To display the most relevant entries to you in priority,
vote for the stories you are interested in
()
and reject those that you are not interested in
()
TinyMCE: There’s a modified version
of this included in Wordpress these days, and it’s extremely well supported by its
developers. You get all the formatting options you’d expect, plus the ability to easily
remove excess formatting tools with just a little code. As an added bonus, there’s a
collection of plugins which enable even more advanced formatting options.
YUI Editor: Sadly, this one is quite often
ignored, perhaps due to that fact it’s the product of a large corporation. Nonetheless, I
know a kick-ass set of tools and utilities when I see one, and this editor is fit for any such
best-of list!
You have 2 main configurations for this - Editor and simpleEditor. You’re not limited
to these however, as once you get to grips with the API you can bespoke it with relative
ease.
FCKEditor: FCKEditor is one of the longest standing
web-based editors out there, and used in a great many open-source apps. It’s also
available in a number of server-side languages
FreeRichTextEditor:
FreeRichTextEditor is gaining more momentum these days, and comes available with 2 modes
available straight out the box: design, code and preview.
WidgEditor: This is the work
of client-side coding guru Cameron Adams, whose personal project has become an extremely
viable, standards-based rich text editor for web applications. The JavaScript behind is also
lean yet easy to read (should you want or need to understand it further), and the code output
is smooth.
Are there others out there that you like? Any experiences that you would like to share? A friend
recently jumped from a paid widget to TinyMCE saying that it was finally ready for prime time.
L#8217;administrateur-d#233;l#233;gu#233; Pierre Grivegn#233;e a pr#233;sent#233; le plan
industriel de la reprise de la cristallerie du Val Saint Lambert par la soci#233;t#233; Val Saint
Lambert SA en formation. Cette soci#233;t#233; d#8217;un capital de 2#160;millions d#8217;euros est
constitu#233;e #224; 30#160;pc par la soci#233;t#233; de M. Grivegn#233;e SPECI SA et #224;
70#160;pc par le holding Ch#226;teau et Finances Corporation, gros n#233;gociant et producteur de
vins haut de gamme dont le patron est le Hasseltois Justin Onclin. En plus de l#8217;achat des
actifs pour pr#232;s de 2#160;millions d#8217;euros, le plan industriel pr#233;voit 4#160;millions
d#8217;euros d#8217;investissements #224; moyen terme pour r#233;nover l#8217;outil, restructurer
la production et d#233;velopper le marketing.img width='1' height='1'
src='http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/864/f/11087/s/21c1a60/mf.gif' border='0'/br/br/a
href="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/21291183408/f/11087/c/864/s/35396192/a2.htm"img
src="http://da.feedsportal.com/r/21291183408/f/11087/c/864/s/35396192/a2.img" border="0"//a
div class="rxbodyfield"p class="ArticleBody" page="1"Solaris has been Sun Microsystems's
bread-and-butter Unix system since 1992. While Unix platforms such as Solaris now are up against
the open source Linux juggernaut, Sun maintains it has the technological advantages and
accommodations for open source to keep Solaris in the game. The company also cites important
customer wins as evidence of the platform's continued strength. To hash out the state of Solaris in
today's marketplace, InfoWorld editor at large Paul Krill recently met with Jim McHugh, vice
president of Solaris marketing at Sun, at the company's Menlo Park, Calif., campus./pp
align="right"a
href="http://ad.doubleclick.net/jump/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
target="_blank" /img
src="http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/idg.us.info.rss/news;pos=imu;tile=6;sz=336x280;skey=patch_management;pkey=security;ord=123456789?"
width="336" height="280" border="0" alt="" align="right"//a/pp class="ArticleBody"
page="1"bInfoWorld:/b Solaris has major users such as Joyent and General Electric. But it does seem
like Linux has the momentum, not just when compared with Solaris, but compared with Unix overall. a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/09/24/39NF-linux-killing-solaris_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"Recent shipment figures/a I received from IDC show Linux growing and Solaris
slipping, with the Solaris volumes being reduced between 2006 and 2007. Does Sun have any new
efforts planned to promote Solaris as an alternative to Linux or as a complement to Linux?/pp
class="ArticleBody" page="1"b[ Many/bbLinux advocates that a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/09/24/39NF-linux-killing-solaris_1.html?source=fssr"
class="regularArticleU"Solaris is on its deathbed/a. Find out why in InfoWorld's analysis. ]/b/pp
class="ArticleBody" page="1"bJim McHugh:/b I actually think that what we're hearing is Linux has
made some momentum and there was some movement toward Linux, but actually we're seeing now a lot of
movement back from Linux to Solaris. So basically, you could find an example anywhere that would
lay out -- OK, if I moved off this old machine, running this older version of that operating system
to a new machine running a newer version of [an] operating system, I will find cost savings. Right?
