MACs are supposed to be unique. With most network devices (not just Xboxen) you can force the device to use a specific address that you make up (possibly causing a problem if the MAC is already in use in your broadcast domain) but real use of this ability is pretty rare.
In any event the first few bits or a MAC are assigned per manufacturer (many manufacturers have more than one) and then they are supposed to go through the rest of the bits assigning a unique set to each device they make.
I admit it. I'm an addict. I need it. And unless MS ports it to Linux (YEAH RIGHT!) I'm gonna play it on MS boxen.
Funny thing is that when I boot into XP to play flightsim I end up doing a handfull of other things (like writing this comment) and never bothering to boot back into Linux. I'll stay in XP for the rest of the night unless I have a specific reason to go back to Linux.
Also something to consider... Don't Opera and a lot of the other Linux browsers allow you to fake out the program and OS sent to the server? I wonder how many people specifically send MSIE/XP to avoid any wierd problems with super-l33t advanced websites that check these things... Might skew your data a little bit.
Here's what happened to the site....
on
When Users Attack
·
· Score: 4, Informative
"The mishaps page was hosted on http://www.thetechboard.com (aka "TTB"). The site was linked from the front page of http://www.slashdot.org.
Typically when a site gets linked by slashdot, also known as "slashdotted", it tends to encounter large bursts of traffic.
Due to the gross incompentence of the hosting service http://www.webmasters.com, the server crashed twice under the pressue of being "slashdotted".
The complaints of the other clients that were using the same server and therefore also experienced outage prompted Webmasters to threaten to permanently close the TTB acount.
Of course, the account has always otherwise been in good standing, but the folks at Webmasters don't even have the mental capacity to limit bandwidth for a particular site so it does not bring down the entire server, so why would they take TTB's otherwise "good behaviour" into consideration?
Please forward any hate mail to: security@webmasters.com (this is from whom the mail about the account cancellation came from).
Thank you.
Jon "jonny" Gerow (pronounced muck like "Guru", hence the handle) "
I hope you didn't see it in a Dolby Digital 5.1 theater, considering that Lucas is all over THX. I doubt you can even legally show ATC in a theater that isn't THX certified.
You know, it's sad, because I'm not that old (or so I think). But I remember back in the day when I went to college, we had computer labs. Rooms and rooms full of Wyse terminals, all hooked up to one of four VAX (appropriatley and imaginativley named VAXA.HOFSTRA.EDU through VAXD.HOFSTRA.EDU) If you wanted to check your e-mail you got your ass off your dorm room couch, put on a jacket (it gets cold in New York!) and walked yourself to one of the computer labs. You even had your choice of mail software (as long as you chose mail, pine, or elm). Shoot they even had this newfangled USENET thing there. There were a couple of PC labs, but those were for weenies who couldn't do term papers in LaTeX. If you wanted pr0n you walked to the bodega and got a Playboy.
Internet in the dorm room you ask? Yeah, we had that. It cost me about $100 and 29.95 a month. The $100 was for a converter thingie so we could use an analog modem with the university's newfangled digital PBX system. The $29.95 was for an account with a local ISP. We used SLIP and we used NCSA mosiac to browse gopher servers, and occaisonally, the web. And we liked it, goddamnit. A LAN in our dorm room? Forget it! Internet connection sharing? Not invented yet! (I ran OS/2 WARP! 3 on my PC back then.) If I was on the 'Net and my roommate wanted on, he'd unpug the phone line.
What is it with kids these days? Yes I understand you're paying for the dorm room. But for christ sake, you're talking about suing your school and shit for turning off your dorm room ethernet access. Get a grip.
No, exactly the opposite; it's saying that we should stick a better engine or a supercharger or dual exhaust and a bigger throttle body on that Jetta, instead of trying to make it faster by removing the bumpers and back seat to decrease the weight.
Problem with that is it's a lot cheaper (free) to take out your back seats than it is to add a supercharger. I understand your point, but some people don't have unlimited financial resources, and they are interested in getting the most functional performance that they can using what they have. There's plenty of value in that. To assume otherwise, expect everyone to upgrade, and ignore the usefulness of stripped down distros/WM's is fool hardy.
So where are the details for the Basic Stamp so we can build one of these ourselves? Some programming instructions for the Stamp or a circuit diagram would be cool.
