It's my oppinion, that whatever the program is designed to do it will always be the user who's responsible for the actual use of a program.
It can't be right that, as a programmer, I can be held responsible for what a user does with my software. Even if I developed a program that had no use appart from a crimminal one, I believe that it would still be the user whos responsibel, for the very simple reason that I did not force the user to use the program.
Even tools developed to crack passwords and breaking into systems can be put to good use; like checking your sites security.
Any tool can be mis-used regardless of its intentional use, so dont blame the person who created the tool, blame the person who used the tool to do wrong!
- Just my humble oppinion Jesper Juhl aka Wisdom Seeker
My favorites for coding would be: Slayer, Ministry, Black Sabbath, Anthrax, Konkrah, Metallica, Mercyfull fate, Iron Maiden, Deep purple, Dire Straits, Vivaldi & Mozart
The whole thing is IMNSHO quite silly. Forbiding words in domain names is just plain rediculous. This is typical of the americans, good thing you managed to get rid of it!
Reading stuff like this makes me ashamed to be a Linux user... Well, not exactely ashamed to be using it, but ashamed to be compared to mindles idiots who use Linux.
I run CivCTP on a IBM ThinkPad 600 (Pentium 133MMX with 64MB/RAM). I run it on Slackware 3.6 (kernel 2.0.36), and normally use AfterStep as my WM, and it runs just fine (the video is not completely smooth, but good enough). It's also completely playable if I run it while using KDE (and KDE's heavy on resources)...
Regards Jesper juhl
That's not so strange.
on
Linux 2.3.0
·
· Score: 2
The only difference between 2.2.8 and 2.3.0 is what will happen to the 2 trees in the future.
2.2.x is a stable series - Only bug fixes wil happen.
2.3.x is experimental - new features will start to appear.
Becourse, I never bought it. Not even once have I owned a copy of M$ WinSlow;-)
Slack's advanced packaging system
on
Slackware.com
·
· Score: 1
"Dave says its because of Slack's advanced packaging system *grin*."
In my oppinion, the.tgz format is not to be laughed at. It may not be very sofisticated, but it does the job. I personally find adding, removing, creating and managing Slackware.tgz packages, much easier than the.rpm format. It's a lot more flexible.
The above is my personal oppinion, I'm aware that people who favor other distributions will probably have a different oppinion, and recomend other package formats (such as.deb or.rpm).
It's my oppinion, that whatever the program is designed to do it will always be the user who's responsible for the actual use of a program.
It can't be right that, as a programmer, I can be held responsible for what a user does with my software.
Even if I developed a program that had no use appart from a crimminal one, I believe that it would still be the user whos responsibel, for the very simple reason that I did not force the user to use the program.
Even tools developed to crack passwords and breaking into systems can be put to good use; like checking your sites security.
Any tool can be mis-used regardless of its intentional use, so dont blame the person who created the tool, blame the person who used the tool to do wrong!
- Just my humble oppinion
Jesper Juhl aka Wisdom Seeker
My favorites for coding would be: Slayer, Ministry, Black Sabbath, Anthrax, Konkrah, Metallica, Mercyfull fate, Iron Maiden, Deep purple, Dire Straits, Vivaldi & Mozart
Here's what Netcraft has to say about it: www.alltheweb.com is running Apache/1.3.6 (Unix) PHP/3.0.11 on FreeBSD .
Both Apache and FreeBSD are well-proven OpenSource software projects. I imagine this is going to be very stable ;)
The whole thing is IMNSHO quite silly. Forbiding words in domain names is just plain rediculous. This is typical of the americans, good thing you managed to get rid of it!
Reading stuff like this makes me ashamed to be a Linux user... Well, not exactely ashamed to be using it, but ashamed to be compared to mindles idiots who use Linux.
I run CivCTP on a IBM ThinkPad 600 (Pentium 133MMX with 64MB/RAM). I run it on Slackware 3.6 (kernel 2.0.36), and normally use AfterStep as my WM, and it runs just fine (the video is not completely smooth, but good enough). It's also completely playable if I run it while using KDE (and KDE's heavy on resources)...
Regards
Jesper juhl
The only difference between 2.2.8 and 2.3.0 is what will happen to the 2 trees in the future.
2.2.x is a stable series - Only bug fixes wil happen.
2.3.x is experimental - new features will start to appear.
This is how it's always been...
This is what we need if PGP has to become more widely used!!!
Just registered for my free CD. I can't wait to get my hands on that one
I really enjoyed reading this. I'm glad there are some people who can retalliate without having to flame.
Nice piece of work!
- Jesper Juhl -
You should submit a bugreport (and a patch) til the linux-kernel mailing list.
Becourse, I never bought it. Not even once have I owned a copy of M$ WinSlow ;-)
"Dave says its because of Slack's advanced packaging system *grin*."
In my oppinion, the .tgz format is not to be laughed at. It may not be very sofisticated, but it does the job. .tgz packages, much easier than the .rpm format. It's a lot more flexible.
I personally find adding, removing, creating and managing Slackware
The above is my personal oppinion, I'm aware that people who favor other distributions will probably have a different oppinion, and recomend other package formats (such as .deb or .rpm).
Regards
Jesper Juhl
... I like the fact that he uses Slackware as a base for his tutorials ;-)
You should be ashamed of yourselves!
- Jesper Juhl