Personally, I use e107, but its missing a built in photo gallery. Most family sites want to share pictures. Also the banner ad's are a little weak, and theming could be easier. But all around, I like it better than Drupal.
Ubuntu, Mandriva, Knoppix, Red Hat (Tho RPM sucks), Linspire (but Apt-get is fucked on it), Debian (kinda with a little poking around)
2) Server distros >> Slackware, Debian.
3) BS distros that don't work >>Gentoo (Grub would not find my kernel), *BSD (I know it's not linux, and I din't really do a lot of experimentation on them, so I may be unfairly rating it)
In this world of fantasy (which we do not live in) it would be nice...however I'd much rather my tax dollars going towards more enviromental regulations and research than some high tech sci-fi wonder.
This has nothing to do with socialism. Socialism includes state housing, healthcare, and welfare. What you are thinking of is right wing authoritarianism, also known as facism. Please use proper terminology when trying to state a flame war over political ideology.
No, he was a genius because he was...simple as that. He understood the value of AC. After all, Edison was the better scientist so that's why the SI unit of flux density (or field intensity) for magnetic fields (also called the magnetic induction) would be called the Edison.
Anything fairly new should be alright, I think the big problem is your pipe size. I mean if you have 30,000 new connections and only 300 kbs, its not goign to transfer data very well.
THere is a program (google for it) called AM-Deadlink. It will check for dupes and dead links, and redirection pages too. It also works for Firefox, Mozilla, Opera and IE.
Why shouldn't they be allowed ot have their websites maintained in some fasion? They should be allowed to vote as citizens of a free country, so why can't they let their freedom of speech ring on the Internet, given the assumption that this would not comprimise safety or order?
to be honoest, if all it broke on my machine was firewire I'd be okay, but it also takes down the internet while it's at it, forcing me to have to restart the dhcp service about every 30 seconds or so for it to actually allow me to get out on the net.
Has anyone else had this problem, if so how did oyu solve it? (sorry, I'm a Debian person, not an XP person.)
I know how this conversation is going to go:
A: "Debian is all old!" B: "Yes, but it's stable and it rulez in professional environments where you can't crash" C: "Um, but Red Hat has pro support, if you're a pro" B: "You can buy support from vendors" D: "Don't people realize stable means stable, and testing means testing and it's wonderful that there are so many options?" E: "My Gentoo system rox!" A,C,D: link to sites like funroll-loops.org F: Hypes up debian-based Knoppix. G: Hypes up debian-based Ubuntu. A: "Debian testing is still old, I need new" B: 'You could try gentoo, you unfaithful kid". yadda yadda yadda.
I would like to be the first to say "duh". Debian is old. Despite it being stable, it's often a good idea to have the newest programs to keep up with the newest technologies.
However, I do find that using a netinstall version of the "testing" release tends to keep up to date with most packages.
I can see how this thread is bound to play out....
A: "Debian is all old!" B: "Yes, but it's stable and it rulez in professional environments where you can't crash" C: "Um, but Red Hat has pro support, if you're a pro" B: "You can buy support from vendors" D: "Don't people realize stable means stable, and testing means testing and it's wonderful that there are so many options?" E: "My Gentoo system rox!" A,C,D: link to sites like funroll-loops.org F: Hypes up debian-based Knoppix. G: Hypes up debian-based Ubuntu. A: "Debian testing is still old, I need new" B: 'You could try gentoo, you unfaithful kid". yadda yadda yadda. It's funny, laugh.
I've seen it work. My high school grade 11 physics teacher did it for us. He used a standard red laser (not a laser pointer), and a card with some black bars. He fired the laser through one of the black bars that had a space between them the size of the wavelength. The results lead to a bunch of dots on the chalkboard.
Yea, jsut like my wife ;)
Personally, I use e107, but its missing a built in photo gallery. Most family sites want to share pictures. Also the banner ad's are a little weak, and theming could be easier. But all around, I like it better than Drupal.
Coppermine gallery?
and there are many Themes and Styles.
From my perspective:
1) Desktop distros
Ubuntu, Mandriva, Knoppix, Red Hat (Tho RPM sucks), Linspire (but Apt-get is fucked on it), Debian (kinda with a little poking around)
2) Server distros
>> Slackware, Debian.
