Slashback: Civilians, Rubyx, Restrictions 225
Do they have the original Coneheads novels? seattlenerd writes "Largely lost in the TV coverage and media hype surrounding Friday's opening of Paul Allen's Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame in Seattle is the fact that SFM celebrates books as much as TV/film SF, according to at least one review. Lots of first editions and several manuscripts are on display as the font of SF ideas. Also not covered much: There's no fantasy or horror. It's all science fiction, with no apologies. And ain't it cool that someone has acknowledged that there are actual writers behind some of the best science-fiction depictions? And that some of these writers are on SFM's advisory board?"
(Reader Comte offered a sneak peek at the museum last week.)
That's why it's called software. An anonymous reader writes "News.com.au is reporting an Australian company has released "The Worlds First" anti-virus software for mobile phones to fix the recent 'Caribe' virus and attempts to prevent future exploits."Simon Crean of Mobile security company Jamanda wrote to say that his company is also has "just delivered a comprehensive fix to the widely publicised mobile virus Cabir and made this fix available to the public via its website at www.jamanda.com. As a gesture of goodwill and to maintain market confidence, concerned mobile users can currently download and install this fix at no charge."
Speaking of quick fixes, baudilus writes "The good folks at Cerulean Studios have already released a patch for Trillian, addressing the block attempt by Yahoo!. In half a day they've outdone Yahoo!'s latest scheme. How's that for support?"
Click two ISOs together, go /home. awalrond writes "Rubyx is a source-based Linux distro which achieved far too much interest a couple of months back after a mention on Slashdot. The author had to pull the plug due to the massive bandwidth costs of users downloading all the sources. Well now it's back, fully converted to use the new White Water bandwidth-sharing download utility. A line has been drawn in the sand, and this e-gauntlet thrown back at Slashdot.
Rubyx can be downloaded, built and installed with a single command to the small rubyx script (written in the ruby language) The same script handles all subsequent package management, and can even create a bootable ISO image of the distro."
I want to see the floating candy instead. Mike Taht writes "Bruce Damer, curator of the Digibarn, got some stunning pictures and movies of the historic SpaceShipOne launch event on Monday. Check it out!"Also in civilian space news, Walkiry writes "The Russian Space Comittee has rejected Gregory Olsen, who was set to become the third space tourist, due to health reasons. This comes as a bit of a surprise, given that Olsen himself seemed quite condfident about his performance during the physical training and claimed that the hardest part was actually learning Russian. A real shame."
(The linked story is less clear about whether Olsen will eventually be able to make the trip; in it, a spokesman for Space Adventures denies that this rejection precludes Olsen's flight.)
His meaning is clear. Matheus Villela writes "Sergio Amadeu, Brazilian president of ITI, the third authority in Brazilian government being below only of Brazilian president and the minister of civil house and recently sued by Microsoft have released an official note to Brazilian and international press; here's a translation of what he said:By reading this far, you irrevocably agree to all the text that follows. emtboy9 writes "If you happen to live in the Raleigh-Durham area, Nextel is now officially offering wireless Broadband via its cell towers. With all the discussion about BPL as of late, its refreshing to finally see someone in my local area doing wireless which is a much better mechanism for broadband access.'In atention to the demands of national and international press, which seens solidary with Brazilian Govern at this moment with no precedences in the history, when a controller of an important public institucion of this country personally suffers the action from those interested in mantain a hegeomonic model, i come, after hear my federal lawyers and solicitors, say that the judicial provocation moved against my person is, by itself, so insultant and improper, that does not deserve reply.
For other hand, i would like to register that the act of contract software preserving the values freedom and opening is, for the Brazilian Government, a question of indissolvable form to the democratic principle.
And because a long and painful way was covered to arrive at the current period of stage of development of the democracy in this Country, we will not stop in our fight. If democracy is a value replect of ideology, is not never an insignificant value. If democracy is a dream, is a dream of which this Country never will wake up again.
