I use OpenBox. I'm always one flick of the mouse wheel away from anything I need. If it's lost, I've got a categorized menu of windows available with a middle click on the background.
The command line is better than any file manger I've ever seen, and it uses a hell of a lot less ram.
I'd like to see Apple's Expose on such a display. It will zoom windows out to fit all of them one the screen for selection by the user.
AOL is a complete bitch when it comes to blacklisting servers without cause.
For some fun, and hours of free muzac, call and try to walk them through whitelisting a server that's in a blacklisted ip block. Be sure to use "big words" like "SMTP" and "whitelist." (Preparing a TCP/IP firewall example that involves cartoon characters might help you get results sooner.)
one has the right to reverse engineer in order to exercise his right to the material.
Therefore, while you may not reverse engineer Apple's format for the sake of generating high-quality mp3 rips, you may reverse engineer it for the purpose of selling your music or playing it on a better OS.
Apple is not as moronic as the RIAA, MPAA, and SCO. They won't jump to piss off customers and/or die in a blaze of bitching glory. That said, they are still as business that will break the law or piss off customers if they think it serves their purposes.
disclaimer: I am neither stating nor implying that the DMCA is anything other than a pile of dog crap smearing the constitution.
OpenZaurus is a much better distribution than the default Sharp one.
If you can't stand the small screen and keyboard, just attach a dumb terminal and away you go.
I don't have enough storage on it to recompile the kernel locally, but I am using GCC on it to do a bit of work on a project of mine during class. The keyboard is nothing to ogle over, but it's a hell of a lot better than a virtual one.
If you want an organizer, pick an old palm up on eBay for a few dollars. If you want a handheld computer, check a zaurus out.
By buying units, and making certain the manufacturer knows we're buying them as a result of the project, thereby preventing a DMCA lawsuit that would only result in massive boycotting on our part.
On the other hand, it's easier to just sit and type about how much the DMCA sucks and how cool reverse engineering is.
You use a modern Linux machine to emulate a decrepit UNIX machine.
The emulation steals the speed increase and abstracts the Penguin Power from the user's environment.
IANAIBMSA(I A Not An International Business Machines System Administrator), but it seems like the only advantage to this is that you can get one hell of a UT/Q3 framerate while the virtual machine is shut down because "somebody was calculating pi on the server" or "Somebody ran vmunix through a spelling checker."
even a high school student with only half a semester of "cooperation game law" can show a judge that these people are extorting innocent people to fund their crack habit though a stock scam.
QT3 has translucent menu items and such. I haven't checked to see if they cheat by reading from the screen, or if they have implimented an alpha layer.
The big issue with an alpha layer is that someone has to have the authority to impliment such a change in the X11 protocol, it can't be done as an extension. Anyone who uses the fucked up protocol won't be able to display their app on a different X server. This breaks compatibility with thin clients.
What I want is complete revamping of the X protocol with backward compatibility maintained (permanently), such that new apps can take advantage of new server-side widgets without breaking compatibility. Wouldn't it be sweet if GTK+ apps could run as well over a 256kb/s line as XAW apps do?
I guess no one with any self respect or knowledge will admit they work for them.
If you know who's responsible, please email me their home address. (I'll have to respond through instant messenger...)
SCO would make more from licensing Linux
on
SCO Roundup
·
· Score: 1
They sure as hell don't make $599 per Solaris license or per *BSD license. If a fleet of space penguins came to Earth and took every copy of Linux with them when they left, a more likely scenario than SCO winning, then I would recommend a switch to Solaris or FreeBSD over OpenServer, which I knew sucked before this whole fiasco.
If they did succeed in driving businesses from Linux, they couldn't hope to drive them to SCO. This way they at least get the $1 for a Microsoft Blanket License for use in MS-LINUX
AOL invented blanket blocking. I'm blocked from their SMTP server, and I've heard several different justifications for it.
I suspect that they are like SCO, in that no one with any self respect or knowledge will work for them. The first time I complained about being blocked, they replied that no one there knew how to allow a server on a "dynamic" subnet. (Dynamic my shiny metal ass.) Later, I heard that no one knew how to allow one ip address while blocking the rest of the subnet. As a result, I'm being accused of the half a billion pieces of spam my ISP's other customers send to AOL.
Let's hope that broadband finally kills those bastards off. I hope their stock falls so much in value that they start using outstanding shares as toilet paper. (I'd pay to use it as toilet paper, but they want a lot more than it's worth...)
I use OpenBox. I'm always one flick of the mouse wheel away from anything I need. If it's lost, I've got a categorized menu of windows available with a middle click on the background.
The command line is better than any file manger I've ever seen, and it uses a hell of a lot less ram.
I'd like to see Apple's Expose on such a display. It will zoom windows out to fit all of them one the screen for selection by the user.
Root for companies that no one has heard of; it makes you sound cool.
(San Dimas Operations...)
AOL is a complete bitch when it comes to blacklisting servers without cause.
For some fun, and hours of free muzac, call and try to walk them through whitelisting a server that's in a blacklisted ip block. Be sure to use "big words" like "SMTP" and "whitelist." (Preparing a TCP/IP firewall example that involves cartoon characters might help you get results sooner.)
