To the folks who said maybe the guys at CloudStack might think it is too hard to implement Hyper-V: WTF have you been smoking? These are the guys who built this from scratch, I doubt something would be "Too Hard" or that they were in some way too lazy to do it.
To the folks who said Xen is not even in the picture: WTF have _YOU_ been smoking? Let's see...who uses Xen? RedHat, Oracle, Citrix, Microsoft (yep, they sure do!) and a host of other people from my measly little home box to MASSIVE hosting companies.
My two centavos...
Back in the day...Mandrake had a thing called MNF - Multi Network Firewall. I used it and it was great, but it disappeared for some reason. I think if they would have kept headed down that road, they would have done much better, but they started having lots of issues, even back then, that were insurmountable by anyone at or near the helm of the company.
Yep, I wouldn't argue with you on the Intel Video Card point...they do suck, as do the GPUs. I guess by support I meant that you can install it without having to pass something to the kernel at boot before you can run the installation, or fiddle with it to get it to work.
Reference - http://wiki.pcbsd.org/index.php/Laptops#Laptops_with_Built-In_Intel_Video_Chip
Like someone up there ^ said, it is fairly uninteresting. I wouldn't go as far as saying "who cares" though. I used version 8.x and it was pretty decent and stable, it didn't have support for Intel video cards, maybe that is fixed.
This is my mantra! Use what you NEED to, not what someone ELSE tells you that you need to use. My Macbook is running a Linux firewall in a VM that I am behind at the moment, typing this on a Linux Mint peecee on a desk next to my Windows 7 Laptop connected to the corporate network.
View My Server ---> www.viewmyserver.com 2 gig of RAM bustable to 4 gig and 2 cores, 7.5 TB of traffic per month, 75 gig of disk space...for $25.00 per month. They are in Arizona. I have run into issues running Concrete5 on them, but it is a bare metal system, so it is really my problem, not theirs. Concrete5 requires some serious PHP tweaking and I haven't gotten there yet. Really fast support and nice bunch of guys!
Yep, and if they did support it, they would have a standard build. You probably wouldn't have the ability to customize much at all and would have updates pushed to you from whatever patch management system they use. I don't understand why anyone would even attempt to use that argument, if you use a system in a corporate environment, it isn't just for security reasons that they have a standard build, it is for ease of updates and support.
Your opinion means nothing when you post it as an AC. Put on your big boy pants and voice your opinion or STFU. That being said, I was simply stating that if you are running a recent computer, it is normally not an issue to run KDE on it. I did not (even if you read it in) look down my nose at anyone for using a computer that is older than a few years. Hell, I use one myself that is from 1999, it runs Solaris very well...with Gnome!:o)
I think you have nailed it. If your machine can't handle what you "like", then you need to do something about it, or suffer a loss of productivity due to the system not matching how you work.
Wow...replying to TWO ACs in one day...it's a new record for me! Anyway, I tend to agree with you. Now a days, with the average computer having 4 gigs of ram and at least a 512 meg video card, if not a full 1 gig, there is no reason to speak poorly of KDE. If I had to worry about how much video memory I was using, I might switch to xfce or something, but I don't. That excuse has been removed for all but the third world countries who can't get the latest new hardware or poor people who can't afford a computer made in the last three or four years. Just sayin'.
I normally don't reply to ACs, but since you say you have been using a computer for 13 years, I figured it was worth it. You are on Slashdot. If you think that saying you have been using a computer for 13 years will get you any "Cred" here, you need to look around. There are people here who have been using them for FAR longer.
" The digital divide will cease to exist. Mobile phones will make it easy for even the poorest of poor to get connected."
The above should read...
"They will try to make everyone believe they can't live without a mobile phone, taking as much money as possible from the poorest of the poor."