For every example, [people were] saying, "I moved from Solaris to Linux and I saved X amount of
dollars," I can give you a couple of examples right back of people who moved from Linux, an older
version, to Solaris have saved a lot of money, as well./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="1"bInfoWorld:/b Do you have a couple of examples?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"bMcHugh:/b
Glasses Direct in the U.K. switched to Solaris because they found that they were relying upon
Apache and that ran 450 percent faster on Solaris than on Linux. So if you're looking at a Web
economy, the ability to run your application faster and faster is driving people to say, "OK, I'm
going to look at Solaris for two reasons. One, if Apache runs a lot faster on Solaris, that's a big
advantage to my company, but I can also take advantage of key features like a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/08/01/31FEinnovator10_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"DTrace/a where I actually can optimize the application itself that's running
on the Web server, so that plays a good component of it." Others are Sapotek, when they found they
had a sixfold performance increase on Solaris 10, and ZhengTu Network, which is in online
gaming./pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"And if you're looking at the trend here of the examples I'm
giving you, [for] people that are Web-facing, buying into the Web economy, scale is very important.
They probably chose to start out with basic hardware and the OS that they could find. The key thing
that you'll see with all these companies, it wasn't the OS that actually they were really thinking
about when they were building their application. They wanted to use MySQL, they wanted to use
Apache, basically they were looking at the LAMP stack and the most important parts of that were the
A, M, and P, right, so they were looking at the Apache, MySQL, PHP, Perl, components./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="1"bInfoWorld:/b What do you see as advantages of Solaris over Windows and
over other Unix platforms?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="1"bMcHugh:/b a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/05/08/01/31FEinnovator10_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"Predictive Self-Healing/a [takes] the standard user messages that would pop
up. You know, there's a potential error with the hardware or with a particular application, and
what Predictive Self-Healing does is it kicks that back to the software and takes action on it so
that it can actually shut down the hardware or restart the application in a way that prevents
having failures. So it keeps availability levels up. We've looked at different components that were
30 percent higher availability just because you can actually control the memory cells and know
what's going on there and know how to take action before it becomes a problem. So that's one of the
key ones./pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"Solaris security has always been our strength, so if
you're looking at what we've been doing as we were working with the government for years and years
and having the highest-level security in any OS, that has been a hallmark of Solaris forever, and
we keep bringing that forward. You're probably hearing more and more about a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/06/07/23TCzfs_1.html" class="regularArticleU"Solaris
ZFS/a. It's actually a data management system, so we've actually brought it down as the core data
management in the file system from that standpoint, and that offers a lot of not only scalability,
but also the ability to go backward [to a previous snapshot]./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bInfoWorld:/b As you know, I spoke with the executive director of the Linux Foundation [Jim
Zemlin]. He basically sees the battle narrowing down as between Linux and Windows. How would you
respond to that?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bMcHugh:/b I would respond that it seems to me
what's going on and what most users see when they look at Linux isn't the Linux kernel. The first
thing they see is the Gnome interface and how they back it up. They're looking at some of the other
components. And so I would think the user experience that he's really talking about isn't inside
the kernel dot-org. I think he's talking about the open source approach [to] doing operating
systems. If he's saying it's open source operating systems and open source applications against
Windows, sure./pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bInfoWorld:/b I don't think he's narrowed it down to
one distribution. He's just basically talking about Linux in general./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bMcHugh:/b Yes. It's interesting. When he talks about Linux in general, he's talking about
this component right down here on the bottom, [the] Linux kernel or Solaris kernel or BSD, for that
matter. The BSD guys, if you tell them that all these system libraries etc. are Linux system
libraries, I think they would disagree pretty openly. The same thing with the Gnu utilities. Those
things are blending and merging, and I think if you look at the Gnome guys, they're a completely
separate community that welcomes involvement from the Linux community, but they also welcome
involvement from the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/05/04/OpenSolaris-OS-officially-debuts_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"OpenSolaris/a community, the BSD communities./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bInfoWorld:/b Do you have any Solaris shipment figures you can offer for the last five
years?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bMcHugh:/b If you look at the number of licenses of Solaris
10, the latest figure I think we put out was about 13 million, and one thing that is really
important to remember, Solaris actually has more deployments than any other Unix or Linux
distribution. And we also have more applications running on Solaris than there are on any Linux
distribution./pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bInfoWorld:/b When you say 13 million licenses, is
that cumulative over many years?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bMcHugh:/b It's cumulative since
the launch of Solaris 10 [three years ago], and that is people who actually have downloaded it.
