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User: jaaron

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  1. Re:Hint: "For Developers" Means "For Developers" on Are Googlers Too Smart For Their Own Good? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. The API is almost identical to Amazon S3. It's just simple REST. What did theodp expect? A simple desktop GUI? That's what this API is designed for developers to create. This is a non-story.

  2. Re:I'm signed up to have my head put in cryostorag on A Geek Funeral · · Score: 1

    And who knows - there's some slight chance they WILL figure out how to download the person from a frozen-head-saved-game into a new model body (or fix the cracks in the brain, implant it in a cloned corpus, and restart it) - and somebody will think it's worthwhile to try it with me. Then it's time travel to the far future.

    Yeah, but seriously. Under what sort of conditions would someone in the future decide to revive some reasonably rich dude from the past (hey, if you can afford cryostorage in this day and age, you're richer than 95% of the world).

    I seriously doubt someone will someday say, "Hey, we don't have enough old rich dudes. Let's go resurrect some." Nope. Instead, you are going to be turned into an experiment. If you ever resurrect, it's not gonna be pretty.

  3. I foresee on Team Aims To Create Pure Evil AI · · Score: 1

    This is doing to end well...

  4. Re:It's been time for YEARS on Harsh Words From Google On Linux Development · · Score: 1

    I would hope that all desktop OS's are used by enthusiasts. ... If people are running an OS for some other reason, then we have problems...

    Expecting everyone to be an enthusiast is incredibly myopic. Most people don't care about their OS. Most don't care about their computer. They care about their paycheck, their family, and sometimes the work they have to do which often involves a computer.

    Are you an enthusiasts about the car brand you drive? The type of pen you use to write with? The chair design you sit on? Some people are. But to expect everyone to be is just ridiculous.

  5. Re:"rel," not "rev" on Can rev="canonical" Replace URL-Shortening Services? · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I don't get this. The Google blog article uses rel. Where did rev come from?

  6. Castle & Crusades on No More D&D PDFs, Wizards of the Coast Sues 8 File Sharers · · Score: 1

    Don't forget D20 variants that bring back the spirit of earlier editions such as Castles & Crusades

  7. Trying to save/force 4th edition on No More D&D PDFs, Wizards of the Coast Sues 8 File Sharers · · Score: 1

    So where the heck is the lost sale? Where is the damage?

    The conspiracy theory is that WotC wants to pull all the old editions so that 4th edition is the only version available.

  8. Girl Talk on So Amazing, So Illegal · · Score: 1

    This definitely reminded me of Girl Talk. Love that music: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girl_Talk_(musician)

  9. Re:eeebuntu on Which Distro For an Eee PC? · · Score: 2, Informative

    Another +1 for eeebuntu here. Has worked great.

  10. Happy Hacking on The Best Keyboards For Every Occasion · · Score: 1

    Glad someone mentioned the Happy Hacking keyboard, which I happen to be using right now.

    I've also heard good things about the Kinesis ergonomic keyboards.

  11. Re:And to the answer...it probably doesn't matter on Real Name For Open Source Development? · · Score: 1

    Exactly. Hiding your real name because you think it gives you some sort of legal anonymity or indemnity is incorrect. In fact, you'll likely be better off to use your real name.

    If you're concerned about patents with the open source work you do, then you should use a license with explicit patent clauses (such as the Apache license). Even better, your open source project should be associated with a non-profit open source / free software foundation like the FSF or ASF.

    As far as the other concerns for use of your real name, I purposefully use my real name for all the open source work I do and it's benefited me significantly.

  12. Re:For Employment Purposes on Real Name For Open Source Development? · · Score: 1

    Interesting. I purposefully use my real name on all the open source work I do and this has helped me for employment / consulting work tremendously. I'm very google-able and I've never had an issue.

  13. Apache does this right. on Real Name For Open Source Development? · · Score: 3, Informative

    Apache strips attribution from source files to avoid anyone feeling they own a particular bit of code instead of the community in general. Authorship is maintained through the issue tracker and the subversion commit records.

    Moreover, no contributions to Apache are anonymous. All contributions through the issue tracker require the submitter to provide a license for use of the work in Apache. All committers who provide significant works are required to sign a contributor license agreement.

    Apache is one of the most thorough open source projects when it comes to ensuring we have clear rights for the works we distribute.

  14. Re:Almost identical? Not quite. (MOD PARENT UP) on OpenOffice.org V3.0 Sets Download Record, 80% Windows · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but I wouldn't want to work at place with an HR department like that. Would immediately disqualify them from my search. Seriously, they don't know how to use a PDF? And you're applying for technical position? Do yourself a favor and forego the pain.

