If you go in to Preferences, Accounts, and then the Advanced section, there is an option "Automatically syncronize changed mail boxes". Is this what you're after? It works well for me.
I can relate to your concerns about the validity of an anonymous email. You'll be pleased to know that SCO has confirmed the authenticity of the email though they claim that the writer misunderstood Microsoft's involvement.
What I find interesting is that they are (apparently) planning to sue one of their own customers! How stupid would anyone have to be to sign a contract with them?
The first target will be a company that has a Unix license from SCO already, giving SCO some contractual leverage in the case. McBride said. In addition, the suit will involve copyright infringement claims.
What version of RHL and FC will be supported, and for how long?
We are currently supporting Red Hat Linux 7.2, 7.3, and 8.0 as these have reached their End-of-Life (EOL).
When Red Hat Linux 9 becomes EOL on April, 31 2004, we will start legacy support for it as well.
As Fedora Core releases become EOL, we will provide support for them on a 1-2-3 and out policy, providing for roughly 1.5 years of update support for each release.
At the University of Melbourne (Australia), we have access for staff and students available from around seventy base stations with a similar number planned for rollout during 2004.
The interesting thing about this economic theory when applied to politics is that it probably leads to a better outcome for society on average.
If you imagine cart A succeeds (i.e wins the election) while cart B goes out of business (loses the election), then all the customers (voters) on cart B's side of the beach are better off because A moved closer to the center.
Sure the outliers on the far side of A might be disappointed with A's move, but the majority of the beach will appreciate a location (political position) closer to the center.
I'm managing the project to choose a Linux distribution to officially support for staff at students at The University of Melbourne, Australia. We were going to select RH9 but now are likely to settle on Fedora or a completely non-commercial distribution like Debian.
Having said that, if we could get a site license for the AUD equivalent of USD$2500, ELWS could definitely be a viable option (particularly with the proxy server to reduce bandwidth charges).
CNN slowed down a copy of the ad, and the word "RATS" clearly appeared on the screen in large, white letters superimposed over the words "The Gore Prescription Plan." In a fraction of a second, the word disappeared, and the words "BUREAUCRATS DECIDE" showed up in smaller letters. To viewers aware of the presence of the word, it is noticeable when the ad is played at normal speed.
If you read the page you linked to, you'll find out why:
Most current browsers don't handle the application/xhtml+xml MIME type correctly, so you'll need to make provisions for serving up your XHTML the old-fashioned way (as text/html) to these browsers. (The list of non-XHTML-aware browsers includes Internet Explorer 6 for Windows, so it's not as if you can skip this step.) If your pages are dynamically generated, you can alter the Content-type programmatically. If you're serving up static files, you'll need to resort to mod_rewrite or a similar solution. More on this in a minute, too.
Who is Miguel Estrada? We all have a right to know before we make him
a judge. Yet he's done his best to hide his views on the law from us.
Miguel Estrada has never served as a judge before, so he's never issued
a written opinion on a case. Nonetheless he has a reputation as a
right-wing ideologue. Paul Bender, a former Deputy Solicitor General
who once supervised Estrada's work, said he found him so "ideologically
driven that he couldn't be trusted to state the law in a fair,
neutral way."**
The Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, the Puerto Rican
Legal Defense and Education Fund, and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus
are among a wide range of civic groups opposing the Estrada nomination.
During hearings held in the last Congress, Estrada refused to answer
Senators' legitimate questions about his legal and judicial views. His
silence is designed to make it hard for Senators to oppose him.
Estrada is a member of the law firm that represented Bush in his successful Supreme Court fight for the presidency. He came to the United States from Honduras as a teenager and graduated from Harvard Law School in 1986. He has practiced constitutional law and argued 15 cases before the Supreme Court.
But Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota accused Estrada of refusing to explain what his judicial philosophy would be if he became a federal judge. The D.C. circuit, which is evenly split between judges appointed by Republican and Democratic presidents, has been a steppingstone to the U.S. Supreme Court.
"Every nominee who comes before the Senate has the obligation to be forthcoming with information about his position, with information about his record," said Daschle. "Until he does, we don't believe that it is in the Senate's best interest to allow this confirmation to go forward."
