You've expressed what I'm been half-sensing for a while now. I think the main reason people use XML or RPCs is because of how difficult it is to write an efficient, bug free parser. RPCs are definitely cool to me (a newbie programmer) but I admit I'm always nervous when I use them, and they just aren't very portable. I'm afraid of magic boxes. And there have been lots of times I've used XML solely because it was easier to #include expat.h than to do a little recursion. It does make config files alot easier, which is one place XML really shines. Wouldn't it be nice if XML was around when sendmail was written?
if building a backdoor in TCP port 80 is built into client machines oses, IT managers will shut down all access to that port at the firewall as well. Maybe when that happens, they'll reopen UUCP and we can get our news the old fashioned way.
I have money waiting to give, if it came to that. Which it won't.
Because this lawyer is full of lawyer shit and doesn't have enough hot air to stand on (regardless of whether Adobe would have a case if they chose to make one -- which they haven't) so he won't take it to court.
Because Senor Frog doesn't have the balls to stand up to such a mild threat. I'm not going to back a coward. Especially if he won't even send an email to Adobe. So I don't think he won't take it to court.
No court case means no court cost. I won't chip in the help pay protection, but I will give a couple hundred dollars to Kai if he fights.
All this lawyer has done is send a couple emails. If he chooses to take it to court (he won't) then he can ask for some compensation. If a mechanic comes to your house and says, I think you should get your carberateur fixed, that will be two hundred dollars for the estimate, thank you, what do you tell him?
Tell them (him) to send the bill to their client, not you. If he wants to work pro-bono, on his own behalf, tell him to file a lawsuit and work for his money.
Adobe is mysteriously silent about this con/blackmail scheme. They obviously have nothing to do with it, but they aren't giving out any comments. If anything, this demonstrates the true nature of the executives of Adobe.
All I know is that it's the numbers that specify the range of addresses you listen at and you specify it with ipconfig (or TCP/IP settings). I couldn't give a more technical answer. I could tell you that with IP 192.168.0.1 and NETMASK 255.255.255.0 you'd listen to everything from 192.168.0.1 to 192.168.0.255
Would that pass the test?
Re:dumbest environmental actions
on
Eco-Terrorism
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· Score: 1
you're right. They deserved it. They had it coming to them. They were asking for it. They should have done what they were told.
No, Adobe can specifically recognize Killustrator as a separate product. I could have said Adobe can specifically grant Killustrator permission to use the name, but then Killustrator would be implicitly recognizing Adobe's exclusive right the word.
Just because you don't know how to use a program doesn't make it unuseable. You use your five favorite Adobe filters over and over and I'll write my own with Gimp.
(ps. 3 of yours are available, you just have to look in the menu -- no its not in the same place. One of the other two is downloadable. Region grabbing is for amateurs, you won't get any real quality from Adobe either, and color matching *can* be done by hand)
It wasn't lack of interest. Thousands (at least) downloaded it. Heaps more tried to, repeatedly. Lots couldn't get it to install. But it was a buggy, smelly piece of shit anyway. And, there's a pretty healthy lack of interest in it for Windows, and even Macintosh, which is why they tried it on Linux in the first place.
Maybe someone should ask Prince if we can borrow his symbol. He has a fairly enlightened view of trademarks, and he might just let KIllustrator use it.
Redhat 5.2 still makes a good base. It's alot quicker to install too. And less bloated. And more secure.
You can use rpm to upgrade gcc from 6.1 Then get the binutils tarball from LFS. Then download and upgrade to the current gcc. Then get the kernel (2.2.19) and add reiserfs support. Then backup and reformat. Restore. Get a new perl, X, Gnome or KDE, openssl/ssh, rsync, apache, sendmail (qmail/postfix), wuftp, etc. and you're ready to customize!
Forget about ever using rpm again. It can't upgrade itself after 6.1, which, coincidentally, is about the time I stopped trusting redhat.
hey, that's a good idea
Charlemange was the first rich guy. Ever. Sure.
You've expressed what I'm been half-sensing for a while now. I think the main reason people use XML or RPCs is because of how difficult it is to write an efficient, bug free parser. RPCs are definitely cool to me (a newbie programmer) but I admit I'm always nervous when I use them, and they just aren't very portable. I'm afraid of magic boxes. And there have been lots of times I've used XML solely because it was easier to #include expat.h than to do a little recursion. It does make config files alot easier, which is one place XML really shines. Wouldn't it be nice if XML was around when sendmail was written?
Atheism is about pretending you know what somebody else does or does not know. Pretentious.
so what? Get a four way Xeon box and watch it smoke. Er... smell it smoke.
if building a backdoor in TCP port 80 is built into client machines oses, IT managers will shut down all access to that port at the firewall as well. Maybe when that happens, they'll reopen UUCP and we can get our news the old fashioned way.
What's a movie that has improved on FX weightlessness /flying since peter pan (besides Superman)?
all you had to do was say someone could come and pick it up at the same price. You deserved what you got.
- Because this lawyer is full of lawyer shit and doesn't have enough hot air to stand on (regardless of whether Adobe would have a case if they chose to make one -- which they haven't) so he won't take it to court.
- Because Senor Frog doesn't have the balls to stand up to such a mild threat. I'm not going to back a coward. Especially if he won't even send an email to Adobe. So I don't think he won't take it to court.
No court case means no court cost. I won't chip in the help pay protection, but I will give a couple hundred dollars to Kai if he fights.All this lawyer has done is send a couple emails. If he chooses to take it to court (he won't) then he can ask for some compensation. If a mechanic comes to your house and says, I think you should get your carberateur fixed, that will be two hundred dollars for the estimate, thank you, what do you tell him?
Adobe is mysteriously silent about this con/blackmail scheme. They obviously have nothing to do with it, but they aren't giving out any comments. If anything, this demonstrates the true nature of the executives of Adobe.
Would that pass the test?
I agree with your signature, though.
so now you can trademark a hyphen?
Kubrick died *before* eyes wide shit. And Jaws and ET confused the hell out of me.
err... I work at AT&T Wireless
I bet KDE was putting the Adobe tech support number on their shrinkwrapped boxes of KIllustrator too, weren't they?
No, Adobe can specifically recognize Killustrator as a separate product. I could have said Adobe can specifically grant Killustrator permission to use the name, but then Killustrator would be implicitly recognizing Adobe's exclusive right the word.
(ps. 3 of yours are available, you just have to look in the menu -- no its not in the same place. One of the other two is downloadable. Region grabbing is for amateurs, you won't get any real quality from Adobe either, and color matching *can* be done by hand)
It wasn't lack of interest. Thousands (at least) downloaded it. Heaps more tried to, repeatedly. Lots couldn't get it to install. But it was a buggy, smelly piece of shit anyway. And, there's a pretty healthy lack of interest in it for Windows, and even Macintosh, which is why they tried it on Linux in the first place.
But I use it in Gnome
Maybe someone should ask Prince if we can borrow his symbol. He has a fairly enlightened view of trademarks, and he might just let KIllustrator use it.
You can use rpm to upgrade gcc from 6.1 Then get the binutils tarball from LFS. Then download and upgrade to the current gcc. Then get the kernel (2.2.19) and add reiserfs support. Then backup and reformat. Restore. Get a new perl, X, Gnome or KDE, openssl/ssh, rsync, apache, sendmail (qmail/postfix), wuftp, etc. and you're ready to customize!
Forget about ever using rpm again. It can't upgrade itself after 6.1, which, coincidentally, is about the time I stopped trusting redhat.
rm -r packagename/ patch packagename