The future is free.'"
Nextel's coverage area looks to be about the same as the trial area they had been running, but if this takes off, it shouldn't be too much longer until they are offering this coast to coast, especially with coming pressure from Cingular Wireless."
However, be choosy about wireless internet service, which can come with some hidden snags: HEXAN writes "With all the recent hubub over wireless access at broadband speeds, I decided to check out Verizon's plan. Although the price is a bit steep, it seemed ok until I got to the "Terms and Conditions."
Here's a sampling of what you cannot do with Verizon's "unlimited" Internet Access: "...cannot be used for" "uploading, downloading or streaming of movies, music or games" [Ugg], "Web camera posts or broadcasts" [No camgirls], "telemetry applications" [No GPS], "substitute or backup for private lines" [No VOIP]. If I cannot use the service to play games, video conference, make calls, download movies or MP3's, what exactly am I paying for? More importantly, how badly will they impinge on my privacy to enforce this agreement? P.s. You cannot reach that special agreement until you go beyond the "front door". The gotcha clauses are not mentioned in the standard, consumer friendly, litigation-approved agreement."
meh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:meh (Score:2, Interesting)
how the hell do they manage that?
The future is free. (Score:2, Insightful)
seems like I've been outsorced to Brazil
Re:The future is free. (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the same country where a NYT reporter was threatened with deportation after he said (backed by sources) that President Lula da Silva was an alcoholic? link [rsf.org]
Everybody's free (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The future is free. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Portuguese, while a major ethnic group, is not the dominant one. I lived in the Italian part of Sao Paulo and some old timers could still speak Italian, but almost none of the kids (under 18 crowd) could speak languages of the Old World other than Portuguese and English, with English being a rather mottled version that was only studied in School like Americans (if you are into it) study French, German, or Spanish. English is not a daily language. Many teachers in Brazil learn British English, but with American cultural twists (which makes some very interesting conversations in English).
What I'm trying to say is that Brazil is not the backward country that you seem to be thinking it is. Freedom is relative, and there are many things you can do in Brazil that if done in America will get you arrested and thrown in jail. I also find the attitude to discuss religion in a public forum to be refreshing compared to almost official atheism in the U.S.A. (the ACLU's attitude about this not withstanding).
That Brazil has more respect for its elected officials than the NYT has for American politicians is totally understandable. If a reporter had done something similar during the JFK administration they probabaly would have been treated in a very similar fashion in the USA. It was just habit for that journalist to forget he was in a different country with a different culture, and not reporting from Texas.
Re:The future is free. (Score:3, Insightful)
Official atheism? Are you in Bizarro U.S.A.? I'll give you one since you seem to not be from the U.S. We have an official "seperation" of church and state - but not official athiesm. Christianity and theism is the accepted belief system. If you can, watch close as the U.S. presidential debates begin - I guarantee they will try t
Re:The future is free. (Score:5, Informative)
Even in this enviroment (./) if you admit to being of a religious nature you will have someone trying to call you stupid or a mindless sheep that has to follow some book that was made up by stoner thinking of a way to control the masses. God forbid you actually state your religion, then you will have a bunch more people telling you your wrong for beliveing in a certain god, worship cows, or somethign of the sort. Religion has basically become taboo in america unless your in an enviroment were it is expected to talk about religion. It is verry hard to find people willing to have a conversation about religion outside one of these enviroments and it is even harder to just meet new people and talk about how being faithfull to your worship has helped you thru tough times.
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
I suspect that applies to very few areas. I live in one of the least religious towns around, and it's not like that here. If some people feel embarrassed to admit they go to church, I doubt it has anything to do with any anti-religious taboo. It's probably because they are shy of being identified with the growing numbers of intolerant, deliberately ignorant fundamentalists. There is a public taboo against intolerance, and I think th
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
Well, "under god" doesn't offend me. I don't think that "under god" is actually a religious thing. It is mor
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
Then you're a fucking idiot. Would you listen to yourself? "God isn't religious" - Of course God is a fucking religious concept!
