future is nil. In Windows, there is nearly guaranteed to be something left behind. This, over time, makes a system slower and slower. Maybe this isn't a problem if you run new equipment, but if you run on hardware that was near the bottom of the resource requirements to begin with and it gets consistently slower from there, you're in for it.
I guarantee if you re-install Windows right now, starting fresh, your system will be NOTICEABLY snappier. Simply does not work that way on Linux.
What benefit? Not wiping out your entire system every 6 months to keep it running at a usable pace. Predictable reliablity, etc.
I just don't have to reboot anymore.
It's worth the driver hell that one often has to go through on a new system. Systems shipped with Linux? Probably a great idea.
Firefox does not drop support in the next release, it drops it in the release after that. 2.0 will run on Win98.
I suppose it has never happened to you? I've left my laptop in a restaurant more than once... have a drink or two and just have other things on your mind -- it can happen if you aren't careful. That's no reason to fuck someone over. Some morality on your part.
Could certainly be 20 37th Ave, apartment 108 or something like that.
When you hear "you stole my phone, give it back" and you don't do anything about it, you are guilty. Maybe not in the eyes of the law, but a kid in kindergarten knows that you can't take things that aren't yours.
Lucent's Orinoco cards had a check box in the driver for "microwave oven robustness" or something similar. I don't know whether it did much of anything for me, but I suspect that things like this were what changed when it was enabled.
Dapper. It actually works pretty well. I've found that I've had more consistent luck since I switched to nvidia-glx (this is a new-to-me laptop at the same time as the Dapper "upgrade" so I'm not sure what is broken how yet). Suspend to RAM doesn't work at all with nvidia-glx (but did work somewhat with the nv driver, but it was unpredictable).
Part of the startup and shutdown time though is logging in and starting up all of your stuff. It's convenient not to have to do so because of hibernation (I know that I've been missing it since I switched to Linux -- only have just been tackling that now).
I get 691 on a 768 connection. Decent, I suppose.
Though not so modern, Dreamcast had a bunch of 2D games on what was essentially a 3D console.