I'm lucky to work for a company that REALLY believes in Telecommuting. My entire team (18 engineers) all work out of their houses, all over the country, as does the majority of our total engineering staff. I technically have a cubicle in our nearest office to my house (about 60 miles), but I haven't been there in probably a year. (Oops, forgot about that spider plant!) I find that I get a lot more done at home than I ever did at the office. Sure, there are distractions, but nobody pops their head over my cubicle wall to ask me some technical quiestion or anything.
My director, who also works from home came up with these "rules." They aren't corporate directives or anything, but more suggestions. They really work. My productivity level is definatley higher than it was in the 'cube farm'
Without further adu, here are the rules:
1) Explain and discuss the rules
Sit down with your wife (or room mate) and other family members as necessary, to discuss these rules, and why it is important that they are followed. Explain the basic philosphies behind these rules as well.
2) The philsophy
This is not so much a rule as a general philophy or principle that is the basis for all other rules. When you are telecommuting, you are at work, not at home. Although you may be physically at home, mentally and otherwise, you are at work, and should be considered with the same level of respect as if you were at the office.
3) Establish your office hours.
By defining your office hours, you define the time constraints in which these rules are in effect.
You also avoid situations where you might feel you're "never really at home, and never really at work." Without set office hours, you can subconsciously allow distractions to occur when you know you should
be working, and you then find yourself making up for them by working when you should be with your family or sleeping.
4) Establish the location of your office
The office is ideally a seperate room in your home, with a door. Having the means by which to isolate yourself from noises in the house (TV, children, vacuuming, etc.) is a very important part of creating a productive work environment in the home. A general use area, such as the kitchen or dining room table may not provide you with the recquired isolation, unless circumstances permit (you live alone, your wife works during the day, no kids, etc.)
5) Pursant to rule 4, loud noises such as the stereo and TV, or loud playing/screaming near the office should be suppressed during office hours out of consideration. Some amount of this is unavoidable, especially during summer vacation periods, but it should be minimized if at all possible. Keep the stereo volume low, and encourage the kids to play in the back yard as weather permits.
6) How and when you can be contacted.
During working hours, if you are in your office, you must be contacted through normal means. You can be called on the phone, or sent an email, but you must not be interupted by a personal visit unless it has been pre-arranged. This includes short visits to say hi, reminders to do chores, hugs from kids, etc.
If you leave your office, for lunch, or for a break, you are fair game. You can be tackled, tickled, or otherwise abused while you are out of your office. Once you return to your office, it's back to work, and rules are back in effect.
7) childcare
It's an easy mistake to make. One of your kids stay's home sick, and since you are already at home, you take care of them. Or, they are home for summer vacation, and your wife takes one of them somewhere and leaves the other children at home.
If you would normally place these children in daycare if an adult were not at home, that, you MUST make daycare arrangements for these children. Remember rule #2. If you must stay home and tend to others care, then you should take leave or PTO.
8) your work away from work
Make time to visit others that you work with in face-to-face situations. It does not take long to feel isolated from the rest of the company, despite today's tools for group colaboration and video conferencing.
9) Keep the office as clean as you would your office
As telecommuting gains more visibility nationally, laws are being passed that dictate that your home office must comply with federal safety regulations, such as OSHA, and that your employer may be liable for unsafe things in your home office. The best policy is to keep your office clean and safe from hazards. Hopefully, inspections will never be conducted.
10) have the proper equipment
Make sure that you have everything you need to be productive, including headsets, a seperate business line from your home line, fast internet connectivity, sufficient computer equipment and sufficient cooling for them (sometimes a problem in desert areas). There is no reason you should feel deprived of anything at home that you would otherwise have at the office (with possible exception to the free sodas and catering).
11) before and after work routines
Some people find it difficult to make the transition between work and home, and have an established routine to help delineate, citing they use the commute to prepare for the day and destress from the day. Such routines includes dressing as you would normally dress, and getting in the car, pulling into the driveway, and pulling back into the garage, or just walking around the block (which doubles as a way to get the circulation going). I personally do not find any of this necessary, although I do still make a cappucino first thing more often than not.
If you are having trouble getting your mind in gear in the morning, or destressing in the evening, you might try taking walks before and after work. You can make the walk as long or short as you find necessary.
On the off chance that there is someone in the world who hasn't seen photos of this yet I put some video stills that I captured off TV today on my home server...
