"I mean, with an enormous amount of decimals calculated, you'd think there was some pretty cool sequences in there?"
Yes, there is!
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375 1
058209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170.. ....31337......1337...7175......717135...
..of doing this? Since they pay so well someone's gonna write that virus. They try to proove viruses can't be written for mac, but they will fail. They'll prove the opposite and they have to pay for it. Insane.
Debian stable is too old. It doesn't work on latest x86 and PPC hardware. Testing is fine for desktop, but for people who need stable and secure system for servers it's not an option. Since there is no security support for testing and there still are some bugs. So we really need stable releases more often. Doing it by dropping some architectures makes sense to me, if you can't buy the hardware anyway. Also developers can still work on their favourite architecture and release if they keep up to the speed those 4 most popular architectures are releasing. It just means that i386 won't be waiting if there are some bugs on m68k.
"I mean, with an enormous amount of decimals calculated, you'd think there was some pretty cool sequences in there?" Yes, there is! 3.141592653589793238462643383279502884197169399375 1
058209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170.. . ...31337... ...1337 ...7175... ...717135...
..of doing this?
Since they pay so well someone's gonna write that virus. They try to proove viruses can't be written for mac, but they will fail. They'll prove the opposite and they have to pay for it. Insane.
Am seeink it clearly now -you are not understandink- It's all relative. What you are perceivink depend on where are you lookink from.
AM NOT KIDDINK!!!
Debian stable is too old. It doesn't work on latest x86 and PPC hardware. Testing is fine for desktop, but for people who need stable and secure system for servers it's not an option. Since there is no security support for testing and there still are some bugs.
So we really need stable releases more often. Doing it by dropping some architectures makes sense to me, if you can't buy the hardware anyway. Also developers can still work on their favourite architecture and release if they keep up to the speed those 4 most popular architectures are releasing. It just means that i386 won't be waiting if there are some bugs on m68k.
And yes, I run debian testing