I keep hearing people say the same thing you have just said (probably just parroting stuff you have heard someone else say, I would bet). "Good IT and Security is invisible to the user". Pure bullshit. If I were to block your from inserting a USB thumb drive into your computer and not pop up a little window telling you why and who to contact if you REALLY need to insert it, then you would be screeching to desktop support about how your "puter" was busted. Tell me...how many people would pay attention to IT or Security policies that were "behind the scenes"? If you had no idea that you were violating the policies, you might be making ignorant statements...oh, crap, nevermind. Pull your big boy pants on and quit expecting the world to hand you every fucking thing you want on a silver platter, if you want to use a shiny new laptop, fee free, but do it at home and use the one you are given for work, STFU and get some work done.
Yet another douche bag trying to convince Slashdot users that they are uber leet by saying they "know how to run a computer" and "hacked the system in 5 minutes". Sure...we believe you...I bet you are a ANON volunteer as well.
Let's see...pushing a GPO and then not being able to reverse it (did they test it at all?) and running three virus scanners...sounds like you are full of shit. No one does either of those unless they are working on their home network (or one so small it doesn't matter). 4 gigs of RAM doesn't work with XP unless you are running the 64 bit version, which NO ONE does, not even Microsoft. Go back to your mom's basement and quit trying to fit in your two cents to a conversation that you know nothing about.
Touch up your Resume', go tell your boss to get bent, pound sand, etc. and look for a new place to work. Anyone who needs metrics on a three person team deserves anything they get, up to and including a swift kick in the ass. If the manager can't figure it out on his or her own, they should be the one being sent out the door with boxes.
I have a Motorola Triumph from Virgin Mobile - it has been around quite some time and has front and rear facing cameras. It is a cheap, but reasonably responsive phone. You are wrong, face it.
To the folks who said maybe the guys at CloudStack might think it is too hard to implement Hyper-V: WTF have you been smoking? These are the guys who built this from scratch, I doubt something would be "Too Hard" or that they were in some way too lazy to do it. To the folks who said Xen is not even in the picture: WTF have _YOU_ been smoking? Let's see...who uses Xen? RedHat, Oracle, Citrix, Microsoft (yep, they sure do!) and a host of other people from my measly little home box to MASSIVE hosting companies. My two centavos...
Back in the day...Mandrake had a thing called MNF - Multi Network Firewall. I used it and it was great, but it disappeared for some reason. I think if they would have kept headed down that road, they would have done much better, but they started having lots of issues, even back then, that were insurmountable by anyone at or near the helm of the company.
Yep, I wouldn't argue with you on the Intel Video Card point...they do suck, as do the GPUs. I guess by support I meant that you can install it without having to pass something to the kernel at boot before you can run the installation, or fiddle with it to get it to work. Reference - http://wiki.pcbsd.org/index.php/Laptops#Laptops_with_Built-In_Intel_Video_Chip
Like someone up there ^ said, it is fairly uninteresting. I wouldn't go as far as saying "who cares" though. I used version 8.x and it was pretty decent and stable, it didn't have support for Intel video cards, maybe that is fixed.
Host an email server for 5000 heavy users - That's what! :o) Linux/Postfix/squirrelmail FTW!!!
This is my mantra! Use what you NEED to, not what someone ELSE tells you that you need to use. My Macbook is running a Linux firewall in a VM that I am behind at the moment, typing this on a Linux Mint peecee on a desk next to my Windows 7 Laptop connected to the corporate network.
The Flux Capacitor needs a Friction Re-lign and IT are the only ones who know where the friction spanner is...and stuff.
View My Server ---> www.viewmyserver.com 2 gig of RAM bustable to 4 gig and 2 cores, 7.5 TB of traffic per month, 75 gig of disk space...for $25.00 per month. They are in Arizona. I have run into issues running Concrete5 on them, but it is a bare metal system, so it is really my problem, not theirs. Concrete5 requires some serious PHP tweaking and I haven't gotten there yet. Really fast support and nice bunch of guys!
There is an old saying...let's see if I can remember it...oh, here we go! Fuck you!
Yep, and if they did support it, they would have a standard build. You probably wouldn't have the ability to customize much at all and would have updates pushed to you from whatever patch management system they use. I don't understand why anyone would even attempt to use that argument, if you use a system in a corporate environment, it isn't just for security reasons that they have a standard build, it is for ease of updates and support.
