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Comment Re:New version! (Score 1) 264

Which is precisely what people are complaining about - more and more packages (like gdm3, gnome, etc) *needing* (being written to require) systemd... or some "shim" to get around it, which starts making packages less and less able to be ported to other OS's (BSDs, Solaris...).

gdm3 needs some functions that used to be provided by consolekit. Until very recently nobody could be bothered to maintain consolekit.

systemd provides those functions.

And that's systemd's fault?

Stop whining. Work.

Comment Re:New version! (Score 1) 264

That's exactly what it does.

No, it isn't.

Or, hell... just plug it into Google to save some time, since all the heavy lifting has been done for you time and time again, you astroturfing troll.

Plug what in? I've tried every way of posing the question I can think of and it all comes back to here or that one incorrect reddit post.

People are tired of submitting bug reports to a project that doesn't address them

Name one.

(Fucking slashdot went down again while I was posting this reply. Did they install systemd or something?)

Comment Re:New version! (Score 1) 264

Actualy that's not true for systemd -- if a process double forks and exits systemd can still capture tbe exit code -- that's (part of) what cgroups is for.

I can find no evidence of the mysterious 'dropped syslog' claims, nobody ever seems to have reported it as a bug and it doesn't happen on any system I have access to.

Comment Re:Feasibility of end-to-end encryption (Score 1) 155

It'll also need an IOMMU and a driver which prohibits the NIC from stepping out of line, or a NIC with open firmware. Otherwise, someone could (theoretically) own your NIC and then browse your memory from it.

On the (as yet inexistant) Neo900 the wireless module is a USB device. It doesn't get to access the memory if the CPU doesn't want it to.

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