There is a Federal Air Marshal Service. They are chartered to protect planes while in the air. They operate in plain clothes, and look like regular passengers. You'd never know if one was sitting next to you. They are armed. However, there's nowhere near enough of them to be on every flight, and they only operate on International flights.
MPLS in a nutshell: Humans set up a Label Switched Path (LSP) beteween several routers. Say from California to New York with routers in Kansas City, Chicago, and Washington DC in the middle. When a packet arrives at a MPLS router (head end router) in New York the router encapsulates it with a fixed length header identifying the packet as traffic that should take that particular path. The MPLS enabled routers in the middle (Kansas City, Chicago, and Washington DC) don't need to do IP address lookups, they just know that a particular LSP always comes in one interface and out another. Finally the router at the end of the LSP (in New York in our example) removes the MPLS encapsulation and forwards it via normal IP routing.
This is a "Good Thing" for several reasons. For one thing, it's quicker, as IP addresses are variable length, whereas MPLS labels are fixed. It also allows a lot more granular traffic control and shaping. Also, you can encapsulate just about anything inside MPLS, not just IP. And you can do QoS, CoS, VPN and lots of other stuff.
This is a VERY simplified version of what MPLS is and does. For more information try the following:
What is Chapter 11 and what does it mean?
A: Metricom has voluntarily asked the courts to provide it protection from its creditors while it works out a repayment plan. The plan is then voted on by its creditors and submitted for the court's approval. This allows Metricom to continue to operate, provide services and consider its options for the future, while working out payment plans with its creditors.
Is the Company being shut down?
A: No, Metricom continues to operate, and we are all striving to maintain the technology and services so prized by our partners and many loyal Ricochet users. We believe that our wireless Internet access product is viable and we believe that today's filing is the best means to preserve this asset moving forward.
So it sounds to me like they won't be turning off the wireless modems if they can avoid it. But I do wonder what's going on with the acution. It'd be kinda hard to continue to operate a wireless network if you sell all the pieces of it.
Other interesting tidbits for those to lazy to click thru:
Under the protection of Chapter 11, the Company will seek to restructure its operations and debt obligations while maintaining the operation of its wireless network
The petition allows Metricom to continue its operations and to explore financial alternatives, while working with its creditors to restructure its debt obligations.
"It is clear to me that Metricom's wireless Internet access product is viable and that its Ricochet service offering provides the fastest mobile wireless communications solution on the market today,"
So, it's not quite over yet. But, I won't be holding my breath...
I'm in a simalr boat... I bought a boxed set of Redhat (5.2 I think) and never looked back. I've downloaded and burned most of the releases since then either at work or at home once I got broadband. Total spent on Windows? OEM version of 3.11, OEM of 98, and that's it.
The interesting thing to consider here, though is what the actual cost of that.ISO that you download is. What percentage of your monthly bits is downloading "free" software. Should that factor in? I guess one could argue the same for pirated Windows software, but I'm not really aware of anyone downloading Win98.ISOs. Course I'm not really looking, but what's the point? One comes with every friggin box you buy these days, unless you buy parts and assemble your own, as I do...I think the local computer place is charging 50 buxs or so for an OEM ME or 98 licence.
So, anyways my point is, if you spend 20 bucks a month on your cable modem, and 50% of your traffic in a given month is downloading ISOs or other free software, couldn't you say that software actually cost you $10?
Here is how my company works: The manager of each department gets a training budget for that whole department. It's a non-rolling over amount each year, based upon the number of people in that department. The manager of that department is free to use that money however he/she wants during the year. I believe it averages out to somewhere around 6k per person. Some managers (especially in operations, where people have very structured work hours) schedule classes to come to the office, or send large groups of employees out to a class together. My manager basically lets us take whatever we want, whenever we want. About 8 months ago he dropped $8k for me to take a 4 pack of weeklong classes. But he made me promise that I was done with training for a while after that.:)
My company also has a very formal tuition reimbursement program. If you are taking college classes they'll pay 80% of tuition/books/etc. for every class you get a 'C' or better in. I don't believe there's any kind of annual limit on that or anything either. And it doesn't have to be at all related to your job. I'm a network design engineer, and I'm currently about halfway done with my Bachelor's in English, all on the company dime.
Exactly the point I was going to make. Radio stations set advertising rates based on the market they are in, and the share of listeners in that market that they get. I highly doubt that any radio station gets paid more per commercial second because they are streaming the station. In fact it is just the opposite. Radio stations spend lots of money for hosting services for their websites/streaming sites and fat pipes for uploading the feed to the site distributing the stream. The only real potential benefit is increased name/brand recognition. If you listen to a local station's stream at work you're more likley to listen to it on the way home.
