Group Policies, recall, were a 1.0 release in their Win2000 form. Some improvements were made in their XP/Win2003 form, such as "Resultant Set of Policy", which despite the needlessly complex name just tells you what all your settings will do to a particular user or machine.
I myself can't wait until Samba supports it however.
If one lives in Michigan, than such protection of data is already illegal, and similar laws are coming soon to a state near you.
Also, it looks like Cisco is bringing the Great Firewall of Chinaâ to the U.S. That plus DMCA plus new state laws will surely be a threat to freedom as we know it.
XP Home's almost down there with Windows Me in my opionion. It's not exactly designed to be networked. I was once a university network admin, and saw how bad it really is. So indeed XP Home to 2000 Pro is an "upgrade". It even corrects the problems with malloc.
Group Policies, recall, were a 1.0 release in their Win2000 form. Some improvements were made in their XP/Win2003 form, such as "Resultant Set of Policy", which despite the needlessly complex name just tells you what all your settings will do to a particular user or machine. I myself can't wait until Samba supports it however.
Too bad some versions of Windows automagically crash after 40 days or so of uptime.
I personally call it RagnaRAR
If one lives in Michigan, than such protection of data is already illegal, and similar laws are coming soon to a state near you. Also, it looks like Cisco is bringing the Great Firewall of Chinaâ to the U.S. That plus DMCA plus new state laws will surely be a threat to freedom as we know it.
Remember what GNU (whose software is used with Linux) stands for: GNU's Not Unix
I bet this will end up like the failed Mac clones from a few years back.
North Korea? Taliban? China? Insert other totalitarian regimes as you see fit.
I've had BitTorrent going since last night, and I have about half of the ISOs so far.
Does it leak as much as the Itanic(TM)?
XP Home's almost down there with Windows Me in my opionion. It's not exactly designed to be networked. I was once a university network admin, and saw how bad it really is. So indeed XP Home to 2000 Pro is an "upgrade". It even corrects the problems with malloc.