It is more of a statement of what the one nation is answerable to. Almost every religion has a god,
Yeah, but nonreligious people don't. That's the whole point. (Aside from those little tiny religions that aren't monotheistic, like hinduism and buddhism, but who cares about them
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
-- you do realize your arguing with sumdumass
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
I may be injecting my own opinion here alittle but thats how i take it.. BTW, i'm kind of agnostic when it comes to
Re: (Score:2)
Re:The future is free. (Score:4, Informative)
I respect the fact that (I'm assuming here) you adhere to your religious beliefs. However, you have to remember that you live in a world populated by people who are not all Christians. We believe many different things.
When you refer to the 'media' as being officially ahtiestic, I have to wonder what you're talking about. I never see athiests in the news in a positive light. I can't even name one well-known living person who claims to be an athiest, except for the nutcase that took the state to court over the pledge.
Maybe the fact that the media attempts to be unbiased towards religion comes across to you as being athiestic. I really don't see this official athiesm in the media. If you're really interested in the religious bias in the media, you might be interested to know that the Washington Times (considered a more conservative media outlet) is owned by a cult leader [deseretnews.com]. While most likely not your own religion, I don't think that makes the Times athiestic.
I'm not sure how you think religion is taboo in America. Religion (or the pretense of it) is absolutely required for a presidential candidate - why do you think that is? Because the established religion in the U.S. is..... Christianity! Name one politician who doesn't claim to believe in a higher power.
Meanwhile, Bush pushes faith-based charities for receiving government funding, "Under God" was added to the pledge in the 50's, "In God We Trust" was added to the dollar, we still say "So Help Me God" in the courtroom, Congress still prays before every meeting, televangelists are still on the airwaves, the Promisemakers still tour.
It seems you might be interpreting things wrong here, perhaps it looks that way from the pews. When you claim that you can't speak about religion outside of "an enviroment were it is expected" perhaps what's actually going on is that people expect you to respect their beliefs? Some people think that trying to push beliefs on someone else, especially in work or casual social settings is extremely rude and obnoxious. Maybe you see that and think that everyone is an athiest. Somehow, I find it hard to believe that you've had an actual conversation on this topic with the masses of people you're claiming are now suddenly athiests.
There is no way religion is taboo in America. Religion gave us all of our taboos. The Whipping of the Christ raked in millions of dollars. We have multitudes of churches, synagogues, mosques, cults and so many varieties of belief systems that it's dizzying. All existing in one country while peacefully coexisting. Ah.. that peacefully coexisting thing - yes there are some religious people who can't stand that and attempt to influence the media, government and public opinion. I guess the latest tactic is to appear as the underdog. You'll find that most people don't buy that.
You are very safe from Athiesm becoming the official "religion" of the United States.
Re:The future is free. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
respect for elected officials? (Score:3, Informative)
I agree that it was pretty disrespectful for the NY Times to call Lula an alcoholic. From what I've seen of him, I like Lula. And if I were leader of a country, I wouldn' be surprised if I drank heavily. But are you really going to try to defend former leaders of Brazil? Like Collor de Mello [country-studies.com]? Or Sarney [zonalatina.com]? That's not even mentioning the series of general-presidents during the military regime in the '60s.
Lula has earned my respect through his years as a labor leader,
Re:respect for elected officials? (Score:2)
Discussions of the sexual habits of JFK, while talked about now to some extent, were never reported or discussed in common public forums in the 1960's
Re:The future is free. (Score:2, Interesting)
In Brazil, Catholcism is a very dominant force, and in just about every public building you will find a picture of the Pope, even police stations and DMV bureaus. I am not talking about one on the desk of one of the employees or officers, but one in a very prominent place in very plain view, with generally nothing else around it. Kinda like
Re:The future is free. (Score:2)
Re:Indeed. (Score:2)
So... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So... (Score:3, Informative)
Unless something complicated is required to install it, you probably can get a basic ebuild, tweak the filename and paths and have it work.
