Comment Liability (Score 5, Funny) 230
I'm liable for first posts.
I'm liable for first posts.
This would be a fantastic idea. Not only would the rules be transparent and non-ambiguous, but the potential for experimentation and self-analysis would be incredible. Python is definitely one of the better languages to use for this, as it tends to be very readable and self-explanatory as far as programming languages go.
While I don't think what they're doing is good or smart, I suspect this would really only affect the GPLed clients accessing the Second Life servers run by Linden Labs and not client use on any private servers that are running. And Linden does have the right to manage the data they store on their servers as they see fit.
The beauty of the GPLed client is that users and developers can choose which servers to point their clients at--and pick the ones that have terms they agree wtih.
Err, let's pretend I looked it up originally that Nile is from the Greek word Neilos.
Well, I can't tell you about 4,000 years ago, but 3,000 years ago in Archaic Egyptian, the Nile was variously called iteru or H'pi.
The name "Nile" is probably from the Arabic name "an-nil" (you'll have to imagine that's an i with a straight line over it--Slashdot hates Unicode).
Frankly, I'd much rather see OpenMicroBlogging being used and promoted rather than the Twitter API. It's used in StatusNet and identi.ca and allows for seamless subscriptions between various OpenMicroBlogging-enabled sites. It's sort of like the XMPP/Jabber of microblogging.
StatusNet also supports the Twitter API, but I don't know of any clients that let me point to identi.ca instead of Twitter. I use Gwibber, though which natively supports both of them and more.
As soon as I get a copy of the actual brief [CC] I will upload it and link to it. Another amicus brief opposing the RIAA's attempt to reverse Judge Gertner was filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and other First Amendment proponents and is already available online."
Thus marking the first time Slashdot has posted a breaking news story.
The RIAA's actions continue to provide amusement for me. But it's all increasingly irrelevant in my life. Just like when I watch a DVD at someone else's place and I realize there's all kinds of wanings against copying and commercials at the beginning. At home, I just use VLC and immediatelly get the main menus.
The RIAA has to face the court of public opinion eventually. I think the Amazon.com MP3 store and iTunes show what remarkable success DRM-free music can have online. Unfortunately for the RIAA, so do Jamendo and Magnatunes....
No, SFTP is the SSH File Transfer Protocol and has nothing to do with FTP. If you like scp, you'll love SFTP.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SSH_file_transfer_protocol
Frankly, the ease of transferring files back and forth is really one of the things I miss most when using other operating systems.
Not really, since if you can log in via SSH, there's an SSH server on the other side.
fish:// is great because you don't need SSH, it'll work over rlogin sessions, too, which is excellent. I didn't remember about this one. Thanks!
That's one of my favorite features, too. In Nautilus, just type 'sftp://SOMEADDRESS' and you're all set.
Ah! I believe that Ubuntu's (and so Debian's) update is fantastically better, but mainly in that they cover the entire distro (and any third-party repos that you explicitly enable), whereas Windows's updates only cover the OS.
But since it's "Windows Update", that's fitting enough. The article claimed Windows didn't have an automatic update feature, which I found absurd. Ignoring scope, I also felt that they're extremely similar (although I spent two hours last night trying to play a fullscreen game while fighting 15-minute Windows update reboot reminders--that's a feature I don't miss in Ubuntu).
When I said that Windows' update feature "rivaled" Ubuntu's, I meant that it was similar enough to merit a comparison, not that one was better than the other.
You claimed that my assertion that Windows offers automatic updates was wrong. You talked about what Ubuntu and Debian are capable of, but you did not seem to explain why you felt my assertion is wrong.
I am not challenging you to a game of semantics, I am genuinely interested in your opinion.
I am curious. Windows offers automatic updates and the default if you click through is to enable them.
Ubuntu and Debian offer automatic updates but it is not default and you have to either set a crontab or in Ubuntu dig under the Updates tab in System > Administration > Software Sources.
In what manner is this substantially different?
If you want to put yourself on the map, publish your own map.