...and a few countries even managed the combination of monarchy and forms of direct democracy (tho that usually doesn't work well, see Italy untill Mussolini came to power)
UK, Spain, Belgium, Holland, Danmark and Sweden, to name a few, are probably not working well then.
Planet 21 (50 Euros back in the days, so that should fit your budget nicely as well), ordered through Dell.com. I've been heavily using it for a year now, doing a lot of airports and up until now it still looks new. One thing I really like about it is that it has double zippers, which you can 'lock', so it is pretty hard for someone to open it without you noticing.
It has some nice weak stuff in the back and on the shoulders and a waist belt, so I guess you could even use it when going on some rougher tracks. Personally I haven't used the waist belt though.
It is not a cool looking sack though, it still features a lot of business look, so it might not be so suitable for using without the laptop. And if you overload it (add some harddisks and some Linux Journals) it will not fit in the airplanes lockers.
I already posted this one here two days ago, but it got rejected, no wonder that things have happened.
The shuttle already got sold to the German Sinsheimer Museum (for cars and technik). More info here. Sorry it is in german and my company doesn't allow translations.
I thought the world would know by now. I really hate the fact that when I try to install some software on my Linux box some stupid vendor wants me to use a product I don't like...
In Europe Red Hat is not as big as it is in the States. Suse is more of an issue in Germany (the worlds third software market). There is lovely Mandrake. I know of some companies running Gentoo and Debian.
Hello Sun!? Wake up! That story might get you somewhere in the US, in Europe people are going to break you for it. Please focus on your own stuff. Most places I come you are refered to as Slowaris. Now maybe you can improve on that one.
Reasoned arguments can only be allowed when the arguments are reasoned. Please check on a couple of links you will see that the percentage of linux accessing google remains the same: 1%. No more, no less.
So to say that linux is dying is not a reasoned argument. So the troll is: offtopic, not containing reasoned arguments and a general flamebait to the linux loving crowd.
Maybe we really should have the "Bill Gates" moderation option, next to troll.
There is a whole thread about apple not having DRM (while the fresh new windows media player has it). There are even people saying apple will never have DRM. How wrong can we be...
Offline.... but why
on
SCO Offline
·
· Score: 2, Informative
The virus was going to hit at 16:something hour. I checked the SCO website this night at 1:30 (CET) and then it was already offline. No reply no more
My guess is they took it offline themselves. Or they applied one of the tricks from yesterdays netcraft post.
Takes about four days. You will feel your head and you will be a pain for others, so take some days off, get yourself out to a place where there is no coffee (may I suggest camping or the moon) and do it.
Find yourself an alternative (may I suggest water here, since it is hard to drink too much of that, plus it helps if you want to keep your weight).
By the way, waking up with orange juice is just great, works better than coffee.
After a couple of days, you could start drinking the black oil again, but just be a bit careful. Go two or three cups a day. No more. Enjoy the taste.
Most companies I've been don't care about licenses. They install a copy of windows where they can. They never cared. Once in a while a manager comes by and asks for a status. Two weeks of licenses buying and the thing starts again.
In a culture like this, where a license is worth void, it is easy to understand why Open Source licenses are totally forgotten. There is no BSA nocking on the door here.
This whole exploit comes with a nice timing. I mean, Debian is the only real open source platform (ok, there are some others, but not on so many platforms). Microsoft announces that they are going to compare windows against linux, updating patches, number of vunerabilities...
Entering 'failure' and then pressing 'I'm feeling lucky' also brings up some more Google fun.
http://www.spiegel.de/fotostrecke/0,5538,10244,00. html
Planet 21 (50 Euros back in the days, so that should fit your budget nicely as well), ordered through Dell.com. I've been heavily using it for a year now, doing a lot of airports and up until now it still looks new. One thing I really like about it is that it has double zippers, which you can 'lock', so it is pretty hard for someone to open it without you noticing.
It has some nice weak stuff in the back and on the shoulders and a waist belt, so I guess you could even use it when going on some rougher tracks. Personally I haven't used the waist belt though.
