I wish I hadn't read that depressing little piece...
So, it's depressing and little at the same time, isn't it? Let me tell you champion something, anybody who's seen a little of the ups and downs in life will feel sympathy for this guy. Obviously, he tries to handle his situation with humour and keep his spirits up, which to my knowledge isn't easy for anybody being umemployed, especially when he's no longer in his twenties. Clearly, this wouldn't really appeal to those busy all day with what - work or feeding their arrogance? Since they still feel the presence of some obscure virus the exact way he describes, and try to avoid them as long as they can instead of facing life and people, as they are, and maybe even care a little.
Methinks there's little of the announced "Advice on how to cope with a PHB" to find in the article, apart from "Get over it or get out". We are informed however where to get more, as that grand insight is given by... Kathleen Lundin, coauthor of "When Smart People Work for Dumb Bosses: How to Survive in a Crazy, Dysfunctional Workplace." That worth a posting on Slashdot... ?
Let's face the facts: from European point of view US legislation is strongly influenced by industry interests, and with the current administration that's unlikely to change.
As well as the US government used to restrict encryption technology export out of US, it may become necessary for Europeans to take care of what they export into the US.
Alan Cox does not make a point (which implies he'd run a test or something). He simply draws consequences, which he can do without getting emotional, and does the initial step towards US/NonUS discrimination of information and maybe even development policy, with reference to the DCMA. Primarily to protect himself, what seems to be reasonable at least in my eyes.
I've got both the PC60 and PC70. The former is a midi for home users, whilst the latter is a big tower sold as server case. Both are carefully designed, but I definitely prefer the PC60. It has a removable mobo tray, thumb screws (which both the PC70 has not) and on the whole is really a lovely piece of pc case: lots of bays, no sharp edges etc. etc.
Concerning the cooling - well with all those fans it should be allright, and until now I've experienced no problems with my Athlon 1.33, GeforceGTS2 etcetera.
Apart from that, I myself can't really measure the difference to other cases. Of course both cases emit some noise (because of the fans), which is tolerable at least for the PC60. As you know, both good cooling and little noise are hard to get, so if your priority lies on the latter you might want to try another case.
On the whole, I'd recommend - for the average user - the PC60, whereas the PC70 is not designed for regular hardware fiddling and a bit too loud.
Wether the PC60 is worth the extra money ? Well, I don't know. But it sure is a nice case.
German government financial support for GPG development started over one year ago, main goal being to provide German companies with reliable protection from economic espionage.
Also, the EU administration recognized that it may be a bit naive to process their most sensitive secrets with foreign closed source software some time ago.
With this motivation in mind, there's no need to worry that there's any country in the world with stronger 'freedom of speech' protection than the US - even though gnupg.org is bold enough to cite a privacy protection article from the German 'Grundgesetz':)
You won't believe it, but gnupg.org seems to be a german site, and it cites a privacy protection article from the 'Grundgesetz'.
Apart from that, german government finacial support for GPG development started over one year ago, main goal being to support reliable protection from economic espionage. Well, there are areas were we aren't all buddies, are there ?
I wish I hadn't read that depressing little piece...
So, it's depressing and little at the same time, isn't it? Let me tell you champion something, anybody who's seen a little of the ups and downs in life will feel sympathy for this guy. Obviously, he tries to handle his situation with humour and keep his spirits up, which to my knowledge isn't easy for anybody being umemployed, especially when he's no longer in his twenties. Clearly, this wouldn't really appeal to those busy all day with what - work or feeding their arrogance? Since they still feel the presence of some obscure virus the exact way he describes, and try to avoid them as long as they can instead of facing life and people, as they are, and maybe even care a little.
Methinks there's little of the announced "Advice on how to cope with a PHB" to find in the article, apart from "Get over it or get out". We are informed however where to get more, as that grand insight is given by ... Kathleen Lundin, coauthor of "When Smart People Work for Dumb Bosses: How to Survive in a Crazy, Dysfunctional Workplace." That worth a posting on Slashdot ... ?
Sorry: it's DMCA, of course.
Let's face the facts: from European point of view US legislation is strongly influenced by industry interests, and with the current administration that's unlikely to change.
As well as the US government used to restrict encryption technology export out of US, it may become necessary for Europeans to take care of what they export into the US.
Alan Cox does not make a point (which implies he'd run a test or something). He simply draws consequences, which he can do without getting emotional, and does the initial step towards US/NonUS discrimination of information and maybe even development policy, with reference to the DCMA. Primarily to protect himself, what seems to be reasonable at least in my eyes.
I've got both the PC60 and PC70. The former is a midi for home users, whilst the latter is a big tower sold as server case. Both are carefully designed, but I definitely prefer the PC60. It has a removable mobo tray, thumb screws (which both the PC70 has not) and on the whole is really a lovely piece of pc case: lots of bays, no sharp edges etc. etc.
Concerning the cooling - well with all those fans it should be allright, and until now I've experienced no problems with my Athlon 1.33, GeforceGTS2 etcetera.
Apart from that, I myself can't really measure the difference to other cases. Of course both cases emit some noise (because of the fans), which is tolerable at least for the PC60. As you know, both good cooling and little noise are hard to get, so if your priority lies on the latter you might want to try another case.
On the whole, I'd recommend - for the average user - the PC60, whereas the PC70 is not designed for regular hardware fiddling and a bit too loud.
Wether the PC60 is worth the extra money ? Well, I don't know. But it sure is a nice case.
German government financial support for GPG development started over one year ago, main goal being to provide German companies with reliable protection from economic espionage. :)
Also, the EU administration recognized that it may be a bit naive to process their most sensitive secrets with foreign closed source software some time ago.
With this motivation in mind, there's no need to worry that there's any country in the world with stronger 'freedom of speech' protection than the US - even though gnupg.org is bold enough to cite a privacy protection article from the German 'Grundgesetz'
You won't believe it, but gnupg.org seems to be a german site, and it cites a privacy protection article from the 'Grundgesetz'.
Apart from that, german government finacial support for GPG development started over one year ago, main goal being to support reliable protection from economic espionage. Well, there are areas were we aren't all buddies, are there ?