Yeah, and when there are dips in Apache's market dominance it's usually from one or other of the parking sites migrating from Apache to IIS. The IIS ones get counted the same way too. What's the problem?
Every geek reads Gibson and Stephenson (and rightly so) but you ought to have a look at some stuff by Greg Egan, Michael Marshall Smith, Bruce Sterling and Pat Cadigan. Their names crop up less often, but their writings are excellent. I'm re-reading Egan's "Quarantine", and it's amazing stuff. I've read Sterling's "Islands in the Net" so many times I've lost count.
I bought my little M100 about 2 years ago. It has travelled entirely around the world in my back-pack, been dropped, rained on, snowed on, ignored, had its batteries drained, synched with more Windows and Linux boxes than I care to think about... and still ticks over beautifully. It appears that I got the only good one ever made. It also saves me from boredom - the BOFH excuse calendar is my most frequently-used bit of software.
Yeah, and when there are dips in Apache's market dominance it's usually from one or other of the parking sites migrating from Apache to IIS. The IIS ones get counted the same way too. What's the problem?
Every geek reads Gibson and Stephenson (and rightly so) but you ought to have a look at some stuff by Greg Egan, Michael Marshall Smith, Bruce Sterling and Pat Cadigan. Their names crop up less often, but their writings are excellent. I'm re-reading Egan's "Quarantine", and it's amazing stuff. I've read Sterling's "Islands in the Net" so many times I've lost count.
I bought my little M100 about 2 years ago. It has travelled entirely around the world in my back-pack, been dropped, rained on, snowed on, ignored, had its batteries drained, synched with more Windows and Linux boxes than I care to think about... and still ticks over beautifully. It appears that I got the only good one ever made. It also saves me from boredom - the BOFH excuse calendar is my most frequently-used bit of software.