The next frontier for Linux OSs is to stop bloody breaking things by continually insisting on rewriting stuff as soon as it finally becomes stable. The levels of NIH are incredibly frustrating for me as a user.
User: "Hey this subsystm seems to have finally settled down and become consistently usable rather than falling over every time it hits a corner case! Hurrah!"
Linux userland developer "That subsystem is so retro. It uses text based config files, has a man page and is widely understood! TO THE REWRITEMOBILE!"
I've used Linux distros for my desktop for more than 10 years and love it in a lot of ways, but certain parts of the developer community really need to learn to stop breaking things. Unfortunately, despite bringing a lot of nice usability to Linux (NOT Unity), Ubuntu is a prime offender in also breaking things.
On a related note, the application of the GPL to scripting languages is terribly unclear as linking isn't something that happens there. There seems to be no decent advice out there on how to apply the GPL when a script library uses it.
I'm using it as my DE and have been for a few months. While there are some nice features there are a lot of serious problems and the complete lack of customisation outside of extensions (which break on each point release and need to be updated manually, if theres a version compatible with the new release) makes it very frustrating. Having the activities button on the top left is terrible for me because i dwell the cursor on the right (window controls, scrollbars are on the right). The new task-tray equivalent is frustrating because it takes longer to get at things like music player controls, and the way the items expand makes them hard to click. Needing to know you have to hold alt to access the shutdown function (instead of sleep which I've still only had work on one computer in Linux) is terrible from the pov of discoverability. The use of a fixed hot corner is terrible for multi-monitor, and I still dont understand how the workspaces work on a second monitor, its pretty bizarre. Also while not necessarily a bad design, I personally hate the launcher and would prefer a menu. Also the lack of applets is annoying, having disk and cpu usage is very useful for me.
Much of this would be solvable if some configurability were built into the shell but the overwhelming "we know best" philosophy now prevalent in gnome makes this impossible.
While I do like a fair bit of the UI in gnome I'm sick of fighting it and as soone as Mate is a bit more mature I'll be moving to it and having a (configurable) hot corner for 'expose' in compiz... I do hope Mate moves to GTK3 though, as I like the toolkit.
Has Xbox turned a net profit yet? I don't mean this year, I mean over its lifetime. It's only a few years since the division turned its first annual profit, let alone made up for all the money it sank into loss-leading.
Having a monopoly isn't illegal, this whole "convicted monopolist" refrain shows a complete lack of understanding. They were convicted of monopoly *abuse*.
Plus upgrading Asterisk to a new version will need a new version of the plugin, so after 2 years you won't be able to continue using it if you need to upgrade *
The article may not say so but the law says that cookies which are required to perform a specific service which the user has requested (such as tracking a shopping basket) are exempt. This would include session cookies for sites where the user's behaviour isn't tracked by the session. Admittedly defining what is and isn't tracking in this case is a bit of a grey area.
I think it would because they're handling user data in the EU. Personal data collected in the EU is covered by EU data protection law as far as I'm aware.
It's pretty unlikely that Twitter don't have an EU datacentre. If they do then interactions between an EU citizen and Twitter servers in the EU would be covered by EU data protection law.
You shouldn't anthropomorphisise climate change, it doesn't like it.
By the way you missed the point of both those questions. They weren't about whether health care reform would would reduce the deficit or whether anthropogenic climate change is occurring, they were about wheth particular groups of people believed on those subjects ( 'most economists', 'most scientists' ). Whether you think those people are right or wrong is irrelevant, that wasn't the question.
OwnCloud is great, now that it works a bit better, but it's got nothing to do with the topic of the article.
The next frontier for Linux OSs is to stop bloody breaking things by continually insisting on rewriting stuff as soon as it finally becomes stable. The levels of NIH are incredibly frustrating for me as a user.
User: "Hey this subsystm seems to have finally settled down and become consistently usable rather than falling over every time it hits a corner case! Hurrah!"
Linux userland developer "That subsystem is so retro. It uses text based config files, has a man page and is widely understood! TO THE REWRITEMOBILE!"