Then we also have ones that we don't necessarily count, because obviously we have very big
enterprise customers that have wall-to-wall contracts with./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bInfoWorld:/b The figures I got from IDC talked about 376,000 Solaris shipments in 2006 and
371,000 last year, so that would be sharply different from your figures./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="2"bMcHugh:/b Are they counting the number of individual downloads and things that get burned
onto a master and then get put onto multiple machines?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bInfoWorld:/b
I think they're talking about the shipment totals./pp class="ArticleBody" page="2"bMcHugh:/b They
might be counting just our hardware shipment totals. I don't know how they would count OS
downloads. If 70 percent of Solaris downloads are going onto other machines -- onto IBM machines,
onto Dell machines, onto HP machines -- I don't know how IDC would capture those numbers, and that
might account for the delta in itself./pp class="ArticleBody" page="3"bInfoWorld:/b What's been the
progress of the OpenSolaris open source effort?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="3"bMcHugh:/b We've had
a lot of opportunity to expand the market for OpenSolaris. The number of downloads that are taking
place just continues to climb through the roof, the number of active users continues to grow. We're
about two months away from the second version of it. We recently put out a CD to students and
professors, and we've been receiving a lot of really strong and good feedback on OpenSolaris. It
really boils down to the fact that we have the Gnome interface, so it's much easier to use [with]
the live CD component. OpenSolaris has been a really big factor in that./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="3"bInfoWorld:/b So basically you have OpenSolaris, which is the open source version, and you
still have the commercial version that you license and for which you sell support?/pp
class="ArticleBody" page="3"bMcHugh:/b Yes. The key thing to remember is we have one Solaris but we
have two different use cases. Solaris 10 is what you see inside the enterprise, [for] people who
need long-term support. Its release cycle is about three years, and we do updates in between.
OpenSolaris we're releasing every six months, constantly adding the latest features, constantly
having the latest components from the other open source communities such as Gnome, keeping up to
date with the latest features from that standpoint. That gives Web 2.0 companies and people that
are building applications the ability to experiment, try out, run the complete latest in operating
systems that will give them an advantage as they roll out their Web 2.0 applications. So there are
people who are going to be rolling OpenSolaris out in commercial deployments. They just won't be
the same people who are running ERP systems with big Oracle databases and SAP./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="3"bInfoWorld:/b Are there any plans to release Solaris or any Solaris
technologies like ZFS under the GPL?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="3"bMcHugh:/b We chose the
licensing for Solaris for a reason, and when you start looking at it, we chose CDDL [Common
Development and Distribution License], which is an OSI-approved license. It is very much similar to
the Mozilla license, so it has a lot of benefits that people look at. One key one is when you're
looking at adding innovation on top of it, doing works on top of it, it works really well. If
you're looking at the OEM business and you're looking at other companies that will be adding value
on top of OpenSolaris, they really appreciate the CDDL way of doing it because it gives them that
flexibility to build on top./pp class="ArticleBody" page="3"bInfoWorld:/b I've heard that you can't
have ZFS or some of the other technologies mixed in with Linux because the license is incompatible
because they use the GPL and you don't./pp class="ArticleBody" page="3"bMcHugh:/b Right, so the
interesting thing is, if you look at ZFS and DTrace, which are the two key features that I think a
lot of people in the Linux community look to and say, "Wow, those are really exciting." Frankly,
they're coming and trying OpenSolaris because of it. In one way that's a compliment, and we like
when they continue to remind people that [these are] innovations. But the fact is it's not that the
OpenSolaris license and the CDDL are not compatible, because you can find DTrace and ZFS in Mac OS
and BSD. What we're seeing is, as we're talking about open source communities evolving, open source
licenses need to evolve as well. GPL was one of the first ones that were out there. We have
products under GPL at Sun, as you know./pp class="ArticleBody" page="4"bInfoWorld:/b Java./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="4"bMcHugh:/b Java, we also do OpenOffice that way. It makes sense for
certain communities. We're not so sure just because the decision was made early on that it makes
sense right now for us to do that. Also, GPL is evolving, so we have to wait and see how those
discussions are going./pp class="ArticleBody" page="4"bInfoWorld:/b Under what circumstance might
you move Solaris to GPL?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="4"bMcHugh:/b We are constantly in discussions
