Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Image

Southwest Adds 'Mechanical Difficulties' To Act Of God List 223

War, earthquakes, and broken washers are all unavoidable events for which a carrier should not be liable if travel is delayed according to Southwest Airlines. Southwest quietly updated their act of God list a few weeks ago to include mechanical problems with the other horrors of an angry travel god. From the article: "Robert Mann, an airline industry analyst based in Port Washington, NY, called it 'surprising' that Southwest, which has a reputation for stellar customer service, would make a change that puts passengers at a legal disadvantage if an aircraft breakdown delays their travel. Keeping a fleet mechanically sound 'is certainly within the control of any airline,' Mann said. 'Putting mechanical issues in the same category as an act of God — I don't think that's what God intended.'"
Programming

Simpler "Hello World" Demonstrated In C 582

An anonymous reader writes "Wondering where all that bloat comes from, causing even the classic 'Hello world' to weigh in at 11 KB? An MIT programmer decided to make a Linux C program so simple, she could explain every byte of the assembly. She found that gcc was including libc even when you don't ask for it. The blog shows how to compile a much simpler 'Hello world,' using no libraries at all. This takes me back to the days of programming bare-metal on DOS!"

Comment Re:Portable == stolen (Score 1) 411

We have a few carts from Bretford - very well made:
http://bretford.com/products/section.asp?pc=7

In a standard configuration we securely mount a laser printer and wireless access point to the cart, so all the teacher needs to do is wheel in the cart, plug it in, and hand out the laptops.

They have an optional timer which has two outlets and switches between them on a schedule:
http://bretford.com/products/overview.asp?id=301
This lets you recharge 24 laptops, 12 at a time, to avoid overloading a standard electrical circuit (in Canada, 15 amp, 110V).

Slashdot Top Deals

"Ahead warp factor 1" - Captain Kirk

Working...