This is the best solution. In Seattle, WA. we have scantron forms which we fill out with pen just like back in college. Those are then fed into the vote counting machine which is like a vault. I assume this vault can tally the votes on the fly for delivery to the main voting headquarters, and the paper ballots are kept somewhere (safe, hopefully) in case a visual recount is requested.
I still don't know what I'm going to do about apt. I have, let's say, 100 servers running rh8 and 9 and I use apt-get exclusively to keep them up to date. Can I switch to fedora and expect apt to still deliver updates in a timely manner? Will rpmfind.net still have endless versions for me to choose from? This is what concerns me more than anything about redhat's changes. I'm just afraid that the wealth of rpm packages out there is going to dwindle away leaving me having to maintain 100 distinct servers via tar-balls. Arrhhhgggg!!
At any rate; If you create an application that uses IMAP to store the calendar info in a special calendar folder, and you have the clients themselves check and resolve conflicts, then your calendar app is P2P.
If you ever find such a thing, please let us know! IMAP calendars would be a magical thing!
I was as jaded as the author after running through all the same games as him. Then I took a break and played some Neverwinter Nights (the built in campaign). It was fun, well balanced good ol' D&D. Then I tried the online client. WOW! Log into a NWN persistent world and it's like a free MMORPG without the MM part. It's not huge, but it's not crowded either. There are great tradeskills, class balance is never an issue, selective PvP, dynamic mob gen... everything works so well. Give it a shot if you're burned out on paying monthly fees for garbage.
Gabe held a number of positions in the Systems, Applications, and Advanced Technology divisions during his 13 years at Microsoft. His responsibilities included running program management for the first two releases of Windows, starting the company's multimedia division, and, most recently, leading the company's efforts on the Information Highway PC. His most significant contribution to Half-Life was his statement "C'mon, people, you can't show the player a really big bomb and not let them blow it up."
I wonder if he signed a contract that prevents him from joining a lawsuit against MS since it was their software that allowed his next big project to go buh-bye.
I'm not out to destroy Microsoft. That will just be a completely unintentional side effect.
I think the way he phrased it was ominous, but I honestly believe that he has loftier goals than simply running MS out of business. He is truly an engineer's engineer.
Hooray for Bayesian filtering! I've got spamassassin running on all my servers blocking spam before it's even delivered. I get about 150 spam emails in my spam folder each day. Only 2 or 3 per week get through into my inbox. So far I, personally, have never had a false positive, but it's easy to fix with spamassassin's learning features and simple whitelisting.
They're advertised "brown bag" style in musician's magazines because they know people would be ashamed to use them. While they serve a purpose for production and mastering (if you like that over-produced sound), their use is blatantly obvious when used live.
Personally, I think it's the flaws inherent in the matrix that make living in it more believable. But that's just me.
I doubt that. Unless the software maker has a wide open connection listening on a huge range of IPs and ports then you could easily deny packets to that particular IP/PORT. Most likely they have a service sitting on one IP listening on one port that you could block.
Maybe you should install your Linux OS according to POSIX standards. There was an init script written years ago for apachectl. That stuff should live/etc/rc.d somewhere
Almost anywhere you go in seattle is a hotspot these days, whether from unconfigured linksys waps or genuine seattlewireless networks. There used to be a map with pinpoints on all the registered hotspots in the region, but I can't find it anymore. Downtown and the University were litterally peppered with access points.
eWEEK: For its part though, SCO has said that there are so many lines of code, and a variety of applications and devices that use that code, that simply removing the offending code would not be technically feasible or possible and would not solve the problem. Do you agree?
Torvalds: They are smoking crack.
Smoking Crack! I never expected him to say something like that. Hey Linus, we should party!
I hope IBM's lawyers read/. There are a lot of people in here that are making very valid arguments against SCO. Specifically that the code from the article predates the existence of SCO. On that mark alone a Judge would throw out SCO's suit.
This is the best solution. In Seattle, WA. we have scantron forms which we fill out with pen just like back in college. Those are then fed into the vote counting machine which is like a vault. I assume this vault can tally the votes on the fly for delivery to the main voting headquarters, and the paper ballots are kept somewhere (safe, hopefully) in case a visual recount is requested.
