Agreed. I have had too many injuries to not stretch. I believe the point is to make your muscles and tendons a bit longer, so that when they're under stress (like during a sprint), it's more difficult to stretch them to the point of tearing. Of course having stretched out muscles means that there's a little more slack, and they won't respond as well. Just guessing, though.
Somebody I knew ran track for a division 3 college, and their coach wouldn't allow them to stretch. I still find that very strange.
Anonymous cvs access is done over ssh, and the public keys are listed on the OpenBSD website. The ports tree includes checksums, and these are all verified automatically. So if you check the ssh key of the cvs server, all your ports are safe.
As for pre-built packages from FTP, I don't think there's anything in place for verification.
KDE 4 is in the OpenBSD-current ports tree. The KDE team doesn't make sure their stuff works on BSD as well as it does in Linux. ktorrent (the only KDE program I used in OpenBSD) has been crashing on me for a long time. There are at least two separate issues involved, but it's too intermittent to track down. I eventually just decided to download torrents onto my laptop (Gentoo) instead.
I must have caught the Islamic school from a bad source, then. As for that church he attended, he was fine going to that church for as long as he did. He only denounces it because it's bad press. It either means that he agreed with the pastor or he he's a dispassionate Christian. Either way.
Well he was raised as a Muslim and studied in an Islamic school in Indonesia. On the other hand, he had no problem with going to a church with an hateful racist pastor. He doesn't seem like he's really committed to anything. If you ask the question: 'Christian or Muslim?', don't expect to get a good answer.
I understand that, but this is an RMS vs the world issue. He was on OpenBSD talk a year ago or so, and he claimed that he couldn't recommend OpenBSD as a free operating system because it contained non-free software. The real issue, it turned out, was that if you install the ports system (a manual process), then you can install things like Opera. Non-free software is restricted to the ports system and is not available via the CD or FTP. He didn't know any of this, because he only heard it from somebody else (who probably didn't know what they were talking about), and subsequently blew it out of proportion.
I really like a quote from Dramatica:
Now, RMS seems to spend his time avoiding soap and bitching that Linux should be called 'GNU/Linux' since it 'uses GNU software, and Linux is just the kernel.' If RMS had actually spent more time working on projects like HURD instead of writing the GNU Software Manifesto he may have a right to bitch.
Also, see the italic text here.
Bottom line: don't listen to this guy.
How is this classified as GNU? I for one get pissed off any time anybody says 'GNU/Linux'. It really shows off RMS's ego that he shoves his own project in front. Anybody who listens to that nutjob has some issues.
Agreed. I absolutely cannot stand RMS and hate almost everything that he or the FSF says and do, but the fact that he also hates the cloud is something I can finally agree with him on. His reasons, though... It's the same tired argument about how we are shackled by the tyranny of evil corporations. I just think that applications written in Javascript running in a browser is idiotic.
Frak yes! My angry email to Charter worked? They have stopped intercepting my DNS. So OpenDNS is a good option, as is running a DNS cache with djbdns' dnscache.
I don't think so. I have Charter, and I have my own DNS caching server that I set up with djbdns. I was pretty happy, but then I discovered to my horror that Charter was hijacking all my DNS requests. I bet if I sent out a DNS request to a nonexistent domain, I would get a response. I'll have to test that.
But then you have a different ISP, so you might be okay. Try using OpenDNS and then navigate to some nonexistent domain.
This is true. Lincoln Laboratory and the neighboring Air Force Base were most definitely blurred. The article probably includes some dated information. I'm surprised that the AFB is now no longer blurred.
So, this is apparently not at all a problem with Suse or Fedora. Referring to the article and not the parent post, I hate it when people talk about distributions like they are responsible for anything at all. Distributions are 99% a collection of software written by others. If you're going to assign blame, it should be done properly.
And I say 'bring on the bugs'. Only through heavy use will the rough edges disappear. I would rather embrace a technology that makes more sense but with some rough edges, than stable legacy code. Both DNS and DNSSEC have their problems right now, I'm sure, but only DNSSEC has a future.
Now all we need is wide deployment IPv6+IPsec, authenticated BGP, and more accessible certificates for use with SSH/HTTPS/IMAP/etc, and we'll be set.
Agreed. I have had too many injuries to not stretch. I believe the point is to make your muscles and tendons a bit longer, so that when they're under stress (like during a sprint), it's more difficult to stretch them to the point of tearing. Of course having stretched out muscles means that there's a little more slack, and they won't respond as well. Just guessing, though.