[and] looking at it. We are a member of the Linux Foundation as well, right at the same level as
Red Hat, Adobe, and the other guys. We watch, we learn, we follow it, but things are really driven
by two standpoints. First, what are your customers' needs? And again, we have end-user customers in
corporations, but we also have OEM customers and partnerships we're building. And we're also
looking at what the right way is to get the technology out there and go from there. Clearly,
clearly when anyone does that little exercise where they say, "If I could take these key features
and build the perfect OS," they reach into Solaris and OpenSolaris and name a few of our features.
Predictive self-healing, DTrace, ZFS, and the security components always come to mind./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="4"bInfoWorld:/b You mentioned an upcoming version of OpenSolaris. What
are the plans for improvements to Solaris?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="4"bMcHugh:/b We are coming
out with our update 6 [for Solaris 10] in the end of October, and you'll see OpenSolaris come out
in November. OpenSolaris [is] on a faster cadence. We're going to be coming out with six-month revs
to OpenSolaris that are really driven at the developer, the Web 2.0 [angle], and going from there.
What goes into Solaris 10 has already been in OpenSolaris, if you want to think of it that way. A
lot of [the additional features involves] support for some on the a
href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/08/03/17/Intel-Six-core-chip-to-ship-by-second-half-08_1.html"
class="regularArticleU"Dunnington chip sets from Intel/a./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="4"bInfoWorld:/b It looks like Sun with Solaris has a strong following and devoted users,
perhaps similar to the way Apple devotees stand by their Mac. Would you say that Solaris users tend
to be less vocal about their support of their platform than Mac users are about theirs?/pp
class="ArticleBody" page="4"bMcHugh:/b I think you're comparing an end-user consumer desktop versus
administrators or Web guys, so there'll be a different level. There will be a different approach to
how they deliver their messaging. If you follow when there are comments online, there is a devoted
following of Solaris users who get up there and post things and clarify statements that are made. I
don't think they'll be dancing in the streets like you would say [about] Mac OS products./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="4"bInfoWorld:/b Or protesting in the streets./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="4"bMcHugh:/b Or protesting in the streets. But I will say when you look at who's the real
community that we're looking at, it's the open source operating system community. It's broader than
the traditional Solaris users. OpenSolaris has actually taken us into a space where people are
saying, and we have people defending and supporting and coming to the aid of Solaris in discussions
because they're experiencing OpenSolaris and what it can do and the newness in what's taking place.
So I always find it really interesting conversations to watch when you have someone from a certain
Linux community who comes after OpenSolaris or Solaris, and they tend to [get] met with someone
else who's saying, "Why are you so passionate and strongly feeling against Solaris? What is the
issue?" And that's really what comes up. This happens at conferences all the time./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="5"It really boils down to there's a group of people that weren't
traditional Solaris admins or Solaris users who are looking at OpenSolaris and saying, "Hey, this
is good stuff, take it seriously." Maybe that's why we're seeing more activity where people feel a
need to come out really strongly and make strong statements against Solaris, because there's a
growing base of supporters of Solaris who are defending it./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="5"bInfoWorld:/b I did have one user at a Solaris-to-Linux site mention there are more people
available who can administer Linux than Solaris. Do you see that as a problem? Do you have any
plans to remedy that?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="5"bMcHugh:/b We definitely have a very strong
system admin community. I don't know if you've ever visited our big admin site, but it's a site
that exists just for the Solaris administrator and some of the other components at Sun. But you
have to keep in mind what we're doing. By adopting the Gnome look and feel and the standard open
source user interface, it's just as easy to administer OpenSolaris as it is any Linux distro
because you're using the same components. You're using the same user interface. You're using the
same packaging system approach for getting software and updating software./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="5"bInfoWorld:/b With Solaris being a 16-year-old platform, has Sun looked at possibilities
for a successor platform or are you just going to keep doing Solaris 11, 12, 13, whatever? Any
plans for a follow-up?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="5"bMcHugh:/b If you look at the innovation
that's coming in Solaris, I would say it continues to go really strong. Because of its commitment
and its maturity as an operating system, we're able to guarantee things like binary compatibility.
