As someone who speaks both languages fluently, it doesn't bother me at all. The iconography could use some tweaking, but this false sense of being offended is ridiculous.
> since you are handing your data to a third party, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy I disagree with that argument. Just because I place information with a third party doesn't mean I shouldn't have an…
I've experienced this before at the federal level. They're corrupt. All of them either are themselves corrupt, or complicit in the knowledge of it.
The Nothing was a great enemy to Atreyu. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088323/
No, but they do have a law about "burglary tools" that can include bolt cutters. That's pretty ridiculous if you ask me.
Colour me a cynic, but I doubt this will curb their activities.
Links, perhaps...
Docker is a solution looking for a problem.
I'm going to step out on a ledge here, but those that are happy with it really don't understand linux or much of how it works beyond editing a few confs. None of which ever touch systemd
Redhat used to be good before they forked off the desktop OS into Fedora. They went downhill in my eyes quickly after that.
Good. Systemd can die. Debian should never have started using them, too.
I, and many others, prefer sysvinit over systemd, which I consider overly bloaty and not in-line with the unix philosophy of 'do one thing and do it well'. It's far too involved in the overall systems where, now, some…
Relevant: "The ECJ ruled* Thursday that if a company operates a service in the native language of a country, and has representatives in that country, then it can be held accountable by the country’s national data…
From: http://9to5mac.com/2015/06/10/xcode-7-allows-anyone-to-downl... "Apple has changed its policy regarding permissions required to build and run apps on devices. Until now, Apple required users to pay $99/year to…
As someone who speaks both languages fluently, it doesn't bother me at all. The iconography could use some tweaking, but this false sense of being offended is ridiculous.
> since you are handing your data to a third party, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy I disagree with that argument. Just because I place information with a third party doesn't mean I shouldn't have an…
I've experienced this before at the federal level. They're corrupt. All of them either are themselves corrupt, or complicit in the knowledge of it.
The Nothing was a great enemy to Atreyu. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088323/
No, but they do have a law about "burglary tools" that can include bolt cutters. That's pretty ridiculous if you ask me.
Colour me a cynic, but I doubt this will curb their activities.
Links, perhaps...
Docker is a solution looking for a problem.
I'm going to step out on a ledge here, but those that are happy with it really don't understand linux or much of how it works beyond editing a few confs. None of which ever touch systemd
Redhat used to be good before they forked off the desktop OS into Fedora. They went downhill in my eyes quickly after that.
Good. Systemd can die. Debian should never have started using them, too.
I, and many others, prefer sysvinit over systemd, which I consider overly bloaty and not in-line with the unix philosophy of 'do one thing and do it well'. It's far too involved in the overall systems where, now, some…
Relevant: "The ECJ ruled* Thursday that if a company operates a service in the native language of a country, and has representatives in that country, then it can be held accountable by the country’s national data…
From: http://9to5mac.com/2015/06/10/xcode-7-allows-anyone-to-downl... "Apple has changed its policy regarding permissions required to build and run apps on devices. Until now, Apple required users to pay $99/year to…