Has it been asked yet why Linux supporters just can't buy control of SCO, fire the current management and just OpenSource the whole mess? Their market cap is about 350million.... How many people (including IBM) might just support a complete take-over? The market is open tomorrow, perfect gift to give your favorite geeks, control of the.h files.
I wonder how many carpenters there are in the US? Most programmers are little more than carpenters who don't have to provide their own tools... "You buy me that shiny 64-bit hammer and I'll *pound* nails with it, Baby!"
No, the constitution is pretty clear, no right not granted the gov't is still reserved to you and me. Privacy has changed meanings since 1776, I think.
But anonymity is interesting. Do you think anonymity was more or less prevalent in the Framer's time? I suspect, since even in the largest cities of the time, people knew a lot more about those living around them. Anonymity seems to be a artifact of modern times, not some lost right. So the wonders of modern communication, the onset of the Global Village, brings with it all the same wonderfulness of living in a grass hut next to a couple of newlyweds. You don't get to live in a village, global of otherwise, anonymously.
my buddy, ClevertronAl, has decided that the first OS was whatever source code that was copied from the first computer program to the second; no matter what the actual hardware (or wetware?) was.
a link to this website? http://ci.sheboygan.wi.us/ ??
Has it been asked yet why Linux supporters just can't buy control of SCO, fire the current management and just OpenSource the whole mess? Their market cap is about 350million.... How many people (including IBM) might just support a complete take-over? The market is open tomorrow, perfect gift to give your favorite geeks, control of the .h files.
I wonder how many carpenters there are in the US? Most programmers are little more than carpenters who don't have to provide their own tools... "You buy me that shiny 64-bit hammer and I'll *pound* nails with it, Baby!"
No, the constitution is pretty clear, no right not granted the gov't is still reserved to you and me. Privacy has changed meanings since 1776, I think.
But anonymity is interesting. Do you think anonymity was more or less prevalent in the Framer's time? I suspect, since even in the largest cities of the time, people knew a lot more about those living around them. Anonymity seems to be a artifact of modern times, not some lost right. So the wonders of modern communication, the onset of the Global Village, brings with it all the same wonderfulness of living in a grass hut next to a couple of newlyweds. You don't get to live in a village, global of otherwise, anonymously.
my buddy, ClevertronAl, has decided that the first OS was whatever source code that was copied from the first computer program to the second; no matter what the actual hardware (or wetware?) was.