Comment Re:Obvious Missing Option (Score 1) 708
Ahh, looks like you angered the Will Smith Millenial Kids Douchebag Club. You failt to get jiggy with it, so you were marked as a troll! The same thing is about to happen to me in 3... 2... 1...
Ahh, looks like you angered the Will Smith Millenial Kids Douchebag Club. You failt to get jiggy with it, so you were marked as a troll! The same thing is about to happen to me in 3... 2... 1...
Will Smith is a good actor? What weirdly potent kind of crack are you smoking??
You can't really be serious when you say that. Are you trolling or what?
Along these same lines I have been hoping to see that some Java wizard will create an applet for Azureus/Vuze that will run an MD5 checksum against the completed data and leave an MD5 file in the directory. That way I don't have to manually run MD5s manually since I include them with *everything*.
Something like this:
Torrent DL ==> Check Pieces ==> Completed ==> Run MD5 ==> Leave MD5 File
Another idea is a workable MD5 (+SHA1/*) checksum generator for X that supports drag and drop, queueing, etc. along the lines of the Win32 app hkSFV or md5summer. md5summer is not bad, but it needs drag and drop and context menus.
If you are looking to do A/V, you might consider the dyne:bolic distribution which is tailored for this use.
Lately, with Microsoft claiming that Linux infringes on their IP, it has occurred to me that what is widely regarded as free software cannot introduce disruptive change into the world.
I have a thought/question/idea:
Has anyone made a survey to determain who uses and runs with Linux LiveCD's. It seems that Ubuntu is the most popular but there seem to be tens if not hundreds of LiveCD desktops for Linux and even a few for (gasp) MS Windows. I have tried since S.u.S.E. Linux 5.2 to find a Linux distribution I was comfortable with using and one which I could feel competant using in place of Windows. It seemed to me that all Linux distrobution wanted me to learn the system
The two principal shareholders John Naruszewicz and Kevin Medina at the weeks-end were still trading verbal blows, while ICANN stepped in to the fray after nearly three years of complaints. Whilst most focus has been on the failure of the company's support systems, allegations of fraud and corruption were flowing freely Friday, not only from the principals involved, but from ICANN.
Meantime the control of RegisterFly.com, seized by Naruszewicz on Tuesday, was back in the hands of Medina late Friday. Both parties are accusing the other of hijacking the company's Web site and administration, which has been effectively dysfunctional for weeks. Medina has also replicated the current site at www.registerfly-inc.com so if he loses control again, or the original site is brought down, he can continue to trade on.
How many NASA managers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? "That's a known problem... don't worry about it."