If you read the text of the php license it would appear to be almost on par with a bsd license. RMS prob is upset because it would appear the license does not require releasing source code if you realease modified binaries. It's all semantics of the word free. Free as in cannot be closed again or free as in you can do whatever you want with it. Nothing more than a bsd v gpl debate and neither camp with change the others mind anytime soon.
ya except apache 1.3 + php isn't really an enterprise solution to a large web application either. One of the reasons cited above for php not working w/ apache2.0 is a lack of thread safety. In php there isn't any. Also, you can thread sessions all reads and writes lock the session from any further reads or writes until the operation is completed.
Unfortunately people keep buying US music. (I'm fortunate that most of my tastes are non RIAA controlled imports.) We can hope they end up like SCO and only getting revenue from lawsuits but overall this still just speaks that the masses are uneducated. Also, with the RIAA getting their brainwashing on copyright into public education systems they are around for the long haul.
The fcc exists primary to ensure radio waves continue to exist and companies are protected from each other. Without proper regulation, and I highly doubt the industry can do this alone, things like satelite tv would be irredic at best. Things like computer monitors, cordless phones, stereos would not have regulations on the interference they put out and cause lots of havoc.
The fcc does do harm such as making money off selling radio spectrum but it's purpose is well defined and one not easily replaced.
Things like Janet Jackson at the super bowl don't make me feel sorry for the guilty parties at all. National tv with children watching and people feel the need to "push the envenlope."
Problems such as the broadcast flag are more a fault of intense lobbying from the MPAA and very little opposition because people either don't understand or don't care. The fcc cannot be faulted for blunders to fair use.
Further the writer's theory of owning spectrum is even sillier than the current system. As an amateur radio operater some times I'm a primary and other times a secondary user of spectrum. Primary means that I must not be interfered with a
nd secondary means I better not interfer. The lack of spectrum would only be in crease if sharing was halted.
For example Microsoft money is not going to take away money from office or windows. I'm not sure what the author is suggesting here. Will xbox sales decrease windows revenue? It sounds like a non-problem. All I can see is that all the money goes to windows/office first and what's left over goes to other products. In which case that's just economics...why throw most of your money into a gamble?
This is all fine and good but none of this matters if someone uses a keylogger to get your login and subsequently uses this information. The most insecure part is always going to be the client machine which is why one time passwords make so much sense.
My primary concern would of course be diverging X releases. While some may adopt X.org I would bet many will continue on using xfree86. In fact the majority that do oppose the new license will most likely keep their own fork in house. Will all this divergence lead to good or just confusion?
are you sure php is turing complete?
They have a ton of problems with getting references to work correctly. Also, they have stated fixing them (so they behave in all our high level languages) would hinder performance of the language so 4 and 5 are very broken. Don't try variables into functions and don't use classes and you should be fine...see:
http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=20993
good quote "We have discussed this issue and it will put a considerable slowdown on
php's performance, to fix this properly."
Is there an engineering reason for it being this tall? Based on the photos it would appear not. Someone correct me if I'm wrong in thinking this is just the French being eccentric.
woops forgot to add it's direction finding skills are weak. Apparantly I'm in Michigan? I'm in Austin,TX and my POP is chicago. It appears to try to get information via one of the upstream links which is horribly inaccurate.
Well, it will tell you when they opened the email/how many times/etc. (assuming they have an html enabled email client.) It works w/ yahoo mail but not with pine. The infinite refresh to tell how long they read the email for is annoying in that it makes it look like the email never finished loading. Can someone see how outlook responds to this? (I haven't a windows box)
Keep in mind this is from late last year but give me a break, it's nothing more than a fishing expedition. But there stock is continuing ever closer to nothingness, just like their claims.
Prior art would be Eterm used primarily in the window manager enlightenment. This is the default setup for it. While it's annoying if you want to use things like syntax highlighting there are many people that use it, in fact other window managers have this feature too.
Data structures are indeed in the ap test. (I took the c++ variant some years back.) The university I ended up at gave credit for 3 semesters if you got a 5 or 2 semesters for a 4 on the cs ab test...for the cs a test, which didn't cover data structures, you got credit for 1 semester with a 4 or better.
