In Denmark, it is a legal obligation to hand over a copy of any and all publicized material to the Royal Library, including anything publicized on websites, for archiving and historical services/research.
That so few does it just indicates that nobody knows about that law.
But, I think it's a wonderful law that there is one central place that at least tries to be complete...
I'd like to see a similar law passed in international media, regarding services such as the WayBack Machine, so that they are not only allowed to, but required to take copies of every and all public material.
For academic, research, history, whatever reasons...
You know how parents always complain that their children sit around all day and play computer games, thus getting violent...
Well, this would solve all that.
Now they could run around all day and play computer games, effectively getting exercise while training for the army, and on top become violent because it's so realistic...
So instead of a wave of semi-fat high school shooters, we'd have a beefed up well trained army of them.
http://grep.law.harvard.edu/article.pl?sid=02/11/3 0/050236&mode=nocomment and that's taken care of.
Yeah yeah, I reply to him so he feels special, but hey, maybe someone can use this.
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
Reading the article, stippling at first sounded awfully lot like what we call pixels nowadays.
And then they say 3D stippling...so in other words, they reinvented voxels?
-- Tino Didriksen / projectjj.dk
Maybe I shouldn't do this, but all that sewer pipe housing idea just makes me want to go...
COWABUNGA!
-- Tino Didriksen / projectjj.dk
...only otherwise?
-- Tino Didriksen / projectjj.dk
...open-source (under the well know GPL) and available for non-commercial use. If you need a commercial license...
Did I miss something, or did he not, by using GPL, just void the non-commercial restriction?
No. NTFS Dynamic Volumes are different. PM can't alter them.
Right, ok, I get it. Sneaky.
Anyways, say I buy the Insider stuff...couldn't I just put the ISO online anywhere I want?
I mean, they are not allowed to sublicense it, so I can release it as per the GPL (or did I get that wrong also)?
-- Tino Didriksen
Someone explain to me how they can do a v2.0 release without adhering to the GPL and making a free download?
-- Tino Didriksen
Sounds similar to http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/06/14/194121 4&mode=thread&tid=100 'cept it's a different company.
Wonder who gets the right to sue the other for patent infringement...
If you are worried about water, then get some actual deionized H2O.
Won't carry charges even if you submerge the computer in it, as long as you don't dump salt or any other material that will ionize.
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
Hey, we are all just a bit high so we all see it as though it's all in italics, but it's just a figment of our imagination...
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
In Denmark, it is a legal obligation to hand over a copy of any and all publicized material to the Royal Library, including anything publicized on websites, for archiving and historical services/research.
That so few does it just indicates that nobody knows about that law.
But, I think it's a wonderful law that there is one central place that at least tries to be complete...
I'd like to see a similar law passed in international media, regarding services such as the WayBack Machine, so that they are not only allowed to, but required to take copies of every and all public material.
For academic, research, history, whatever reasons...
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
Actually, everything inside a computer is a mini-network, just with different protocols.
There is a reason they made all those protocols as well: Effeciency.
TCP/IP, IPX, and so on, are very high level and bloated compared to the simpler and to-the-point protocols used in inter-device communication.
Everything is optimized for the hardware.
The LAN/WAN protocols are optimized for long distance less-reliable transfers.
-- Tino Didriksen
"and you'd never have to leave"
Ok, maybe you never have to leave, but I do like clean water.
And, the occasional bodily outlets might clutter up those 30-gallon-minute pipes...
However, the whole setup does look gooooood...
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
set_time_limit(36000);
Should cover your execution limit problem, unless your server has Safe Mode on.
-- Tino Didriksen
Actually, they did take that into account.
It's the part about a ratio of 1:1 connections.
A spike would still be 1:1, whereas DDoS would be off that.
-- Tino Didriksen / Project JJ
You know how parents always complain that their children sit around all day and play computer games, thus getting violent...
Well, this would solve all that.
Now they could run around all day and play computer games, effectively getting exercise while training for the army, and on top become violent because it's so realistic...
So instead of a wave of semi-fat high school shooters, we'd have a beefed up well trained army of them.
Seen from my mind:
If you pay for a product, you should expect the author to be liable for flaws.
If you get it for free, or the author doesn't make revenue from it (ie. charity developers), then the author should not be liable.
Seems logic to me, anyways...
--|--
Tino Didriksen
Hammer - Yamhill
Hammer - Anvil...
Nearly pronounced the same?
Ok, could be my accent, but I think it is.
Kinda ironic. AMD makes the hammer, Intel makes the anvil. In any case, Intel takes a beating.
--|--
Tino Didriksen
Just an idle question, but does ICANN also control IPv6 TLDs? If not, then who? If yes, why?