In certain genres. Mainly in Reggae and all its sub genre's like dancehall.
All the *good* tunes are released as 7" and 85% of the album releases are allways collection of 1month-3 year old singles. This is the case atleast from the top artists.
Why this happens ? Because there is so enourmous competition and there are literally hundreds of few songs each month (Basicly because of the "riddim" re-use eg. many artists record their own version to the same track)
IT doesnt take a visionary to see that this will eventually happen in mainstream also.
Is what they do just what you want? I do not have a clue what they cost to the customers but i've seen alot of akamai hardware spread around different hosting facilities around the europe.
I think their basic product is "x amount of space and bandwidth very close to the end user".
For example, Ximian used akamai at somepoint when their first gnome 1 desktop came out. I downloaded it and installer was *blazing* fast. I was wondering what was going on as i never get +500kb/s speeds from us and i was pretty suprised when the trace stopped at 2 hops into our own datacenter =)
Pdsh doesnt yet fully support ssh. For command executiong as rsh's replacement, yes but for rcp no. The newest build of pdsh doesnt even compile right with --with-ssh without patching.
Without any sarcasm: I dont see how your math applies to the situation if Sequent violated sco's ip's before IBM bought them (And Sco holds ibm responsible as they are the current owner of Sequent). Could you clear that for me.
Last time i checked, ximian desktop *was* just an another gnome distro.. And i belive ximian puts a shitload of code back into gnome project as whole. And question remains:
How actually they left gnome ?
Its like you are saying Alan left Linux when he was hired to work for RedHat..
So basicly, Caldera is now suing the linux community..
Thing that still bothers me is that as far as i know, Tarantella kept the rights for UNIX trademark or do i remember that incorrectly ? If that is right, then UnixWare as it is now is also a licencee and thus, shouldnt have any basis for claiming ip rights..
People seem to point out that SCO has allready released the offending code in gpl by releasing their own distro.
Im not pointing this out, but its more of a question:
In the past there was Caldera, and there was Sco. Caldera bought os division part of SCO but not rights to "The Unix". Sco company remained and their plan was to make Tarantella their main product but also keep UnixWare maintained (This is still correct?)
Now, Are Caldera and Sco still seperate company ? And if yes, then has Sco really released a linux distribution (which would mean that Sco has released the code themselves too, knowingly or unknowlingly..) but if no, then it would be Caldera who released the code and it wouldnt mean jack s#!t to the actual ip case.
Leasure Suit Larry. It was the first game ever i played from start to end and that experience left me quite satisfied.
Another "memory of the lifetime" was first day in everquest. My dwarven warrior had finally managed to drag his arse of kaladim and into to the nearby hill around sunset and it was absolutely fabulous. Just that sight of sun going down and watching other younglings killing bats and rats and skeletons here and there.. Really nice.
Warhead in amiga was really awesome. I had little table on the floor which fitted diskdrives and 500'er to it nicely and i had it painted quite well and it kinda added to "space atmosphere" by making amiga look like a spaceship control panel. I also had ordinary blue light bulb (not blacklight) in my room and and it also made things "real-er".
... when TurboPascal ruled the land and people writing c code where considered nomads, there was SWAG, SourceWareArchivalGroup or something. This was neat little program that had literally thousands of codesnippets extracted from many many places like fidonet and usenet groups and direct postings.
It would be really really neat if someone with time and/or talent would pull up similar compilation for "modern" languages. Or maybe even make similar thing with pseudocode.
(eg John Peel session over here)
Urm. John Peel sessions are/where played in finnish mainstream radio also called RadioMafia, which changed its name to YleX start of this year.
And Well, yle is finnish equivalent for BBC.
But i get your point;))
Indeed. Ofcourse, there's even better vinyl players (i cant remember the name right now, i have the link somewhere) which have been said to be even better than 1200's and they are about 2-3 times older than technics..
Have you read the reviews in imdb ? Some of them are quite decent but majority of them are total b.s.
