..with the amount of employers looking through social network sites for information on employees...surely that should be "and even look for unemployment"?
Just because people on Slashdot joke about it does not make it true. There are lots of jokes about Scotsman and sheep, but that does not mean sheep buggery is common and universal in Scotland. Duh.
I agree - from my own site stats, it seems like there are those people who stick with IE and those who use other browsers (its 99% Windows users). When the Opera free licence came out last time (the one-day, birthday offer thingy) I saw more of a change in firefox % than IE. Not that it was a huge drop anyway
Its good news anyway..more choice and competition and all that.
I am sure 'malicious workers' already have rights of access to files of vulnerable children. Putting everything in one database could make it easier to secure and to track who has access to such files (rather than on multiple smaller local authority databases).
Its not about openoffice particularly, its about having an open document format so that organisations can choose which office suite they think best suits without being concerned about whether they'll be able to send/receive properly formatted files.
Do you even know what electrolytes are?
Surely all the benzos in the water will help with that?
"They opened the source code.."
Another win for FOSS!
puteus vos es non
*awaits corrections*
..a txtspk version for the CLI?
Too right! It has to say something about how ready linux is for the ordinary person when someone who buys from PC World can install and run it.
Unless it was Linspire, of course.
..with the amount of employers looking through social network sites for information on employees...surely that should be "and even look for unemployment"?
...not having all the hype again? Not that I don't appreciate just about every other article being about something with 'i' in the front of it, mind.
Ooo..I'm really looking forward to them porting that one
The video and the talk of replicating made me think of this
For god's sake, KILL IT!
Terrorists are well known to avoid most CCTV cameras, but brazenly flout congestion charge rules.
You mean like..say..200+ Wine patches or paying for a bunch of people to work on FOSS code all summer?
Nah, washing machines, hoovers and kitchen sinks aren't exempt from VAT.
*runs away*
Well, if it makes it easier to create programs that'll sync between phone and linux OSes then I'd be pleased...
*Reboots to XP to sync WM5 again*
Is IQ, the meaningless and frequently circular measurement that it is, not assumed to be normally distributed then?
Shirley you mean, 1) Post bad "underpants gnome" style joke on /.
2) ????
3) Karma! ;)
Read the end of the article - they are rumoured to be porting Talk over.
Just because people on Slashdot joke about it does not make it true. There are lots of jokes about Scotsman and sheep, but that does not mean sheep buggery is common and universal in Scotland. Duh.
Nah, that's the Welsh
A rat with 5957 Comments in two days - impressive ;)
Have you noticed that most people have only started posting recently too?
..or Oolite as long as you don't use Windows.
Its quite good!
..that google suggest is available as a seperate extension (and is quite useful)
Percentage of total visits - a n% shift is the same whether thats IE or Konqueror.
I agree - from my own site stats, it seems like there are those people who stick with IE and those who use other browsers (its 99% Windows users). When the Opera free licence came out last time (the one-day, birthday offer thingy) I saw more of a change in firefox % than IE. Not that it was a huge drop anyway
Its good news anyway..more choice and competition and all that.
Ho Hum
I am sure 'malicious workers' already have rights of access to files of vulnerable children. Putting everything in one database could make it easier to secure and to track who has access to such files (rather than on multiple smaller local authority databases).
Its not about openoffice particularly, its about having an open document format so that organisations can choose which office suite they think best suits without being concerned about whether they'll be able to send/receive properly formatted files.