Apparenly -- from NY Time article -- new code and/or data being uploaded from Australia was interrupted. It may be that the FLASH was incompletely burned and/or corrupted. This is a common problem. The article refers to some checks made to get an image uploaded, but no details. Is this source public? It would be a good thing if many eyes examined the code for flaws. (The source should be available if it was funded by our tax dollars.)
there must be some certain-frequency signal in the "noise" that occurs in the noise for two durations: the duration of a morse dit and dah. Wouldn't an FFT and analysis of the relative amplitudes and durations suggest what the message is (to a person knowing morse code)?
Check this out:
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/technology/AP-Mass achusetts-Microsoft.html
A NY Times (reg. regquired, blah, blah...) link to an AP story about the state of MA wanting open source software for gov't purposes.
This story has been out for hours, I even tried submitting a story to Slashdot, but still nothing.
This is another nail in the MS coffin, so get your hammers, gang, and pound away.
Is there a successor to this (rpn "computer science" calculator (64-bits,too)). Mine's about 20 years old and crapped-out once, but I took it apart and put it back together (as well as I could) and, Hey! It's working again. Is there a 16C emulator anywhere?
I use 9.0. It is good. If you look at the Slack Book's HTML, you'll see that it was created with MS Word; is that telling?
I hope they soon get the 2.6 kernel going.
9.0 kernel builds and works with Gcc 3.X, which is more than some distros can claim.
I want Slack to have a "make world," like the BSDs, then I'd be set; although I must say that Slack generally uses stock sources, as opposed to patched-to-hell, like some others.
The indemnification program is limited to customers who receive a Linux distribution from HP, run it on HP hardware and have a support contract with HP.
This is "insurance." The revenue they get from the hardware and support contract will cover legal expenses, if any -- unlikely.
That is the answer. They should have outsourced a $7500 time and materials budget, then pocketed the spare $7500. Am I not right? OK, might have outsourced a $5000 budget, then kept $10000. Any lower bidders out there?
It's hard to short SCO now, because not too many institutions hold it long. When institutions hold a stock long, they often make shares available to brokers to borrow, so the brokers' customers can short them.
One assumes they bought BSD to plunder some techniques and standard API routines...
VxWorks has always depended heavily on BSD code. They may have been the first RT OS to offer tcp/ip networking -- courtesy of BSD, twenty or so years ago! As far as plundering techniques and standard APIs, VxWorks is a one-address-space-holds-all OS, like MS-DOS, in that respect. They have a follow-on, something like VxWorks AE that may support processes.
Are they related to P.J. Plauger?
Yahoo! Go for it.
Xfree86 got it from x.org. Can they encumber what they got?
A cool 2 million for a studio in one of Trump's towers.
Apparenly -- from NY Time article -- new code and/or data being uploaded from Australia was interrupted. It may be that the FLASH was incompletely burned and/or corrupted. This is a common problem. The article refers to some checks made to get an image uploaded, but no details. Is this source public? It would be a good thing if many eyes examined the code for flaws. (The source should be available if it was funded by our tax dollars.)
Doesn't linuxdevices.com have an interest in posting "success" stories? Why don't they ever offer "failure" stories?
As for alternatives, there are others beside ecos: rtems, itron, maybe more that are also available.
there must be some certain-frequency signal in the "noise" that occurs in the noise for two durations: the duration of a morse dit and dah. Wouldn't an FFT and analysis of the relative amplitudes and durations suggest what the message is (to a person knowing morse code)?
So, why do people use LabView for this?
Check this out: http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/technology/AP-Mass achusetts-Microsoft.html
A NY Times (reg. regquired, blah, blah ...) link to an AP story about the state of MA wanting open source software for gov't purposes.
This story has been out for hours, I even tried submitting a story to Slashdot, but still nothing.
This is another nail in the MS coffin, so get your hammers, gang, and pound away.
Is there a successor to this (rpn "computer science" calculator (64-bits,too)). Mine's about 20 years old and crapped-out once, but I took it apart and put it back together (as well as I could) and, Hey! It's working again. Is there a 16C emulator anywhere?
I use 9.0. It is good. If you look at the Slack Book's HTML, you'll see that it was created with MS Word; is that telling?
I hope they soon get the 2.6 kernel going.
9.0 kernel builds and works with Gcc 3.X, which is more than some distros can claim.
I want Slack to have a "make world," like the BSDs, then I'd be set; although I must say that Slack generally uses stock sources, as opposed to patched-to-hell, like some others.
Thanks, Patrick
This is "insurance." The revenue they get from the hardware and support contract will cover legal expenses, if any -- unlikely.
That is the answer. They should have outsourced a $7500 time and materials budget, then pocketed the spare $7500. Am I not right? OK, might have outsourced a $5000 budget, then kept $10000. Any lower bidders out there?
Going, going, sold American!
Open source crypto has vulnerabilites.
Closed source crypto has vulnerabilities.
Can't these problems be solved by using STL?
And when it preserves metadata, too.
We patiently await Reiser 6.0
Did you learn to write before you could read? Could you debug another's code if it was in your own area of "expertise?"
;-)
You can program but can't test and debug?
Where did you go to school? Just so we'll know
Is it dead simple because the patches may be incomplete? Does RPM/APT, et al., consider all the dependencies?
But that "lots of email" uses up bandwdith, without which the internet will die.
It's hard to short SCO now, because not too many institutions hold it long. When institutions hold a stock long, they often make shares available to brokers to borrow, so the brokers' customers can short them.
Is 32V free? I read that the court ruled that AT&T didn't properly copyright the material, so does that mean that we can use things from it?
You could try LynuxWorks' Bluecat and if that is not good enough they have a true realtime offering, LynxOS, which is ABI compatible with Linux.
One assumes they bought BSD to plunder some techniques and standard API routines...
VxWorks has always depended heavily on BSD code. They may have been the first RT OS to offer tcp/ip networking -- courtesy of BSD, twenty or so years ago! As far as plundering techniques and standard APIs, VxWorks is a one-address-space-holds-all OS, like MS-DOS, in that respect. They have a follow-on, something like VxWorks AE that may support processes.
-Rock
But five lines may be too much. The standard in some copyright/plagiarism matters has been a sequence of thiry identical characters.
Just DUMP IBM's contributions. That is the simplest way out.
You borgs are counting on help from the BSD community?
Surely there are more. No? Since affiliated is past participle of affiliate, the defs. under affiliate would be informative, also.