Comment Re:Not like other sports. (Score 1) 295
Well, I guess it would add a threatening element to the game that if you start to beat the guy on steroids, he might beat you... literally.
Well, I guess it would add a threatening element to the game that if you start to beat the guy on steroids, he might beat you... literally.
It also highlights how stupid some people are if they think that installing an OS of a totally different version over the top of an old installation is a good idea. Only a complete newbie idiot with minimal knowledge of computers would actually think this is a good idea. That goes for all OSs - not just Windows.
I would concur with that from most Windows user's point of view, but it doesn't always hold.
I have had enough successes upgrading Debian based servers from woody to sarge to etch to lenny to consider it a fairly safe operation (by "fairly safe" I mean I'm happy to do it remotely, but only on machines that are not currently doing anything important - live services are moved elsewhere for a while until the new environment is considered ready and stable). I've only done a desktop upgrade twice, and while both occasions went well that is not many data points so I can't call it statistically relevant.
BUT, in every case the vast majority of the software on those machines came from the official repositories, with only a few odds and ends coming from the semi-official "backports" repos and a sprinkling of small things hand compile into
Having said all that, I still generally recommend an OS reinstall for a major upgrade even for home systems (for server use the new install option is a no-brainer anyway, as you will be wanting the new environment fully built and tested alongside the old one before migrating over) running Debian. If all your irreplaceable data is away from the system drives/partitions and properly backed up and you have all your install sets and product keys to hand you are not going to lose anything except a little time, and you get a much cleaner system (less all the collected cruft you forgot was even there on the old setup) out of it.
Do you honestly think a half dozen audio codecs, and another half dozen video codecs would make for a "small" DLL?
libavcodec currently has decoders for 242 audio and video codecs, encoders for 100, demuxers for 129 container formats and muxers for 89.
The resulting DLL is about 7 MB.
If their goal is outright legalization, then their stated goal should also be outright legalization.
Suggesting that pot should be something that you get from a pharmacy and with a prescription when, in reality, you believe that you should be able to grow and use it yourself is disingenuous and counterproductive.
There is a workaround for that.
http://icrontic.com/articles/upgrade-the-windows-7-rc-to-retail
Indeed there is. You can find it here: http://www.ubuntu.com/getubuntu/download
So in other words paper MCSE's dont understand how to do compatibility testing or XP mode. I love how on slashdot we bash the business class and pointy haired managers until they say something anti-MS then they are the wisest people in the world.
The high end transmissions these days are automated clutches in one form or another. You shift just like normal but the clutch engagement is automatic and (usually) much faster than you could do it yourself. You still chose the shift points but there is no shift pedal - just a stick or paddles. Hate to say it but the clutch pedal is a relic that has no functional reason to exist anymore. It only sticks around because people like it - not because it is actually necessary or even all that useful 99% of the time.
A manual transmission is far cheaper than a conventional auto or new double-clutch systems. That's a pretty big driver. I don't know what it's like in the US, but most automatics in New Zealand carry a price premium of around 10% vs the manual version.
Personally I dislike automatics purely because of the torque converter. I like my revs to directly correspond to wheel speed. Not some vague relationship where it feels like my pedal position is merely a suggestion.
Except here in Canada, where most governments lean "liberal" socially, and... well, at the moment economic policy can only be described as "house on fire". To be perfectly honest, parliamentary debates might be improved a bit if firefighters would smash down the doors and haul everyone outside once in a while.
"worknig functional audio drivers for plain audio"
Working functional audio driver for plain audio are fine.
Now admittedly there might not be some ports of "professional apps" sold to people
for more than what people pay for their entire PC. However, my comment wasn't about
that. What is going to keep the other 95% of the userbase from using Linux.
It's certainly not the bullshit claim about "plain audio" drivers.
The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh