> Can you take this instead of metal-shop or home-ec to fufull your elective requirements?
Lets see...Metal shop to make a custom case that has room for all your drives and home-ec to learn how to cook using the heatsink from your overclocked CPU? If you take the classes concurently, you could make the case double as a stove.
I thought that Bill Gates (or was is MS) owned a portion (~15%???) of SCO. So if SCO is owned in part by Gates/MS, and SCO is supporting Caldera, then Gates/MS is indirectly supporting Caldera. Ironic isn't it. Reminds me of a saying about building your own coffin.
I would beg to differ. In many of the funerals that I have attended in the past few years, it is often brought up that the mourners need to celebrate the life of the deceased.
There is a difference between celebrating the life of someone and celebrating their death.
I've always considered Mandrake a derivative of Red Hat. I know it is its own distro, but wasn't it (or maybe still is) derived from RH?
> Can you take this instead of metal-shop or home-ec to fufull your elective requirements?
Lets see...Metal shop to make a custom case that has room for all your drives and home-ec to learn how to cook using the heatsink from your overclocked CPU? If you take the classes concurently, you could make the case double as a stove.
I thought that Bill Gates (or was is MS) owned a portion (~15%???) of SCO. So if SCO is owned in part by Gates/MS, and SCO is supporting Caldera, then Gates/MS is indirectly supporting Caldera. Ironic isn't it. Reminds me of a saying about building your own coffin.
Actually, the article didn't say they were using Red Hat. It said that they were going to use Red Flag. I read it wrong the first time also.
Quote: "The ministries would instead use 'Red Flag - Linux'"
>no loss of life is cause for celebration...
I would beg to differ. In many of the funerals that I have attended in the past few years, it is often brought up that the mourners need to celebrate the life of the deceased.
There is a difference between celebrating the life of someone and celebrating their death.