All of these features sound interesting. But, what made firefox great was the fact that it removed all of the bloat. This seems like the beginning of the end.
That is very narrowminded view of things. Just because they use it at work does not mean they need to take it home with them. And, linux does not need that to happen for it to be successful. If linux works for Ford... other IT shops might embrace it and use it in more corporate settings... creating jobs and revenue for the linux community.
If a company like Burlington had not done what they did in 1999... no way a big slow (yet powerful) company like Ford would be doing what they are doing in 2003.
you think you are cashless, but really you are just passing the buck along to someone else (in most cases, your bank.) For example, two thirds of the "online bill payments" you send end up as checks that get sent off to somebody to be cashed.
All of these features sound interesting. But, what made firefox great was the fact that it removed all of the bloat. This seems like the beginning of the end.
That is very narrowminded view of things. Just because they use it at work does not mean they need to take it home with them. And, linux does not need that to happen for it to be successful. If linux works for Ford ... other IT shops might embrace it and use it in more corporate settings ... creating jobs and revenue for the linux community.
... no way a big slow (yet powerful) company like Ford would be doing what they are doing in 2003.
If a company like Burlington had not done what they did in 1999
you think you are cashless, but really you are just passing the buck along to someone else (in most cases, your bank.) For example, two thirds of the "online bill payments" you send end up as checks that get sent off to somebody to be cashed.