No ass, that's about 62 eMacs or 43 iBooks from the Apple Education price list. Would you rather they use commodity Dells that will be dead in 18 months?
Because some people like having their information in one place. And not having multiple apps open. It would be like using Photoshop to only create gifs and using another program to create jpegs. The calendars relate to emails, as meetings are scheduled and such, and allow people to ditch those damn day planners and use a computer instead.
um, the GNU has been available since 1984.. While Windows 1.0 wasn't out until 1985. GNU had a head start, it's just sad that it took another 7 years for it to mean anything.
That's nice and all, but it's just half of what Exchange does. What about the calendars? Would something like PHPGroupware or one of the additional groupware scripts work with Outlook with Postfix for email?
Plus, if Outlook didn't work. They would have to reeducate the employees for the new system. You have to look at the big picture, to see the costs system wide.
Well, with the numbers, that 59% of web users are using Windows 98 or ME (58% of the hits to my work site), then it would be a good thing to have this ability.
No wonder Netscape/Mozilla can't get above 10%, they had a bug keeping them out of the corporate enviroment for over three years and it still doesn't work on the largest platform.
It's with this gripe that I moved to Safari at home and have to stick with IE at work. Mozilla can die, I've given up on it.
"Their analysis points to Palm as a case study for a successful breakup of a company"
It's hard to call the Palm breakup success, as their stock has dropped $50 in the past 52 weeks and is hovering around $10. Where as Apple's stock has only dropped $10 during the same period and is around $15-$17. Apple is in a lot better shape financially than Palm has been in a while.
This will only hurt Abi's success on the Mac and hurt this guys chances of getting a job on par with Apple.
Apple already has Microsoft and Openoffice and even TextEdit. There are dozens of good word processors out there, and Abi will never be the killer app for OS X. If anything's a killer app, it's Konfabulator. A word processor hasn't been a killer app since 1985.
It's a shame, I like and have advocated Abi at various times, but with putzs like this, I'm almost ashamed at even suggesting it.
I have to vouch for this, as I use Movable Type as a non-blog CMS for my work site, an 800-bed hospital receiving thousands of hits a day. I looked at building a dynamic solution, but decided to have friendly URLs, and to not tax the server with constant db connections. My event calendar and about 80% of the pages are inside of MT, with our job listings as the only section pulling things from outside Movable Type.
Thus the further proof of the pussification of Europe.
Re:My experience with upgrading from VPC5 to VPC6
on
Virtual PC 6 Review
·
· Score: 2, Informative
On version 5, there were issues with the 9x code that made it slower than a VPC with NT4. I dropped 98 on VPC and used NT4 sp6 instead. Same browsers, but it ran about 30% faster.
98 under version 6 does seem flaster, while Nt screams.
No it's not that simple. If a company has invested money in this setup, then the employees have to use it. I would love to use Mozilla and even would love to use it on a Linux or OS X box behind our little firewall and proxy, but there is no way around it from a "simple" standpoint.
That is all well and good, but a majority of people do not run Python on their computers as a means to get to the internet. I'm not asking just for me, but for everyone who is sick of IE in a corporate enviroment. Is Sally Jane from Accounting gonna do this, no, but she can install Mozilla.
Unfortunately they still haven't added NTLM support. If you're in a total Microsoft shop with a MS proxy, if the admin has it totally secured, nothing other than IE can be used. Having this feature in Mozilla will help reestablish it as a corporate browser....and help some of us who can only use IE.
Oh and the bug is 3 years old. I know some work is being done on the Windows Mozilla, but damn. Three years?
No it's completely different. They're very similar, in their functonality. It's a text editor and so is textwrangler. There is no editing capability in Preview.
No ass, that's about 62 eMacs or 43 iBooks from the Apple Education price list. Would you rather they use commodity Dells that will be dead in 18 months?
Because some people like having their information in one place. And not having multiple apps open. It would be like using Photoshop to only create gifs and using another program to create jpegs. The calendars relate to emails, as meetings are scheduled and such, and allow people to ditch those damn day planners and use a computer instead.