Re:So... (Score:2)
Re:So... (Score:2)
Random binaries hanging around my system just annoy the crap out of me.
the hall of fame (Score:5, Informative)
Re:the hall of fame (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, it will most likely follow the course of the Experience Music Project, also an Allen project, and will shrink not expand. In fact, it's in space in the EMP that's not being used due to lack of interest. Hell, several local papers in Seattle ran articles that could have very well been entitled 'What about after all the nerds have come and gone.'
Yahoo: GAIM Has Fix, Expecting New Release (Score:5, Informative)
GAIM's mailing list on sourceforge has postings saying that they have received info on a Yahoo fix from the Trillian people. They expect to do a release of GAIM tonight. I'd expect that other projects will also get this info and will be doing releases shortly.
Re:Yahoo: GAIM Has Fix, Expecting New Release (Score:2)
Gaim & Yahoo (Score:5, Informative)
Apparently there will be a release out tonight with the fix included.
WhiteWater, BitTorrent's successor? (Score:5, Interesting)
"A Massive increase in internet efficiency is possible with persistent
bandwidth sharing. BitTorrent started the ball rolling; now White Water takes
the next step with proxy/server and mirroring facilities."
Persistent bandwidth sharing is the key. Consider:
- When you download a file with ftp or http, you connect to and download the
WHOLE file from the publishing server.
- When you download a file with bitTorrent, you get CHUNKS of the file from
loads of other people who are downloading the file AT THE SAME TIME AS YOU.
If you are the only downloader, you'll get the WHOLE file from the publishing - When you download with White Water, you get CHUNKS of the file from any WW
proxy which has ever downloaded the file and still has it in it's cache.
White Waters' proxy mode provides this _persistent_ or _ongoing_ file sharing.
Even if you are the only person currently downloading the file, you will
receive chunks from every WW proxy which still has the file (or chunks of it)
in its cache. If there are a hundred proxies with the file, and your local
bandwith is wide enough, you could receive the file 99 times faster than
would be possible from the original publishing server alone, which might be
on a simple home broadband connection.
"Imagine that 10 of your hard working employees download the latest Harry
Potter movie trailer. Thats 10 identical huge files saturating your internet
connection. If instead the trailer was published using WW, you could run a WW
proxy on your gateway server and only 1 copy would be downloaded, even if a
hundred employees decided to fetch it. Better yet, they would all be sharing
the data amongst themselves, massively reducing the load on your gateway
server."
This is only possible with the proxy/server mode WW provides.
"Now imagine that your ISP provided a WW proxy. Thousands of downloads are
reduced to one, freeing up Gigabytes of the ISPs upstream bandwidth!"
As you can see, the implications are quite profound.
"Best of all, JK could publish the trailer on her home broadband connection,
and even a mention on Slashdot couldn't kill it!"
Questions (Score:2)
and just to make a correction(?)
Re:Questions (Score:2)
From what I read, it looks like WW is very similar to BitTorrent, but server-side WW proxies will cache any WW content that passes through them. This saves outsi
the difference as I understand it: (Score:2)
With WW you keep uploading as long as it's in your Temporary Internet Files or wherever WW put it.
Re:the difference as I understand it: (Score:2)
Of course, this assumes that you leave the WhiteWater client running constantly. If you close it once you're done, it's the same as Bittorrent.
I guess I see this as being more of a "Peer Akamai" where local users get the file from a close WW server; one that's run by your ISP, for example.
Re:the difference as I understand it: (Score:2)
Therefore my (somewhat limited) upstream DSL bandwidth is reserved for sharing only those files that I actively want to support, not everything I've downloaded.
Now, the other issue is that I don't know how much benefit that WW would have for individual users that are downloading "questionable P2P con
Re:WhiteWater, BitTorrent's successor? (Score:2)
Of course, I've never used BitTorrent either, but it would seem that you would have similar bandwidth loss issues with BT.
