Comment Re:I agree (Score 1) 681
You mean a skeptic like Freeman Dyson? I don't think he's a developer though he is a premier physicist.
You mean a skeptic like Freeman Dyson? I don't think he's a developer though he is a premier physicist.
Says the guy who doesn't even have a science degree. Just a masters in Engineering.
Hey "SCience GUy" I'll see your crappy Masters in Engineer and raise you a PhD in Mathematical Physics.
I remember in 1998 hearing the experts all say "This time it's different we won't crash."
To get torrenters to oppose Net Neutrality and Title II legislation.
Clarification: Name a few apps that you cannot find in "lesser" apps stores.
Sure, you can go with a lesser known app store, but you lose a good chunk of apps in the process.
Name a few?
Sounds to me like he is for it when he's not against it.
If the sperm is destroyed, is there anything left that contains DNA in the semen?
If not that this could be a big boon to rapists who no longer have to worry about leaving their DNA behind.
Here is what I think will happen:
At some point Poettering will piss off Linux enough to get him banned from submitting to the mainstream kernel.
To deal with the problems of no active maintainer of systemd contributing to the kernel, Linus will write his own boot system.
This system will work better then the sysinit system, but not be anywhere near as onerous as systemd.
Peace will return to the linux landscape.
We keep all the information about the Khardasians around?
I thought reverse engineering the server protocol was perfectly legal. Samba/CIFS and Bitkeeper are two protocols for which this was an example.
Sometimes to access a site, you need to connect to a proxy. Every piece of software that connects to the next has to assume it needs to be routed through a proxy. The reverse engineers can write a small proxy which reroutes those particular addresses to something else.
Still I find it hard to believe that IP's hard code IPs. They are prone to change.
You either don't know LLVM or you don't know Android.
Well obviously you either don't know these projects as well as you do or you are willing to lie about them.
They are not the same.
Obviously they are not Android is an Operating system and LLVM is a set of compiler tools. The point of analogies is to compare similar things that are different. Analogies comparing the same thing really don't work. For example, if doesn't make sense to draw an analogy between the digestive system of a Guernsey cow and the digestive system of a Guernsey cow does it?
LLVM was a postgrad student project,
A student whose name is Chris Lattner. Who has been the project maintainer his whole life. Who went to work for Apple to bring the code up to snuff and created a team there to maintain it.
and remains an open project, that anyone can contribute to http://llvm.org./
Android was a commercial product bought by Google
and whose core was open sourced. It's called AOSP. and like LLVM anyone can contribute to it.
s/Android LLVM/Android/
If LLVM were a Microsoft product instead of an Apple product
LLVM is not an Apple product. It's an open source project which Apple, amongst others, incorporate into their products, and to which they contribute source improvements.
Right and Android LLVM is not an Google product. It's an open source project which Google, amongst others, incorporate into their products, and to which they contribute source improvements.
Living on Earth may be expensive, but it includes an annual free trip around the Sun.