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Comment Re:Strangely inspirational (Score 1) 373

refusing to interviews if the interviewer isn't willing to "properly" refer to GNU/Linux or conflates Free and Open Source Software... Arguably such people are the ones who might most benefit from his message. Appearing on stage next to a banner might produce the opportunity to talk about why he disagrees with such things... talking to a reporter who conflates "Free" and "Open Source" might provide an opportunity to talk about the difference. Both could be done in a non-confrontational way that none the less shows what he believes and why.

did you see the part where rms asks that the journalists actually attend his talk? and the references he gives to the GNU website talking about the difference between Free Software and Open Source software?
by the time he finishes his speech, he has spoken at length on the differences. why repeat it to a journalist?

Comment Re:DRM (Score 1) 1162

DVD's have DRM also. Your argument doesn't hold any water.

that is because his argument is not licensed to hold water in your region. if you were in the proper region, and paid the appropriate licensing fees you would see that the water is indeed held.

Comment Re:Ummm, that's a crap article (Score 2) 705

Now, there well may be technical reasons why a reboot is a bad idea, but this article doesn't present any.

hrm, the article states: ...If you shrug and reboot the box after looking around for a few minutes, you may have missed the fact that a junior admin inadvertently deleted /boot and some portions of /etc and /usr/lib64 due to a runaway script they were writing. That's what was causing the segfaults and the wonky behavior. But since you rebooted the server without digging into the problem, you've made it much worse, and you'll soon boot a rescue image -- with all kinds of ponderous work awaiting you -- while a production server is down.

and:
In many cases, it's extremely important not to reboot, because the key to fixing the problem is present on the system before the reboot, but will not be immediately available after. The problem will recur, and if the only known solution is to reboot, then the problem will never be fixed unless or until someone decides not to reboot and instead tries to find the root of the problem.

and while I disagree with this one slightly..as the problem may still be present after a reboot..I defintely agree with what the author is saying...find the actual root of the problem, and fix it..don't just cross your fingers and hope a reboot will fix the problem.

Also the author never mentions preserving uptime of the server as a goal..he does mention a few times patching in place..which will mean killing services, effectively making that particular server unavailable.

Comment Re:Sure (Score 1) 182

yep, defintely late to the party. *cough* WebTV *cough*

yea, OK some different functionality..but the idea was there. and yes, they bought a company to make it happen.

This one could make it though..MS tends to not get things right until the second patch to the 3rd release of their code..

Comment Re:Seems kinda stupid (Score 1) 754

...Better ideas for cutting down on deaths: bigger bumpers, lower speed limit (like 45), tougher driving tests, taking away licenses more aggressively, mandating disc brakes...

I'm with ya on most of this...but yikes dude. If you need a speed limit of 45 when in REVERSE, I think you may be doing something wrong...

Comment driving without due care and attention (Score 1) 709

I never really understood why a whole new law had to be introduced for cell phones/GPS's. most jurisdictions that I know of have some sort of punishment for "driving without due care and attention". they tend to have heavier consequences than the newer you-can't-touch-a-phone laws...but a car smashing into a biker has the same results whether that driver was napping, or texting..

Comment no need for a technical solution (Score 1) 396

there is no need for a technical solution..assuming this is for a business, fire anyone who decides to infect a company-owned PC with malware. (make sure your AUP/HR Policies *clearly* state this).

ideally this would let you uninstall any anti-virus on end-user PC's, which will increase performance...you still need to do some checking at the perimeter of course.

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