  15. Try Asia on Programming Jobs Abroad For a US Citizen? · · Score: 1

    I'm living in Hong Kong at the moment and if you've got decent skills it's not hard to find work in Greater China including the mainland, Hong Kong, Taiwan or even Singapore.

  16. Open source licenses come in 3 flavors. on Google Reverses "Absurd" Mozilla Code Ban · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The MPL and the GPL are very different. The MPL is closer to the LGPL and the EPL than it is to the GPL

    One of the easiest ways to think of it was give by Dave Johnson back in 2006. You can place most open source licenses into one of three categories:

    • Gimme Credit: this includes the Apache, BSD and MIT licenses. Basically, you can do anything you want with the code, but you must give the original authors credit in some way.
    • Gimme Fixes: is used by the EPL, MPL, and LGPL. Basically, the original code will always be open source and any direct changes of the original code (patches, bug fixes, enhancements) must also be released as open source. However, you can combine this software with closed code to create a proprietary work. This license tends to be used by frameworks and libraries. Sometimes the original author gets special rights (like the NPL).
    • Gimme everything!: the GPL stands alone in it's requirement that the code itself and all derivative works be free software.

    Hope that helps.

  17. Re:Open Source Flash? Open Screen Project on Why Is Adobe Flash On Linux Still Broken? · · Score: 1

    So there is no version of Flash that is open source then?

    Actually, a month or two ago, Adobe started the Open Screen project. While this isn't an open source flash per-se, it does open up the chance for people to start working on a better port of Flash to Linux. So for anyone complaining about Linux on Flash: patches welcome.

  18. Re:Anti-Linux? on Microsoft and Apache - What's the Angle? · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Who's helping them, Bruce? Who?

    Not the ASF. The money Microsoft gives Apache gets them no special access to the code, no voting rights, nothing. Nothing other than a logo and press release.

    And your argument about Microsoft extending Apache is baseless and you know it. You've even admitted as much in the article:

    Microsoft can use Apache project code in their own proprietary software without being a member of the project, and without paying anything, because the Apache license is a gift with no strings attached.

    Apparently your definition of an "anti-linux" play is using any license other than the GPL. Because there's nothing special about this Microsoft strategy of yours that has anything to do with the Apache sponsorship. They could follow that strategy without handing out cash. So apparently all of the BSD, MIT and Apache licensed projects have fallen into Microsoft's deft plan.

    But what really upsets me, Bruce, are your subtle allegations that the ASF is somehow selling out the rest of the open source community. You've clearly not been involved in the process, have confusions about what ASF sponsorship means, and hell, have confusion about what the Apache Software Foundation is these days. If you knew any of the people involved, you wouldn't be so quick to jump to conclusions. So enough with the conspiracy theories already.

  19. It's not called trolling on Is Anyone Using the Google Web Toolkit? · · Score: 1

    It's called lurking.

  20. Re:Anyone usinging specialised tests? on Fallout From the Fall of CAPTCHAs · · Score: 1

    I used to use simple geometry problems, like:

    What shape has three sides?

    Solved almost all spam problems I ever had. I think a large trick to the blog spam problem for most smaller blogs is to just use a rather unique question that cannot be answered by a computer. When you notice you've got some spam, just change the question. If the questions are unique for each website and change at random intervals and have no clear pattern or question type, then it's almost impossible to create a bot to handle them.

    What really upsets me about the blogspam is the amount of bandwidth wasted serving these bots.

  21. Re:Pittsburgh for University..... on The World's 10 Dirtiest Cities · · Score: 1

    Have fun. Lived in or near Pittsburgh most of my life. CMU is great. Man, what I wouldn't give for a good Primanti's sandwich.

  22. You think that's bad... on The World's 10 Dirtiest Cities · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Check out Guangzhou, China. I've been there several times and never seen a clear day there. Though I hear Xian is worse.

  23. Re:questionable on The World's 10 Dirtiest Cities · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Seems like they took 10 random cities.

  24. Re:PSP eBook Reader on No, David Pogue, Ebook Piracy Is Not a Given · · Score: 1

    What PDF software do you use on the PSP?

  25. Re:The real reason on Post-Quake, China Cuts Access to Entertainment Web Sites · · Score: 1

    Exactly. More details here:

    Again, to emphasize, these instructions went out to internal Chinese sites. Though I imagine they'll begin blocking access to other sites soon too.