"There is a very wide coral response to omega—some are able to internally control the [relevant] chemistry," says Rau, who has collaborated with Caldeira in the past but did not participate in this research. Those tougher coral species could replace more vulnerable ones "rather than a wholesale loss" of coral. "
I guess his views were not in line with the study, so his results were not included.
I don't understand why GPG is not baked into everyone's mail client by now. All my geek friends have my public key. You should be using 4096 bit encryption and a public key server.
For someone in his position, he should know better than that.
Even an idiot can install Thunderbird and then put the Enigmail plugin on top of it.
There are already plugin authors that are writing the plugins as freeware. They mostly have daytime paying jobs. If Mozilla continues to throw them under the bus on a rapid revision cycle, we will loose more good plugins.
Case and point: FireGPG plugin, I use this daily.
The origional author decided to throw in the towel. However, he did release the source code to github.com/firegpg/firegpg.
Two fine people updated it to work with 4.0.1. Within weeks the nightly build managed to break this great plugin. Sure enough when 5.0 was released, the plugin is broken again, and there is now nobody willing and able to patch this fine piece of software.
When the next major security breach is found in FF 4.0.1, and I am forced to update to FF5, then I will also curse Mozilla.
They are going to alienate the core plugin authors, as this was the main reason for thier sucess over browsers.
"There is a very wide coral response to omega—some are able to internally control the [relevant] chemistry," says Rau, who has collaborated with Caldeira in the past but did not participate in this research. Those tougher coral species could replace more vulnerable ones "rather than a wholesale loss" of coral. "
I guess his views were not in line with the study, so his results were not included.
I don't understand why GPG is not baked into everyone's mail client by now. All my geek friends have my public key.
You should be using 4096 bit encryption and a public key server.
For someone in his position, he should know better than that.
Even an idiot can install Thunderbird and then put the Enigmail plugin on top of it.
There are already plugin authors that are writing the plugins as freeware. They mostly have daytime paying jobs.
If Mozilla continues to throw them under the bus on a rapid revision cycle, we will loose more good plugins.
Case and point: FireGPG plugin, I use this daily.
The origional author decided to throw in the towel. However, he did release the source code to github.com/firegpg/firegpg.
Two fine people updated it to work with 4.0.1. Within weeks the nightly build managed to break this great plugin. Sure enough when 5.0 was released, the plugin is broken again, and there is now nobody willing and able to patch this fine piece of software.
When the next major security breach is found in FF 4.0.1, and I am forced to update to FF5, then I will also curse Mozilla.
They are going to alienate the core plugin authors, as this was the main reason for thier sucess over browsers.