I've used Linux distros for my desktop for more than 10 years and love it in a lot of ways, but certain parts of the developer community really need to learn to stop breaking things. Unfortunately, despite bringing a lot of nice usability to Linux (NOT Unity), Ubuntu is a prime offender in also breaking things.
On a related note, the application of the GPL to scripting languages is terribly unclear as linking isn't something that happens there. There seems to be no decent advice out there on how to apply the GPL when a script library uses it.
With HTTPS there's less caching going on in general so it's a bit slower. Doesn't bother me but it's definitely a valid reason.
Because there's already /Goobuntu/ and GNUbuntu.
Pretty sure it was Sony Music and Sony Computer Entertainment. Quick google didn't throw anything up though.
Oops, I meant to reply to the GP of my post above.
I'm using it as my DE and have been for a few months. While there are some nice features there are a lot of serious problems and the complete lack of customisation outside of extensions (which break on each point release and need to be updated manually, if theres a version compatible with the new release) makes it very frustrating. Having the activities button on the top left is terrible for me because i dwell the cursor on the right (window controls, scrollbars are on the right). The new task-tray equivalent is frustrating because it takes longer to get at things like music player controls, and the way the items expand makes them hard to click. Needing to know you have to hold alt to access the shutdown function (instead of sleep which I've still only had work on one computer in Linux) is terrible from the pov of discoverability. The use of a fixed hot corner is terrible for multi-monitor, and I still dont understand how the workspaces work on a second monitor, its pretty bizarre. Also while not necessarily a bad design, I personally hate the launcher and would prefer a menu. Also the lack of applets is annoying, having disk and cpu usage is very useful for me.
Much of this would be solvable if some configurability were built into the shell but the overwhelming "we know best" philosophy now prevalent in gnome makes this impossible.
While I do like a fair bit of the UI in gnome I'm sick of fighting it and as soone as Mate is a bit more mature I'll be moving to it and having a (configurable) hot corner for 'expose' in compiz... I do hope Mate moves to GTK3 though, as I like the toolkit.
AFAIUI he is being charged, in Sweden they do an interview before pressing charges. Hence the applicability of the Interpol warrant.
I really hope that was a joke...
She is smarter than *me*.
*I* am smarter than her.
She is smarter than *I* *am*.
*I* *am* smarter than she is.
Dimwit.
OMG Don't look at the BLUE, man! :p
Proving what someone believes is pretty difficult.
I'm pretty sure very, very, few people in the UK give a flying fuck about George Washington. What forums are you reading?
Or are you taking jokes about "the colonials" a little too literally?
Has Xbox turned a net profit yet? I don't mean this year, I mean over its lifetime. It's only a few years since the division turned its first annual profit, let alone made up for all the money it sank into loss-leading.
The UK Armada /is/ running Windows, depressingly... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/01/05/windows_for_warships_hits_type_23s/
I love (and hate) SIP but it's rare you'll get as good call quality as Skype. Both ends need a wideband codec which is rare.
Having a monopoly isn't illegal, this whole "convicted monopolist" refrain shows a complete lack of understanding. They were convicted of monopoly *abuse*.
Plus upgrading Asterisk to a new version will need a new version of the plugin, so after 2 years you won't be able to continue using it if you need to upgrade *
Duh.
The article may not say so but the law says that cookies which are required to perform a specific service which the user has requested (such as tracking a shopping basket) are exempt. This would include session cookies for sites where the user's behaviour isn't tracked by the session. Admittedly defining what is and isn't tracking in this case is a bit of a grey area.
SFTP or FTPS I presume?
I think it would because they're handling user data in the EU. Personal data collected in the EU is covered by EU data protection law as far as I'm aware.
It's pretty unlikely that Twitter don't have an EU datacentre. If they do then interactions between an EU citizen and Twitter servers in the EU would be covered by EU data protection law.
There's a gulf between bias and propaganda.
You shouldn't anthropomorphisise climate change, it doesn't like it.
By the way you missed the point of both those questions. They weren't about whether health care reform would would reduce the deficit or whether anthropogenic climate change is occurring, they were about wheth particular groups of people believed on those subjects ( 'most economists', 'most scientists' ). Whether you think those people are right or wrong is irrelevant, that wasn't the question.