What AFTRA has done here is ask the stations to pay the on air talent more when the stations aren't getting any additional revenue from the whole deal. AFTRA knows that the radio stations aren't going to go for it. AFTRA had to know that the stations were going to shut down the feeds instead. So the real question is "What does AFTRA have against streaming audio over The 'Net?"
O.K... but is the Linux Software that they have ActiveHome compatable? Will the linux software use the recieve features of the ActiveHome kit?
No! Re:BunnyPeople[tm] must die
on
Cool PC Cases
·
· Score: 1
No, no, no... The BunnyPeople(tm) are a good thing(tm)! Think about it, what better mascot for a CPU? A pink, lime green, or lemon colored space suit guy, dancing around, puttin some fun in the good ol' cpu.
No, thank you, the BunnyPeople(tm) are cool indeed.
Umm... no.
MACs are supposed to be unique. With most network devices (not just Xboxen) you can force the device to use a specific address that you make up (possibly causing a problem if the MAC is already in use in your broadcast domain) but real use of this ability is pretty rare.
In any event the first few bits or a MAC are assigned per manufacturer (many manufacturers have more than one) and then they are supposed to go through the rest of the bits assigning a unique set to each device they make.
At least that's how it is supposed to be.
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2002.
I admit it. I'm an addict. I need it. And unless MS ports it to Linux (YEAH RIGHT!) I'm gonna play it on MS boxen.
Funny thing is that when I boot into XP to play flightsim I end up doing a handfull of other things (like writing this comment) and never bothering to boot back into Linux. I'll stay in XP for the rest of the night unless I have a specific reason to go back to Linux.
Also something to consider... Don't Opera and a lot of the other Linux browsers allow you to fake out the program and OS sent to the server? I wonder how many people specifically send MSIE/XP to avoid any wierd problems with super-l33t advanced websites that check these things... Might skew your data a little bit.
"The mishaps page was hosted on http://www.thetechboard.com (aka "TTB").
The site was linked from the front page of http://www.slashdot.org.
Typically when a site gets linked by slashdot, also known as "slashdotted", it tends to encounter large bursts of traffic.
Due to the gross incompentence of the hosting service http://www.webmasters.com, the server crashed twice under the pressue of being "slashdotted".
The complaints of the other clients that were using the same server and therefore also experienced outage prompted Webmasters to threaten to permanently close the TTB acount.
Of course, the account has always otherwise been in good standing, but the folks at Webmasters don't even have the mental capacity to limit bandwidth for a particular site so it does not bring down the entire server, so why would they take TTB's otherwise "good behaviour" into consideration?
Please forward any hate mail to: security@webmasters.com (this is from whom the mail about the account cancellation came from).
Thank you.
Jon "jonny" Gerow (pronounced muck like "Guru", hence the handle)
"
I hope you didn't see it in a Dolby Digital 5.1 theater, considering that Lucas is all over THX. I doubt you can even legally show ATC in a theater that isn't THX certified.
Internet in the dorm room you ask? Yeah, we had that. It cost me about $100 and 29.95 a month. The $100 was for a converter thingie so we could use an analog modem with the university's newfangled digital PBX system. The $29.95 was for an account with a local ISP. We used SLIP and we used NCSA mosiac to browse gopher servers, and occaisonally, the web. And we liked it, goddamnit. A LAN in our dorm room? Forget it! Internet connection sharing? Not invented yet! (I ran OS/2 WARP! 3 on my PC back then.) If I was on the 'Net and my roommate wanted on, he'd unpug the phone line.
What is it with kids these days? Yes I understand you're paying for the dorm room. But for christ sake, you're talking about suing your school and shit for turning off your dorm room ethernet access . Get a grip.
Actually, only the Fast Serial card TD LED was listed as a class 3 device. The "Front Panel Light" (which ever one that is) is a class 2.
Personally I can't see getting anything meaningful out of a moderatley used POS or ATM line card's LEDs.
Problem with that is it's a lot cheaper (free) to take out your back seats than it is to add a supercharger. I understand your point, but some people don't have unlimited financial resources, and they are interested in getting the most functional performance that they can using what they have. There's plenty of value in that. To assume otherwise, expect everyone to upgrade, and ignore the usefulness of stripped down distros/WM's is fool hardy.
