Yes - much better to have absolutely no minimum income for all persons so that we can have actual starving children living under bridges while the rich fat cat 1 percent of the world's population continues to accumulate loot an an even greater pace.
There is only so much loot that the 1 percent can accumulate before there is simply not enough left for all persons to have a warm dry house, healthy food, reasonable clothing, and a good education.
We've already passed that point so it's no wonder the rich fat cats don't like this policy.
How To Keep Microsoft's Nose Out of Your Personal Data In Windows 10? The only way I know for preventing MS from accessing your personal data for their own purpose is to not install MS software.
This reaction from privileged men tels me that the film is absolutely necessary and bang on target for helping to bring Hollywood into a more balanced approach to telling stories with strong female lead characters.
Hollywood has a huge anti-woman bias in it's hiring practises and in the sorts of films it makes.
This is a bad move and will force people away from using Mozilla because it will mean a Joe Citizen wanting to have a website will need to purchase SSL certificates - at significantly greater cost than the hosting cost of the web host that supplies the web hosting capability.
I'm thinking that, just like each succeeding version of MS Windows was based on the same actual code base just with changes, so too will MSE be essentially MSIE under the hood PERHAPS with some cosmetic changes to make people think it's different.
Microsoft Internet Explorer by any other name is still Microsoft Internet Explorer. I suspect that they're trying - desperately trying - to dump the poor reputation their browser has but I really doubt they would want to write the software completely from scratch like Mozilla did when they went from Netscape 4.x to Netscape 6. That was a massive job that took many years before it was good.
In my view the decisions should be: 1) What are the remedies for breach of the terms of the GPLv2? Answer: Either the offender is to cease distributing the offending software (binary or otherwise) AND the code in question is to be completely and entirely removed from the offending product, or some other solution at the discretion of the Free Software Foundation (including but not limited to the offender entirely ceasing to distribute the offending software.
2) What is a "distribution" under the GPLv2 that triggers the obligations under the GPLv2? Answer: Any transmission of the software in binary or object code, or any other format where the availability of the software (binary or object code) passes into the control of a person other than the owner of the software.
3) Does the GPLv2 include a patent license? Answer: No. Software is mathematics and therefore is not patentable.
4) What type of integration between proprietary code and GPLv2 licensed code will result in creating a "derivative work" and subject such proprietary code to the terms of the GPLv2? Answer: All integration in any way other than an API call to a fully separate self-contained program should result in the integrated code being covered by the GPLv2 license.
Isn't there a separate license for covering situations where people might want to distribute GPL and non-GPL software as a part of a package?
Nothing abnormal here. Sounds like regular Microsoft availability to me. All Microsoft servers require regular (at least monthly) patching to keep them secure. All Microsoft products require regular restarting to keep them available and performing correctly when you want them. Why should "Azure" be any different?
lower commodity fuel prices, which has the even worse effect of.....
not so stupidly high petrol prices at petrol stations.
Oil tycoons won't be making such gratuitous profits and governments not creaming off as much in tax. We can't have petrol prices under $2.20 a litre (perhaps $1.20 would be nice) now can we!
On Ubuntu Linux I use Firefox with Ad Block Plus. I don't see adverts.
I tend to keep the original OS, but resize and repartition the HDD so that I can install my preferred set-up but still have the original spyware for when I want to sell the device down the track.
If I can buy a good-spec (64bit, separate vid card, good RAM, good HDD, good number of USB ports) chrome book AND put Ubuntu on it then I might end up with another laptop.
Chrome Books are great for enterprises that want to avoid the Micro$oft tax, and that have a majority of users that only need to use browser-based resources.
DMCA only applies to slaves owned by the USA government (in turn owned by large multi-national corporations). Citizens of other countries, and businesses not seeking to trade in the USA, don't have that problem.
From Microsoft: "We use a variety of security technologies and procedures to help protect your personal information from unauthorized access, use or disclosure. For example, all data sent from the Windows 10 Technical Preview to Microsoft is encrypted in transit and we store the personal information you provide on computer systems that have limited access and are in controlled facilities."
In other words: "We transmit the data using SSH and store it in a datacentre."
Specific versions of Linux has been available for multiple platforms for how many decades now? Does Microsoft consider that they're "innovating" by doing this?
