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Comment Re:Wait, what now? (Score 1) 462

Have you used anything else? IMHO MSVS is horrible. It is just like MSWord (and possibly others - I have been running Linux for a decade:)). Someone is used to it, and they don't know the trouble they are into. If/when someone tries something-anything- else, and persist for more than a month, then the weakness of MSVS, MSWord is evident.
And yes, I have seen this many times happening to my students (it is however extremely difficult to persuade a student to try something else than what they are used to, and mostly I have given up trying).

Comment Re:Oh really? (Score 1) 184

I think this is a major factor - people know where to find information now without having to ask Google. They know about Amazon, they know about Wikipedia, they know about their favorite news sites.

Google has its use, but people aren't having to use Google to find everything the way they used to.

This is simply not so. The search mechanism that Amazon and Wikipedia have, is far far far .. (n times) behind Google. It is much much (n times) better to use Google to search either Amazon or Wikipedia. In other words Google searhes Google and Wikipedia better than themselves.

Comment PCBSD (Score 4, Informative) 65

I downloaded PCBSD (a FreeBSD distribution) last weekend. I installed it in an old PC. Everything went fine and it did detect the wireless NIC. I downloaded gcc, g++, gfortran, python and compiled all my programs (console based and graphics based). No surprises. I was either lucky, or FreeBSD/PCBSD is mature enough to be used as desktop OS.
It was a nice experience to use something else than Linux, and be productive as well :)

Submission + - How to Ditch the Grid With a Woodstove and a $100 (motherboard.tv) 3

HansonMB writes: Given one of my more immediate life goals is to be living in a somewhat self-contained cabin somewhere far away from all of this — yet still have a way to keep my deer meat frozen and my laptop charged — the Volo Stirling engine is very relevant to my interests. Basically, it’s a lot like an internal combustion engine, except instead of the heat coming from inside the engine via exploding gasoline, the heat comes from outside the engine, like from a woodstove. It’s an old concept, dating back to 1812, that got shoved to the side with the advent of the grid and the internal combustion engine. Detroiter Tim Sefton and his Volo Designs are aiming to bring it back, with plans to have a consumer-ready Stirling engine capable of generating a household’s worth of electricity ready by spring 2012, for less than $100.

Comment I like unity (Score 1) 798

I am a power user. I use CL continuously. I have also been using KDE since last century. AND I LIKE unity. Its different, it works (in 11.10), my programs (graphics and text based) run equally well as in KDE (SuSE), and CL is a only click away for power users. Thanks Ubuntu; we have yet another Desktop choice in Linux.

Comment Re:How do I make money in a free software world? (Score 1) 107

Oh come on. RMS has said that since ages. Look, how do we make a road? The state pays civil engineers to design and manufacture it, and then it is free for all. Of course it needs maintenance, and again the state pays people to the job.
Thus, if we need structural analysis software, developers get paid to do it and maintain it by tax money, and everyone has it for free.
Things change. Noone has a god-given right to earn money, if they do something that people don't care. To see how ridiculous is the assertion of the gggg-grand father, I will para-phrase it, A LITTLE :
I need to feed my family. I write SNOBOL code for a living. How do I get paid for doing this in a world where all software is in C++/Java/Python?

Comment Re:Don't Be Evil? That's just a lie (Score 1) 417

I don't believe Google is doing this. You have to concentrate on the (hard) facts:
1. Google search is free and efficient. If MS and (in fact most of America) drives Google out of business, forget search engines for free. And forget good results; MS has already shown that it gives you the results which MS wants to give.
2. Google maps. The same.
3. Google earth. The money that you need to get satellite photos is insane. Yet Google gives it for free. It has helped me and my colleagues enormously.
4. Google translate. A very essential tool for me and almost everyone I know. For free.
5. Google mail.
6. Google Lunar prize. If this does not convince you, then nothing can.
7. VP8 codec, which Google bought and set it free.
And if they make a buck with advertisements, then good.

Comment Other kernels are in the right direction (Score 1) 460

"Debian kFreeBSD is a toy OS, people really shouldn't misunderstand that.''
It is extremely important to have more than one free kernel. In other slashdot stories we all have seen the attack to Android, which is basically Linux. How long before MS Apple and other criminals (convicted monopolists) attack Linux to oblivion in USA. I just hope, that Europe might come to their senses, and continue to resist software patents.
I had hope about free Solaris, because I believed that Sun could protect the OS with their patent portfolio. But now Sun is Oracle.
So, Debian kFreeBSD and Debian kHurd, are invaluable projects. It must be made clear to those criminals that if they nuked Linux, everyone would switch to a replacement kernel (FreeBSD) without affecting the userland. And if they nuked FreeBSD too, then we could switch to Hurd, and the criminals would have to start all over again.

By the way, of course Debian kFreeBSD would be a toy OS. Didn't MS say so about Linux at the start? didn't old Unix vendors say exactly the same about Windows? And before that wasn't DOS only for playing around with toy computers?

Comment Re:research: Implementaions count a lot (Score 1) 192

In this case NASA is obsoleted by Arthur Clarke who envisioned telecommunication satellites earlier. And the space race to the moon was started by Russia. It was their idea. Yet who does not credit NASA with rockets, spaceships and all space staff?
To repeat what /.ers have stated many times. Ideas (and non-hardware patents) are cheap. Implementations are difficult.

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