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Comment Re:slightly off topic (Score 1) 476

Honestly, the same goes for the GNOME project. Just have a read here. This situation is possibly even worse for FLOSS in the long run than the FSF's conservativeness.

FLOSS development is supposed to be about choice, I find it very unsettling that various entities try to take that choice away. "If you're not a GNOME project you don't matter, in fact we'll actively try to make your life harder." is basically what they say.

The same can be said about the entire systemd debacle, is it an improvement over what we have now? Maybe so, but that is irrelevant to this discussion, but the way they are trying to force it on everyone whether you need it or not, whether you want it or not is sickening and unworthy of a FLOSS project.

Personally I'll take the FSF's slowass development, seemingly archaic policies and Stallman's insistence on correcting every use of "Linux" to "GNU/Linux" over the current trend emanating from the likes of the GNOME project.

Comment Re:So like... (Score 1) 151

While true here I feel the effort is wasted. We don't have two different Office suites but rather twice more or less the same Office suite with a different license. The likelihood of both projects spending/wasting quite a bit of time/effort trying to not deviate too much from each other seems rather big, this effort would have been better spent on competing with actually different office suites (or standalone applications) instead of with their clone.

Comment Re:So like... (Score 1) 151

No we don't, one was donated by Oracle so they didn't have to maintain it (because they managed to piss off most of the devs). The right thing for the community would have been for Apache to drop it as a clear signal to Oracle and its ilk so they maybe might start fixing their attitude, now Oracle just gets what it wants: an updated Office suite they can do whatever they want with whenever they want (due to the license).

The main reason as I see it, to keep this "thing" "alive" is out of anti-GPL sentiment, which is just a plain retarded reason in my book.

Comment Re:But, the Blogosphere likes creating controversy (Score 1) 255

It's not irrevocable (they can easily get out of their promise if they want) and only covers a relatively small part of the entire .Net runtime, much less than you need for it to be actually useful, iow, Mono implements a lot that doesn't fall under this promise. The FSF has covered this ground time and time again.

Comment Re:2 people agreeing is news? (Score 1) 411

Because they were mostly a nomadic people. It's only when their land got taken from under them that they saw the need for a "state" or "identity" as such. You can hardly lay claim on a land you haven't lived in for like 3000years without sounding like a lunatic. Most peoples aren't native to the country they live in, having displaced other peoples or having been displaced by other peoples multiple times in the course of history. The Old Belgians for example got driven quite out a few times and most of them now probably live somewhere way south in Europe (Southern France, Spain, maybe even Turkey), it would be pretty insane if they suddenly tried to reclaim their former land after like 1300 years.

As usual, two wrongs don't make a right, but enough wrongs make damn sure you keep running in circles. Which seems exactly what is happening here.

Comment Re:When do we get compression? (Score 1) 803

Indeed, if this feature was actually useful in an enterprise setting RedHat would have implemented it years ago. The simple fact that they did not is in itself enough proof that it is a useless feature.

For my personal usage I barely have any files I could compress and save any reasonable amount of space with. Old documents tend to go in tar bzipped files which, incidentally, I can just browse as if they ware normal folders with my file manager of choice. If the OP can't with his then his file manager is a gimped piece of crap that needs replacing.

File system compression is a non-solution to a non-problem.

Comment Re:Performance (Score 3, Insightful) 242

IMHO the time to desktop means nothing, especially on Windows as you note, the system isn't usable for minutes after the desktop's shown up. Adding in a faster drive (eg, an SSD or a hybrid drive) will cut down on the startup time, but the issue remains. So whether you load everything before showing the desktop or after will only make a difference in perceived bootup time, not in actual "time until the system is actually usable". In other words, it's just a cheap way to appear to boot faster without any actual benefit to the user.

Comment Re:Well, of course. (Score 2) 242

My experience is quite the opposite, when transferring large files from windows to Linux (over a gigabit link) or vice versa it's always the Windows machine that chokes on the IO trashing like a madman (seen with, Debian/Gentoo and Windows XP/Vista/7 with either ReiserFS/ext3/ext4 vs NTFS).

My guess is your distribution isn't set up properly for your workload.

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