Your opinion means nothing when you post it as an AC. Put on your big boy pants and voice your opinion or STFU. That being said, I was simply stating that if you are running a recent computer, it is normally not an issue to run KDE on it. I did not (even if you read it in) look down my nose at anyone for using a computer that is older than a few years. Hell, I use one myself that is from 1999, it runs Solaris very well...with Gnome! :o)
I think you have nailed it. If your machine can't handle what you "like", then you need to do something about it, or suffer a loss of productivity due to the system not matching how you work.
No, it isn't elitest. It is a fact. And yes, KDE would probably not "Just work" on your machine. I said 512 to 1 gig VIDEO CARD, not total memory.
Wow...replying to TWO ACs in one day...it's a new record for me! Anyway, I tend to agree with you. Now a days, with the average computer having 4 gigs of ram and at least a 512 meg video card, if not a full 1 gig, there is no reason to speak poorly of KDE. If I had to worry about how much video memory I was using, I might switch to xfce or something, but I don't. That excuse has been removed for all but the third world countries who can't get the latest new hardware or poor people who can't afford a computer made in the last three or four years. Just sayin'.
I normally don't reply to ACs, but since you say you have been using a computer for 13 years, I figured it was worth it. You are on Slashdot. If you think that saying you have been using a computer for 13 years will get you any "Cred" here, you need to look around. There are people here who have been using them for FAR longer.
" The digital divide will cease to exist. Mobile phones will make it easy for even the poorest of poor to get connected." The above should read... "They will try to make everyone believe they can't live without a mobile phone, taking as much money as possible from the poorest of the poor."
I keep hearing people say the same thing you have just said (probably just parroting stuff you have heard someone else say, I would bet). "Good IT and Security is invisible to the user". Pure bullshit. If I were to block your from inserting a USB thumb drive into your computer and not pop up a little window telling you why and who to contact if you REALLY need to insert it, then you would be screeching to desktop support about how your "puter" was busted. Tell me...how many people would pay attention to IT or Security policies that were "behind the scenes"? If you had no idea that you were violating the policies, you might be making ignorant statements...oh, crap, nevermind. Pull your big boy pants on and quit expecting the world to hand you every fucking thing you want on a silver platter, if you want to use a shiny new laptop, fee free, but do it at home and use the one you are given for work, STFU and get some work done.
Yet another douche bag trying to convince Slashdot users that they are uber leet by saying they "know how to run a computer" and "hacked the system in 5 minutes". Sure...we believe you...I bet you are a ANON volunteer as well.
Let's see...pushing a GPO and then not being able to reverse it (did they test it at all?) and running three virus scanners...sounds like you are full of shit. No one does either of those unless they are working on their home network (or one so small it doesn't matter). 4 gigs of RAM doesn't work with XP unless you are running the 64 bit version, which NO ONE does, not even Microsoft. Go back to your mom's basement and quit trying to fit in your two cents to a conversation that you know nothing about.
Touch up your Resume', go tell your boss to get bent, pound sand, etc. and look for a new place to work. Anyone who needs metrics on a three person team deserves anything they get, up to and including a swift kick in the ass. If the manager can't figure it out on his or her own, they should be the one being sent out the door with boxes.
I have a Motorola Triumph from Virgin Mobile - it has been around quite some time and has front and rear facing cameras. It is a cheap, but reasonably responsive phone. You are wrong, face it.
Knowing a bit of web design or how to create a website in Drupal does not make you a "Computer Geek". It makes you a self taught web designer.
A Printer with an Android tablet built in. http://www.engadget.com/2010/10/12/hp-photosmart-estation-c510-printer-android-tablet-now-on-sale/ Maybe they want to change from Android to WebOS, or maybe they are just at step 3. - $$$ Profit
You mean they are serious about protecting _THEIR OWN_ data, not customers data.
So...with that logic, if you have a Ph.D. in Fish Hatcheries, you would save people's lives using Fish Mating?