Do you buy bandwidth is kilobytes/sec or kilobits/sec? Hard disk space in binary gigabytes or decimal gigabytes?
Bigger numbers are easier to sell. I buy my bandwidth in bushels per horsepower, and that's how I like it!
They are really just shutting down in the face of threats from SCO.
AOL can censor sites, and their bundled spyware logs where you go if you circumvent the block. Same thing?
one has the right to reverse engineer in order to exercise his right to the material.
Therefore, while you may not reverse engineer Apple's format for the sake of generating high-quality mp3 rips, you may reverse engineer it for the purpose of selling your music or playing it on a better OS.
Apple is not as moronic as the RIAA, MPAA, and SCO. They won't jump to piss off customers and/or die in a blaze of bitching glory. That said, they are still as business that will break the law or piss off customers if they think it serves their purposes.
disclaimer: I am neither stating nor implying that the DMCA is anything other than a pile of dog crap smearing the constitution.
SCO OpenServer is quite broken, and they have yet to give it away.
I was thinking of a stoned hot slut(free as in beer) fighting a stoned fat chick. (In Soviet Redmond, all the fights are composed of fat chicks.)
I didn't mean to say that the Republican party was the Communist party, but rather that the latter party could win by exploiting this.
Both leading parties in this country suck in very similar ways. The Libertarian Party doesn't suck.
OpenZaurus is a much better distribution than the default Sharp one.
If you can't stand the small screen and keyboard, just attach a dumb terminal and away you go.
I don't have enough storage on it to recompile the kernel locally, but I am using GCC on it to do a bit of work on a project of mine during class. The keyboard is nothing to ogle over, but it's a hell of a lot better than a virtual one.
If you want an organizer, pick an old palm up on eBay for a few dollars. If you want a handheld computer, check a zaurus out.
The mainstream press has been silenced after the Communist party won a landslide victory in the latest presidential election recount.
By buying units, and making certain the manufacturer knows we're buying them as a result of the project, thereby preventing a DMCA lawsuit that would only result in massive boycotting on our part.
On the other hand, it's easier to just sit and type about how much the DMCA sucks and how cool reverse engineering is.
we removed it from the firmware before shipping. It was ugly, so we replaced it. (Damn K&R syntax!)
You use a modern Linux machine to emulate a decrepit UNIX machine.
The emulation steals the speed increase and abstracts the Penguin Power from the user's environment.
IANAIBMSA(I A Not An International Business Machines System Administrator), but it seems like the only advantage to this is that you can get one hell of a UT/Q3 framerate while the virtual machine is shut down because "somebody was calculating pi on the server" or "Somebody ran vmunix through a spelling checker."
BOFH excuses 16 and 452, respectively.
even a high school student with only half a semester of "cooperation game law" can show a judge that these people are extorting innocent people to fund their crack habit though a stock scam.
When the power goes out so long that my server and cable modem go down, I have nothing left to do but play UT.
"Power out... disaster... locusts...
That's an SEP. (Someone Elses Problem.)
but my workstation might. I'd need to still be able to tunnel X from my server to display GUI apps locally.
would ever work for today's SCO.
Judging by the quality of OpenServer, I'd say no one with coding experience has worked on it for a decade.
I'd post a torrent file for my SCO discs, but they aren't worth the bandwidth.
QT3 has translucent menu items and such. I haven't checked to see if they cheat by reading from the screen, or if they have implimented an alpha layer.
The big issue with an alpha layer is that someone has to have the authority to impliment such a change in the X11 protocol, it can't be done as an extension. Anyone who uses the fucked up protocol won't be able to display their app on a different X server. This breaks compatibility with thin clients.
What I want is complete revamping of the X protocol with backward compatibility maintained (permanently), such that new apps can take advantage of new server-side widgets without breaking compatibility. Wouldn't it be sweet if GTK+ apps could run as well over a 256kb/s line as XAW apps do?
but when do we get an ASCII renderer for it?
I guess no one with any self respect or knowledge will admit they work for them.
If you know who's responsible, please email me their home address. (I'll have to respond through instant messenger...)
They sure as hell don't make $599 per Solaris license or per *BSD license. If a fleet of space penguins came to Earth and took every copy of Linux with them when they left, a more likely scenario than SCO winning, then I would recommend a switch to Solaris or FreeBSD over OpenServer, which I knew sucked before this whole fiasco.
If they did succeed in driving businesses from Linux, they couldn't hope to drive them to SCO. This way they at least get the $1 for a Microsoft Blanket License for use in MS-LINUX
AOL invented blanket blocking. I'm blocked from their SMTP server, and I've heard several different justifications for it.
I suspect that they are like SCO, in that no one with any self respect or knowledge will work for them. The first time I complained about being blocked, they replied that no one there knew how to allow a server on a "dynamic" subnet. (Dynamic my shiny metal ass.) Later, I heard that no one knew how to allow one ip address while blocking the rest of the subnet. As a result, I'm being accused of the half a billion pieces of spam my ISP's other customers send to AOL.
Let's hope that broadband finally kills those bastards off. I hope their stock falls so much in value that they start using outstanding shares as toilet paper. (I'd pay to use it as toilet paper, but they want a lot more than it's worth...)
you're forgiven. (we know you set your UID to 0...)