Under that scenario given by the OP I can see that it could be a good idea
problem with whitewater (Score:2)
Re:WhiteWater, BitTorrent's successor? (Score:2)
However, if I try to compile it on anything but a Linux system, I see something like:
set -e; g++ -MM -MF joystick.d -Wall -Werror -DLINUX -I../ joystick.cpp
joystick.cpp:20:28: linux/joystick.h: No such file or directory
make[1]: *** [joystick.d] Error 1
make: *** [winux] Error 2
Why is portable code looking for linux/joystick.h? Maybe, by portable, they mean "you can use it on more than one linux distro."
Re:WhiteWater, BitTorrent's successor? (Score:3, Informative)
The http protocol allows requests for partial transfers, but single URL defines a single source from which to pull (or else source forge wouldn't have the mirror picker page) and neither the http nor ftp (protocols) define a mechanism for automatically simultaneously pulling a single file from multiple auto-located server sources with crypto file chuck integrity validation.
http caching is great, but this _is_ different from it and from ftp and from bt. Not lik
Re:WhiteWater, BitTorrent's successor? (Score:2)
I'm not a fan since that means it's taking up slack space on my HD that I could be putting to more productive uses.
This Rubyx thing (Score:5, Interesting)
One complaint though: I wish the author would quit calling it an "operating system" as if it wasn't yet another source-based [Linux | GNU/Linux] distribution. Sure, call it a meta-distribution like Gentoo, but don't get carried away. I'm glad he did so in the writeup; I hope he'll change the webpage too.
One question though: why isn't there a Sourceforge or Rubyforge page for the script? Also, there seems to be a namespace conflict with an in-development Ruby-based Enhydra clone [sourceforge.net].
Re:This Rubyx thing (Score:2)
I hope they don't raise a stink.
What am I paying for? (Score:5, Funny)
Spam. Lots and lots of Spam, and not the semi-gelatinous mystery meat in a can, either.
Wanted! (Score:3, Funny)
-------
Wanted
(photo here)
Sergio Amadeu do Silveira
Criminal Charges
Any information about where is this man contact immediately with the Justice Department of Microsoft
Your identity will be hidden
(Microsoft logo)
Always caring about Brazil own good
-----
Well, i'm not good translating, but at least brazilians will have fun with that
Translation to English from Portuguese (Score:4, Informative)
Wanted
Sergio Amadeu da Silveria
Criminal Record
1. Democratization of Technological Knowledge
2. Technological Liberation of Brazil
3. Assisting 2000 Civil Servants (presumably to switch to Linux, or at least helping them with technology)
4. Publication of Diverse Books (in a context indicating that he is the author)
5. Pushing for the end of monopolies through litigation. (Anti-trust lawsuits)
WARNING:
This man is dangerous!
Any information about the location of this person should be sent to the Legal Department at Microsoft. This information will be kept confidential.
MICROSOFT
Always wanting the best for Brazil.
(P.S. I spent a couple of years in Sao Paulo, and although I have a hard time being able to translate INTO Portuguges, I can understand it fairly well and turn it into English. Your translation was pretty good though.)
Re:Translation to English from Portuguese (Score:5, Funny)
but I came up with:
Fuck you Microsoft!
A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:5, Interesting)
The answer to both were the same: that Yahoo views Messenger and more specifically, the IMVironemnts contained within Messenger as basically a revenue generator and a advertising vehicle to draw traffic to their other properties, not just a text messaging service.
Since Trillian and other alternative clients don't you view the IMVironment ads, they don't want you to use them...
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:2)
On one hand I feel kinda sorry for Yahoo IM (that its being using with 3rd party tool). On the other hand
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:2)
And do you think Yahoo would continue to provide free IM servers and bandwith to users if this were the case?
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:2)
Yahoo providing the service would be irrelevant. A Jabber server running at each ISP would make IM more distributed.
