Comment Re:COME TO SOCIALISM BABY! (Score 1) 309
*blink*
Remind me again why neither San Francisco, CA, nor New York, NY have residential 1gbit symmetric fiber service, but Chattanooga, TN does?
*blink*
Remind me again why neither San Francisco, CA, nor New York, NY have residential 1gbit symmetric fiber service, but Chattanooga, TN does?
You have to specify which phones your stuff runs on...
It's a little easier than you make it out to be:
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html
Specifically,
http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/uses-feature-element.html
man 5 resolvconf.conf
?
Well, it's like Google rolling out Gigabit broadband. They know that it's not going to work right now, the technology isn't there yet to do it in a way that is profitable.
This is in Tennessee:
http://chattanoogagig.com/
1gbps symmetric service for 350USD/month.
Split that with ten neighbors, and you almost beat the download speed (and absolutely crush the upload speed) of Comcast's best offering for far less than half their price.
I don't know about you, but my last 80286 didn't make it to 1990.
I had a Tandy 1000TL with a 20MB "Hard Card" (read: harddrive bolted on to an IDE expansion board) that made it past Y2K. I booted the fucker up after the turn of the millennium. There was nary a bug in sight. Midnight Rescue! and Castle ran without a hitch.
It's pretty public, by default. Check out how many random people's statuses you can comment on:
Did your SSL cert come from StartCom?
*blink*
I spent the past five years working in a small (~25 developer) Windows XP Pro based software development house. Our file server was running Win2K3 Enterprise and was using a large (1TB, later upgraded to 10TB) hardware RAID 5 disk array. All of this equipment was sourced from Dell.
Once a month, we needed to call in an admin to bring down the server (and once every other month for someone's desktop machine) to delete files that were "screwed up". "Screwed up" means:
* Cannot delete, rename, read, or modify the file.
* The only tab available on the "File->Properties" dialog for the file in question is the "General" tab. (This means that the Sharing, Security, and Customize tabs shown here are not present.)
Note that *every* developer performed work as an unprivileged user. Noone on staff possessed an Administrator account, with the exception of the admins.
I've never *ever* seen this behaviour with *any* filesystem on Linux. I've abruptly pulled the plug on my home machines hundreds of times and never had *any* filesystem issues. (Not even with reiserfs V3.
"Touch base" comes from ye olde American Baseball. You have to touch a base in order to continue on to the next one; you can't just run past the place where the base is.
/me plays Devil's Advocate:
Just 'cause the crypto's closed-source doesn't mean that it's not lifted in its entirety from peer-reviewed software.
Most people will probably continue to have one ISP connected by a firewall. Instead of a stateful firewall that's been configured to also do NAT, they'll just have a simpler stateful firewall and skip the address translation tables.
FTFY.
A huge number of people are having serious problems with the KDE 4.x series.
If they're having issues, they need to file detailed bug reports. Software developers are generally neither mind readers nor are they working for the NSA.
Ever have a power outage while in the KDE? Good luck getting the DE back with your old preferences.
A) The loss of your preferences files is an issue with your filesystem, not KDE.
B) KDE 4.x is rock solid for me, despite multiple intentional power outages *and* running it all on btrfs.
So Microsoft can (successfully, in the Central District of California)
Cite, please?
HOLY MACRO!