Of course, the silent treatment could be while they argue with Broadcom about who should be supplying what. It appears that most of the files in the Firmware are supplied by Broadcom - so shouldn't they be releasing the code on their site rather than Linksys.
The WRT54G is based on the BCM94710, and that is supplied with the OneDriver(tm) infrastructure support for Linux and VxWorks. All 54g(tm) products use Broadcom chipsets, and so are likely to be liable under the same conditions.
Linksys (www.linksys.com), Buffalo (www.buffalotech.com) , Belkin (www.belkin.com) all provide 54g infrastructure hardware.
The Broadcom client OneDriver(tm) software supports Microsoft platforms only.
http://www.broadcom.com/docs/AirForceFam.pdf
OneDriver & 54g are trademarks of Broadcom.
(just so they don't complain at me).
Bands do sell at their concerts, however - the band has to buy the CDS off the record company in order to sell them at the gig. (Those that are with record companies). Sometimes the company might setup a stall and sell them themselves. In the end, the only way round this is to remove the record companies. After all, they are basically venture capitalists who specialise in entertainment.
We've had the basics of transmitting data over powerlines for a while.
Baby monitors work that way - which is why you can use them in some of your neighbours houses to monitor the baby at home (if they are on the same phase as you).
There have been LAN versions of "data over power" in the past - the only new thing is that its a MAN/WAN system now, which is good.
I live on the coast, miles from anyone else, and fairly close to the side of a large grantite mountain. I have enough trouble getting TV signals - so no IP via satellite for me, or DSL. I'm lucky if I get 40Kbs from the modem.
The main challenge was not being able to throw hardware resources at the problem.
Managing to fit everything in - and tweaking the hardware you had. You programmed what was needed in the package - not what you thought was a cool idea. Once everything that was needed was in - THEN you added the cool stuff:-)
You look at the size that VisiCalc takes up (less than 30k) and then look at what Excel and other spreadsheets take up. They still to the same things and 90% of the extras people don't use anyway.
Lets get back to clean coding without the bloat.
Because you've let the terrorists win.
By changing society and your lifstyle to accomadate the terrorists, you've lost since their intention is to disrupt your lives.
Look to what the founding fathers of the USA said. Look in the Constitution. People died to allow the Constitution to be created and in its support, and now the population seem content to just let it be ripped up for the sake of 'security'.
"They that can give up liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
And the first this Bush has done is ALLOW the largest terrorist act in the world to happen. Many allies - including the likes of Germany (using information from the same sources as available to the US) warned about 9-11 in the June before it happened.
He's now started a war and destroyed the integrity of the UN, ignored International Law and by saying its perfectly legal as a "pre-emtive defensive strike" for the likes of North Korea to nuke Washington because the USA has threatened them. They can say it was a pre-emptive strike to stop the USA attacking them in the future.
Clinton - Israel-Palastine agreements, Northern Ireland, various international trading agreements. He didn't bin the Kyoto Agreement on the Environment where as Bush binned it and allowed more pollution from the Energy Industry buddies.
But in the US you can change and morph the charges - look at the DMCA charges against Elcom and the Bnetd people. They kept changing the Elcom charges, and when they first charged Bnetd, they kept changing the charges.
Plus, you have always been able to change the charges during a trial, as long as both sides agree.
Re:64bit matters, for Google, too
on
Forget Moore's Law?
·
· Score: 2, Insightful
64bit has been here for a while, called Alpha Processors and they work very nicely.
Why stay stuck in the Intel world? There's more to computers that what you buy from Dell.
Of course, the silent treatment could be while they argue with Broadcom about who should be supplying what. It appears that most of the files in the Firmware are supplied by Broadcom - so shouldn't they be releasing the code on their site rather than Linksys. The WRT54G is based on the BCM94710, and that is supplied with the OneDriver(tm) infrastructure support for Linux and VxWorks. All 54g(tm) products use Broadcom chipsets, and so are likely to be liable under the same conditions. Linksys (www.linksys.com), Buffalo (www.buffalotech.com) , Belkin (www.belkin.com) all provide 54g infrastructure hardware. The Broadcom client OneDriver(tm) software supports Microsoft platforms only. http://www.broadcom.com/docs/AirForceFam.pdf OneDriver & 54g are trademarks of Broadcom. (just so they don't complain at me).
Bands do sell at their concerts, however - the band has to buy the CDS off the record company in order to sell them at the gig. (Those that are with record companies).
Sometimes the company might setup a stall and sell them themselves.
In the end, the only way round this is to remove the record companies. After all, they are basically venture capitalists who specialise in entertainment.
We've had the basics of transmitting data over powerlines for a while.
Baby monitors work that way - which is why you can use them in some of your neighbours houses to monitor the baby at home (if they are on the same phase as you).
There have been LAN versions of "data over power" in the past - the only new thing is that its a MAN/WAN system now, which is good.
I live on the coast, miles from anyone else, and fairly close to the side of a large grantite mountain. I have enough trouble getting TV signals - so no IP via satellite for me, or DSL. I'm lucky if I get 40Kbs from the modem.
The main challenge was not being able to throw hardware resources at the problem. Managing to fit everything in - and tweaking the hardware you had. You programmed what was needed in the package - not what you thought was a cool idea. Once everything that was needed was in - THEN you added the cool stuff :-)
You look at the size that VisiCalc takes up (less than 30k) and then look at what Excel and other spreadsheets take up. They still to the same things and 90% of the extras people don't use anyway.
Lets get back to clean coding without the bloat.
I thought in this modern age the term is "shock and awe". It can't be terrorism if we are doing it.
Because you've let the terrorists win. By changing society and your lifstyle to accomadate the terrorists, you've lost since their intention is to disrupt your lives. Look to what the founding fathers of the USA said. Look in the Constitution. People died to allow the Constitution to be created and in its support, and now the population seem content to just let it be ripped up for the sake of 'security'. "They that can give up liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." Benjamin Franklin
And the first this Bush has done is ALLOW the largest terrorist act in the world to happen. Many allies - including the likes of Germany (using information from the same sources as available to the US) warned about 9-11 in the June before it happened. He's now started a war and destroyed the integrity of the UN, ignored International Law and by saying its perfectly legal as a "pre-emtive defensive strike" for the likes of North Korea to nuke Washington because the USA has threatened them. They can say it was a pre-emptive strike to stop the USA attacking them in the future. Clinton - Israel-Palastine agreements, Northern Ireland, various international trading agreements. He didn't bin the Kyoto Agreement on the Environment where as Bush binned it and allowed more pollution from the Energy Industry buddies.
But in the US you can change and morph the charges - look at the DMCA charges against Elcom and the Bnetd people. They kept changing the Elcom charges, and when they first charged Bnetd, they kept changing the charges.
Plus, you have always been able to change the charges during a trial, as long as both sides agree.
64bit has been here for a while, called Alpha Processors and they work very nicely.
Why stay stuck in the Intel world? There's more to computers that what you buy from Dell.