Comment: Helloworld was this ... (Score 1) 363
HelloWorld from YEARS ago was a distributed social networking system. Its a shame that it never took off.
http://www.cooperatingsystems.com/index.htm
Helloworld was way ahead of its time
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HelloWorld from YEARS ago was a distributed social networking system. Its a shame that it never took off.
http://www.cooperatingsystems.com/index.htm
Helloworld was way ahead of its time
6 to 15 hours is the sweet spot for me. The Mario games are great examples of the right amount of challenge and time invested into the game.
I used to LOVE the Zelda games, back when i could figure them out and finish one of them from start to finish in 10 hours. The newest one on the Wii though I never got all the way through. The puzzles were more challenging than I wanted, there was too much travelling, and the game was WAY too long.
I want puzzles, but i don't want to spend an hour having to figure them out or wandering back and forth across the level trying to find something the developer hid under a rock just to make the game last longer.
I'm currently playing Dante's Inferno and its a good mix of mindless hack and slash and mindlessly easy puzzles.
I don't want a sense of accomplishment for sitting in front of my TV playing a game. I want to play something to take my mind off the daily tasks that should be giving me a sense of accomplishment.
Maybe its time we start pushing distributed social networking.
Think "HelloWorld" from years ago, but more modern. HelloWorld was great, just ahead of its time.
No, you didn't.
I might be more interested in all of google's offerings if they offered a more unified interface to access everything.
Read, Gmail, Buzz, Wave, Docs, Calendar are all windows that need open. Plus, as they add more services, their interfaces feel more like "hacks" to put it all together.
Because clearly, public welfare has been working for centuries.
Whoever modded this up is retarded too.
I hate this fucking website.
It is clear you don't understand what rights are. Why don't you define rights for us?
(Once you realize you're having trouble clearly defining what rights are and why you have them, because you don't actually understand them, go do some homework and come back when you have something intelligent to say.)
Why does nobody offer the suggestion of ASKING FOR HELP? ASKING FOR HELP is an option. No one has a right to live off of someone else's efforts though, so if someone hits shit luck he can't just impose on someone.
Just be sure to turn off the root user, setup the SSL, and change the port number to something else. I also like to limit webmin to a list of known IP addresses via its admin interface AND in iptables.
Been using Webmin for longer than i can remember.
No discipline is ever requisite to force attendance upon lectures which are really worth the attending. -- Adam Smith, "The Wealth of Nations"