Why is Californian law an issue? Mozilla developers are located all around the world, as are Mozilla users. This is a world-wide Open Source software development community, not a USian business.
The reason why USAian broadband is so "slow" is because vendors (all vendors, everywhere) only supply a product that is "good enough", and no more, for people to pay the price they're paying. In the USA broadband is very cheap for what is being supplied.
In other countries around the world people can only dream of having that amount of bandwidth for that price. Suppliers outside of North America simply don't offer packages that cheaply.
If M$ is releasing a new iteration of MS Windows every year, then how will this move impact on support for previous releases of MS Windows that were sold with PC hardware sold to consumers within the last 5 years, or disk image builds deployed new into enterprises in the previous 5 years?
I think M$ is building a rod for its own back that it won't be able to sustain.
> Far too many nations either have their money fixed against the dollar (China being the best example), or > manipulate (I will exclude for the time, but easy enough to show and prove).
The USian economy is very week and unable to maintain its own position in the financial market. Those countries who are maintaining parity with the USian dollar mostly also have dynamic rapidly growing economies (ie China) that are effectively using the blinkered "reduce costs" mentality that is common to the economic thinking of most of the Western World to attract new business, improve the quality of their manufacturing and technology base, and grow their economy.
While I don't like what they're doing, they should at least be congratulated for being highly successful at building their own economy - and more fool us for letting them do it that way!
Nothing will change in that respect so long as the primary economic focus of Western economies is on external trade..
> Have a tax break or temp subsidy for energy STORAGE. This group of ppl will buy excess electricity and sell > it at a higher rate and provider the electricity that is needed.
Expecting tax-payers to subsidize a second-rate solution is not a valid answer.
Ultimately what you really need are cheaper methods of generating electricity.
This is otherwise known as "Keep your friends close and your enemies closer".
Yes - much better to have absolutely no minimum income for all persons so that we can have actual starving children living under bridges while the rich fat cat 1 percent of the world's population continues to accumulate loot an an even greater pace.
There is only so much loot that the 1 percent can accumulate before there is simply not enough left for all persons to have a warm dry house, healthy food, reasonable clothing, and a good education.
We've already passed that point so it's no wonder the rich fat cats don't like this policy.
Only 13 years! Now the costs battles. [eom]
Shashdot is working perfectly fine. A great easy to use forum filled with intelligent perceptive people.
Please don't destroy what is a perfectly fine, easy to use, thing.
How To Keep Microsoft's Nose Out of Your Personal Data In Windows 10?
The only way I know for preventing MS from accessing your personal data for their own purpose is to not install MS software.
Well, speaking personally, this Firefox user doesn't want it.
Keep it simple. Keep it small. Keep it from Embrace/Extend/Extinguish!
This reaction from privileged men tels me that the film is absolutely necessary and bang on target for helping to bring Hollywood into a more balanced approach to telling stories with strong female lead characters.
Hollywood has a huge anti-woman bias in it's hiring practises and in the sorts of films it makes.
Wanaka yesterday, had a Magnatude 6 earthquake. Chile regularly gets magnitude 7 and 8 quakes.
No news here. Move along.
This is a bad move and will force people away from using Mozilla because it will mean a Joe Citizen wanting to have a website will need to purchase SSL certificates - at significantly greater cost than the hosting cost of the web host that supplies the web hosting capability.
I understand the rationale, but very bad move!
I'm thinking that, just like each succeeding version of MS Windows was based on the same actual code base just with changes, so too will MSE be essentially MSIE under the hood PERHAPS with some cosmetic changes to make people think it's different.
Microsoft Internet Explorer by any other name is still Microsoft Internet Explorer. I suspect that they're trying - desperately trying - to dump the poor reputation their browser has but I really doubt they would want to write the software completely from scratch like Mozilla did when they went from Netscape 4.x to Netscape 6. That was a massive job that took many years before it was good.
What about software that is just run uninstalled?
How does Microsoft Device Guard protect against that?
In my view the decisions should be:
1) What are the remedies for breach of the terms of the GPLv2?
Answer: Either the offender is to cease distributing the offending software (binary or otherwise) AND the code in question is to be completely and entirely removed from the offending product, or some other solution at the discretion of the Free Software Foundation (including but not limited to the offender entirely ceasing to distribute the offending software.
