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- I think this is a very helpful link. It fixes all the keyboard mapping problems. Even for VMware server 2.0 http://communities.vmware.com/message/1091425
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- "Yes, it helps people through altered perception of the world, but so do three glasses of wine." ___ Oh, so atheists do not drink alcohol because it is too much like religion?...
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- • Theism is not a religion. Atheism is not a religion for the same reason. 'Theism' is an abstract noun which refers collectively to each organized religion which espouses the existence of...
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dmiessler.com/about/
Slashdot is running a story about MySQL buddying up with SCO, and both the story itself and the /. comments are quite enlightening. I’ve always liked MySQL myself — or, to put it another way, I’ve never had a problem with it when using it for the few thing
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3 years ago
What is the difference between the SCO-MySQL deal and the SCO-PostgreSQL/EnterpriseDB deal?
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1846635,00...
They were both announced at the same time. They are both doing the same thing (providing certified binaries to run on SCO).
As usual, MySQL gets bad press and PostgreSQL gets ignored.
3 years ago
Sometimes if a product is good, you may have to bend your way of thinking. The "That's Micro$loth/SCO/Hewlett Packard! IT SUCKS!" way of thinking is going out of style.
I've always been a fan of GNU/Linux, but I use Microsoft products all the time (Windows XP/200 at work and home, MS .NET for coding projects, MS Outlook for email at work) for one of two reasons: 1) it's the best product for the job, or 2) it's a professional tool we use in my department/place of work.
While unstable or horribly designed products should be avoided at all possible costs, we should learn to look at software for what it is, not what it stands for. A true geek wouldn't use a magnet on his hard drive because he didn't personally write a text editor or IDE.
3 years ago
#2: I think this is wrong on two fronts. The first is that part of product quality is having the freedoms that open source attempts to secure for you. I try to avoid commercial software when I can specifically becuase of things like vendor lockin and overhead of $/time involved in license management, but this isn't a software issue. I try to avoid consumer products that have low up front costs in an effort to lock you into recurring costs from parts... like appliances that require proprietary battery packs or a toothbrush that requires special tooth paste. But even beyond that, now more than ever it is important for consumers to avoid companies that support ideas that they are against. Simple examples include avoiding make-up companies that support animal testing or maybe avoiding software companies that use monopolistic business practices :-) There is no sense in pumping money into companies that are activly working against consumers, and companies that partner up with them should be given a critical eye as well, so that if there is a comprable alternative you can switch to it.