Maybe someone should make a complaint to the SEC? Am I the only one that thinks that Dairl and friends have been ripping off SCO investors and are now using FUD to get more investors to rip off. Then, at the end, when they lose everything, it becomes an easy way to dispose of the "Body" of SCO. Somewhat similar to the play in a movie called "The producers." It's Just Enron again, with a smaller company.
Worse than being "Not a Techie" she runs the school webserver on windows. ...
Connected to www.birdville.k12.tx.us.
...
Escape character is '^]'.
helo
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
Date: Thu, 08 Jan 2004 13:48:41 GMT
Content-Type: text/html
Content-Length: 87
While the senario you describe would happen to some extent, I think that there are two most likely outcomes of the SCO case...
1) SCO loses compleatly.
In this case there is no need to do anything.
2) Some but not much code is ordered purged.
Kernel Gurus will spend thier time purging that code that may be ordered removed.
I can't really see anything like a total victory for SCO.
Maybe someone should make a complaint to the SEC?
Am I the only one that thinks that Dairl and friends have been ripping off SCO investors and are now using FUD to get more investors to rip off.
Then, at the end, when they lose everything, it becomes an easy way to dispose of the "Body" of SCO.
Somewhat similar to the play in a movie called "The producers." It's Just Enron again, with a smaller company.