Comment Re:cynicism (Score 1) 431
Um, Ubuntu does sign their packages.
Um, Ubuntu does sign their packages.
Which limits your (in the US) carrier choice to T-Mobile, and your handset choice to a handful of mid-end feature phones and all but three of their BlackBerrys.
1)Use some of that paint that blocks cell phone calls. (works for wifi also)
...and now what happens when you try to make a cell call?
I actually tried that once with DD-WRT, as our phones kept colliding with the wifi. Trouble was, some of our gear (oddly enough, our Wii and DS) couldn't see the signal.
Which is perfectly legally and morally fine. The LGPL allows you to charge money for distributing software (provided, of course, you also follow through with the rest of the license, incl. providing source), and there's nothing wrong with selling the service of downloading software and burning it to disc for you.
You mean the Qt docs program also designs GUIs? I'm sure you meant Designer.
If you have a piece of GPL code in your program, all of the program must be GPL. LGPL only applies to the LGPL code and any changes you make to it (your original code can be under any license)
But it's the only thing that can get you on the secret network on the same device as you can check your unclassified email on.
Which, IMHO, borders very close on a Very Bad Idea (TM). One pin-sized hole and "oops, I just posted the positions of the entire armed forces on Facebook"
Biggest downside of course being you would have to use Windows Mobile. Being a fellow BlackBerry addict, it's not the same.
They're already secure enough to be standard issue to all Congress critters, including AES encryption and (software) self and remote destruct. Wouldn't be too much of a leap for the Presidential model.
It gets better. I ran across a service for my Blackberry called Qik that lets you stream video live from the phone, and saves the video to the site straight away.
So, for example, if someone who had a phone with Qik was taping the BART shooting or something equally embarrassing to $powerful_group, even if security forced you to delete the video and took the phone, the video's already out there.
Funny you should mention that, Opera has all those out of the box.
-AdBlock ("content blocker")
-Foxmarks (Opera Link)
-Greasemonkey (User JS)
-Firebug (Dragonfly)
KDE and OSX have also supported this for a while.
And so has *nix proper since the dawn of time
The big difference here is that with webOS;
1) The apps are actually stored locally
2) Palm is apparently allowing access to the hardware via CSS, HTML, and JavaScript (details are scarce right now), something no one else does right now
(does the word "bollocks" mean anything to you?)
Testicles.
"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."