Comment Fond memories (Score 1) 726
I have many memories of Slashdot, some good, and some bad.
9/11
That Jon Katz asshat
Natalie Portman, and hot grits.
But I never visit any more.
I have many memories of Slashdot, some good, and some bad.
9/11
That Jon Katz asshat
Natalie Portman, and hot grits.
But I never visit any more.
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Apple already tried a gaming platform back in the day. It was called the Pippin.
Is this idea gonna fly?
Yes.
Do we really need yet another Apple-controlled walled garden? Don't we have enough of those already?
Yes. No.
Maildir storage format is resistant to bit-rot because it stores each message in a separate file, and uses filesystem directories for mail folders. It's widely supported by user agents (mail readers) and IMAP/POP3/SMTP servers, so you'll never be stranded by the actions of a single software vendor. Finally, it's easily searched using everyday unix tools - find, grep, sed, awk, etc., and you can use the full-text search engine of your choice for speedy searches.
When I was working for NASA, on the NISN network, we'd get these weird router crashes for the old Cisco router located at (or very near) the South Pole in Antarctica. It was always a memory problem, and I'd always have to call someone to get them to powercycle the router. It irritated me to keep bothering those guys, so I opened a case with Cisco TAC.
The TAC guy sent a terse response, saying that particular crash was a "transient memory error" due to "alpha radiation or sun spots." That really pissed me off -- Cisco TAC just gave me a standard BOFH response! I escalated, and swung the NASA club around some, and finally got a senior engineer on the phone. "You said this router's at the South Pole, right? So that means it's at very high altitude, with very little ozone shielding, right?" "Umm, yeah." "Well there you go. There's a lot more radiation at that altitude than at sea level. Our stuff's only rated for sea level. See if they can
I relayed the info to my contact at McMurdo, and he laughed and said he'd figure something out.
On a hunch, I checked the other two "high-altitude" routers we had, and sure enough, they both had a statistically higher failure rate for "transient memory errors".
That's crazy talk. There are many threats to the health and vibrancy of an open source project, and being backed by a commercial company is not a reliable indicator of danger.
Consider the behavior of the project maintainers and planners. Do they engage the community on key issues? Do they accept outside contributions? How are conflicts resolved?
The issue isn't who funds the developers, but the attitudes and behaviors of project leadership.
You maintain your copyright for Asterisk contributions if you used Digium's contributors' agreement.
Read carefully: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fissues.asterisk.org%2Fview_license_agreement.php
Most contributors grant a "perpetual, worldwide, royalty-free, irrevocable, non-exclusive, and transferable license" to your contribution that allows dual licensing. Unless you specifically disclaimed your copyright, you still have it.
How often I found where I should be going only by setting out for somewhere else. -- R. Buckminster Fuller