At a press conference Wednesday afternoon with various Hispanic organizations, Congressional Democrats, including Daschle, Leahy and Rep. Robert Menendez of New Jersey, said it hasn't been easy for the Hispanic community to oppose a Hispanic nominee to the bench.
The key word is "qualified," Menendez said, adding that Estrada has no judicial experience or a "critical understanding" of Latino issues.
In the seven election cycles from 1989-2002, Enron Corporation, through its PAC and through its employees, has given some $648,465 to current members of the House of Representatives ($282,949of it in the '00 and '02 cycles). Of this, 57% was given to Republicans and 43% to Democrats. Since the Enron collapse, $153,150 of this money has been returned, either through direct refunds of contributions or through donations to ex-employee charities. This comes to almost 24% of money returned - 19% of Republican money and 29% of Democrat money.
Of the 435 Representatives in the House, 201 received money from Enron - 123 Republicans and 78Democrats. Of these, 76 have returned at least some of this money - 38 Republicans and 38 Democrats. According to these figures, then, almost 38% of Representatives who have received Enron money have given some of it back. Split by party, 31% of Republicans who received money gave it back, while nearly49% of Democrats who received money gave it back.
In the other legislative chamber, Enron gave $539,833 from 1989-2002 to current Senators. The vast majority of this - 78% - was given to Republicans. We have not completed the process of data collection with regards to the Senate, but the data so far indicate that most Democrats in the Senate have returned at least some of the money they received from Enron, while Republicans lag behind by a significant margin.
Enron was also the largest donator to George Bush in his run for the presidency.
Does anyone have a copy of SCO's cease and desist letter that they can publish on Slashdot (even if anonymously)? I would definitely be interested in taking a look at it.
My reading of the context of the "insecure" was that it referred to the transmission of email data as well as username and password. Hotmail may make you log in via HTTPS but when you read your mail it is all via insecure HTTP.
We have those ports blocked at the border routers where I work (a major Australian university) and we've been hit from the inside. Once you have one infection it spreads VERY quickly from our experience.
So can those in the US please recall George Bush for creating a record deficit of (at least) US$455 billion? The rest of the world wants him recalled for other reasons, but any recall will do...
I'm certainly not a supporter of the Taliban (or Islam, or any religion for that matter), but it's worth looking at how and why they came to power.
Support for the fundamentalist regime of the Taliban largely came from those who were despairing of the constant fighting and corruption of the warlords who ran the country. The Taliban promised an end to the fighting and corruption which they largely achieved through their extreme fundamentalism and strict control of society.
Since the US overthrew the Taliban, the situation has returned almost exactly to what it was prior to their rise to power. Any guesses as to what might happen in the future when the Afghanis again get sick of the corrupt warlords (particularly the Northern Alliance who might not be religious fundamentalists but are just as guilty of horrific acts)?
As (nearly) any Australian knows, there is nothing better for a hangover than Vegemite.
Vegemite is a by product of beer (i.e. it is taken out during the production). Therefore after drinking a lot of beer you feel bad simply because you are lacking the by product which was removed during production.
Perhaps we should wait for more details before claiming the decision is stupid.
I believe the Gartner report is rubbish (read it carefully and you will see there are no sources, only assumptions). Munich is definitely moving to OpenOffice.org...
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,1110809,00. as p
If you go in to Preferences, Accounts, and then the Advanced section, there is an option "Automatically syncronize changed mail boxes". Is this what you're after? It works well for me.
I can relate to your concerns about the validity of an anonymous email. You'll be pleased to know that SCO has confirmed the authenticity of the email though they claim that the writer misunderstood Microsoft's involvement.
What I find interesting is that they are (apparently) planning to sue one of their own customers! How stupid would anyone have to be to sign a contract with them?
http://news.com.com/2100-1016_3-5167829.html?tag=s t_lh
The first target will be a company that has a Unix license from SCO already, giving SCO some contractual leverage in the case. McBride said. In addition, the suit will involve copyright infringement claims.
At least with MS you know what you're getting into. With Oracle it's about squeezing as much money as possible.
Doesn't that mean you know what you're getting in to with Oracle...?