I still don't know what I'm going to do about apt. I have, let's say, 100 servers running rh8 and 9 and I use apt-get exclusively to keep them up to date. Can I switch to fedora and expect apt to still deliver updates in a timely manner? Will rpmfind.net still have endless versions for me to choose from? This is what concerns me more than anything about redhat's changes. I'm just afraid that the wealth of rpm packages out there is going to dwindle away leaving me having to maintain 100 distinct servers via tar-balls. Arrhhhgggg!!
I never have any problems with my wireless connection in the trees. They don't stand a chance against my wireless tool
If you ever find such a thing, please let us know! IMAP calendars would be a magical thing!
I'm a fan of the Nordock persistent world. It's kept me hooked for a month now. Check nordock.net or google for other servers. Lotsa fun.
I was as jaded as the author after running through all the same games as him. Then I took a break and played some Neverwinter Nights (the built in campaign). It was fun, well balanced good ol' D&D. Then I tried the online client. WOW! Log into a NWN persistent world and it's like a free MMORPG without the MM part. It's not huge, but it's not crowded either. There are great tradeskills, class balance is never an issue, selective PvP, dynamic mob gen... everything works so well. Give it a shot if you're burned out on paying monthly fees for garbage.
Get an answering machine and screen your calls. I haven't talked to a telemarketer in 10 years (at least).
Gabe held a number of positions in the Systems, Applications, and Advanced Technology divisions during his 13 years at Microsoft. His responsibilities included running program management for the first two releases of Windows, starting the company's multimedia division, and, most recently, leading the company's efforts on the Information Highway PC. His most significant contribution to Half-Life was his statement "C'mon, people, you can't show the player a really big bomb and not let them blow it up."
I wonder if he signed a contract that prevents him from joining a lawsuit against MS since it was their software that allowed his next big project to go buh-bye.
I'm not out to destroy Microsoft. That will just be a completely unintentional side effect. I think the way he phrased it was ominous, but I honestly believe that he has loftier goals than simply running MS out of business. He is truly an engineer's engineer.
Hooray for Bayesian filtering! I've got spamassassin running on all my servers blocking spam before it's even delivered. I get about 150 spam emails in my spam folder each day. Only 2 or 3 per week get through into my inbox. So far I, personally, have never had a false positive, but it's easy to fix with spamassassin's learning features and simple whitelisting.
Due to all these viri and ddos's over the last month the reachability index at xaffire has been pretty rocky. Fun to watch though.
They're advertised "brown bag" style in musician's magazines because they know people would be ashamed to use them. While they serve a purpose for production and mastering (if you like that over-produced sound), their use is blatantly obvious when used live. Personally, I think it's the flaws inherent in the matrix that make living in it more believable. But that's just me.
Repeat after me...
Willing suspension of disbelief
Willing suspension of disbelief
If I want reality I'll read the news. Duh.
I doubt that. Unless the software maker has a wide open connection listening on a huge range of IPs and ports then you could easily deny packets to that particular IP/PORT. Most likely they have a service sitting on one IP listening on one port that you could block.
filter the ports at your firewall. Problem solved, right?
Maybe you should install your Linux OS according to POSIX standards. There was an init script written years ago for apachectl. That stuff should live /etc/rc.d somewhere
Actually, there are some new node maps at Node DB
Almost anywhere you go in seattle is a hotspot these days, whether from unconfigured linksys waps or genuine seattlewireless networks. There used to be a map with pinpoints on all the registered hotspots in the region, but I can't find it anymore. Downtown and the University were litterally peppered with access points.
My bittorrent is downloading at 0kB/s and uploading at 0kB/s. I thought it was supposed to speed up with more connections, damnit!
Torvalds: They are smoking crack.
Smoking Crack! I never expected him to say something like that. Hey Linus, we should party!
I hope IBM's lawyers read /. There are a lot of people in here that are making very valid arguments against SCO. Specifically that the code from the article predates the existence of SCO. On that mark alone a Judge would throw out SCO's suit.
Do the majority of people say "Oh Ess Ecks" or "Oh Ess Ten"? I'm in the "Oh Ess Ecks" because it sounds l33t.
Does anyone know the address of the compromised ftp server? I'd like to check if it's still secure. Or someone else can...