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:2)
I like my IM centralized, and I can't see any benefits to distributing it like that. With my centralized IM, I can connect to one or two networks and get 99% of my friends. If Jabber became popular, would I have to connect to the ISP-run server of everyone on my contact list?
Even if they addressed that via a forwarding mechanism or something, they're just following the footsteps of another tech that already does what they want: IRC.
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:2)
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:5, Interesting)
(For the record, I'd happily use the "official" YIM client if the Mac version didn't suck so hard. Instead I use Adium.)
Re:A quasi-official word from Yahoo. (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't begrudge AOL, Yahoo, or even MSN for trying to make some money on ads. If they explained intelligently and elegantly why Gaim users _should_ view with ads, I bet some people would do it.
-Erwos
Better translation (Score:2)
Re:Better translation (Score:5, Informative)
In regards to the demands of the national and international press, that empathizes with the Brazilian Government in this moment without precendent in our history, in which the director of an important public institution of this country is personally attacked by those interested in maintaining a homeogenic model, I will, after discussing the matter with my lawyers and federal prosecutors, attest that the judicial action taken against me is, by itself, so insulting and without merit that it does not deserve a response.
On the other hand, I would like to maintain that the move to software that protects the values of openess and freedom is, to the Brazilian Government, something intimately connected to the democratic principle. And because we have come through a long and difficult road to reach our current level of democracy in this country, we will not surrender in our battle.
If democracy is an ideal, it is never insignificant. If democracy is a dream, it is a dream this country will never wake up from.
The future is free.
I have an even greater respect for the original translator now. Although I'm fluent in both languages, it's quite difficult to make direct translations (I guess I just never have to).
Quick and dirty translation translation (Score:4, Informative)
On the other hand, I would like to say that contracting to use software that preserves the values of openess and freedom is, for the Brazilian Government, an issue indivisble from the principles of democracy.
And because it has been a long and painful road that we have traveled to arrive at the current stage of democratic development in the country, we will not stop in our fight. If democracy is a value reflective of an ideology its value is never insignificant. If democracy is just a dream, it is a dream from which this country will never awaken again.
The future is free."
-Sergio Amadeu
KFG
Re:Better translation (Score:2)
Re:Better translation (Score:2)
It'd be like running the U.S. Declaration of Independence through babelfish a few times then trying to get at the nuances of what the framers were saying.
There's something to be said for reading good translations of elegant writings instead of bad ones.
I never understand licenses (Score:5, Insightful)
This seems absolutely socialist behavior compared to what is being promoted by these licensing agreements. At least the immigrants knew they were being fucked and had the ability to discern exactly how fucked they were before they signed the papers. Now agreements are not even generally made available prior to the contract signing, i.e. purchase, and are often made available in hard copy only after the additional agreement is reached. I admire companies like verizon suppling their agreements before a contract, i.e. sale, is reached. However, one has to wonder when the courts are going to decide that the general populous is just too stupid to comprehend these agreements. which are written for corporate lawyers, and therefore have to be ruled null and void.
Socialist? (Score:2)
This seems absolutely socialist behavior...
Why do you characterize that as "socialist." Socialism proscribes that resources be shared among the group. The conditions described in The Jungle seem more like an extreme form of capitalism to me. The workers were considered human capital -- similar to the buildings and equipment -- to be used and depreciated on the balance sheet. I don't see anything socialist about it (unless you're just using "socialist" as a synonym for "bad.")
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:2)
The other legal argument I wannt to see is the proof
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:4, Informative)
Ahem. The woman didn't know the coffee was hot enough to inflict third-degree burns. A reasonable expectation when you purchase coffee (or any food, whether served hot, cold, or in-between) is that it is at an appropriate temperature for human consumpation at the time of purchase.
The coffee McDonald's served this woman was not at such a serving temperature. Furthermore, by McDonald's record of buying off (by paying their hospital costs) dozens of people who had been burned by their coffee, it can be shown that they were aware of the problem and chose to ignore it.