It's why you'll find more applications available on Solaris 10 than any other component -- because
of the binary compatibility. It's always easy to bring things forward./pp class="ArticleBody"
page="5"That is a challenge in some of the Linux spaces, and I do know that's one of the things
that the Linux Foundation is trying to push to is more standardization and helping people through
it so that you don't have to worry about -- between Red Hat, Suse, Ubuntu -- being able to run
applications. And that is probably the value-add they offer to the broader Linux community. Whereas
because of our strength of the maturity, we are able to not put that burden on our customers./pp
class="ArticleBody" page="5"bInfoWorld:/b What's happening with Intel Solaris and desktop
Solaris?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="5"bMcHugh:/b Solaris x86 continues. So Solaris running on x86
chip set is really what you're asking for. OpenSolaris actually is really strong on the x86. The
involvement from Intel is really great; they're one of the big contributors in our OpenSolaris
community. Our relationship with AMD continues to be really strong in this space. If you're looking
for an OS where a chip manufacturer can get their innovations included really quickly, OpenSolaris
is probably the leading OS from that standpoint./pp class="ArticleBody" page="5"bInfoWorld:/b What
about Solaris on the desktop?/pp class="ArticleBody" page="5"bMcHugh:/b You can take OpenSolaris
and run it on the desktop. As we continue to add these user interfaces, it becomes what people
would expect to use in a desktop component from that standpoint. Traditional Solaris on the desktop
was really, really strong in the workstation space, but now OpenSolaris is certified on over 3,000
machines. So if you think of it from that standpoint, the availability to be on a desktop is
growing faster and faster. We're constantly working with not just only the chip manufacturers, but
we're talking to certain computer manufacturers and laptop manufacturers that will be putting out
in public soon [systems] that have OpenSolaris./p/div
Micron Technology is expanding its partnership with Nanya Technology Corporation and signing a
definitive agreement to acquire Qimonda AGÂ’s 35.6 percent ownership stake in Inotera
Memories, Inc., a Taiwanese DRAM memory manufacturer, for $400 million in cash.
Harris Corporation, an international communications and information technology company, has
selected MobileFrame's Configurable Mobile Application software as its Standard Mobility
Platform. MobileFrame's platform will be used to build mobile applications to automate Work Order
Dispatch and Field Service processes. (PRWeb Oct 13, 2008)
Acabo de recibir este mensaje de Eyespot en el que el CEO
dice que cierran y que te lleves tu musica y videos a otro lado o los pierdes. Las empresas de
internet que se quedan sin cash en un mercado cerrado para ellas van a ir cerrando. Además
el tema del video es muy caro de ofrecer. Ahora mismo no puedo dar datos concretos pero se de
bastantes empresas de internet en Europa y Silicon Valley que les quedan meses de vida porque tal
como esta no habrá nadie que las financie. Estoy asesorando a varias para salir adelante.
Pero por más que trato de encontrar soluciones el gran problema de los start ups ahora es
que ahora las empresas más grandes del mundo parecen tener tanto riesgo como antes
tenían los start ups pese a que producen muchísimo cash. Dell es un buen ejemplo. Tiene 10 mil millones de
dólares en cash y vale 26 mil millones de dólares. No tiene deuda, no tiene que
pedirle nada a ningún banco, tiene un EBITDA de 4000 millones de dólares. La
acción de Dell bajó más de 60%. En estas condiciones de mercado invertir en
un start up es muy difícil. Mejor comprar Dell inclusive si los próximos dos
años son malos y el EBITDA baja a la mitad. Y como Dell así están las 10
empresas más grandes del mundo de tecnología. El problema de los start ups es como
si los equipos de primera división jugaran contra los de tercera. Los de tercera no hay
manera que ganen.