It is not a cool looking sack though, it still features a lot of business look, so it might not be so suitable for using without the laptop. And if you overload it (add some harddisks and some Linux Journals) it will not fit in the airplanes lockers.
I bought my pc with windows. But since then the Windows XP Home Edition CD has not left its sealed case.
Needless to say that in stead of accepting the M$ EULA I booted from a Gentoo CD an reformatted the harddrive.
Kind regards,
Trip
I already posted this one here two days ago, but it got rejected, no wonder that things have happened. The shuttle already got sold to the German Sinsheimer Museum (for cars and technik). More info here. Sorry it is in german and my company doesn't allow translations.
I thought the world would know by now. I really hate the fact that when I try to install some software on my Linux box some stupid vendor wants me to use a product I don't like...
In Europe Red Hat is not as big as it is in the States. Suse is more of an issue in Germany (the worlds third software market). There is lovely Mandrake. I know of some companies running Gentoo and Debian.
Hello Sun!? Wake up! That story might get you somewhere in the US, in Europe people are going to break you for it. Please focus on your own stuff. Most places I come you are refered to as Slowaris. Now maybe you can improve on that one.
Removing the commercials will do the trick.
I can't recall completely, but it must have been with Need for Speed.
That is an awful lot of spam
-
Apache for a webserver (smoking signals)
- Evolution for an email suite
- Gimp for a drawing program
- Mozilla for a browser
- Exim for a mailserver
- Squid for a proxy (8 arms, wow, very intuitive).
Yeah you are right, KDE should work on it.One will I get X-ray vision?
"The bottom line? Any of these platforms can be operated securely," said Koetzle. (Koetzle is the leader of the Forrester Team).
Now have a look at yesterdays Slashdot Virus article.
Reasoned arguments can only be allowed when the arguments are reasoned. Please check on a couple of links you will see that the percentage of linux accessing google remains the same: 1%. No more, no less.
So to say that linux is dying is not a reasoned argument. So the troll is: offtopic, not containing reasoned arguments and a general flamebait to the linux loving crowd.
Maybe we really should have the "Bill Gates" moderation option, next to troll.
They found proof of rivers.
From the article (quick translation): They did some chemical analyses and now the expectation of Mr. Squyres turned out to be true.
Even if you don't understand the article, the pictures are nice.
You can not sell, what you don't own.
Are there other popular open source products whose authors can agree to make a similar statement?
Samba is the first that comes to mind (and would have a major influence).
There is a whole thread about apple not having DRM (while the fresh new windows media player has it). There are even people saying apple will never have DRM. How wrong can we be...
The virus was going to hit at 16:something hour. I checked the SCO website this night at 1:30 (CET) and then it was already offline. No reply no more
My guess is they took it offline themselves. Or they applied one of the tricks from yesterdays netcraft post.
Go cold turkey.
Takes about four days. You will feel your head and you will be a pain for others, so take some days off, get yourself out to a place where there is no coffee (may I suggest camping or the moon) and do it.
Find yourself an alternative (may I suggest water here, since it is hard to drink too much of that, plus it helps if you want to keep your weight).
By the way, waking up with orange juice is just great, works better than coffee.
After a couple of days, you could start drinking the black oil again, but just be a bit careful. Go two or three cups a day. No more. Enjoy the taste.
Most companies I've been don't care about licenses. They install a copy of windows where they can. They never cared. Once in a while a manager comes by and asks for a status. Two weeks of licenses buying and the thing starts again.
In a culture like this, where a license is worth void, it is easy to understand why Open Source licenses are totally forgotten. There is no BSA nocking on the door here.
Right.
Not.
Original ntfs.sys
What Dave has to say about this.
This whole exploit comes with a nice timing. I mean, Debian is the only real open source platform (ok, there are some others, but not on so many platforms). Microsoft announces that they are going to compare windows against linux, updating patches, number of vunerabilities...
Dunno call me paranoid.