Of course what they really mean here is "We want big businesses to buy our stuff, but we don't want to actually go through the trouble of supporting them."
RMS's eternal AI-bot denounces the non-free software controlling the robotic waiter and proclaims Hurd to enter stable release within the next 15 years.
either way, it at least raises the flag against the record companies and makes people wonder who they are really trying to protect. the way i see it, computers have eliminated a lot of jobs over the years. the digital music revolution is the first time that computers threatened to eliminate jobs of high-priced/money-laden/not-that-smart people like the record execs.
in my opinion, if the record industry put as much effort into figuring out how to make the internet music distibution model work for to their advantage, they'd be a lot farther ahead.
I agree on the monday security sessions. The first few hours were really basic. But (after the intro session) I think Micheal did a really good job of touching every point about Linux security. He was very willing to go in depth if one of the attendees aske him.
I though it was a good presentation. It reinforced the basics and made me think about how my users are moving about on my boxes.
According to Netcraft, the Linux OS is behind about 35.37% of websites, while the Apache Web Server is behind 62.53%. (I'm sure that most of those Linux boxes are running Apache though).
Of course what they really mean here is "We want big businesses to buy our stuff, but we don't want to actually go through the trouble of supporting them."
That strategy has worked really well for Dell...
PhD don't matter that much at Google.
Neither does grammar.
RMS's eternal AI-bot denounces the non-free software controlling the robotic waiter and proclaims Hurd to enter stable release within the next 15 years.
They also act as birth-control
I have been using wi-fi for ~10 years. I have 2 kids under 2yo, they will probably disagree with the findings.
either way, it at least raises the flag against the record companies and makes people wonder who they are really trying to protect. the way i see it, computers have eliminated a lot of jobs over the years. the digital music revolution is the first time that computers threatened to eliminate jobs of high-priced/money-laden/not-that-smart people like the record execs. in my opinion, if the record industry put as much effort into figuring out how to make the internet music distibution model work for to their advantage, they'd be a lot farther ahead.
My car cost $700, does that mean it's not a car?
I agree on the monday security sessions. The first few hours were really basic. But (after the intro session) I think Micheal did a really good job of touching every point about Linux security. He was very willing to go in depth if one of the attendees aske him. I though it was a good presentation. It reinforced the basics and made me think about how my users are moving about on my boxes.
According to Netcraft, the Linux OS is behind about 35.37% of websites, while the Apache Web Server is behind 62.53%. (I'm sure that most of those Linux boxes are running Apache though).