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Comment Re:and laptops? (Score 1) 362

I currently live in Europe and tried to get a Linux Laptop about 2 years ago. I tried several barebone sellers, but there were always problems: either they wouldn't ship to my country, or they'd force the local keyboard upon me, but I wanted a standard US qwerty. In the end, the ONLY seller of Linux laptops that had what I wanted was... Dell ! And that's what I got for home, work and wife. Works fine with Ubuntu.
Caldera

Not Quite Dead: SCO Linux Suit Against IBM Stirs In Utah 170

An anonymous reader points to a story in the Salt Lake Tribune which says that The nearly defunct Utah company SCO Group Inc. and IBM filed a joint report to the U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City saying that legal issues remain in the case, which was initiated in 2003 with SCO claiming damages of $5 billion against the technology giant, based in Armonk, N.Y. That likely means that U.S. District Judge David Nuffer, who now presides over the dispute, will start moving the lawsuit — largely dormant for about four years while a related suit against Novell Inc. was adjudicated — ahead. What kind of issues? In addition to its claims of IBM misappropriation of code, SCO alleges that IBM executives and lawyers directed the company's Linux programmers to destroy source code on their computers after SCO made its allegations. The company's other remaining claims are that IBM's actions amounted to unfair competition and interference with its contracts and business relations with other companies. IBM has remaining claims against SCO that allege the Utah company violated contracts, copied and distributed IBM code that had been placed in Linux and that SCO created a campaign of "fear, uncertainty and doubt" about IBM's products and services because of the dispute over Unix code.

Comment Gateway (Score 1) 80

In Pohl's Gateway series of books, there are AI assistants that are created this way. The 'hero' of the story has one based on Einstein. And then when computer power increases and those get more and more input and larger decision trees, things get... interesting. Anyway it's an awesome SF series.

Comment Re:Forth prefer I (Score 1) 177

I did some Forth back in... ohhh... 1983 on an ORIC-1. I found it hardly easier than assembly at the time. But since then don't they have a huge trove of libraries and whatnot, like other languages, to do most things ? Has it stayed 'bare metal' so much ? Hell, even in C you can load a webserver library with one #include and one call.

Comment Small data (Score 3, Interesting) 51

Let me Godwin that discussion fast... Just remember that Hitler, with a few Hollerith machines, which aren't even considered computers by any definitions of the term, managed to classify, sort and exterminate millions of people, just imagine what a malevolent dictatorship could bring today. Think we are past that ? Well, it looks like the Front National, France's extremist and racist party, is posed to win the next election due to the usual two main parties being full of shit and full of themselves (not sure there's a difference there).

Now the million dollar question is: do you really want to give the keys to (in this case, french equivalent to) the NSA to such a party, even if democratically elected ?!? Really ? The best solution is to never build a mass listening aparatus in the first place. Pass laws making it impossible. Buid an anti-NSA whose life work is to search, target, disrupt or destroy by whatever means any mass spying operations.

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