Finally, the woman only sued for the recovery of her hospital costs, which McD's only offered 10% of; the exorbitant amount awarded by the court was awarded with the intent of punishing McDonald's.
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:2)
But seriously there was more to it than that. She recieved 2nd degree burns from this 'cofee'. McDonalds was serving it well above the accepted serving standard. There is also a difference between a product served at a drive through, where one might resonably expect it to be at drinking temperature, and somthing you've cook
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:2)
Yes she was in a car. But she was the passenger - not the driver.
The car was stopped.
The old lady received 3rd degree burns ofer 6% of her body.
McDonnalds had over 700 coffee burn complaints against it. Many of those complaints were for burns very similar to the old lady's.
McDonnalds kept their coffee at 190 degrees. that is over 40 degrees hotter than what is considered optimal by most coffee drinkers.
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:2)
HUH? Look up the proper brewing and holding temps for coffee sometime. Brewing temps are just below boiling. Holding temps are near 180 degrees. Properly brewed coffee and properly stored coffee can cause 3rd degree burns. Therefore, under the conclusions of this asinine lawsuit, ALL hot coffee served properly EVERYWHERE (in the reg
Re:I never understand licenses (Score:2)
It's one of the drawbacks of the legal system. Certainly the American system, but I'm not sure that the British system is any better.
They had to find a side as being wrong. I've read some reports on the whole case. From what I could see both sides had goofed.
McDonald's really shouldn't have been selling coffee at that temperature. It was quite simply dangerous. However, even at allowable temperatures I would say that anyone who puts a cup of coffee in their lap in a car is simply asking for trouble.
It
Any cockpit or chase plane views? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Any cockpit or chase plane views? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Any cockpit or chase plane views? (Score:2)
Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:4, Informative)
Unfortunately, uploading means "sending data from your system", and downloading means "receiving data to your system".
If this TOC is going to be enforced, you can plug in the adapter, but you couldn't technically use the service at all (everything else relies on these two capabilities).
Why exactly would you pay them any money?
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2, Informative)
Uploading and downloading are modifying "movies, music, or games" correctly. Even if one were to try to separate the two, one could only truly say that by that wording they are prohibiting uploading. Downloading is directly connected to "movies, music or games" in their wording.
(Then she eats, shoots, and leaves.)
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
is what they're saying.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:5, Informative)
It's lazy grammatical translation on the part of the slashdot submitter and editors. (Not terribly unusual at that, and conveniently arranged to provoke more flaming than what's warranted.) The actual terms of service say:
Put in context, it quite clearly indicates to me at least that they only care about uploading and downloading of movies. Of course, it doesn't mean that the rest of the terms of service aren't also very restrictive and perhaps the "unlimited" in the name is misleading.
But essentially they don't want you using your connection to run a server, or to otherwise transfer anything that might end up hogging excessively high bandwidth compared with their regular customers. It doesn't rule out using the connection for general web browsing and email, which is probably all that 95% of their target market want anyway. In fact, the earlier parts of the terms of service (not quoted here) specifically state that those tasks are what it's intended for.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Insightful)
you don't need broadband to surf the net or to read email.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
I can even watch flash presentation with 56k. the small programs that I "need" to surf the web (java, flash etc) can either be avoided (note web content is not java-flash dependent, web
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
Sure, and 640K is enough for anyone. Some people enjoy having web pages download fully in 2 seconds rather than waiting 15 seconds for it to load. It's great when you're doing web searche
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:4, Insightful)
Prohibiting a server connection of any sort is prohibiting you from every sending data from your computer. Period. The rest is just semantics from a lawyer who thinks he understands computers but really doesn't.
Of course, they probably think that the only internet protocol is HTTP.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Insightful)
If their bandwidth is so precious that it only supports web browsing and email, then it's not quite "broadband", is it? It reminds me of Monty Python's "Insurance Sketch":
Vicar (Eric Idle): But my car was hit by a lorry while standing in the garage and you refuse to pay my claim.