2) What is a "distribution" under the GPLv2 that triggers the obligations under the GPLv2?
Answer: Any transmission of the software in binary or object code, or any other format where the availability of the software (binary or object code) passes into the control of a person other than the owner of the software.
3) Does the GPLv2 include a patent license?
Answer: No. Software is mathematics and therefore is not patentable.
4) What type of integration between proprietary code and GPLv2 licensed code will result in creating a "derivative work" and subject such proprietary code to the terms of the GPLv2?
Answer: All integration in any way other than an API call to a fully separate self-contained program should result in the integrated code being covered by the GPLv2 license.
Isn't there a separate license for covering situations where people might want to distribute GPL and non-GPL software as a part of a package?
Nothing abnormal here. Sounds like regular Microsoft availability to me.
All Microsoft servers require regular (at least monthly) patching to keep them secure.
All Microsoft products require regular restarting to keep them available and performing correctly when you want them.
Why should "Azure" be any different?
lower commodity fuel prices, which has the even worse effect of.....
not so stupidly high petrol prices at petrol stations.
Oil tycoons won't be making such gratuitous profits and governments not creaming off as much in tax. We can't have petrol prices under $2.20 a litre (perhaps $1.20 would be nice) now can we!
This is clearly an attack on Java and Tomcat.
On Ubuntu Linux I use Firefox with Ad Block Plus. I don't see adverts.
I tend to keep the original OS, but resize and repartition the HDD so that I can install my preferred set-up but still have the original spyware for when I want to sell the device down the track.
If I can buy a good-spec (64bit, separate vid card, good RAM, good HDD, good number of USB ports) chrome book AND put Ubuntu on it then I might end up with another laptop.
Chrome Books are great for enterprises that want to avoid the Micro$oft tax, and that have a majority of users that only need to use browser-based resources.
Agreed. Politicians have this tendency to be easily bribed. :(
DMCA only applies to slaves owned by the USA government (in turn owned by large multi-national corporations).
Citizens of other countries, and businesses not seeking to trade in the USA, don't have that problem.
From Microsoft:
"We use a variety of security technologies and procedures to help protect your personal information from unauthorized access, use or disclosure. For example, all data sent from the Windows 10 Technical Preview to Microsoft is encrypted in transit and we store the personal information you provide on computer systems that have limited access and are in controlled facilities."
In other words: "We transmit the data using SSH and store it in a datacentre."
Specific versions of Linux has been available for multiple platforms for how many decades now? Does Microsoft consider that they're "innovating" by doing this?
Why is Californian law an issue? Mozilla developers are located all around the world, as are Mozilla users. This is a world-wide Open Source software development community, not a USian business.
The reason why USAian broadband is so "slow" is because vendors (all vendors, everywhere) only supply a product that is "good enough", and no more, for people to pay the price they're paying. In the USA broadband is very cheap for what is being supplied.
In other countries around the world people can only dream of having that amount of bandwidth for that price. Suppliers outside of North America simply don't offer packages that cheaply.
If M$ is releasing a new iteration of MS Windows every year, then how will this move impact on support for previous releases of MS Windows that were sold with PC hardware sold to consumers within the last 5 years, or disk image builds deployed new into enterprises in the previous 5 years?
I think M$ is building a rod for its own back that it won't be able to sustain.
> Far too many nations either have their money fixed against the dollar (China being the best example), or
> manipulate (I will exclude for the time, but easy enough to show and prove).
The USian economy is very week and unable to maintain its own position in the financial market. Those countries who are maintaining parity with the USian dollar mostly also have dynamic rapidly growing economies (ie China) that are effectively using the blinkered "reduce costs" mentality that is common to the economic thinking of most of the Western World to attract new business, improve the quality of their manufacturing and technology base, and grow their economy.
While I don't like what they're doing, they should at least be congratulated for being highly successful at building their own economy - and more fool us for letting them do it that way!
Nothing will change in that respect so long as the primary economic focus of Western economies is on external trade..
> Have a tax break or temp subsidy for energy STORAGE. This group of ppl will buy excess electricity and sell
> it at a higher rate and provider the electricity that is needed.
Expecting tax-payers to subsidize a second-rate solution is not a valid answer.
Ultimately what you really need are cheaper methods of generating electricity.