>http://sose*.smut****.com/ Big Boobs on Parade rulez the world of
If you hadn't aleready guessed this is a standing invitation to get
NASTY viruses that will declare you are infected and demand you buy
an antivirus scan. You know where that goes......
It requires concentrated effort to cut the ensuing crap.
If you are male - this is a visual trap set for males of several
engineering disciplines.
You have been warned.
Brian W
I feel sorry for you guys.
i
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>I run Linux and my computer are impervious to that malware.
>
>I feel sorry for you guys.
Shrug....
Gunner running Xandros 4.1 with Forte Agent under Crossover.
>
>i
>
>On 2008-12-22, Brian Whatcott <bet...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>> On Sun, 21 Dec 2008 06:51:22 -0800 (PST), piavern...@gmail.com
>> wrote:
>>
>>>http://sose*.smut****.com/ Big Boobs on Parade rulez the world of
>>>Big Boobs! This site offers a categorized selection of the most unique
>>>Free Big Boobs Movies ever filmed. Our team of hard working slaves
>>>picks each and every one of these fine babes warranting the finest big
>>>boobs videos for our fellow surfers
>>
>> If you hadn't aleready guessed this is a standing invitation to get
>> NASTY viruses that will declare you are infected and demand you buy
>> an antivirus scan. You know where that goes......
>> It requires concentrated effort to cut the ensuing crap.
>> If you are male - this is a visual trap set for males of several
>> engineering disciplines.
>> You have been warned.
>>
>> Brian W
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist..."
Maj. Gen. John Sedgewick, killed by a sniper in 1864 at the battle of Spotsylvania
I heard that EEE PCs run Xandros. Personally, I switched everything to
Ubuntu.
i
I installed Ubuntu 8x last week, but it was problematic setting up
networking and dialup.
Xandros works first time, everytime. Im running the 30day trial..so
expect it to shut down before long, but Im going to install the freeware
version later this week. Doesnt have Crossover in the OCE edition, but
Wine seems to work well enough with Forte Agent.
Most Linux versions seem to choke and puke configuring a dialup modem,
even the USR externals I run. They all seem to work fine on highspeed,
but...shrug I dont have highspeed, nor can I get it.
Gunner
Could be. I have not used dialup much lately. 8.10 supports is
relatively nicely, as far as I heard, but obviously you are happy and
there is not much to add. At least you stay virus free.
> On Mon, 22 Dec 2008 08:37:30 -0600, Ignoramus26369
> <ignoram...@NOSPAM.26369.invalid> wrote:
>
> >On 2008-12-22, Gunner Asch <gun...@NOSPAMlightspeed.net> wrote:
>
> Most Linux versions seem to choke and puke configuring a dialup modem,
> even the USR externals I run. They all seem to work fine on highspeed,
> but...shrug I dont have highspeed, nor can I get it.
I'm not a big fan of RedHat based distributions, but I ran Oracle
Enterprise Linux for a while and "upgraded" to CentOS. I use an
externally connected USR Robotics modem for dial-up, and that
is one thing that does work reliably.
Know if someone knows how to re-organize menu entries under
Gnome...
Bart
Right click on "Applications" then "Edit Menus".
Cheers,
Bruce
(bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom)
However I have been a Mac user since 1985.
There have only been 7 successful viruses on the Mac and 4 of those are
from before 1990.
There was the Auto-start virus in the early 90's, sneaky little bugger,
that never actually did anything other than propagate.
The remaining 2 have been scripting macro-viruses that prey on
Microsoft apps.
That is 7 as compared to over 1.5 million on Windows and a few hundred
on Linux
Linux has just been very good about patching.
Everybody keeps saying..." When the hackers decide to really attack the
Mac it is all over"
What a load of bull hockey.
They have tried over and over to crack the Mac, and just gave up since
it is too much work.
With BSD UNIX under the hood MacOSX is pretty solid.
I will concede that if you really want a gaming PC you don't want a Mac.
A few years ago I was trouble shooting a really old Mac SE30 for
somebody and actually found the N-Vir virus.
Seemed almost a shame to wipe it.
Poor little bugger was all alone in the world.
I felt like I was killing the last Dodo on Earth.
> >
> >Know if someone knows how to re-organize menu entries under
> >Gnome...
> >
> >Bart
>
> Right click on "Applications" then "Edit Menus".
> Cheers,
That brings up an application that is supposed to allow you to Edit
Menues, but it doesn't actually help. I want to create a sub-division
to an existing menu and move entries already on the menu into the
sub-divisions. The application you point to doesn't do that: at least,
I can't find any way to make it do that, and searching the Internet
doesn't bring up any way to do that. You can't just drag and drop
menu entries as you can on other operating systems.
Speaking of which, I'm running MacOS 9 as I type this. It's much
more stable and less vulnerable to attack.
Relevance to this news group: we all need computers to do our
work now, and unfortunately the "best" operating system doesn't
win in the market. The wrong people in a company are making the
decision on which operating system to use, for the wrong reasons,
or without the real knowledge of what's needed. Windows simply
is not a good operating system, and I don't know why businesses
put up with something that works that badly: they wouldn't put up
with an office copier or fax machine or delivery truck or parts press
that had as many faults and broke down as often. But it's what
the industry has chosen, and most of the lighting design software
I know of runs on Windows. The other software you need to
run a business is also most likely to run on Windows (except for
some areas of the graphic arts industry, which still likes the
Macintosh). Since the biggest competitor to Windows now is
Linux, and it's the next most likely operating system to have
the software that's needed, I've been learning and using Linux
for several years now, and expect to use it more and more in
the future. My Macintosh is for "hobby" work.
Unless one of you knows of lighting design software that
runs on MacOS or OpenVMS...
Bart
It's called IT horsepower, MS and to a lesser extent IBM maintain a
small army of folks to make your system work. For this service you pay a
handsome price (think of a BIG taxi meter).
So say you are running 15,000 boxes connected to a huge server farm,
most issues are due to personnel, not attacks or bugs.
This service, although expensive, is much less than maintaining your own
small army dedicated to dealing with all the problems the end users have
(mostly easy stuff).
>
> Unless one of you knows of lighting design software that
> runs on MacOS or OpenVMS...
>
> Bart
Won't "leopard" run MS stuff?
Matt