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Comment 666 (Score 0) 409

Revelation 13:17 Clarke's Commentary on the Bible: And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark - "If any," observes Bishop Newton, "dissent from the stated and authorized forms; they are condemned and excommunicated as heretics; and in consequence of that they are no longer suffered to buy or sell; they are interdicted from traffic and commerce, and all the benefits of civil society. So Roger Hoveden relates of William the Conqueror, that he was so dutiful to the pope that he would not permit any one in his power to buy or sell any thing whom he found disobedient to the apostolic see. So the canon of the council of Lateran, under Pope Alexander III., made against the Waldenses and Albigenses, enjoins, upon pain of anathema, that no man presume to entertain or cherish them in his house or land, or exercise traffic with them. The synod of Tours, in France, under the same pope, orders, under the like intermination, that no man should presume to receive or assist them, no, not so much as hold any communion with them, in selling or buying; that, being deprived of the comfort of humanity they may be compelled to repent of the error of their way." In the tenth and eleventh centuries the severity against the excommunicated was carried to so high a pitch, that nobody might come near them, not even their own wives, children, or servants; they forfeited all their natural legal rights and privileges, and were excluded from all kinds of offices. The form of excommunication in the Romish Church is to take lighted torches, throw them upon the ground with curses and anathemas, and trample them out under foot to the ringing of the bells. It is in this and similar ways that the false prophet has terrified the Latin world, and kept it in subjection to the secular and spiritual powers. Those interdicted by the two-horned beast from all offices of civil life are also such as have no

Comment I like Unity, I'm keeping it. (Score 1) 272

I've been using Unity now at home for the last month or so. Its Gnome 2 at work on the Fedora 13 development machines. Unity excels as a "consumerist" interface. The traditional windows paradigm that wastes screen space irks me no end - when I wanna code I want Netbeans/Eclipse to use every pixel. The test app can be switched in and out as needed - the docs are on the other screen. I've tried using Ubuntu 11.04 at home for coding but Netbeans hates the default look and feel and does not seem to completely honor look & feel settings, and why TF should I change my whole env just to please NB ? I guess you get what you pay for - and Ubuntu is one hell of a bargain, but I would like Canonical to spend a bit of time on dev workflow and make sure the popular modern dev tools (Eclipse & Netbeans) works well in Ubuntu - I understand its not their beef. But at the same time: Developers, Developers, Developers ! All in all I like Unity, I'm keeping it. And haters please keep the entertaining hate'n on - all progress depends on the unreasonable man. But keep it real - you can't be a l33t libertarian unfettered atheist and weep into to your designer microbrew every time somebody moves a close button and be taken seriously at the same time.

Comment What if every megacorp was as awesome as Google (Score 0) 107

Consider a world in which every big corp invested as much energy and money into "shit that matters", like google does. Or not even that, in stead of fighting like rabid starved pigs for a slice of the cake, try to bake a bigger cake. I'm certainly a Google fanboi, and I think I have good reason to be.

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