It is my firm belief that Ant is still the most powerful and flexible Java development tool available. A single XML file can be distributed among developers (regardless of platform), integrated into an IDE or used along side a simple text editor, then used with little or not effort. Ant can be extended with "plugins" or tasks... making it integrate with version control systems, documentation-creation tools (e.g. doxygen), etc.
There's a reason other popular IDEs like Eclipse and JBuilder include support for Ant build.xml files!
At least with Linux we have a choice! Looking beyond the arguments/discussion of which kernel version is better, I see the bigger picture: Linux is about freedom. The freedom to choose, modify, extend.
I use ssh for remote access to my home network. There's no way I'd use telnet... it's not that I have something to hide, it's just that ssh protects my personal information and resources (i.e. my home computers). ssh is as easy to use as telnet, too!
I also use ssh (and ppp) to create a VPN between my computer at work and my network at home since I need to work at home sometimes and my company won't provide a real VPN for non-modem users.
Encryption is safe (safer, at least, than plain-text), easy to use a good way to protect my privacy (which we all know, is constantly threatened).
The headline seemed to indicate that this release was "BugFree" and that "if it doesn't compile for you, you must be doing something wrong". Anyone with CS 101 experience knows that just because it compiles, doesn't mean that it's "BugFree".
I've got a G200 and Linux and Windows both run really well -- even with intense 3D games like Quake 3. This is an excellent card. I'm looking at trying Be, does anybody know if Be 4.5 has support for the Millenium G200? That'd rock!
There's a reason other popular IDEs like Eclipse and JBuilder include support for Ant build.xml files!
At least with Linux we have a choice! Looking beyond the arguments/discussion of which kernel version is better, I see the bigger picture: Linux is about freedom. The freedom to choose, modify, extend.
I use ssh for remote access to my home network. There's no way I'd use telnet... it's not that I have something to hide, it's just that ssh protects my personal information and resources (i.e. my home computers). ssh is as easy to use as telnet, too!
I also use ssh (and ppp) to create a VPN between my computer at work and my network at home since I need to work at home sometimes and my company won't provide a real VPN for non-modem users.
Encryption is safe (safer, at least, than plain-text), easy to use a good way to protect my privacy (which we all know, is constantly threatened).
The headline seemed to indicate that this release was "BugFree" and that "if it doesn't compile for you, you must be doing something wrong". Anyone with CS 101 experience knows that just because it compiles, doesn't mean that it's "BugFree".
I've got a G200 and Linux and Windows both run really well -- even with intense 3D games like Quake 3. This is an excellent card. I'm looking at trying Be, does anybody know if Be 4.5 has support for the Millenium G200? That'd rock!