Um, I beg to disagree, sucrose and lactose can't be absorbed in the stomach, they get broken down (in the sucrose case, into glucose and fructose) in the small intestines. In case you missed that biology class, the intestines are on the other side of the stomach from the mouth.
On the other hand, monosaccharides can be absorbed in the mouth or the stomach. Thus, they are not recommended for diabetics.
And by the way, some starches are broken down by saliva, others are broken down in the stomach. And the maltose produced is then digested in the small intestines (same place sucrose is absorbed, and about the same speed). So actually, starch and sucrose are pretty much equivalent as foods.
Here is a link to the Colorado State University quick handbook on the subject:
http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/digestion/smallgut/absorb_sugars.html
Note: no biochemistry - just human biology here.
Pure opinion! Potatoes have starch, very little sugar or fiber and only traces of everything else. And most of that is in the skin. They are a lot worse for you than cane sugar (raw sugar cane is a quarter dietary fiber - vs. a few percent dietary fiber in a baked potato). [My opinion.]
Onions and garlic would meet my requirements, but probably are not so good for your breath.
Closed = not open now. Think about OpenWatcom. It spent a dozen years as a closed source commercial product (not open yet). It's open source now. Same game. [Some] Android source is not open today. It might be some day in the future.
Gotcha wins!
It may be funny, but I wonder how true it is. Do you know anyone who runs Windows/XP with IE 7 so he/she can access particular web sites. It's not hard with virtualization or even simple minded LILO or GRUB solutions. I'm sure I hit over 50% of the web sites I access as a Windows box, even though I run either Gentoo or Ubuntu at least 95% of the time....
The meta-Turing test counts a thing as intelligent if it seeks to devise and apply Turing tests to objects of its own creation. -- Lew Mammel, Jr.