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User: Errtu76

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  1. Re:Vigilante circus. on NVIDIA Kills Online Store In Response To Hacker Claims · · Score: 1

    Yep, Monster 3D II indeed. My primary card was the same as you, but I invested in a Gravis Ultrasound card for music since I liked the Assembly demoscene and that was a must have :)

    And I wanted a big harddisk so I spent about $600 on a 2G Quantum Bigfoot ;)

    I think my phone now has better specs than my system back then, but yeah, gaming ruled!

    Also I upgraded my mobo and CPU (a 486DX2-80) to a P1 133 MHz so I could play Moto Racer without a problem.

  2. Re:Vigilante circus. on NVIDIA Kills Online Store In Response To Hacker Claims · · Score: 1

    :)

    I can still remember my Diamond Monster 3D card, Then later added a second one with the SLI(?) cable. Good old times.

  3. is there still time on Solar X-Flare Blasts Directly Toward Earth · · Score: 1

    to call Bruce WIllis?

  4. Re:What if it's "Sumo-e artist" instead of "Sumi-e on A Program Learns Oriental Ink Painting · · Score: 1

    The same. Just a lot bigger.

  5. Re:Conspiracy theory on NSA Claims It Would Violate Americans' Privacy To Say How Many of Us It Spied On · · Score: 1
  6. bring out your dead! on Black Death Discovered In Oregon · · Score: 1

    "I'm not dead!"

  7. take a techie and a salesperson to the customer on Ask Slashdot: How Best To Teach Programming To Salespeople? · · Score: 1

    Whenever we are dealing with a customer that isn't exactly sure what he/she wants, one of the salespeople would take a technician with him when first visiting the customer. That way all the really technical related questions get answered by the tech person, and if the salesperson is smart (cross your fingers) he'll pay attention so next time he'll be able to answer the question himself. Might take a few times before he manages this skill, and of course the tech person will have to invest some time, but in the end it really pays off. The salesperson will (hopefully) sell the product and the technical people can start right away without having to ask a lot of questions afterwards, or swearing at sales for selling something that they can't deliver.

  8. Re:What's the point? on Mandriva Not Shuttering Its Doors, Yet · · Score: 1

    How about, "I want something like Fedora, but which does not require a yearly upgrade that will inevitably break things?" Now, where might I find such a disto, without having to pay for it...

    You're not required to update, but for the sake of security/productivity it is advisible. However, there's one thing that doesn't work with RHEL/CentOS/SL and that's the major upgrade, like the one from 5 to 6. You just can't. You're required to reinstall the base from scratch. Something that Fedora (or Ubuntu, for that matter) can do. I've updated from F10 to F16 without things breaking.

    I use RHEL/CentOS/SL too though, but only for servers. Usually the lifetime of a major update cycle equals (or is bigger than) the lifetime of the hardware.

  9. We found a witch! on Data Engineer In Google Case Is Identified · · Score: 1

    May we burn her?

  10. Re:Way too confusing on Why Desktop Linux Hasn't Taken Off · · Score: 1

    I could moderate you down, but that wouldn't be fair. Instead I'll just comment and say I disagree with you. As a person who has been using Linux on his desktop for over 7 years now, I'm more familiar with that than the gazillion flavors of Windows (7) nowadays. At least I know that everybody agrees that Vista is terrible, but I wouldn't know the difference between Starter, Premium, Professional, Enterprise or Ultimate. In my opinion that's based on nil experience with any of these flavors, I think that's more confusing to people than a Linux distro flavor. I always say to new Linux users "give Ubuntu a try" and to the techies who want to experiment with brand-new software I tell them to try Fedora.

