>>40
Hardy Heron actually introduces some damn interesting things, like PolicyGuard.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-04 9:59
>>41
The way PolicyKit is implemented is un-Unixlike and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until April, but I'm not expecting much.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-04 14:29
>>42
The way Linux is implemented is un-Unixlike and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until the Hurd's release date, but I'm not expecting much.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-04 14:40
>>43
The way Umix is implemented is un-Multicslike and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until the rewrite in C, but I'm not expecting much.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-04 21:19
>>44
The way memes are created is un-awesomelike and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until the failure is total, but I'm not expecting much.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-05 0:00
>>45
The way Multics is implemented is un-CTSS-like and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until the rewrite in BCPL, but I'm not expecting much.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-07 20:17
>>46
The way niggers is slaving is un-nigger-like, and not likely to end well. I'll refrain from commenting further until they start working, but I'm not expecting much more than them to eat watahmelongs.
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-09 14:15
well, it depends. Small business that doesn't require specialist software- yes, if you're staff are willing to learn how the new software works.
Large business, or any business that requires specialist software- no, unless you're willing to pay for training all your employees, or unless you're willing to use an opensource (or cheap) alternative to said specialist software
Name:
Anonymous2008-02-09 14:18
>>48
Large businesses will generally be writing their own ``specialist software'', so the point is moot.
What's good for businesses that use computers is to run one or more OS(es) as required to accomplish their business. People complaining about interoperability issues between platforms like OS X, Windows, and Linux are just too lazy to figure out more than one platform.