[...] his experiences at the second Linuxdays of Lexembourgh [...] Ok, it is true that we are a small country. And it might be true that only very few of you have heard about us. BUT: The country's name is Luxembourg(h) and nothing with Lexe or sth.;)
Anyway, the Linuxdays were not really a big success, there were a few geeks and a lot of "oh-i-can-install-suse23-so-i-am-a-linux-god"-peop le...
These Sun Server Appliances seem to be a good hcoice you, you don't need a lot of experience with Linux as you can set up everything via web-interface.
I personally don't like them that much because i like to configure my own machines, but Cobalt's are suited for people who don't have the time or the experience to manage a custom server.
keeping your job by writing crap that no one can possibly understand only creates hatred from the others who may have to read and alter your code. Hah! Sorry, but i am unemployed. No, i'm not really unemployed, i'm still going to school. I do not work for a company, and so i cannot lose my job. The code i write is for me, and works for me. I share it and if you don't like it, fine, i don't care.
I like mountainbiking a lot to get some time off. I is a really fun sport, but tricky and exhausting in the beginning. You'll get a really good endurance if you practise at least a 2 times a week (for about 2 hours). Besides your flexibility will improve if you ride in more difficult terrain, but it takes a while to get used to handling a mountainbike. Equipment is rather expensive if you want to have good quality bikes, but that shouldn't be the problem if you're plaing around with GPS systems out there;)
Well where's the problem? They do their best to satisfy everyone's needs... what if you had such a machine? were you still unhappy about this? Another point is that they try to improve linux support on bigger machines, which are often IBM servers...
RealPlayer, because you really really checked that checkbox. really!!
Common, even my 4/86 had more memory!? And how do they expect me to compile gnome2 on this? *duh*
hope that technology isn't on the list ...
You might call me a pessimist, but I can't be worse than earth ...
Set a cronjob to crash/reboot the machine every 30-45 minutes, that way they won't recognize the difference between linux and windows.
... even Debian releases faster. HeHe
Due to the sensitive nature of this information, please forward with discretion only to those people who can clearly gain value from it...
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Ah, gain value? They mean *head-shaking* or *laughing* geeks? Oh, well
Oh come on, by then we'll have Toy Story 11 with a whole bunch of new funky character-names ...
If they continue like that, we'll soon have 2.5.100 ... chicks dig fancy kernel numbers.
Inadequate and Deceptive Product Labeling: Comparison of 21 ... WEBSERVERS? :P
Seems quite slashdotted.
[...] his experiences at the second Linuxdays of Lexembourgh [...] ;)
p le ...
Ok, it is true that we are a small country. And it might be true that only very few of you have heard about us. BUT: The country's name is Luxembourg(h) and nothing with Lexe or sth.
Anyway, the Linuxdays were not really a big success, there were a few geeks and a lot of "oh-i-can-install-suse23-so-i-am-a-linux-god"-peo
Do we have to pay for stability next? Uh-Uh!
"What we're proposing to do is take the cartridge right over the silicon chip..."
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Sure, the robot removes the heatsink and then cools the chip?! uhm, i'm sorry but the time between the two actions is enough for my athlon to die
... Linux panics ...
WHAT? Oh bloody hell, Linux actually panics??? Someone shoot me
These Sun Server Appliances seem to be a good hcoice you, you don't need a lot of experience with Linux as you can set up everything via web-interface.
I personally don't like them that much because i like to configure my own machines, but Cobalt's are suited for people who don't have the time or the experience to manage a custom server.
... STFU and RTFM!
keeping your job by writing crap that no one can possibly understand only creates hatred from the others who may have to read and alter your code.
Hah! Sorry, but i am unemployed. No, i'm not really unemployed, i'm still going to school. I do not work for a company, and so i cannot lose my job. The code i write is for me, and works for me. I share it and if you don't like it, fine, i don't care.
Not quite... when I program, i just take the names that come to my mind. These are often $foo, $muh or just plain $data, sometimes $raw_data.
But i think a clear code-structure is more important than variable names or detailed comments.
... casemod! That'd fit perfectly!
For this reason most companies have a BOFH. But he could be dangerous too!? Oh hell, why not replace all humans by unintelligent computers ... uh-uh
I like mountainbiking a lot to get some time off. I is a really fun sport, but tricky and exhausting in the beginning. You'll get a really good endurance if you practise at least a 2 times a week (for about 2 hours). Besides your flexibility will improve if you ride in more difficult terrain, but it takes a while to get used to handling a mountainbike. Equipment is rather expensive if you want to have good quality bikes, but that shouldn't be the problem if you're plaing around with GPS systems out there ;)
Well where's the problem? They do their best to satisfy everyone's needs ... what if you had such a machine? were you still unhappy about this? Another point is that they try to improve linux support on bigger machines, which are often IBM servers ...
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If you're right, noone replies
Ok, the article is fine, informative and well shaped, needless to say that openbsd does it's work really well as a firewall.
... really.
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But why the hell do we have 80% troll posts? This sucks
Oh yeah, mod me down now, but you know i'm right
... to britney's face?