LWN.net Linux Timeline 2002 35
Cpyder writes "The fine folks over at Linux Weekly News have just released their 2002 Linux Timeline. It's nice to see what good things have happened to the community this year."
How many QA engineers does it take to screw in a lightbulb? 3: 1 to screw it in and 2 to say "I told you so" when it doesn't work.
Actually... (Score:2, Informative)
"This is version 0.9 of the 2002 timeline"
And I hope the editors here don't decide to post another story when 1.0 comes out.
To be the devil's advocate, (Score:1, Interesting)
I have a feeling better things will come in 2003.
Re:To be the devil's advocate, (Score:2)
Yes, great things has happened in the development of 2.5.
I have a feeling better things will come in 2003.
I guess your feeling will prove correct. To be a litle more specific I expect the 2.5 development to finish and we will see a new stable kernel with the improvements we are looking forward for.
Forgotten Entry (Score:3, Funny)
I think lwn.net forgot this during November 2002:
RMS yet again tried to convince everyone to call Linux as GNU/Linux.
I guess he should change his name to GNU/Stallman first. :-)
Re:Forgotten Entry (Score:3, Funny)
Favorite Tidbits (Score:4, Funny)
Ahhh the accounting practices of Americans, PROFIT.
CD copy protection schemes are defeated with a magic marker, but the movement to ban markers under the DMCA never quite gets off the ground.
Not by lack of trying ...
Disney buys a bunch of Linux systems from HP, despite the fact that the Disney-backed CBDTPA would make Linux illegal (HP press release).
You make it sound like Disney is a large member of the MPAA, and that my friend is an all out lie^H^H^H .. wait no ... that's right ...
Red Hat's "bluecurve" desktop draws criticism for its attempts to merge the GNOME and KDE desktops into a single environment. Other changes, such as the removal of the Taiwanese flag, also prove upsetting.
Hehehe this one still gets me, I love how people think it's a bad thing to merge the two biggest best open source window managers for linux/other OS's.
New Xbox security measures are broken within three weeks; the new hardware security had been meant to keep Linux (and other software) off the Xbox platform.
Hold on a minute here, are you trying to say that Microsoft is bad at security for technology related products?
The tcpdump source is compromised by a trojan horse. Experts agree that this stuff is getting old.
but I was under the impression that ALL people were inherently good ...
Linux comes ahead of Microsoft on Google's list of top search terms.
That's because people are trtying to find lennox air conditioners, DUH! Everyone knows that RedHat is linux, not linux.
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Stallman quote (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm stuck in an infinite loop trying to parse this statement, could somebody help me.
Re:Stallman quote (Score:1, Funny)
Like "The sun is shining, the sky is blue. There is clearly no need fot the proprietary software model."
Re:Stallman quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Gouvernments and Linux (Score:5, Interesting)
Linux != Nerd News (Score:3, Informative)
Two observations (Score:2)
2) Anyway, what struck me the most about Linux in 2002 was how on the one hand, easy to use distributions (Lindows, Lycoris, Knoppix, that resurrected Corel thingy) made so much progress, while, on the other hand, the big excitement in desktop Linux focused on Gentoo and other source-based distributions. That's a worrisome sign for people hoping to see widespread new adoption of Linux on the desktop.
Re:Two observations (Score:2)
For that matter, most of the Novell connection needs work. This may be ameliorated when we migrate to Netware6 next year. (January probably.)
But, as you can see, these are MINOR problems! There now is basically no reason for anyone to stick to windows. They might need to stay with Red Hat 7.3 until VMWare gets their act together and produces a version for Red Hat 8.0, if they have any applications that they NEED that simply must run on windows. (I'm currently planning on moving my wife's computer over to Linux, with a VMWare box for a couple of applications that haven't been ported to anything since Win95. [The main one doesn't even run on Win98!])
The importance of Lycoris, Lindows, Xanthro, etc. is that they allow someone to run Linux without having anyone nearby to hold their hand. (I may hate Lycoris setting the default use to be root, but it does make *some* sense. Still, that should be handled by install scripts, not by default.)
Okay (Score:1, Insightful)
Last Post! (Score:1)
way. This happens to us all the time with computers, and nobody thinks of
complaining.
-- Jeff Raskin
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