I'm sure their techniques will cause google to make such tricks harder in the future. Many of you are familiar with people creating nonsense link pages to drive their own rating up and the various things google put in place to make this harder. Now they need a contest on how to get delisted, I still have a domain name that hasn't been used in 3 years that is in google.
no but with their stock at its lowest level in 6months, continuing layoffs, and more people dropping them like the bad company they are...it again signals the beginning of the end which we are all anxiously awaiting.
Didn't they find that lowering the price in other countries increased sales? I mean for example a dnb 15 track cd...that's $15...if you raise that to 1.25 a track that's $18.75. I have paid less for some dvds before! Ugh $1/track was actually almost fair.
Well openbsd is a fork of netbsd. These two ip stacks are rather similar. OpenBSD as well as FreeBSD will sync various pieces with netbsd. All three share with each other and even if the code isn't identical good portions of the stack use the same concepts.
I'm sure many people are familiar with seeing mold on their shower curtain. As long as you have a white curtain that is fairly durable, just toss some bleach and some soap into the washer and let it go. Ironically enough, I did this just this last saturday.
Some systems have already been migrated to debian, some aren't publically facing and the time/money isn't there yet. Overall our plan is to migrate everything to debian. Using stable and a quick apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade makes patching quite easy.
Alright, i suppose I should have limited my statement to programmers. Though, for anyone with the know how, reverse engineering is just a matter of time.
Anyone who is inteligent and bored can crack just about anything in relatively short order. I'm sure most/. readers are all too aware of how easy cracks, keygens, and serials are to get ahold of. Though kudos to him as he got the job done faster than the latest yahoo protocol was reverse engineered, or maybe just kudos to yahoo! Though, I don't think apple will be hiring him anytime soon.
Well a good portion of the company is on Macs. In any case they've made it clear they wanted to break into the server market and have many campaigns to migrate from unix to windows. They've dug in for the long haul and any loss of market share, even for servers is going to be upsetting to them. Two of the four people on my team have linux workstations and I use freebsd.
Microsoft, just like other corporations, always provide information internally they don't want seen publically. There is no evil plot here, no more than any normal corporation. Though, if you read the memo it would appear he wants everyone there to laugh at linux and open source as a nonviable piece of junk. Well, Mr. ballmer, I too work for a corporation and our 8 production servers all run linux because windows isn't up the task.
If you read the text of the php license it would appear to be almost on par with a bsd license. RMS prob is upset because it would appear the license does not require releasing source code if you realease modified binaries. It's all semantics of the word free. Free as in cannot be closed again or free as in you can do whatever you want with it. Nothing more than a bsd v gpl debate and neither camp with change the others mind anytime soon.
ya except apache 1.3 + php isn't really an enterprise solution to a large web application either. One of the reasons cited above for php not working w/ apache2.0 is a lack of thread safety. In php there isn't any. Also, you can thread sessions all reads and writes lock the session from any further reads or writes until the operation is completed.
Unfortunately people keep buying US music. (I'm fortunate that most of my tastes are non RIAA controlled imports.) We can hope they end up like SCO and only getting revenue from lawsuits but overall this still just speaks that the masses are uneducated. Also, with the RIAA getting their brainwashing on copyright into public education systems they are around for the long haul.
The fcc exists primary to ensure radio waves continue to exist and companies are protected from each other. Without proper regulation, and I highly doubt the industry can do this alone, things like satelite tv would be irredic at best. Things like computer monitors, cordless phones, stereos would not have regulations on the interference they put out and cause lots of havoc.
The fcc does do harm such as making money off selling radio spectrum but it's purpose is well defined and one not easily replaced.
Things like Janet Jackson at the super bowl don't make me feel sorry for the guilty parties at all. National tv with children watching and people feel the need to "push the envenlope."
Problems such as the broadcast flag are more a fault of intense lobbying from the MPAA and very little opposition because people either don't understand or don't care. The fcc cannot be faulted for blunders to fair use.
Further the writer's theory of owning spectrum is even sillier than the current system. As an amateur radio operater some times I'm a primary and other times a secondary user of spectrum. Primary means that I must not be interfered with a nd secondary means I better not interfer. The lack of spectrum would only be in crease if sharing was halted.
For example Microsoft money is not going to take away money from office or windows. I'm not sure what the author is suggesting here. Will xbox sales decrease windows revenue? It sounds like a non-problem. All I can see is that all the money goes to windows/office first and what's left over goes to other products. In which case that's just economics...why throw most of your money into a gamble?