This is our second notice informing you that Eyespot Corporation will no longer be able to
continue serving you. You will no longer have access to your content and our services as of
midnight, pacific standard time, October 15, 2008. Please take immediate action to ensure that
you have downloaded all your media and moved to an alternate provider for your video publishing
services.
div class="center"div class="image"a
href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/27/65/00096527.jpeg" target="_blank"img
src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/27/65/00096527_medium.jpeg" id="external_img_615719"//a/divbr/ bESL
Soundtracks: Modular Systems [2001]/bbr/ MP3 | 320 kbps | 65 min | 65 MB + 60 MB br/ iElectronica,
Downtempo, Future Jazz/i/divbr/ Compiled by Thievery Corporation, this is a brand new collection of
tracks from ESL Music artists. It is the first time these cuts have been available on CD and the
collection is a great introduction to some of the new ESL artists. Also, there are two very rare
Thievery Corporation tracks and two remixes.br/
newtley writes "The New Democrats' Jack Layton has become the first leader of a major Canadian
political party to acknowledge the importance of the Internet during a federal election. He's using
YouTube to carry his message specifically to the online community, launching it on P2Pnet. 'We
don't want to see hidden fees and gouging and service slow-downs all in the interests of promoting
the objectives of certain large corporations,' Layton says." Other party members have also spoken
out against increased internet regulation. We've been following the Canadian net neutrality debate
for quite some time.pa
href="http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/12/1353212amp;from=rss"img
src="http://slashdot.org/slashdot-it.pl?from=rssamp;op=imageamp;style=h0amp;sid=08/10/12/1353212"/a/ppa
href="http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/12/1353212amp;from=rss"Read more of this
story/a at Slashdot./p pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/Q-GvKbsHBEYjeAkKFZXoqixHBvU/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/Q-GvKbsHBEYjeAkKFZXoqixHBvU/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~4/INZzM1RPAvg"
height="1" width="1"/
newtley writes "The New Democrats' Jack Layton has become the first leader of a major Canadian
political party to acknowledge the importance of the Internet during a federal election. He's using
YouTube to carry his message specifically to the online community, launching it on P2Pnet. 'We
don't want to see hidden fees and gouging and service slow-downs all in the interests of promoting
the objectives of certain large corporations,' Layton says." Other party members have also spoken
out against increased internet regulation. We've been following the Canadian net neutrality debate
for quite some time.pa
href="http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/12/1353212amp;from=rss"img
src="http://slashdot.org/slashdot-it.pl?from=rssamp;op=imageamp;style=h0amp;sid=08/10/12/1353212"/a/ppa
href="http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/10/12/1353212amp;from=rss"Read more of this
story/a at Slashdot./p pa
href="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/Q-GvKbsHBEYjeAkKFZXoqixHBvU/a"img
src="http://feedads.googleadservices.com/~a/Q-GvKbsHBEYjeAkKFZXoqixHBvU/i" border="0"
ismap="true"/img/a/pimg src="http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~4/INZzM1RPAvg"
height="1" width="1"/
div class="center"div class="image"a
href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/02/64/00096402.gif" target="_blank"img
src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/02/64/00096402_medium.gif" id="external_img_615426"//a/divbr/
bQuantitative Micro Software EViews 6 Enterprise Edition | 191 MB/b/divbr/ EViews 6 offers academic
researchers, corporations, government agencies, and students access to powerful statistical,
forecasting, and modeling tools through an innovative, easy-to-use object-oriented interface. Its
combination of power and ease-of-use make EViews 6 the ideal package for anyone who works with time
series, cross-section, or longitudinal data. With EViews, you can quickly and efficiently manage
your data, perform econometric and statistical analysis, generate forecasts or model simulations,
and produce high quality graphs and tables for publication or inclusion in other applications.
