Comment Symphony vs OO (Score 0, Redundant) 331
According to this article Lotus Symphony is based on OpenOffice.
http://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/News/IBM-Throws-Out-Microsoft-Office
According to this article Lotus Symphony is based on OpenOffice.
http://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/News/IBM-Throws-Out-Microsoft-Office
Samsung and a few others have Blu-Ray players with built-in NF streaming ability. I bet few if any of them run an MS OS internally. So, wonder what stream they use? I've only watched a couple of things on mine but they were good quality and very consistent.
Oh and what OS does the Roku use?
Umm.. You don't run VMWare ESX or XenServer either one *on* Windows or *on* Linux. They're considered "bare-metal" hypervisors:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypervisor
I have multiple Win2k8 Server installs running happily on XenServer5 now. Works very well.
I came to Linux relatively late. It is now only around 3 years ago that I decided to give it a try. There are a number of reasons why I didn't do it earlier. I was living with my parents and thus shared a machine with the rest of the family; I was into gaming and thus 'needed' Windows, etc. Well, better late than never I guess.
For a few years, spammers have been sending out spam pretending to be from my personal, vanity domain. I haven't seen many complaints recently, but it now costs me a considerable amount of time daily to delete hundreds of bounces from mail servers that don't recognized forged headers, etc. The recipients' mail filters are probably also down-rating my domain name as a result, too, further degrading the value of my domain name if I ever want to use it for a commercial venture. I am also concern
The one day you'd sell your soul for something, souls are a glut.