I see no problem with this. The existing nullsoft installer app will just be ported to the SDK and then everyone can just continue to install apps as they do now.
Yes it does, not now but material was eventually supposed to fall into public domain after a certain amount of time and then you can do whatever you want to with it. That's the problem the laws have been altered to the point that this is not happening anymore. Copyright was never intended to block people forever, only for a limited amount of time.
Port OSX to XEN, this would nicely solve the unknown hardware configuration problem and might even make a certain Redmond company consider taking a second look.
The idea is that over time a greater and greater percentage of the population becomes dissatisfied with the establised government (read: tyranical, opressive). Eventually a revolt occurs and if the segment that revolts is large enough and well equipped enough they succeed. This, of course, includes those people driving the Abrams. It's hard to shoot at the "rebels" when they may contain family. Therefore a percentage of the military would probably rebel also. This is how civil wars (read: revolution the the rebelling side) start. It worked for america. At the time no one thought Britain could be defeated but we did it mostly with civilian militia armed with nothing more than hunting rifles. It can be done, all it takes is enough people willing to die for a cause. If you lose you're branded a terrorist, traitor, "insert current term here". If you win you're a revolutionary. As for the "militia only" interperetation of the constitution, when it was written the militia was the people. Everyone carried there own equipment and when they were called up they dropped what they were doing at the time and went to war.
I see no problem with this. The existing nullsoft installer app will just be ported to the SDK and then everyone can just continue to install apps as they do now.
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
Yes it does, not now but material was eventually supposed to fall into public domain after a certain amount of time and then you can do whatever you want to with it. That's the problem the laws have been altered to the point that this is not happening anymore. Copyright was never intended to block people forever, only for a limited amount of time.
Port OSX to XEN, this would nicely solve the unknown hardware configuration problem and might even make a certain Redmond company consider taking a second look.
The idea is that over time a greater and greater percentage of the population becomes dissatisfied with the establised government (read: tyranical, opressive). Eventually a revolt occurs and if the segment that revolts is large enough and well equipped enough they succeed. This, of course, includes those people driving the Abrams. It's hard to shoot at the "rebels" when they may contain family. Therefore a percentage of the military would probably rebel also. This is how civil wars (read: revolution the the rebelling side) start. It worked for america. At the time no one thought Britain could be defeated but we did it mostly with civilian militia armed with nothing more than hunting rifles. It can be done, all it takes is enough people willing to die for a cause. If you lose you're branded a terrorist, traitor, "insert current term here". If you win you're a revolutionary. As for the "militia only" interperetation of the constitution, when it was written the militia was the people. Everyone carried there own equipment and when they were called up they dropped what they were doing at the time and went to war.
http://www.fwdout.net/