I bet that even if you write something like "i liked the plot in this because of the characters where written well and deeply enough" is good for review and author also seems to want that we submit book information also, not just reviews..
It could be as secure as wi-fi where the actual "media" is free for anyone to grap. What this means is that it requires strong crypto to be secure.
I think the realiability is bigger issue. What if someone wants to cut your operations. Big piece of carton or huge van to front of emitter could quite efectively cut it. How's that for denial of service;)
Well, i admit that i havent read the article so i dont know how it actually operates but what about "light noise" from other sources.. Or other co-existing "light hubs" in the area. How do they effect the data and its reliability. Only way to prevent this (which i can think off) is using laser as transport medium light and thats not so new anymore is it. And DoS'n laser is even more simpler since the lightbean is really narrow usually and doesnt spread as "normal light".
It is not even rare (atleast with biggest finnish cable provider). They are receiveing the signal via satellite most likely and when there's heavy snowstorm or rains, picture quality is really bad in some cases. So, anyone with cabledish themselves can verify this also;)
And how the hell is that comment Funny?! Its comment about the original post being rigt kind of answer to question in hand!!
Some of you moderators are just too morons!;)
Depending on the integredity of project manager, he might want to put "coders" to do the job which would take longer and thus quaranteeing work/money/whatever as project takes x+n days to accomplish when "scripter" could do it in x days.
And how about my answer to that thread ? The thing is, if you think this a bit, this aint fancy at all. Think about it. You can send emails from for phone any time you want. Now, got a shell somewhere with email attached? Ever heard of procmail ? With that and 20ish lines of perl code, you are set..
You got classroom full of desktop machines ? Answer is obvious, you install Seti@Home to all of them ofcourse!
In certain genres. Mainly in Reggae and all its sub genre's like dancehall.
All the *good* tunes are released as 7" and 85% of the album releases are allways collection of 1month-3 year old singles. This is the case atleast from the top artists.
Why this happens ? Because there is so enourmous competition and there are literally hundreds of few songs each month (Basicly because of the "riddim" re-use eg. many artists record their own version to the same track)
IT doesnt take a visionary to see that this will eventually happen in mainstream also.
And the obligatory link: www.akamai.com
Is what they do just what you want? I do not have a clue what they cost to the customers but i've seen alot of akamai hardware spread around different hosting facilities around the europe.
I think their basic product is "x amount of space and bandwidth very close to the end user".
For example, Ximian used akamai at somepoint when their first gnome 1 desktop came out. I downloaded it and installer was *blazing* fast. I was wondering what was going on as i never get +500kb/s speeds from us and i was pretty suprised when the trace stopped at 2 hops into our own datacenter =)
Pdsh doesnt yet fully support ssh. For command executiong as rsh's replacement, yes but for rcp no. The newest build of pdsh doesnt even compile right with --with-ssh without patching.
Without any sarcasm: I dont see how your math applies to the situation if Sequent violated sco's ip's before IBM bought them (And Sco holds ibm responsible as they are the current owner of Sequent). Could you clear that for me.
You do the math.
What?!
Last time i checked, ximian desktop *was* just an another gnome distro.. And i belive ximian puts a shitload of code back into gnome project as whole. And question remains:
How actually they left gnome ?
Its like you are saying Alan left Linux when he was hired to work for RedHat..
There's loads of things people do that are fun to them but will result them with court and/or jail time if cought..
For example: Cannabis, BlackHat stuff, writing viruses, speeding and so on..
Not necessery good stuff but i know that some people consider those "fun"..
So basicly, Caldera is now suing the linux community.. Thing that still bothers me is that as far as i know, Tarantella kept the rights for UNIX trademark or do i remember that incorrectly ? If that is right, then UnixWare as it is now is also a licencee and thus, shouldnt have any basis for claiming ip rights..
People seem to point out that SCO has allready released the offending code in gpl by releasing their own distro.
