There's clearly a word or two missing in the sentence from the second article you quote. Try parsing it as "The great majority of the increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was put there by the developed world...". Substitute man-made for an alternative meaning.
The key word being clarification. I believe the clarification is more relevant to the Novell situation, where Novell are a third party making patent deals to cover code they are distributing. Once Microsoft themselves start distributing that code directly, they are certainly in violation of the GPL if they then turn around and start suing people for exercising their rights under the license that they themselves distributed under.
The key words here being history and had. Back in the day, that might have been the done thing for the Catholic Church, but that doesn't mean we should accept the same from Scientology now.
It's easy to say so now, but in 1992, someone posting to Usenet had no expectation that their comments would be archived forever and be easily searchable by anyone with an internet connection and 10 seconds to spare.
Apache is popular because it was being developed rapidly at a time when development on the two major servers, NCSA httpd (from which it forked) and CERN, had stalled due to people moving on from the Universities where they were developed (many to Netscape).
Judging by their official website, the only things they have copied off Disney are a copy of the castle that Disney copied from a real castle in Germany, and some clowns who apart from the red noses, look remarkably like the seven dwarfs - from a certain 18th century German fairytale.
Or perhaps the GP never looks at Groups or Explore. Flickr only seems to advertise other Yahoo properties (through inconspicuous icons at the bottom) for me when I look at individual photos or someone's photostream.
Clearly you don't want a central agent (like a CA) be in control of trust, because the problem here is the central control over encryption in the 1st place.
A CA is not in central control over encryption. They are only in control of authenticating keys. The only way they can subvert the encryption process is to issue matching (in details, but not in keys) certificates to you and the man in the middle. If they were to do this, it would be detected quickly, and their reputation as a trusted CA would suffer.
When I was there in the late '80s they already had the route mapped out for the Nagoya-Osaka section of the maglev, via Mie and Nara rather than the Gifu-Kyoto route of the Shinkansen.
Flash Video is tied to the Flash Desktop Player. More and more people are starting to take their video watching beyond the desktop - portable media players, PSP's, PDA's, mobile phones, set-top-boxes on your large TV screen are all candidates for video watching, especially short videos such as found on YouTube, and none are served by non-standard formats like Flash Video. While there is a flash player available for some PDAs and smartphones, it does not support the video codecs used by youtube, google, atomfilms and others.
TFA is slashdotted already, but from the summary I can't tell if he's reviewing Beryl, the unstable fork of Compiz 3D window manager, which is itself unstable and not enabled by default in the latest Ubuntu and most other distros, or the recently released Ubuntu 7.04, AKA Feisty Fawn.
To me, the google translation appears to say 244 orders for up to 25 copies were placed in that time period at one particular store (which the Japanese site says is the online site of a large chain). So not 244 copies in China at all. The article seems to be about trends over time and how the release of subsequent versions have not caused the surge in sales that the release of Ultimate did, not about a surprisingly low number of overall sales, though it does close with a statement that consumers are being cautious compared to how things were with the XP release.
img is deprecated, and certainly shouldn't be overridden to apply to video as well. Use an object tag instead:
<object data="foo.mp4" type="video/mp4" width="352" height="288">
Put alternative for old browsers and search engines here...
</object>
I think you also need a commented out object tag with a classid specifying an appropriate ActiveX control for IE as well - at least to support IE6 and earlier, not sure if IE7 follows the standard now. There are special comments that IE treats as conditional blocks for this.
The following is hypothetical, I do not have details of the specific case.
He was passing and his phone went. In the UK, it is illegal to drive while talking on a handheld mobile phone, so like a good citizen, he pulled over and answered the call. After the call he pulled out his laptop to type up some notes from the call while they were still fresh in his mind. Meanwhile Windows helpfully connects to a nearby open wireless AP nearby.
Of course it's more likely that he was parked outside the same property for a couple of hours every night, and the police only acted after they got sick of taking calls from the AP's owner. But like I say, I don't actually know the details here, so like the rest of the posters on Slashdot, I can only speculate.
There's clearly a word or two missing in the sentence from the second article you quote. Try parsing it as "The great majority of the increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was put there by the developed world...". Substitute man-made for an alternative meaning.
My guess is that it can overwrite protected system files, and gain kernel level privileges using this attack vector.
The key word being clarification. I believe the clarification is more relevant to the Novell situation, where Novell are a third party making patent deals to cover code they are distributing. Once Microsoft themselves start distributing that code directly, they are certainly in violation of the GPL if they then turn around and start suing people for exercising their rights under the license that they themselves distributed under.
