Don’t have prisoners all have the same preconditions?
With degrowth, in theory at least, growing poorer countries could get richer while degrowing richer countries would lose nothing.
Don’t have prisoners all have the same preconditions?
With degrowth, in theory at least, growing poorer countries could get richer while degrowing richer countries would lose nothing.
Zorin
Not sure if I’d trust an OS named like a Bond villain.
Great, now find a project to apply it and collect your participation trophy. :-P
and produce tons of excellent, reviewed but useless code on the way.
Unironically Lynx and Elinks.
license is probably the reason they’re doing it. no way around that without infringing copyright law I guess.
you could check how other FOSS do it. e.g. you externally link it as a library and use another license the user has to agree on just for that.
screw syncterm, what’s a good & secure BBS software for linux? with doors and mails and nice menu navigation, zmodem and everything…?
I remember amiexpress and prometheus from amiga times, they were a breeze to setup, configure & maintain.
world-renowned, enterprise-level antivirus software running
lol. better just use defender next time.
edit: or not use windows.
What are you trying to prevent? You can’t release anything (opensource or not) without risking someone stealing the idea without patenting.
No FOSS license will prevent that (quite the opposite, it encourages copying/modifications). Those licenses just prevent someone using your code commercially without releasing the source code again.
not sure why you think that. if it’s indistinguishable, it’s still prior art. If it’s something better or different than your code, it’s a new thing.
Patents protect technical principles, not actual sourcecode.
no, the patent office would find your publication, deem it Prior Art and not grant the patent. If it would miss it (some don’t research very well), anyone can notify them to void the patent afterwards anytime.
IANAL, there are lawyers specialized on patents who’ll reassure you for free/cheap (relatively, they are friggin expensive). It also depends on legislature. Countries that break/never agreed to the PCT will do what they please.
NAL but my understanding always was, that you can’t patent anything in your name, when it’s already published.
That would make any patent related clause void anyway.
You could do some automated/scripted installation VM-image builder thingy and release that. Would probably also save some manual work for you. (bash script fetching install image & run qemu, autounattend.xml, etc. all nicely released on github.) And it’d be auditable.
that’d be an awesome way to spread malware with some VM evasion.
not sure if any 3rd-party windows install should ever be trusted. no matter what usecase.
What’s surprising? You can basically poke a hole in any living thing and goo will drip out if the hole is large enough.
OP pointed out the fascinating specialty of complete transformation with an intermediate liquid state.
much more important: we’d be years ahead with storage technology.
Secret ballot is not a prerequisite for a democratic process.
What? Of course it is. Hence: “The secret ballot became commonplace for individual citizens in liberal democracies worldwide by the late 20th century.”.
The UK has numbered ballots
secret != anonymous … OPs argument mainly dismissed confidentiality.
But we don’t claim their voting process is undemocratic.
we certainly would if no one checked the number of people simultaniously using a voting booth.
I never assumed this.
Sorry, didn’t mean to imply that. I meant OPs argument.
Nigeria
It’s not a democratic process then by definition.
mail-in votes technically don’t meet the criteria
Now that’s a valid point. But how bold to assume, the vote was lost because men forced their women to use mail-in. In reality, reasons are much more complex.
That was also the time where some classic tunes were created…