Im not pointing this out, but its more of a question:
In the past there was Caldera, and there was Sco. Caldera bought os division part of SCO but not rights to "The Unix". Sco company remained and their plan was to make Tarantella their main product but also keep UnixWare maintained (This is still correct?)
Now, Are Caldera and Sco still seperate company ? And if yes, then has Sco really released a linux distribution (which would mean that Sco has released the code themselves too, knowingly or unknowlingly..) but if no, then it would be Caldera who released the code and it wouldnt mean jack s#!t to the actual ip case.
Another "memory of the lifetime" was first day in everquest. My dwarven warrior had finally managed to drag his arse of kaladim and into to the nearby hill around sunset and it was absolutely fabulous. Just that sight of sun going down and watching other younglings killing bats and rats and skeletons here and there.. Really nice.
Warhead in amiga was really awesome. I had little table on the floor which fitted diskdrives and 500'er to it nicely and i had it painted quite well and it kinda added to "space atmosphere" by making amiga look like a spaceship control panel. I also had ordinary blue light bulb (not blacklight) in my room and and it also made things "real-er".
Will be 3.1 and then 3.11 and then 95,98,ME and so on ;)
Indeed the M series of via epia mobos have DVD (eg, mpeg) hardware decoder but it is not supported in Linux.
Ofcourse, as etDVD is not actually "linux", they *might* have changes to get it work but alas, in lindows its just not yet possible..
I think the actual data is still available at @ http://www.bsdg.org/swag/
It would be really really neat if someone with time and/or talent would pull up similar compilation for "modern" languages. Or maybe even make similar thing with pseudocode.
(eg John Peel session over here) Urm. John Peel sessions are/where played in finnish mainstream radio also called RadioMafia, which changed its name to YleX start of this year. And Well, yle is finnish equivalent for BBC. But i get your point ;))
Indeed. Ofcourse, there's even better vinyl players (i cant remember the name right now, i have the link somewhere) which have been said to be even better than 1200's and they are about 2-3 times older than technics..
(Jah Shaka's soundsystem uses that player)
And Technics SL-1200mk2's to be exact. They have been in production and sale allmost 30 years now pretty much without drastic modifications.
Have you read the reviews in imdb ? Some of them are quite decent but majority of them are total b.s.
I bet that even if you write something like "i liked the plot in this because of the characters where written well and deeply enough" is good for review and author also seems to want that we submit book information also, not just reviews..
It could be as secure as wi-fi where the actual "media" is free for anyone to grap. What this means is that it requires strong crypto to be secure.
;)
I think the realiability is bigger issue. What if someone wants to cut your operations. Big piece of carton or huge van to front of emitter could quite efectively cut it. How's that for denial of service
Well, i admit that i havent read the article so i dont know how it actually operates but what about "light noise" from other sources.. Or other co-existing "light hubs" in the area. How do they effect the data and its reliability. Only way to prevent this (which i can think off) is using laser as transport medium light and thats not so new anymore is it. And DoS'n laser is even more simpler since the lightbean is really narrow usually and doesnt spread as "normal light".
It is not even rare (atleast with biggest finnish cable provider). They are receiveing the signal via satellite most likely and when there's heavy snowstorm or rains, picture quality is really bad in some cases. So, anyone with cabledish themselves can verify this also ;)
.. you have squashdotted a fly!
And how the hell is that comment Funny?! Its comment about the original post being rigt kind of answer to question in hand!! Some of you moderators are just too morons! ;)
Depending on the integredity of project manager, he might want to put "coders" to do the job which would take longer and thus quaranteeing work/money/whatever as project takes x+n days to accomplish when "scripter" could do it in x days.
And how about my answer to that thread ? The thing is, if you think this a bit, this aint fancy at all. Think about it. You can send emails from for phone any time you want. Now, got a shell somewhere with email attached? Ever heard of procmail ? With that and 20ish lines of perl code, you are set..