We have a DOS-based call-recording-answering-machine system on a special PC that is at least 12 years old. The company who made the solution went out of business 7 years ago.
But the machine is running strong:)
I prefer Sublimetext on Windows computers. It's a free-shareware program that mimics TextMate almost fully. ZenCoding package is also available for SublimeText.
Posted
by
samzenpus
from the beware-the-list-refresh dept.
An unnamed man flying from Nigeria to New York City found out he was added to a no-fly list somewhere above the Atlantic Ocean, when the plane stopped to refuel in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Officials won't say what he did or why he was added to the list after he had already boarded a flight. He was not immediately charged with a crime and Customs and Border Protection will only say that he is a "potential person of interest." From the article: "The man, a citizen of Gambia, was not on the no-fly list when he boarded the aircraft in Dakar, Senegal, said a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the issue publicly."
They really should learn from Audio Software devs. They have not cracked Cubase 4-5 (allthough H2O did a brilliant job on Cubase3), and they can't crack software that requires PCI-plugged cards like some VSTs and stuff.
Oh, I forgot to add. Today my w7 had another BSOD while I was using remote desktop connection to a XP-box at work. Dump shows ntoskrnl. Funny thing was, that the XP-box also crashed. It replied still to ping and as my co-worked stated, mouse and keyboard were still functional; but that was it.
I run w7 RTM build and BSOD is happening. I've read M-audio firewire audio interface drivers make this happen, but I'm not sure. Been XP-user for 9000 years now and BSOD is kind of frustrating to experience nowadays.
Posted
by
CmdrTaco
from the it's-a-book-of-faces dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Facebook launched new privacy settings this week. Cosmetically, this means that the settings are explained more clearly and are marginally easier to manage. Unfortunately, some of the most significant changes actually make preserving privacy harder for its users: profile elements that could previously be restricted to 'Only Friends' are now designated as irrevocably publicly available: 'Publicly available information includes your name, profile picture, gender, current city, networks, friend list, and Pages.' Where you could previously preserve the privacy of this information and remain publicly searchable only by name, Facebook now forces you to either give up this information (including your current city!) to anyone with a Facebook account, or to restrict your search visibility — which of course limits the usefulness of the site far beyond how not publicly sharing your profile picture would. That Facebook made this change while simultaneously rolling out major changes to the privacy settings interface seems disingenuous."