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Comment Re:It's been decades. (Score 1) 815

No. http://images.apple.com/legal/sla/docs/macosx107.pdf: "The grants set forth in this License do not permit you to, and you agree not to, install, use or run the Apple Software on any non-Apple-branded computer, or to enable others to do so."

In 10.4, on the other hand, it's not explicitly stated, only implied: "This License allows you to install and use one copy of the Apple Software on a single Apple-labeled computer at a time."

Comment Re:I Know People Like You (Score 2) 267

No, if you buy quality brands, take a little care and, probably most importantly, are lucky, that happens. I'm writing this on my 7 year old MacBook 1.1 (HD is 4 years old, replaced because the old one was too small, not because it failed). Before that I owned a Toshiba Satelite Pro for 6 years. And I'm using my laptop throughout the day allmost every day because I'm a student and programming hobbyist and I don't own a stationary. I may have prioritized wrong by buying expensive stuff and using them long after they are outdated, but I certainly have used them.

Comment Re:"virii" is not a fucking word, moron. (Score 2) 228

Whether virus has a morphologically marked plural in latin is debatable. The discussion you link to claims that "virus" is a 4th declension noun, but all dictionaries I've checked (including Oxford!) says it's a 2nd declension noun. Anyway, "virus" is a neuter, not masculine noun, which means that the latin plural (if it really is 2nd declension) is not "viri" ("virii" does not make sense to me; is it an anglicism?), but "vira", which btw is well established as an alternative to "virus", at least in Denmark.

Comment Re:Automator and AppleScript (Score 1) 317

Ironically, AppleScript, which apparently tries to be "human friendly", is the first programming language I've tried where I gave up figuring out how to do some simple operation that looks alike in all other languages (some string operation, I think it was), even after searching the documentation. I now believe OSA really is an acronym for Obnoxious Syntax Abomination.

Comment Re:Good (Score 1) 851

True, but sometimes people do follow lines of thought that can be taken ad absurdum. I believe the line is often drawn at what is immediately inituive, for example the immediate risk of contamination (or at least most of us are brought up to wash our hands and dress wounds). That you may or may not catch a flu may be percieved as a more remote threat. I do not claim that this line of thought is 100% coherent; all I know is that there are actually people who refuse e.g. ensurance for this reason.

Comment Re:Good (Score 1) 851

I'm also baffled by this. The only reason I can think of (except them being in Christian Science) is that she follow the same line of thought that leads some (and I stress: SOME) protestants to have issues with contraceptions and/or ensurance: By taking such precautions you don't trust God to do what's best for you.

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