Somebody I knew ran track for a division 3 college, and their coach wouldn't allow them to stretch. I still find that very strange.
Here's why: http://freshmeat.net/projects/bashcompletion/. The more people attribute features to a distribution, the more insane I get.
... the standard FreeBSD distribution combines the advantages of Gentoo's (customizing the building of packages to your needs or desires) ...
You have that backwards.
Anonymous cvs access is done over ssh, and the public keys are listed on the OpenBSD website. The ports tree includes checksums, and these are all verified automatically. So if you check the ssh key of the cvs server, all your ports are safe.
As for pre-built packages from FTP, I don't think there's anything in place for verification.
KDE 4 is in the OpenBSD-current ports tree. The KDE team doesn't make sure their stuff works on BSD as well as it does in Linux. ktorrent (the only KDE program I used in OpenBSD) has been crashing on me for a long time. There are at least two separate issues involved, but it's too intermittent to track down. I eventually just decided to download torrents onto my laptop (Gentoo) instead.
Still, we should choose our leaders. If I don't believe somebody is righteous, I will not follow them.
I must have caught the Islamic school from a bad source, then. As for that church he attended, he was fine going to that church for as long as he did. He only denounces it because it's bad press. It either means that he agreed with the pastor or he he's a dispassionate Christian. Either way.
Modded down = Obama fanatic lashes out.
Well he was raised as a Muslim and studied in an Islamic school in Indonesia. On the other hand, he had no problem with going to a church with an hateful racist pastor. He doesn't seem like he's really committed to anything. If you ask the question: 'Christian or Muslim?', don't expect to get a good answer.
I have the facts right, as I have listened to the podcast and read the subsequent set of emails. You really should listen to the podcast.
Icon.
Now, RMS seems to spend his time avoiding soap and bitching that Linux should be called 'GNU/Linux' since it 'uses GNU software, and Linux is just the kernel.' If RMS had actually spent more time working on projects like HURD instead of writing the GNU Software Manifesto he may have a right to bitch.
Also, see the italic text here. Bottom line: don't listen to this guy.
How is this classified as GNU? I for one get pissed off any time anybody says 'GNU/Linux'. It really shows off RMS's ego that he shoves his own project in front. Anybody who listens to that nutjob has some issues.
Yes, and I use Gentoo. I tried to stop my parent comment but it was too late :(
I installed OpenOffice.org on the 17th.
I expressed an opinion, sir. Not an argument.
Agreed. I absolutely cannot stand RMS and hate almost everything that he or the FSF says and do, but the fact that he also hates the cloud is something I can finally agree with him on. His reasons, though... It's the same tired argument about how we are shackled by the tyranny of evil corporations. I just think that applications written in Javascript running in a browser is idiotic.
Frak yes! My angry email to Charter worked? They have stopped intercepting my DNS. So OpenDNS is a good option, as is running a DNS cache with djbdns' dnscache.
Scratch that, I need to test more. It seems my DNS requests aren't being hijacked now. OpenDNS is probably a good option then?
I don't think so. I have Charter, and I have my own DNS caching server that I set up with djbdns. I was pretty happy, but then I discovered to my horror that Charter was hijacking all my DNS requests. I bet if I sent out a DNS request to a nonexistent domain, I would get a response. I'll have to test that.
But then you have a different ISP, so you might be okay. Try using OpenDNS and then navigate to some nonexistent domain.
This is true. Lincoln Laboratory and the neighboring Air Force Base were most definitely blurred. The article probably includes some dated information. I'm surprised that the AFB is now no longer blurred.
Whoever tagged this 'bsd' needs to wise up. Gnome developers don't give a frak about BSD.
Such as exponential averaging, or just making assignments worth more as the course progresses.
P.S. Exponential averaging for course grading would be awesome.
So, this is apparently not at all a problem with Suse or Fedora. Referring to the article and not the parent post, I hate it when people talk about distributions like they are responsible for anything at all. Distributions are 99% a collection of software written by others. If you're going to assign blame, it should be done properly.
And I say 'bring on the bugs'. Only through heavy use will the rough edges disappear. I would rather embrace a technology that makes more sense but with some rough edges, than stable legacy code. Both DNS and DNSSEC have their problems right now, I'm sure, but only DNSSEC has a future.
Now all we need is wide deployment IPv6+IPsec, authenticated BGP, and more accessible certificates for use with SSH/HTTPS/IMAP/etc, and we'll be set.