Insurance Agent (Michael Palin): Oh well, Reverend Morrison ... in your policy..
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Interesting)
I think it clearly says "This is how we're going to structure an incredibly misleading add compaign". It's an attempt to sell an 'unlimited' service with a contract giving them the right to restrict said service in pretty much any way they w
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Insightful)
This is broadband we are talking about. If the target market is just browsing the web or reading email why would they need broadband? Before I had broadband that's all I did, and it was plenty fast enough.
I think what bothers me the most is that they don't specifically limit the illegal grey area and instead broadly ban everything. What if I were watching mov
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Insightful)
Didn't read the license did you? It clearly stated...
By reading this far, you irrevocably agree to all the text that follows.
If you don't like the translation or the editing you should complain before you read it.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2, Insightful)
That seems to me to rule out absolutely any form of IP traffic, since it is not possible for humans to transmit IP without a machine to encode/decode it. You can't operate a morse key fast enough to send broadband. The prohibition of more specific activities like downloading music is superfluous.
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
Alan
Re:Verizon TOC means "do not use" (Score:2)
And I suppose that means we shouldn't use IM instead of the phone, or going out to see people.
Scaled Composites VIPs incomplete! (Score:3, Interesting)
I refuse to buy virus software for a cell phone (Score:4, Insightful)
I will not be dragged into yet another scam where I constantly pay to patch up problems that should not exist in the first place. If my service is interrupted by a virus my phone company had better release a firmware update to fix it or I won't be paying the bill. If they cut off my service for not paying for a phone that can't be used then all that will have happened is that they lost another customer. I can easily live without a cell phone.
Re:I refuse to buy virus software for a cell phone (Score:3, Informative)
I vote in every election, and I also vote every day in the marketplace with my pocketbook.
Extortion (Score:2, Insightful)
Translation:Doesn't preclude the flight, just makes it cost Olsen a couple more roubles.
Re:Rubyx... and Ruby itself (Score:5, Informative)
Ruby is quite a bit smaller (in MBs) than Perl. The whole sourcecode to Ruby is less than 1MB - (well, now that they've added several packages and extensions in 1.8.1 it's closer to 2MB, but that includes GUI toolkit bindings, web server modules, etc. - lots of useful stuff.)
Last I checked Perl's sourcecode was in the >5MB range, but that was a while ago.
I included the ruby executable and a few libraries on a CD recently (it was used for installing packages from the CD) and it took up less than 3MB total including the ruby scripts written for installation and C extention that I wrote (a shared library).
So, Ruby's footprint is relatively small compared to Perl's. I don't know about Python's footprint, though.
Re:Rubyx... and Ruby itself (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Rubyx... and Ruby itself (Score:5, Interesting)
For the source code, you can often get quite small while still being readable. Ruby's designer, Matz, takes things like aesthetics, intuitiveness and liveable design more seriously than most language designers. Whether it succeeds or not is a personal judgement call. It leads to some useful things being excluded from the standard base because they are deemed "not the Ruby Way", but also to a tool base that is (in the estimation of fans) very clean, useful and fun to use.
You can read about the ideas behind Ruby here [rubyist.net] in a presentation by Matz called "How Ruby Sucks". Also an extended Python/Ruby comparison here [c2.com].
Basically if you want to see what Perl would look like if it was created by a crazy Japanese guy with a peculiar philosophy of programming instead of a crazy American guy with a peculiar philosophy of programming, take a look at Ruby.
Re:Rubyx... and Ruby itself (Score:2)
Re:All for Yahoo Blocking 3rd parites (Score:2)
Re:All for Yahoo Blocking 3rd parites (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, I'm all for yahoo blocking 3rd party IMs because hopefully people will stop using their service and I won't have to build gaim from cvs once a week (okay, not every week) so I can IM people who won't give it up.
The sooner people start moving towards open protocols like jabber [jabber.org], the easier it is for all of us!
My $.02