IANANE(I am not a network engineer), but it seems to me that widespread mesh and ad hoc networks decentralized nature might prove difficult to "police". Already we see Snort and other tools designed to break into exsisting WiFi networks. The distributed nature of these new networks would lend itself to such attacks. While strong encryption would prevent a properly configured station from being cracked, the real problem with WiFi and perhaps these new networks is foolish people leaving them wide open. Then there is the question of accountablity. What happens when my feed starts providing resticted intellectual property like "Oops!...I did it again"? Just who gets sued. Present laws dictate that ISPs are not liable as long as they take steps to immediately cut the source. Assuming, you would be protected under such a law it seems to me the central feature of the network(relaying others data) is discouraged by legal the standards.
Under the GNU Public License code is "copyrighted". The trick is that the license allows for works based upon the code or ideas there in. They just must to be licensed in the same manner as the original code. I've never heard of anyone patenting open source code -- probably because it is prohibitively expensive and time consuming. There is no way anyone can protect their code or idea or stuff from theft once in public itself except by constant vigilance. As for making a buck, once somebody figures that out I'd like to be told as well.
...and knights are combatants. It only makes sense for their most respected member to be able dish it out when necessary.
That said, Yoda is more in touch with the light side of the force than all of them. When he is a peace it flows through him and he can do wonders. I personally thought that he should just have "relaxed" and start tossing Doku around like a rag doll when he wipped out the light saber. It is peace that has always been Yoda's ally not violence. I think the Yoda we see in AOTC is more rash and youthful himself. He is arrogant and still has a lesson to learn.
I can hammer out about a thousand lines of code in an average productive coding day at my job.
You must be an exceptional programmer. You should ask for more than $55 an hour. Given a 10 hour day with no break whatsoever that comes down to slightly more than 36 seconds per line. I might be able to work that fast if I did not need to consider what I was doing or how to do it. If I had to say debug/test/document my program as well I would need at least 40 seconds a line.
I run debian on a new ibook. Coming from the x86 world, partitioning properly took me hours to figure out and three tries to get it perfect. Here is a hint RTFM. Installing any OS can potentially hose your system if you don't know what you are doing.
It runs fantastic, is identical to my desktop at work, and is not slowed down by all the chrome in OS X. I would reccomend running Linux on any of the Open Firmware machines. I tried several distributions and I favor debian for x86 or PPC. It may not have all the bells and whistles and it may not be for your average OS X user, but for a serious developer there is no substitute.
There is always a best tool for the job. There may be a reason so many audio professionals go with a Mac. Check out this article a friend forwarded the other day:
IANANE(I am not a network engineer), but it seems to me that widespread mesh and ad hoc networks decentralized nature might prove difficult to "police". Already we see Snort and other tools designed to break into exsisting WiFi networks. The distributed nature of these new networks would lend itself to such attacks. While strong encryption would prevent a properly configured station from being cracked, the real problem with WiFi and perhaps these new networks is foolish people leaving them wide open. Then there is the question of accountablity. What happens when my feed starts providing resticted intellectual property like "Oops!...I did it again"? Just who gets sued. Present laws dictate that ISPs are not liable as long as they take steps to immediately cut the source. Assuming, you would be protected under such a law it seems to me the central feature of the network(relaying others data) is discouraged by legal the standards.
Under the GNU Public License code is "copyrighted". The trick is that the license allows for works based upon the code or ideas there in. They just must to be licensed in the same manner as the original code. I've never heard of anyone patenting open source code -- probably because it is prohibitively expensive and time consuming. There is no way anyone can protect their code or idea or stuff from theft once in public itself except by constant vigilance. As for making a buck, once somebody figures that out I'd like to be told as well.
...and knights are combatants. It only makes sense for their most respected member to be able dish it out when necessary.
That said, Yoda is more in touch with the light side of the force than all of them. When he is a peace it flows through him and he can do wonders. I personally thought that he should just have "relaxed" and start tossing Doku around like a rag doll when he wipped out the light saber. It is peace that has always been Yoda's ally not violence. I think the Yoda we see in AOTC is more rash and youthful himself. He is arrogant and still has a lesson to learn.
I can hammer out about a thousand lines of code in an average productive coding day at my job. You must be an exceptional programmer. You should ask for more than $55 an hour. Given a 10 hour day with no break whatsoever that comes down to slightly more than 36 seconds per line. I might be able to work that fast if I did not need to consider what I was doing or how to do it. If I had to say debug/test/document my program as well I would need at least 40 seconds a line.
The correct URL
I run debian on a new ibook. Coming from the x86 world, partitioning properly took me hours to figure out and three tries to get it perfect. Here is a hint RTFM. Installing any OS can potentially hose your system if you don't know what you are doing.
It runs fantastic, is identical to my desktop at work, and is not slowed down by all the chrome in OS X. I would reccomend running Linux on any of the Open Firmware machines. I tried several distributions and I favor debian for x86 or PPC. It may not have all the bells and whistles and it may not be for your average OS X user, but for a serious developer there is no substitute.
Apple betting audio pros will like Mac OS X 10.1
I don't quite understand it all but it seems OS X is built for sound from the ground up.