"Microsoft had a head start over open source"
um, the GNU has been available since 1984.. While Windows 1.0 wasn't out until 1985. GNU had a head start, it's just sad that it took another 7 years for it to mean anything.
That's nice and all, but it's just half of what Exchange does. What about the calendars? Would something like PHPGroupware or one of the additional groupware scripts work with Outlook with Postfix for email?
Plus, if Outlook didn't work. They would have to reeducate the employees for the new system. You have to look at the big picture, to see the costs system wide.
http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23679
Well, with the numbers, that 59% of web users are using Windows 98 or ME (58% of the hits to my work site), then it would be a good thing to have this ability.
No wonder Netscape/Mozilla can't get above 10%, they had a bug keeping them out of the corporate enviroment for over three years and it still doesn't work on the largest platform.
It's with this gripe that I moved to Safari at home and have to stick with IE at work. Mozilla can die, I've given up on it.
Well, if 98 didnt' support NTLM, then why does IE work on a win2k network through ISA?
NTLM works, but not on 98. Works fine in NT and 2k. So to say it works is a little disingenuous. And yes, I did post this to bugzilla.
For the proper pass codes and the correct numbers, the SCO Investor Relation's site has the info.
I called the number Bruce gave above and was told to call an alternate number. The alt # is 1-800-946-0719
"Their analysis points to Palm as a case study for a successful breakup of a company"
It's hard to call the Palm breakup success, as their stock has dropped $50 in the past 52 weeks and is hovering around $10. Where as Apple's stock has only dropped $10 during the same period and is around $15-$17. Apple is in a lot better shape financially than Palm has been in a while.
Slashcode is cluttered and /. is still using ancient font tags. What is this, 1999? Sorry, programmers don't usually give the best UI advice.
This will only hurt Abi's success on the Mac and hurt this guys chances of getting a job on par with Apple.
Apple already has Microsoft and Openoffice and even TextEdit. There are dozens of good word processors out there, and Abi will never be the killer app for OS X. If anything's a killer app, it's Konfabulator. A word processor hasn't been a killer app since 1985.
It's a shame, I like and have advocated Abi at various times, but with putzs like this, I'm almost ashamed at even suggesting it.
anyone can purchase a domain and put whatever address they want in the registry.
I have to vouch for this, as I use Movable Type as a non-blog CMS for my work site, an 800-bed hospital receiving thousands of hits a day. I looked at building a dynamic solution, but decided to have friendly URLs, and to not tax the server with constant db connections. My event calendar and about 80% of the pages are inside of MT, with our job listings as the only section pulling things from outside Movable Type.
Thus the further proof of the pussification of Europe.
On version 5, there were issues with the 9x code that made it slower than a VPC with NT4. I dropped 98 on VPC and used NT4 sp6 instead. Same browsers, but it ran about 30% faster.
98 under version 6 does seem flaster, while Nt screams.
No it's not that simple. If a company has invested money in this setup, then the employees have to use it. I would love to use Mozilla and even would love to use it on a Linux or OS X box behind our little firewall and proxy, but there is no way around it from a "simple" standpoint.
here's the link, ass.
That is all well and good, but a majority of people do not run Python on their computers as a means to get to the internet. I'm not asking just for me, but for everyone who is sick of IE in a corporate enviroment. Is Sally Jane from Accounting gonna do this, no, but she can install Mozilla.
Unfortunately they still haven't added NTLM support. If you're in a total Microsoft shop with a MS proxy, if the admin has it totally secured, nothing other than IE can be used. Having this feature in Mozilla will help reestablish it as a corporate browser....and help some of us who can only use IE.
Oh and the bug is 3 years old. I know some work is being done on the Windows Mozilla, but damn. Three years?
take that manual and go fuck yourself, ok. I can read and I was asking a basic question. jesus christ.
My old MP 120 has a copy of Graffiti and works exactly like the palm version. It wasn't a later addition, as I had the original box with software.
I had a MP 120, and there was a windows connection kit from Apple, and there are a couple of Linux tools too.
No it's completely different. They're very similar, in their functonality. It's a text editor and so is textwrangler. There is no editing capability in Preview.