    And what you call disagreement among users/developers, I call variety. Don't like Ubuntu? Fine, give Fedora a try, or OpenSUSE or Debian. It's all good, it's all free and you (listen carefully now) can decide without spending money. I know really experienced Linux users who are so accustomed to using Debian, they can customize the entire system to look exactly the way they want to. Same goes for Ubuntu people and Fedora users. Don't stick with one distribution, try a lot of them, until you find one that you like. And even then, you aren't forced to stick with it. And even if you pick one that I can't 'support', I can tell you where you can go find help. Lots of fora and IRC chans filled with experienced people who can (and most often will) help you out.

    Linux _is_ simple to use. Depending on the distro and your personal preferences. I can make myself comfortable with Fedora and its gnome shell, but I'll probably have a slightly more difficult time trying to get used to Ubuntu's Unity. But that's just me. I'm glad other distributions exist that offer different things. Freedom to use any (or none) of them. Gotta love it.

  11. Re:What's best on Firefox 12 Released — Introduces Silent, Chrome-like Updater · · Score: 2

    Yeah, I get what you mean. And the only reason why I haven't switched over to Chrome is because I kind of like vimperator, which doesn't exist for Chrome. Or at least, not in the way vimperator for Firefox operates.

  12. 64K RAM SYSTEM 38911 BASIC BYTES FREE on Jack Tramiel, Founder of Commodore Business Machines, Dies At Age 83 · · Score: 1

    READY. ...

    Yeah, good memories. Thanks, Jack.

  13. probably a nameserver hack on Anonymous Claims To Have Defaced Hundreds of Chinese Government Sites · · Score: 2

    So they 'hacked' a DNS service and then claim to have defaced hundreds, if not thousands of websites. Big deal. Come back when you effectively disabled the Great Firewall.

  14. extensions? on Controlling GNOME 3 With Skeltrack · · Score: 1

    Those extensions now get a whole new function!

  15. Re:Microsoft CAUSES botnets on Microsoft Leads Sting Operation Against Zeus Botnets · · Score: 1

    You should've updated your system, check logfiles, run chkrootkit on a regular basis etc. Else, you're no better than people running unpatched Windows desktops.

  16. Re:It's Basic Infrastructure on Queensland Police to Look For Unsecured WiFi Spots · · Score: 1

    Glad you got it ;)

  17. Re:It's Basic Infrastructure on Queensland Police to Look For Unsecured WiFi Spots · · Score: 1

    Exactly!

    Mine is encrypted though with 'acomplicatedpassword' which is very easy to type so I never get the odd looks I get whenever someone asks me for the passphrase.

  18. Re:No, I'm New Here on Mystery Rising Within Mercury · · Score: 1

    Whoops. Wasn't your comment.

  19. Re:No, I'm New Here on Mystery Rising Within Mercury · · Score: 1

    I do, but your comment was just screaming for this reply. Sorry :)

  20. What's the name of the second game? on Amiga Returns With Lackluster Linux-Powered Mini PC · · Score: 1

    Anyone knows what the title of the second game that's been played? I remember it from a long time ago and would like to play it again. Even more if it's in Linux.

  21. Re:What about this is unusual? on Mystery Rising Within Mercury · · Score: 4, Funny

    You must be new here.

  22. great for in the office on Camera Can See Around Corners · · Score: 1

    Because you never know when the boss is evesdropping.

  23. Re:Where does this guy live? on Book Review: Google+: the Missing Manual · · Score: 1

    Actually people in Brazil found out that only they're are using Orkut so almost everyone who has an account there either has an extra one on Facebook or has left Orkut altogether in favor of FB, so that's something people from other countries are the most likely to use.

  24. Re:Beats real war any day on Iran Blamed For Major Cyberattack On BBC · · Score: 1, Interesting

    "Afghanistan was a response to 9/11"

    More like 9/11 was an excuse for Afghanistan.

  25. Re:Not a bad number on White House CIO Describes His 'Worst Day' Ever · · Score: 2

    If it's only send and retrieve mail, I'd suggest postfix & dovecot. If you want the 'fancy' stuff, give Zarafa a try. It's Dutch, so it must be good (vim, python, etc) :P and under the hood it still uses postfix.