So where are the details for the Basic Stamp so we can build one of these ourselves? Some programming instructions for the Stamp or a circuit diagram would be cool.
I recognize the difference between the government restricting our rights and large dominant corporations restricting our rights.
What you don't recognize is that one is just as bad as the other.
I admit, I can't help but feed the trolls...
This isn't anti-Microsoft, you dolt. This is pro-free speech and anti-censorship.
If Linus decreed that the Linux Kernel could not be run on webservers with anti Linux messages I'd hate it just as much.
But the more important question, who would buy/use Frontpage to write an anti-Microsoft website anyways???
I'm lucky to work for a company that REALLY believes in Telecommuting. My entire team (18 engineers) all work out of their houses, all over the country, as does the majority of our total engineering staff. I technically have a cubicle in our nearest office to my house (about 60 miles), but I haven't been there in probably a year. (Oops, forgot about that spider plant!) I find that I get a lot more done at home than I ever did at the office. Sure, there are distractions, but nobody pops their head over my cubicle wall to ask me some technical quiestion or anything.
My director, who also works from home came up with these "rules." They aren't corporate directives or anything, but more suggestions. They really work. My productivity level is definatley higher than it was in the 'cube farm'
Without further adu, here are the rules:
1) Explain and discuss the rules
Sit down with your wife (or room mate) and other family members as necessary, to discuss these rules, and why it is important that they are followed. Explain the basic philosphies behind these rules as well.
2) The philsophy
This is not so much a rule as a general philophy or principle that is the basis for all other rules. When you are telecommuting, you are at work, not at home. Although you may be physically at home, mentally and otherwise, you are at work, and should be considered with the same level of respect as if you were at the office.
3) Establish your office hours.
By defining your office hours, you define the time constraints in which these rules are in effect.
You also avoid situations where you might feel you're "never really at home, and never really at work." Without set office hours, you can subconsciously allow distractions to occur when you know you should
be working, and you then find yourself making up for them by working when you should be with your family or sleeping.
4) Establish the location of your office
The office is ideally a seperate room in your home, with a door. Having the means by which to isolate yourself from noises in the house (TV, children, vacuuming, etc.) is a very important part of creating a productive work environment in the home. A general use area, such as the kitchen or dining room table may not provide you with the recquired isolation, unless circumstances permit (you live alone, your wife works during the day, no kids, etc.)
5) Pursant to rule 4, loud noises such as the stereo and TV, or loud playing/screaming near the office should be suppressed during office hours out of consideration. Some amount of this is unavoidable, especially during summer vacation periods, but it should be minimized if at all possible. Keep the stereo volume low, and encourage the kids to play in the back yard as weather permits.
6) How and when you can be contacted.
During working hours, if you are in your office, you must be contacted through normal means. You can be called on the phone, or sent an email, but you must not be interupted by a personal visit unless it has been pre-arranged. This includes short visits to say hi, reminders to do chores, hugs from kids, etc.
If you leave your office, for lunch, or for a break, you are fair game. You can be tackled, tickled, or otherwise abused while you are out of your office. Once you return to your office, it's back to work, and rules are back in effect.
7) childcare
It's an easy mistake to make. One of your kids stay's home sick, and since you are already at home, you take care of them. Or, they are home for summer vacation, and your wife takes one of them somewhere and leaves the other children at home.
If you would normally place these children in daycare if an adult were not at home, that, you MUST make daycare arrangements for these children. Remember rule #2. If you must stay home and tend to others care, then you should take leave or PTO.
8) your work away from work
Make time to visit others that you work with in face-to-face situations. It does not take long to feel isolated from the rest of the company, despite today's tools for group colaboration and video conferencing.
9) Keep the office as clean as you would your office
As telecommuting gains more visibility nationally, laws are being passed that dictate that your home office must comply with federal safety regulations, such as OSHA, and that your employer may be liable for unsafe things in your home office. The best policy is to keep your office clean and safe from hazards. Hopefully, inspections will never be conducted.
10) have the proper equipment
Make sure that you have everything you need to be productive, including headsets, a seperate business line from your home line, fast internet connectivity, sufficient computer equipment and sufficient cooling for them (sometimes a problem in desert areas). There is no reason you should feel deprived of anything at home that you would otherwise have at the office (with possible exception to the free sodas and catering).
