For people here in the US who do not have a top notch radio station (in Detroit we have WDET) in their area, this could be a Good Thing. After I stopped listening to commercial radio a few years ago, my CD collection has become increasingly more diverse. I'd say that probably 50-60% of my CD purchases in the past few years were directly related to things I heard on WDET; music you would never hear on commercial radio.
I'm hoping that this takes off. Maybe it will serve, (as ESPN once did for sports -- before it became pop culture), as a showcase for the other side of music. There is so much excellent music floating around that many people never get a chance to hear.
I currently work for a company that is "on the cusp" of a decision similar to what the article described. We just paid out a bunch of money for OfficeXP (for a couple of reasons) and now some of the more Microsoft-inclined persons at my company are quietly screaming for Exchange 2000. And of course, all of the neato features in Exchange 2000 require Active Directory, and Active Directory requires MS DNS, etc. The handwriting is plainly on the wall. I thought I remember reading that Novell is considering giving away (as in gratis) NDS. I checked their website yesterday and downloaded a copy of it for Linux.
Almost sounds like Multics error message...
Three words...
"Chitlins, Whiskey and Skirt"
That made the greatness right there. It's a serious hard toss between SnM and FT for the best Lucasarts adventure game.
Still not Star Control 2 though... =)
For people here in the US who do not have a top notch radio station (in Detroit we have WDET) in their area, this could be a Good Thing. After I stopped listening to commercial radio a few years ago, my CD collection has become increasingly more diverse. I'd say that probably 50-60% of my CD purchases in the past few years were directly related to things I heard on WDET; music you would never hear on commercial radio.
I'm hoping that this takes off. Maybe it will serve, (as ESPN once did for sports -- before it became pop culture), as a showcase for the other side of music. There is so much excellent music floating around that many people never get a chance to hear.
I'm not exactly sure. I just started reading about Exchange 2000 a few days ago. Everything I've read states something along these lines:
"Exchange 2000 is tightly integrated with Active Directory..."
I haven't delved into it enough to see what needs AD and what doesn't.
I currently work for a company that is "on the cusp" of a decision similar to what the article described. We just paid out a bunch of money for OfficeXP (for a couple of reasons) and now some of the more Microsoft-inclined persons at my company are quietly screaming for Exchange 2000. And of course, all of the neato features in Exchange 2000 require Active Directory, and Active Directory requires MS DNS, etc. The handwriting is plainly on the wall. I thought I remember reading that Novell is considering giving away (as in gratis) NDS. I checked their website yesterday and downloaded a copy of it for Linux.
Anyone running NDS on Linux? Good / bad?