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User: selfsealingstembolt

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  1. Maybe we are searching into the wrong thing... on What's Behind The Odd Data? · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe that are residues of testing? Some people writing networking-software maybe just made some debugging runs using data sent over the net and sent out erroneous packets.

    Maybe it is some rare case with a seldom occuring situation where the TCP/IP protocol runs mad? I mean, when designing such flexible and autonomous systems sometimes there are things you can't foresee. After decades of online time and rewrites of TCP/IP core parts in combination with the unpredictability of such huge systems it would not surprise me, if that are just packets which emerge every now and then.

    Another explanation: the net has gotten critical mass and is becoming conscious....

    Just my two cents.....

  2. Most important on OSI vs SCO · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The best part is at the end of the document:
    A judgment in favor of SCO could do serious damage to the open-source community. SCO's implication of wider claims could turn Linux into an intellectual-property minefield, with potential users and allies perpetually wary of being mugged by previously unasserted IP claims, and ever-more-outlandish theories of entitlement being propounded by parties with only the most tenuous relationship to anyone who ever wrote actual program code. On behalf of the community that wrote most of today's Unix code, and whose claims to have done so were tacitly recognized by the impairment of AT&T's rights under the 1993 settlement, we protest that to allow this outcome would be a very grave injustice. We wrote our Unix and Linux code as a gift and an expression of art, to be enjoyed by our peers and used by others for all licit purposes both non-profit and for-profit. We did not write it to have it appropriated by men so dishonorable that after making profit from our gift for eight years they could turn around and insult our competence.

    And here's the really important message:
    Damage to the open-source community would matter, because we are both today's principal source of innovation in software and the guardians and maintainers of the open Internet. Our autonomy is everyone's bulwark against government and corporate control of the digital media that are increasingly central in political, commercial, and personal communications. Our creative energy is what perpetually renews and finds ever more exciting uses for computers and networks. The vigor of our culture today will translate into more possibilities for everyone tomorrow.

    I think that is a nice roundup of every geek's feelings towards the tendencies found in politics, business and laws nowadays.

  3. Another interview with him, released yesterday on Grady Booch On Software Engineering · · Score: 3, Informative

    To find at:

    IBM-Developerworks

  4. Just a cover story they made up .... on Microsoft's iLoo Project A Hoax · · Score: 2, Informative

    ... after they realized everyone was making fun of their iLoo. So they just pulled it back.

    From the article:
    In an e-mail sent last week to The Associated Press, Red Consultancy's Ben Philipson wrote "MSN is really working on building a prototype for the Summer festivals, perhaps Glastonbury ... This is very much a 'toe in the water' experiment to gauge interest so we'll have to see how it goes, although judging from response so far it's really captured people's imagination!"

    Malina Bragg, who helps with MSN's account for Waggener Edstrom, also verified last week that the project was true.

  5. Re:I turned down a well paying job at Walgreens on Suit Up Or Ship Out? · · Score: 1

    In other words, the space shuttle isn't going up guided by code that a guy wrote late last night :-).

    Obviously, it is...

  6. Where is the problem? on Bruce Perens Plans On-Stage DMCA Violation · · Score: 1

    Here in Austria it is possible to buy code-free dvd-players completely legal in any shop. And most shops give you the possibility to remove the code-lock, if your player has one. So what?