On l'attendait avec impatience après un Cosmic Game en demi-teinte (il est vrai qu'ils
avaient mis la barre très haute avec The Richest Man In Babylon), le voilà enfin, le
dernier opus des maitres du... par Jeffbuck
Internet Marketing Company: search engine optimization (SEO), PPC management, analytics, SEO
design, and online marketing at Cresoft.com. Call 1-800-CRESOFT
div class="image"a href="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/big_show.php?/avaxhome/51/63/00096351.jpeg"
target="_blank"img src="http://pixhost.ws/avaxhome/51/63/00096351_medium.jpeg"
id="external_img_615249" alt="get-smart"//a/divbr/ div class="center"b Get Smart (DVDrip - 2008)
/bbr/ English | Subtitle: English/Portuguese-Brasil/Spanish | 110 min | XVid 624x352 | 448 kbps 5.1
AC3 | 23 fps | 1,4 Gb | ALLiANCE br/ iGenre : Action/Comedy/Thriller |
rapidshare/megaupload/file-factory/i /divbr/ iGet Smart/i , a 2008 adaptation of 1960s American spy
parody television series , stars Steve Carell (“40 years old virgin”,”Little Miss
Sunshine”) as agent 86 Maxwell Smart who must battle the evil corporation KAOS with his
sidekick , agent 99 (Anne Hathaway).
Three days before the Canadian elections, the party leader of the New Democrats has spoken out in
favor of BitTorrent sites, calling them “fundamental to democracy.” At the same time,
isoHunt, the largest Canadian BitTorrent site advises its users not to vote for the
Conservatives, considering their stance on copyright issues.
Jack Layton, leader of the Canadian New Democrats
is a proponent of net-neutrality, and he believes that social networking sites, YouTube and
torrent sites are great services that should be available to everyone.
In a direct message to our friends at p2pnet
Layton stated: “Torrent sites [...] are actually very fundamental to making a democracy
work, and to helping human intelligence to be shared and exchanged. It’s about as
fundamentally democratic as you can get.”
In the video message Layton is very clear. Throttling people’s connections is not an
option. The Internet should be open and equal to everyone.
“What we want to see is the Internet used as a public tool — a public
tool for exchanging ideas and I particularly want to say that if we don’t fight to preserve
it, we could lose it. We don’t want to see hidden fees and gouging and service slow-downs
all in the interests of promoting the objectives of certain large corporations,” Layton
says in his message to P2Pnet.
With his statement, he joins his fellow party member Charles Angus, who has spoken out against
against ‘anti-piracy bills’ and in favor of Net-neutrality many times
before. In an
interview last June, for example, he said that the proposed three-strikes law is idiotic, and
completely useless.
“It’s idiotic because as we see with the DMCA those that get accused of infringements
lack the legal power that the corporations that are threatening them have,” Angus said.
“So it’s always going to be a completely one-sided argument and if ISP’s are
legally bound to cut you off after three claims of infringement, I think there are certainly
problems.”
Based on their views on net-neutrality and copyright bills, the New Democrats seem to be the best
party to vote for. Much better than the Conservatives at least, who are supporting ACTA and bill C-61.
Unfortunately, many Canadians are planning to vote for the Conservative, as they are awfully
close to a majority. This triggered
isoHunt’s founder Gary Fung, who’s from Canada as well, to encourage his Canadian
users not to vote for them.
On the frontpage of isoHunt Gary writes: “I know about 3.7
million Canadians visited isoHunt last month, which is more than 10% of Canada’s
population. So I ask all who read this to tell your Canadian friends to not be a slacker and vote
on Oct. 14. I don’t care which party you vote, just vote any party but the
Conservatives.” In addition to this statement, all Canadian isoHunt visitors will now see
the following message on top of the page, which leads them to Gary’s statement.
isoHunt’s message to Canadian voters
The New Democrats seem to be a good alternative to the Conservative party. However, towards the
end of the video message Layton scared us a little by saying: “The Internet belongs to
Canadians,” but we’re pretty sure he is trying to say that all Canadians should have
equal access to the web.
Layton on torrent sites, copyright bills and net-neutrality
A website that sorts everyday the most relevant information to you.
Vote for the news and Matoumba will learn your tastes and the information that you like the most.
It is all FREE!
Find here the history of the stories you found interesting.
Show this to people who share the same interests as you,
and if they use Matoumba, their own votes will fine recommandations to you.