This is all fine and good but none of this matters if someone uses a keylogger to get your login and subsequently uses this information. The most insecure part is always going to be the client machine which is why one time passwords make so much sense.
My primary concern would of course be diverging X releases. While some may adopt X.org I would bet many will continue on using xfree86. In fact the majority that do oppose the new license will most likely keep their own fork in house. Will all this divergence lead to good or just confusion?
are you sure php is turing complete? They have a ton of problems with getting references to work correctly. Also, they have stated fixing them (so they behave in all our high level languages) would hinder performance of the language so 4 and 5 are very broken. Don't try variables into functions and don't use classes and you should be fine...see: http://bugs.php.net/bug.php?id=20993 good quote "We have discussed this issue and it will put a considerable slowdown on php's performance, to fix this properly."
Is there an engineering reason for it being this tall? Based on the photos it would appear not. Someone correct me if I'm wrong in thinking this is just the French being eccentric.
except I'm not running windows/ie so activex doesn't work here.
woops forgot to add it's direction finding skills are weak. Apparantly I'm in Michigan? I'm in Austin,TX and my POP is chicago. It appears to try to get information via one of the upstream links which is horribly inaccurate.
Well, it will tell you when they opened the email/how many times/etc. (assuming they have an html enabled email client.) It works w/ yahoo mail but not with pine. The infinite refresh to tell how long they read the email for is annoying in that it makes it look like the email never finished loading. Can someone see how outlook responds to this? (I haven't a windows box)
Keep in mind this is from late last year but give me a break, it's nothing more than a fishing expedition. But there stock is continuing ever closer to nothingness, just like their claims.
Prior art would be Eterm used primarily in the window manager enlightenment. This is the default setup for it. While it's annoying if you want to use things like syntax highlighting there are many people that use it, in fact other window managers have this feature too.
Data structures are indeed in the ap test. (I took the c++ variant some years back.) The university I ended up at gave credit for 3 semesters if you got a 5 or 2 semesters for a 4 on the cs ab test...for the cs a test, which didn't cover data structures, you got credit for 1 semester with a 4 or better.
I'm sure their techniques will cause google to make such tricks harder in the future. Many of you are familiar with people creating nonsense link pages to drive their own rating up and the various things google put in place to make this harder. Now they need a contest on how to get delisted, I still have a domain name that hasn't been used in 3 years that is in google.
no but with their stock at its lowest level in 6months, continuing layoffs, and more people dropping them like the bad company they are...it again signals the beginning of the end which we are all anxiously awaiting.
Didn't they find that lowering the price in other countries increased sales? I mean for example a dnb 15 track cd...that's $15...if you raise that to 1.25 a track that's $18.75. I have paid less for some dvds before! Ugh $1/track was actually almost fair.
Well openbsd is a fork of netbsd. These two ip stacks are rather similar. OpenBSD as well as FreeBSD will sync various pieces with netbsd. All three share with each other and even if the code isn't identical good portions of the stack use the same concepts.
I'm sure many people are familiar with seeing mold on their shower curtain. As long as you have a white curtain that is fairly durable, just toss some bleach and some soap into the washer and let it go. Ironically enough, I did this just this last saturday.
Some systems have already been migrated to debian, some aren't publically facing and the time/money isn't there yet. Overall our plan is to migrate everything to debian. Using stable and a quick apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade makes patching quite easy.
Alright, i suppose I should have limited my statement to programmers. Though, for anyone with the know how, reverse engineering is just a matter of time.
Anyone who is inteligent and bored can crack just about anything in relatively short order. I'm sure most /. readers are all too aware of how easy cracks, keygens, and serials are to get ahold of. Though kudos to him as he got the job done faster than the latest yahoo protocol was reverse engineered, or maybe just kudos to yahoo! Though, I don't think apple will be hiring him anytime soon.
Well a good portion of the company is on Macs. In any case they've made it clear they wanted to break into the server market and have many campaigns to migrate from unix to windows. They've dug in for the long haul and any loss of market share, even for servers is going to be upsetting to them. Two of the four people on my team have linux workstations and I use freebsd.
Microsoft, just like other corporations, always provide information internally they don't want seen publically. There is no evil plot here, no more than any normal corporation. Though, if you read the memo it would appear he wants everyone there to laugh at linux and open source as a nonviable piece of junk. Well, Mr. ballmer, I too work for a corporation and our 8 production servers all run linux because windows isn't up the task.