3) BS distros that don't work
>>Gentoo (Grub would not find my kernel), *BSD (I know it's not linux, and I din't really do a lot of experimentation on them, so I may be unfairly rating it)
But thats my opinon from whwere I stand.
I like E107. It's very useful and customizable and has a great theme and plugin developer community.
for me it suits everything from community sites, to corporate sites.
In this world of fantasy (which we do not live in) it would be nice...however I'd much rather my tax dollars going towards more enviromental regulations and research than some high tech sci-fi wonder.
Other then 13 year old girls, who uses Neopets anymore? It's only fitting MTV bought it.
So there is hope for my coworkers after all!
Fucking socialist bastards.
This has nothing to do with socialism. Socialism includes state housing, healthcare, and welfare. What you are thinking of is right wing authoritarianism, also known as facism. Please use proper terminology when trying to state a flame war over political ideology.
No, he was a genius because he was...simple as that. He understood the value of AC. After all, Edison was the better scientist so that's why the SI unit of flux density (or field intensity) for magnetic fields (also called the magnetic induction) would be called the Edison.
Way to falsely argue!
Indeed, That is why Tesla is a genius.
Anything fairly new should be alright, I think the big problem is your pipe size. I mean if you have 30,000 new connections and only 300 kbs, its not goign to transfer data very well.
I don't care about the price fixing of RAM, when are they goign to kick the asses of the gas companies for price fixing?
THere is a program (google for it) called AM-Deadlink. It will check for dupes and dead links, and redirection pages too. It also works for Firefox, Mozilla, Opera and IE.
Why shouldn't they be allowed ot have their websites maintained in some fasion? They should be allowed to vote as citizens of a free country, so why can't they let their freedom of speech ring on the Internet, given the assumption that this would not comprimise safety or order?
yes.
to be honoest, if all it broke on my machine was firewire I'd be okay, but it also takes down the internet while it's at it, forcing me to have to restart the dhcp service about every 30 seconds or so for it to actually allow me to get out on the net. Has anyone else had this problem, if so how did oyu solve it? (sorry, I'm a Debian person, not an XP person.)
when it comes to avoiding intellectual property, I have this plan...but if I told you, I'd have to kill you.
I know how this conversation is going to go:
A: "Debian is all old!"
B: "Yes, but it's stable and it rulez in professional environments where you can't crash"
C: "Um, but Red Hat has pro support, if you're a pro"
B: "You can buy support from vendors"
D: "Don't people realize stable means stable, and testing means testing and it's wonderful that there are so many options?"
E: "My Gentoo system rox!"
A,C,D: link to sites like funroll-loops.org
F: Hypes up debian-based Knoppix.
G: Hypes up debian-based Ubuntu.
A: "Debian testing is still old, I need new"
B: 'You could try gentoo, you unfaithful kid".
yadda yadda yadda.
laugh, becasue it's true.
What? No Douglas Adams? He was my favourite
Mod parent down as a troll, I'm on Shaw and I can assure you Bit torrent is going strong.
I took the blue pill
fuckin' A! you had beetter be +5 funny when I come back, that made me laugh out loud.
I would like to be the first to say "duh". Debian is old. Despite it being stable, it's often a good idea to have the newest programs to keep up with the newest technologies.
However, I do find that using a netinstall version of the "testing" release tends to keep up to date with most packages.
I can see how this thread is bound to play out....
A: "Debian is all old!"
B: "Yes, but it's stable and it rulez in professional environments where you can't crash"
C: "Um, but Red Hat has pro support, if you're a pro"
B: "You can buy support from vendors"
D: "Don't people realize stable means stable, and testing means testing and it's wonderful that there are so many options?"
E: "My Gentoo system rox!"
A,C,D: link to sites like funroll-loops.org
F: Hypes up debian-based Knoppix.
G: Hypes up debian-based Ubuntu.
A: "Debian testing is still old, I need new"
B: 'You could try gentoo, you unfaithful kid".
yadda yadda yadda. It's funny, laugh.
I've seen it work. My high school grade 11 physics teacher did it for us. He used a standard red laser (not a laser pointer), and a card with some black bars. He fired the laser through one of the black bars that had a space between them the size of the wavelength. The results lead to a bunch of dots on the chalkboard.