I truly find it shocking that 90% of the top postings I see are about shooting or sueing this neighbour. Nobody with a brain online anymore? Nobody wondering about this situation?
Nobody asking himself if this is truly meant as an attempt to annoy? Could it perhaps be possible that old man has a mosquito problem?
Has the poster actually spoken to the man? How did this conflict start? What was the Posters part? What can/he/ do to resolve it? Do you truly believe that the elderly person wants to spend his last days in conflict with his neighborhood?
Incredible, how many of you resolve to violence and lawyers. Both are so... expensive (in every way thinkable)!
But when the United States Constitution was framed, the Founding Fathers saw no need to explicitly spell out the right to a private conversation. That would have been silly. Two hundred years ago, all conversations were private. If someone else was within earshot, you could just go out behind the barn and have your conversation there. No one could listen in without your knowledge. The right to a private conversation was a natural right, not just in a philosophical sense, but in a law-of-physics sense, given the technology of the time.
Definately consider switching to an A/D setup if you have not already started migrating users from Netware to A/D.
Your use of the word "Netware" implies you're mixing up Novell Netware (the operating system) with Novell eDirectory (the directory service).
With A/D and cool projects like OpenLDAP you can do some pretty neat web based things with Java or PHP.
...where as this is not possible with Novell eDirectory? I'm doing some pretty neat things with Bash and Novell eDirectory. Haven't tried it with PHP, but I'd be hard pressed to believe that this is not possible. A webportal based around Novell eDirectory should be peachy. Switching from a solid setup of Novell to AD (Active Disaster) is the last thing I would ever ever do.
OpenLDAP however.... (but that would be because of my open source zealotery;-))
Ps: we're running Citrix and Novell without a problem. Various webservices authenticate to the eDir (via LDAP interface) and all works like a charm. Think Apache mod-ldap-userdir, RequestTracker, KnowledgeTree DMS and subversion. I'd be at a loss without eDir.
Container ships don't have to move cargo from one part of the ship to another, on a regular basis.
It's an analogy. Therefor, it is dead easy to make the comparison seem ludicrous, even if it does hold water (pun intended). You could try to discuss T'baums opinions, instead of discussing his analogy. It's better sport, methinks.
Don't get me wrong: I work in spaceresearch at the moment. But this is ridiculous. We've got tens of thousands of people right here on *earth* in need of surgeons every day.
Couldn't this tech be used in places like Pakistan, like, tomorrow?
I'd love to know where you get your info. I get mine from Netcraft. Like this one of 14th of march, 2005, stating:
"Among the other distributions, Debian has the fastest growth in absolute terms, and is secure for now in second place. But some of the smaller distributions are growing faster relative to their existing user base. Gentoo continues to roughly double each year, albeit from a low base. Mandrake's recent acquisition of Conectiva will boost it only slightly, as there are only a few thousand Conectiva sites in the survey; Mandrake's own growth is more significant."[1]
My bad for not clicking the link.
Apart from that oversight, it is *still* ridiculous reach for guns and lawyers over this.
I truly find it shocking that 90% of the top postings I see are about shooting or sueing this neighbour. Nobody with a brain online anymore? Nobody wondering about this situation?
Nobody asking himself if this is truly meant as an attempt to annoy? Could it perhaps be possible that old man has a mosquito problem?
Has the poster actually spoken to the man? How did this conflict start? What was the Posters part? What can /he/ do to resolve it? Do you truly believe that the elderly person wants to spend his last days in conflict with his neighborhood?
Incredible, how many of you resolve to violence and lawyers. Both are so... expensive (in every way thinkable)!
You should read this: http://www.philzimmermann.com/EN/essays/WhyIWroteP GP.html
A quote:
But when the United States Constitution was framed, the Founding Fathers saw no need to explicitly spell out the right to a private conversation. That would have been silly. Two hundred years ago, all conversations were private. If someone else was within earshot, you could just go out behind the barn and have your conversation there. No one could listen in without your knowledge. The right to a private conversation was a natural right, not just in a philosophical sense, but in a law-of-physics sense, given the technology of the time.
-- mverwijsOf course, this [1] tells me that it, in fact, *is* a i386 machine. So parent is *wrong*:
[1] http://db.debian.org/machines.cgi?host=gluck
So they hacked in, and only ran x86 code? Sounds like a script kiddie to me.
/me ponders on the enormity of that thought.
Definately consider switching to an A/D setup if you have not already started migrating users from Netware to A/D.
Your use of the word "Netware" implies you're mixing up Novell Netware (the operating system) with Novell eDirectory (the directory service).
With A/D and cool projects like OpenLDAP you can do some pretty neat web based things with Java or PHP.
...where as this is not possible with Novell eDirectory? I'm doing some pretty neat things with Bash and Novell eDirectory. Haven't tried it with PHP, but I'd be hard pressed to believe that this is not possible. A webportal based around Novell eDirectory should be peachy. Switching from a solid setup of Novell to AD (Active Disaster) is the last thing I would ever ever do.
OpenLDAP however.... (but that would be because of my open source zealotery ;-))
Ps: we're running Citrix and Novell without a problem. Various webservices authenticate to the eDir (via LDAP interface) and all works like a charm. Think Apache mod-ldap-userdir, RequestTracker, KnowledgeTree DMS and subversion. I'd be at a loss without eDir.
I've simply got tired of all this ideologic stuff.
Folks, this is coming from a guy who wrote:
Just imagine that if every application and every game were coded cross-platform everybody just could go into any shop and buy any computer they like.
Tired of ideologic stuff indeed.
Container ships don't have to move cargo from one part of the ship to another, on a regular basis.
It's an analogy. Therefor, it is dead easy to make the comparison seem ludicrous, even if it does hold water (pun intended). You could try to discuss T'baums opinions, instead of discussing his analogy. It's better sport, methinks.
> Would have made more sense to me anyway.
You must be one of those rare emacs-users I keep hearing about.
Don't get me wrong: I work in spaceresearch at the moment. But this is ridiculous. We've got tens of thousands of people right here on *earth* in need of surgeons every day.
Couldn't this tech be used in places like Pakistan, like, tomorrow?
Ok, but does bash or ksh run on windows? This is for their own OS, not unix.
It does natively (no cygwin) with Unxtools for Windows! Eventhough sh.exe is zsh, not bash of ksh.
It's the first thing I install on a Windows machine.
I'd love to know where you get your info. I get mine from Netcraft. Like this one of 14th of march, 2005, stating:
"Among the other distributions, Debian has the fastest growth in absolute terms, and is secure for now in second place. But some of the smaller distributions are growing faster relative to their existing user base. Gentoo continues to roughly double each year, albeit from a low base. Mandrake's recent acquisition of Conectiva will boost it only slightly, as there are only a few thousand Conectiva sites in the survey; Mandrake's own growth is more significant."[1]
[1]http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2005/03/14/ fedora_makes_rapid_progress.html
Please, people: stop the panic. T'was only one year ago that Debian was the "fastest growing distribution"[1] according to the almighty Netcraft.
And all of a sudden it's dying?
Please....
Kind regards...
Maarten
[1] http://news.netcraft.com/archives/2004/01/28/debia n_fastest_growing_linux_distribution.html
From the Xen homepage (bottom): "Work on Xen has been supported by UK EPSRC grant GR/S01894, Intel Research, HP Labs and Microsoft Research. "
So... why should Microsoft worry again?
Obviously. This firm plans to make money *selling* the poor animals.
They would be creating their own competition by not neutering them.