I would (and do) use the Fedora legacy project.
At the University of Melbourne (Australia), we have access for staff and students available from around seventy base stations with a similar number planned for rollout during 2004.
The interesting thing about this economic theory when applied to politics is that it probably leads to a better outcome for society on average.
If you imagine cart A succeeds (i.e wins the election) while cart B goes out of business (loses the election), then all the customers (voters) on cart B's side of the beach are better off because A moved closer to the center.
Sure the outliers on the far side of A might be disappointed with A's move, but the majority of the beach will appreciate a location (political position) closer to the center.
Whoops, looks like I misread. USD$2500 is the base package - you need to pay for licenses on top of that...
I'm managing the project to choose a Linux distribution to officially support for staff at students at The University of Melbourne, Australia. We were going to select RH9 but now are likely to settle on Fedora or a completely non-commercial distribution like Debian.
Having said that, if we could get a site license for the AUD equivalent of USD$2500, ELWS could definitely be a viable option (particularly with the proxy server to reduce bandwidth charges).
Remember the Presidential campaign?
http://www.cnn.com/2000/ALLPOLITICS/stories/09/12/ bush.ad/
If you read the page you linked to, you'll find out why:
Or are they blocking Estrada because
and
and
Enron didn't give equally to both Republican and Democrats (from the information I could find) but it is a lot closer than I previously though.
From http://www.citizenworks.org/enrondonations/summary .php.
Enron was also the largest donator to George Bush in his run for the presidency.
From http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/1336960. stm.
You can use with iPhoto or access it as a removable drive in both OS X and Windows. See http://web.belkin.com/support/kb/kb.asp?a=2832 for more details.
What about when Microsoft said opening Windows source code could be damaging to US national security. Do the Chinese not count?
Does anyone have a copy of SCO's cease and desist letter that they can publish on Slashdot (even if anonymously)? I would definitely be interested in taking a look at it.
My reading of the context of the "insecure" was that it referred to the transmission of email data as well as username and password. Hotmail may make you log in via HTTPS but when you read your mail it is all via insecure HTTP.
We have those ports blocked at the border routers where I work (a major Australian university) and we've been hit from the inside. Once you have one infection it spreads VERY quickly from our experience.
So can those in the US please recall George Bush for creating a record deficit of (at least) US$455 billion? The rest of the world wants him recalled for other reasons, but any recall will do...
>> by-enlarge
:-)
>You've been reading too many spams. The correct expression is "by and large".
Shouldn't it be buy-enlarge?
I'm certainly not a supporter of the Taliban (or Islam, or any religion for that matter), but it's worth looking at how and why they came to power.
Support for the fundamentalist regime of the Taliban largely came from those who were despairing of the constant fighting and corruption of the warlords who ran the country. The Taliban promised an end to the fighting and corruption which they largely achieved through their extreme fundamentalism and strict control of society.
Since the US overthrew the Taliban, the situation has returned almost exactly to what it was prior to their rise to power. Any guesses as to what might happen in the future when the Afghanis again get sick of the corrupt warlords (particularly the Northern Alliance who might not be religious fundamentalists but are just as guilty of horrific acts)?
Repeat after me: "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it".
Even Fox News is reporting that Jessica was injured in an vehicle accident rather than by Iraqi gunfire.
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,91546,00.html
As (nearly) any Australian knows, there is nothing better for a hangover than Vegemite.
Vegemite is a by product of beer (i.e. it is taken out during the production). Therefore after drinking a lot of beer you feel bad simply because you are lacking the by product which was removed during production.
Conclusion? Eating Vegemite fixes hangovers.
I can't tell if you're serious or joking here, but monopolies are definitely bad if you're a consumer.
A company who has monopoly control over a market maximises its profit by increasing prices and reducing sale numbers.
In a competitive market companies are forced to maximise sales by reducing prices. Less profit for them, but cheaper prices for consumers.
Perhaps we should wait for more details before claiming the decision is stupid.
. as p
I believe the Gartner report is rubbish (read it carefully and you will see there are no sources, only assumptions). Munich is definitely moving to OpenOffice.org...
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,1110809,00