Comment Re:You might just want to suggest a memory upgrade (Score 1) 294
Maybe he lives somewhere where amazon does not ship? Maybe it's 10x computers (120USD sure is a lot more!).
Maybe he lives somewhere where amazon does not ship? Maybe it's 10x computers (120USD sure is a lot more!).
I find that
Out of curiosity, what distro do you usually install?
Anyone wanting to print more than one would just use a VM, or "print-to-pdf". Where the hell did you find such "cupon-printing" software? I've never even heard of such a thing!
I found that suggesting "Mint" prevents this. People think about black screens and green text when you say Linux. They have no concept of Mint (or Ubuntu), so naming that doesn't fire a fear of terminals.
The need for adding "-no-dwrite" to wine has existed for months, it's nothing new.
Why don't you run native wine?
Why not? It sounds like he knew what counts, and amount-of-lines-of-code really doesn't count.
I think this pretty much covers the entire subject:
http://www.folklore.org/StoryView.py?project=Macintosh&story=Negative_2000_Lines_Of_Code.txt
They changed the indentation from tabulations to spaces on 10k files.
I think since Bootcamp, everyone just assumed that Mac users were just dual booting to play games. Not always true, though (and a real inconvenience).
Why would mac users dual boot (and consider that "conventient), and Linux users run wine? Most Linux users run LInux on windows-compatible computers.
You can build FLOSS windows apps and run them on wine on your ARM Linux machine.
Oh, because it's too hard to implement a 1997 protocol? (IMAP IDLE)
The first time I saw that I knew I was not getting a blackberry.
Then you didnt do your research very well, because BIS is the ghetto "i cant afford a BES" experience. A proper BES is magnitudes more secure than anything SSL has to offer.
[citation needed]
Seriously.
There's absolutely no evidence to back this up. With SSL and my own server, I'm sure nobody's listening to my connection. The same can't be said for BES, because, seriously, we don't know!
A networkless computer?
Ultra-delicate files can be handled on offline computers, and moved around in physical devices, and encrypted.
That greatly depends on the Language being used.
I used to work using Python, and eclipse is almost useless during refactoring. The same applies to most dynamically typed languages (or, in this case, duck-typed).
Just like people used to trust Google more than Microsoft. Times change, and so do companies.
There's also the fact that open sourcing it allows implementations for ANY architecture and platform, not just those they choose.
What good is a ticket to the good life, if you can't find the entrance?