The key words here being history and had. Back in the day, that might have been the done thing for the Catholic Church, but that doesn't mean we should accept the same from Scientology now.
It's easy to say so now, but in 1992, someone posting to Usenet had no expectation that their comments would be archived forever and be easily searchable by anyone with an internet connection and 10 seconds to spare.
You must be looking in the wrong place.
Apache is popular because it was being developed rapidly at a time when development on the two major servers, NCSA httpd (from which it forked) and CERN, had stalled due to people moving on from the Universities where they were developed (many to Netscape).
Judging by their official website, the only things they have copied off Disney are a copy of the castle that Disney copied from a real castle in Germany, and some clowns who apart from the red noses, look remarkably like the seven dwarfs - from a certain 18th century German fairytale.
Or perhaps the GP never looks at Groups or Explore. Flickr only seems to advertise other Yahoo properties (through inconspicuous icons at the bottom) for me when I look at individual photos or someone's photostream.
Actually, only RSS 1.0 is based on RDF. The only similarity between RDF and the more popular RSS 2.0 and RSS 0.92 is that they are all based on XML.
First you say it is not true, and yet you explain how it can be done, and that PKI is designed to solve this exact problem.
Because switched keys are easy to detect, and enough people are paranoid about these things that there are plenty of eyes watching for it.
A CA is not in central control over encryption. They are only in control of authenticating keys. The only way they can subvert the encryption process is to issue matching (in details, but not in keys) certificates to you and the man in the middle. If they were to do this, it would be detected quickly, and their reputation as a trusted CA would suffer.
It's a fundamental feature of public key encryption that public keys can be exchanged in the clear without compromising security.
When I was there in the late '80s they already had the route mapped out for the Nagoya-Osaka section of the maglev, via Mie and Nara rather than the Gifu-Kyoto route of the Shinkansen.
When did the Swiss Franc cease to exist?
Flash Video is tied to the Flash Desktop Player. More and more people are starting to take their video watching beyond the desktop - portable media players, PSP's, PDA's, mobile phones, set-top-boxes on your large TV screen are all candidates for video watching, especially short videos such as found on YouTube, and none are served by non-standard formats like Flash Video. While there is a flash player available for some PDAs and smartphones, it does not support the video codecs used by youtube, google, atomfilms and others.
There are plenty of ways to improve on YouTube. Ditching the proprietary Flash video for a more portable standard like H.264 for starters.
The fact that the existing systems from the company they have bought this from are based on SIP and H.264 should give you a clue.
TFA is slashdotted already, but from the summary I can't tell if he's reviewing Beryl, the unstable fork of Compiz 3D window manager, which is itself unstable and not enabled by default in the latest Ubuntu and most other distros, or the recently released Ubuntu 7.04, AKA Feisty Fawn.
To me, the google translation appears to say 244 orders for up to 25 copies were placed in that time period at one particular store (which the Japanese site says is the online site of a large chain). So not 244 copies in China at all. The article seems to be about trends over time and how the release of subsequent versions have not caused the surge in sales that the release of Ultimate did, not about a surprisingly low number of overall sales, though it does close with a statement that consumers are being cautious compared to how things were with the XP release.
img was deprecated in an earlier revision of XHTML 2.0, they may have resurrected it in the latest revision, I haven't been keeping up.
img is deprecated, and certainly shouldn't be overridden to apply to video as well. Use an object tag instead:
<object data="foo.mp4" type="video/mp4" width="352" height="288"> Put alternative for old browsers and search engines here... </object>
I think you also need a commented out object tag with a classid specifying an appropriate ActiveX control for IE as well - at least to support IE6 and earlier, not sure if IE7 follows the standard now. There are special comments that IE treats as conditional blocks for this.
The following is hypothetical, I do not have details of the specific case.
He was passing and his phone went. In the UK, it is illegal to drive while talking on a handheld mobile phone, so like a good citizen, he pulled over and answered the call. After the call he pulled out his laptop to type up some notes from the call while they were still fresh in his mind. Meanwhile Windows helpfully connects to a nearby open wireless AP nearby.
Of course it's more likely that he was parked outside the same property for a couple of hours every night, and the police only acted after they got sick of taking calls from the AP's owner. But like I say, I don't actually know the details here, so like the rest of the posters on Slashdot, I can only speculate.
PRAM is so last year. I'm into PUSHCHAIR already, and looking forward to move to TRICYCLE real soon now.