It's the same everywhere. What changes is who the special interest are, how people are coerced and a promotion of the idea that the cause justifies all means.
I went to an interview for a position in a well known audit firm (IT department). I was rejected on the basis of my personality test. I later learned from a friend working in the IT department that the position was filled by a relative of one of the managers in another department.
Google is both legally and morally correct in my opinion. They are employing people to cook, buy the raw materials legally and offer food to their employees. How would you like paying taxes for food you prepare at home?
I believe that all government-given rights are actually an illusion. I can't think of a single right that does not have exceptions. Take freedom of speech for example. You might speak your mind but the press can portray (all hail our corporate/government overlords) you as a lunatic so it becomes irrelevant what you are saying. Right to a fair trial? Ask your Japanese-born citizens during WW2 or potential terrorist citizens in more recent times. If basic rights can be repealed I think it's pointless to speak about rights at all.
That's baby corruption. The real pros make their competitors do the work through cut-throat sub-contracting and they get a commission. Either that or It's possible to be the cheapest yet you complete the project by sub-contracting all of it to the same people you were competing against in the first place.
How can you know which traits are those? What prevents pure "survival of the fittest" is that there is a lot of artificial selection going on. Factors like the income of your parents, culture you are raised in, basically anything that you cannot control makes the whole argument insignificant. Even traits which are really useful, depending on your location they may be considered flaws.
Many people (including myself) purchase hardware based on linux support. If there are no decent nvidia drivers those people can always go with amd. Also a lot of systems (STBs, low power pcs etc) come with linux or android pre-installed so nvidia needs linux support to convince the OEMs to go with them. I think nvidia has more to lose than linux users if they dropped support for newer kernels or offer a sub-optimal experience..
Tracking is usually cookie-based (ie uses information in the HTTP headers) so an HTTP header is the only logical place to specify that you do not want to be tracked. Web server logs are not suitable for tracking. At most they can tell you where the user came from (referrer) an ip and what he requested. Using only that information is very unlikely that any advertiser will be able to track you since the ip might be a company router, an ISP web proxy, an anoymous proxy etc etc.
Even if tracking information is batch updated from huge web server logs that contain http headers the advertiser can check for the header and not save the information. Technologically the idea is solid.
One of the main reasons companies get/24 is to allow them to have redundant links to the internet. How can multiple ISPs advertise a/25 without affecting other customers on the same/24?
I think you missed the parent's point. he way I read it is that proprietary off-the-self software is on its way out not proprietary software as a whole.
I also believe that this particular subset of proprietary software is in danger because off-the-shelf software tend to be generic and it's more likely that open-source software will perform the same task.
The more generic the open-source software, the more contributors it's likely to have. Over time it will have similar or better quality and more features than its proprietary counterparts.
The problem is that the runtimes for all those languages must be first installed on the browser.
For example a python runtime would be a minimum 4MB, ruby 6MB and so on. If you make them optional web developers will not bother using them if they will risk their sites not working.
I get lots of calls for Windows-related issues, very few for Mac OSX and nearly zero for Linux. This is definite proof that linux has less issues than OS X and far fewer than Windows. Discussion closed!
You don't even need to read binary. You can simply use wireshark or any other network monitoring tool. That's how closed source products get busted all the time for "calling home" etc. I personally doubt Google will force "calling home" on users without offering something in return (server-based bookmarks and history for example). In the end most users will choose features over privacy and Google will get their data with the user's consent.
I only use servers with remote management if they are far away. They are not too expensive and the investment usually pays off the first time your server doesn't come up (remote management $ plane ticket $ + overtime $).
It's the same everywhere. What changes is who the special interest are, how people are coerced and a promotion of the idea that the cause justifies all means.
I went to an interview for a position in a well known audit firm (IT department). I was rejected on the basis of my personality test. I later learned from a friend working in the IT department that the position was filled by a relative of one of the managers in another department.
There are less capable drivers we are just poor judges of our abilities.
Google is both legally and morally correct in my opinion. They are employing people to cook, buy the raw materials legally and offer food to their employees. How would you like paying taxes for food you prepare at home?
I believe that all government-given rights are actually an illusion. I can't think of a single right that does not have exceptions. Take freedom of speech for example. You might speak your mind but the press can portray (all hail our corporate/government overlords) you as a lunatic so it becomes irrelevant what you are saying. Right to a fair trial? Ask your Japanese-born citizens during WW2 or potential terrorist citizens in more recent times. If basic rights can be repealed I think it's pointless to speak about rights at all.
His broken English actually reinforce his point.
That's baby corruption. The real pros make their competitors do the work through cut-throat sub-contracting and they get a commission. Either that or It's possible to be the cheapest yet you complete the project by sub-contracting all of it to the same people you were competing against in the first place.
You are right I meant. In any case Wordpress will not comply.
Yeah right. Wordpress will get fined in the worst case. In case they comply they will lose a lot of bloggers. Nice try Prenda Law.
How can you know which traits are those? What prevents pure "survival of the fittest" is that there is a lot of artificial selection going on. Factors like the income of your parents, culture you are raised in, basically anything that you cannot control makes the whole argument insignificant. Even traits which are really useful, depending on your location they may be considered flaws.
Many people (including myself) purchase hardware based on linux support. If there are no decent nvidia drivers those people can always go with amd. Also a lot of systems (STBs, low power pcs etc) come with linux or android pre-installed so nvidia needs linux support to convince the OEMs to go with them. I think nvidia has more to lose than linux users if they dropped support for newer kernels or offer a sub-optimal experience..
I forgot about user agent :) but you get the point
Tracking is usually cookie-based (ie uses information in the HTTP headers) so an HTTP header is the only logical place to specify that you do not want to be tracked. Web server logs are not suitable for tracking. At most they can tell you where the user came from (referrer) an ip and what he requested. Using only that information is very unlikely that any advertiser will be able to track you since the ip might be a company router, an ISP web proxy, an anoymous proxy etc etc. Even if tracking information is batch updated from huge web server logs that contain http headers the advertiser can check for the header and not save the information. Technologically the idea is solid.
One of the main reasons companies get /24 is to allow them to have redundant links to the internet. How can multiple ISPs advertise a /25 without affecting other customers on the same /24?
The data was acquired illegally so it wouldn't be admissible in court for other cases.
I also believe that this particular subset of proprietary software is in danger because off-the-shelf software tend to be generic and it's more likely that open-source software will perform the same task.
The more generic the open-source software, the more contributors it's likely to have. Over time it will have similar or better quality and more features than its proprietary counterparts.
There are numerous examples of this.
This is why the web standardised on one language.
I get lots of calls for Windows-related issues, very few for Mac OSX and nearly zero for Linux. This is definite proof that linux has less issues than OS X and far fewer than Windows. Discussion closed!
Tortoisegit. Haven't used it so I can't tell you how stable or complete it is.
Another reason is that the bitkeeper license prohibits users to work on competing products.
Thanks to inflation by the time they are 400 they wont be rich any more.
Socialism != communism.
Just get a controller with battery-backed RAM (the more the better). Your system will be cheaper, more reliable, and only slightly slower.
You don't even need to read binary. You can simply use wireshark or any other network monitoring tool. That's how closed source products get busted all the time for "calling home" etc. I personally doubt Google will force "calling home" on users without offering something in return (server-based bookmarks and history for example). In the end most users will choose features over privacy and Google will get their data with the user's consent.
I only use servers with remote management if they are far away. They are not too expensive and the investment usually pays off the first time your server doesn't come up (remote management $ plane ticket $ + overtime $).