That's the kind of crap kids listen to these days, unfortunately.
Teens want that instant gratification of hearing the latest song. Adults don't care as much about that. And geeks actually care about how the music is encoded.
Do they at least give Clippy a makeover or something? A 3D talking Clippy that dances to your music.. Come on Microsoft, find a way to make your software take up more processing power and system resources. That's what you're good at.
Exactly is right. Anyway, they should have these machines locked down in a certain way, if it does not provide total security, at least it will strongly discouage anybody to tamper with it, eg: bios passwords.
This reminds me of the kid that also decided certain rules didn't apply to him, and went and installed one of those SETI@Home type apps on every computer at his workplace.
The America Online (not AIM) software is practically a rootkit. In Windows it installs certain kinds of network drivers and background processes that you cannot remove. If you remove them, they will reinstall on AOL startup. If you remove them, and go onto a limited user account, AOL will refuse to work.
--
http://www.systemdisc.com/linux cds
they all need it... they just don't know it yet.
That's the kind of crap kids listen to these days, unfortunately. Teens want that instant gratification of hearing the latest song. Adults don't care as much about that. And geeks actually care about how the music is encoded.
I suppose the future belongs to social search engines like the new Swicki project.
"There's only one like this in the world" Damn!
> Yes, it's doubtable. And why would anyone care if a calender girl is a geek or not?
Do they at least give Clippy a makeover or something? A 3D talking Clippy that dances to your music.. Come on Microsoft, find a way to make your software take up more processing power and system resources. That's what you're good at.
Exactly is right. Anyway, they should have these machines locked down in a certain way, if it does not provide total security, at least it will strongly discouage anybody to tamper with it, eg: bios passwords. This reminds me of the kid that also decided certain rules didn't apply to him, and went and installed one of those SETI@Home type apps on every computer at his workplace.
Slashdot just gave them free publicity.
That's right. And I assume everybody has a cup of good caffienated coffee while they read Slashdot in the morning.
The America Online (not AIM) software is practically a rootkit. In Windows it installs certain kinds of network drivers and background processes that you cannot remove. If you remove them, they will reinstall on AOL startup. If you remove them, and go onto a limited user account, AOL will refuse to work. -- http://www.systemdisc.com/linux cds
No, it's a penis.
She would be treated like a total Michael Moore.