11) before and after work routines
Some people find it difficult to make the transition between work and home, and have an established routine to help delineate, citing they use the commute to prepare for the day and destress from the day. Such routines includes dressing as you would normally dress, and getting in the car, pulling into the driveway, and pulling back into the garage, or just walking around the block (which doubles as a way to get the circulation going). I personally do not find any of this necessary, although I do still make a cappucino first thing more often than not.
If you are having trouble getting your mind in gear in the morning, or destressing in the evening, you might try taking walks before and after work. You can make the walk as long or short as you find necessary.
On the off chance that there is someone in the world who hasn't seen photos of this yet I put some video stills that I captured off TV today on my home server...
:)
Here.
Let's see how long my T-1 will hold up.
Here's a FAA page about the service.
I've been watching TV all morning and capturing stills whenever anything happens. http://www.geocities.com/livitup1/index.html Updating constantly.
This is a "Good Thing" for several reasons. For one thing, it's quicker, as IP addresses are variable length, whereas MPLS labels are fixed. It also allows a lot more granular traffic control and shaping. Also, you can encapsulate just about anything inside MPLS, not just IP. And you can do QoS, CoS, VPN and lots of other stuff.
This is a VERY simplified version of what MPLS is and does. For more information try the following:
Hmm... They've been blanketing the TV airwaves around me latley. Surprised they weren't doing this nationally.
What is Chapter 11 and what does it mean? A: Metricom has voluntarily asked the courts to provide it protection from its creditors while it works out a repayment plan. The plan is then voted on by its creditors and submitted for the court's approval. This allows Metricom to continue to operate, provide services and consider its options for the future, while working out payment plans with its creditors.
Is the Company being shut down? A: No, Metricom continues to operate, and we are all striving to maintain the technology and services so prized by our partners and many loyal Ricochet users. We believe that our wireless Internet access product is viable and we believe that today's filing is the best means to preserve this asset moving forward.
So it sounds to me like they won't be turning off the wireless modems if they can avoid it. But I do wonder what's going on with the acution. It'd be kinda hard to continue to operate a wireless network if you sell all the pieces of it.
http://www.ricochet.net/news_events/media_center/
Other interesting tidbits for those to lazy to click thru:
So, it's not quite over yet. But, I won't be holding my breath...
The interesting thing to consider here, though is what the actual cost of that .ISO that you download is. What percentage of your monthly bits is downloading "free" software. Should that factor in? I guess one could argue the same for pirated Windows software, but I'm not really aware of anyone downloading Win98 .ISOs. Course I'm not really looking, but what's the point? One comes with every friggin box you buy these days, unless you buy parts and assemble your own, as I do...I think the local computer place is charging 50 buxs or so for an OEM ME or 98 licence.
So, anyways my point is, if you spend 20 bucks a month on your cable modem, and 50% of your traffic in a given month is downloading ISOs or other free software, couldn't you say that software actually cost you $10?
Here is how my company works: The manager of each department gets a training budget for that whole department. It's a non-rolling over amount each year, based upon the number of people in that department. The manager of that department is free to use that money however he/she wants during the year. I believe it averages out to somewhere around 6k per person. Some managers (especially in operations, where people have very structured work hours) schedule classes to come to the office, or send large groups of employees out to a class together. My manager basically lets us take whatever we want, whenever we want. About 8 months ago he dropped $8k for me to take a 4 pack of weeklong classes. But he made me promise that I was done with training for a while after that. :)
My company also has a very formal tuition reimbursement program. If you are taking college classes they'll pay 80% of tuition/books/etc. for every class you get a 'C' or better in. I don't believe there's any kind of annual limit on that or anything either. And it doesn't have to be at all related to your job. I'm a network design engineer, and I'm currently about halfway done with my Bachelor's in English, all on the company dime.
What AFTRA has done here is ask the stations to pay the on air talent more when the stations aren't getting any additional revenue from the whole deal. AFTRA knows that the radio stations aren't going to go for it. AFTRA had to know that the stations were going to shut down the feeds instead. So the real question is "What does AFTRA have against streaming audio over The 'Net?"
Yeah, good thing I have a Sun box 1 foot to my left. Oh, never mind, his page is totally useless anyways.
O.K... but is the Linux Software that they have ActiveHome compatable? Will the linux software use the recieve features of the ActiveHome kit?
No, thank you, the BunnyPeople(tm) are cool indeed.
But GOD gave them that Rolex.