Author Topic: Just have to Vent  (Read 1071 times)

SAJChurchey

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« on: 19 May 2003, 20:13 »
You know what really pisses me off . . . M$.

They're trying to buy rights to UNIX just so they can take on Linux. Those arrogant bastards. They never wanted anything to do w/ UNIX b4 this shit. So, now they decide to hop on the band wagon temporarily to fight "the greater evil."

And that's another thing...M$ PR.

Whenever they make a statement to the masses regarding their business strategies against Linux, they always try to make it sound like it's US (Consumers & M$) v. them.  Trying to make themselves sound like the protectors of the American citizens, trying to make themselves seem like a gov't figure even.

The only person Linux is a threat to are the crooked business men up at M$ . . .the money-hungry yet lazy programmers that sold out to M$ . . . NOT...I repeat...NOT  the consuemers that the open source community is trying the damnedest to save from inferior software and unethical, illegal, and unfair business practices.

I spit at you Bill Gates...I would love to shit in a paper bag light it on fire and throw it on the front steps of M$...b/c you bastards sicken me to the very pit of my stomach.

Sooner or later the sheep that they call the American public will sooner or later be forced to realize that they are not free...they are forever slaves to the company that keeps the nations computers running, and eventually they shall overthrow the tyrant

DOWN W/ M$?

No longer will I boot up my computer and start up Windoze.  No longer will I log in to my computer and say "Hail Gates!!!"
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Messiah 4 Linux

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« Reply #1 on: 19 May 2003, 20:46 »
quote:
Sooner or later the sheep that they call the American public will sooner or later be forced to realize that they are not free...they are forever slaves to the company that keeps the nations computers running, and eventually they shall overthrow the tyrant  


Oh when will people realize that the 13th amendment did not abolish slavery, it only changed masters to one big new master (14th amendment) and then the master started collecting money from most everyones paycheck.

And the more productive the slave is, the bigger the cut the master gets.

SAJChurchey

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« Reply #2 on: 19 May 2003, 20:51 »
This is more than just about the American gov't letting M$ slide on a whole bunch of shit.  They are partly to blame.

Unfortunately, the slaves aren't as productive as they could be, but then again the "masters" wouldn't be making the profit.  A new master would begin to make more money. . . the users themselves.
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LordWiccara

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« Reply #3 on: 19 May 2003, 23:56 »
quote:
Originally posted by SAJChurchey:
...they are forever slaves to the company that keeps the nations computers running, and eventually they shall overthrow the tyrant


...keeps the nations computers running?  haha.  unless you call the reset button the power button...Micro$hit computers dont run.

i defentally agree with what you say here though. u made a good point
!!!DOWN WITH M$!!!
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Siplus

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« Reply #4 on: 20 May 2003, 01:20 »
quote:
Originally posted by ArmTheHomeless:


...keeps the nations computers running?  haha.  unless you call the reset button the power button...Micro$hit computers dont run.

i defentally agree with what you say here though. u made a good point
!!!DOWN WITH M$!!!



in all of this antiM$ religous/cultist ferver, remember: M$'$ os does <i>run</i>, just doesn't run well. oh, and my computers don't have reset buttons anymore : )

we all have negative feelings toward microsoft (cept zombie), but nothing will happen. people do not see anything wrong with microsoft, and they will continue to see nothing wrong with it. i can't wait for the day that they realise there are better choices out there then the bloated and overpriced MS products


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lazygamer

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« Reply #5 on: 20 May 2003, 04:38 »
quote:

Oh when will people realize that the 13th amendment did not abolish slavery, it only changed masters to one big new master (14th amendment) and then the master started collecting money from most everyones paycheck.


Hmmmm, well I should look up that 14th amendment.

[ May 19, 2003: Message edited by: lazygamer ]

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lazygamer

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« Reply #6 on: 20 May 2003, 05:03 »
quote:
Amendment XIV

Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

Section 2. Representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each state, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the executive and judicial officers of a state, or the members of the legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such state, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such state.

Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any state legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any state, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any state shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.

Section 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.


You whacky Americans... I can't understand wtf you d00dz are talking about! ;

What is a summary of this amendment?


Section 1-Sounds good, understand it.

Section 2-WTF does this mean? It sounds like it's saying something stupid, and also saying that people who are criminals(no concern over what crime was commited) or took part in rebellion, are denied voting rights. About the crime thing though, does this mean criminal record or being in jail?

Section 3-I get it. Basically, if you want to hold civil or military office in the US, you must not of aided or comforted enemies or engaged in rebellion or insurrection. Ok I find it funny that the founding fathers are all concerned about governments being unstopable, and this ammendmant basically says that rebellion is a very bad thing to do. Didn't the founding fathers think that rebellion is a sign of government corruption, and the people have the right to overthrow any government that is corrupt? You also get into the "Who's to say that is rebellion" can of worms. Oh, and by this section, the red cross is comforting the enemy by treating their wounded during a war.  

Section 4-I get this also. Ok so if the US government spends money on aiding insurrection or rebellion against itself, it is illegal to pay it back as the national debt. But spending money on preventing rebellion and insurrection is debt... WTF?! There is no need to spend such money! Preventing rebellion is for dictatorships, not democracy.

Section 5-Oh goody, a vague statement open to interpretation. This would be fine, except 14th amendment is mostly bullshit that should not exsist!


Ok so when was this amendment passed, and why was it allowed to pass? Quite a stupid and terrible amendment...
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solo

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« Reply #7 on: 20 May 2003, 21:03 »
From our happy train of Linux/Open Source development we look up to see that not all is right in our world, one of our biggest supporters is being attacked by the owner of a proprietary operating system, saying that they breached their contract and copied code from the Proprietary to the Free, without the permission of the ailing owner. This is laughable to most of us, and it is discussed valiantly by members of the Open Source community. It looks as though, in it's last dying breath, the Lesser Enemy has tried to make one last use of it's Weapon, the rights to the source code of UNIX. This isn't that disturbing past the fact that this could stunt the growth of, or destroy, Open Source adoption rates (which, needless to say, _is_ pretty disturbing). Many of the gifted Seers predict that the Greater Enemy is behind this attack on our humble but growing world. Sure enough the Red Mounded Evil announces it's stock in the dark plan to destroy the pure, moral Linux and it's brethren Open Source projects, great and small. Whether it's part in this battle is direct or caused _by_ the battle is yet to be seen, but it is a disturbing event for the Open Source Community.

And now we speak of the Greater Enemy's involvement here in this place devoted to it's destruction. Yet, we do not speak of ways to destroy the Red Mounded Evil and to shatter the 'Windows' to Hell that it has opened. Valiant projects are trying to promote our Open Source world in general, but our MES is only speaking mildly of the evils it was created to destroy.

It is time for MES to eradicate Microsoft. Here is what I propose:

We create a set of workgroups that will research and plot each part of Microsoft's downfall.
   - Antitrust/OEM Licensing: Research the exact reasons OEMs cannot/have reason to be afraid of Microsoft revoking their Windows licenses, and perhaps investigate how to present this in a court setting to make it obvious that Microsoft is illegally preventing alternative products from gaining ground. Also discuss with any OEMs that are willing to the reasons behind their not supporting Linux/Other OSes (perhaps there are other motives/problems with Linux/Other OSes)
   - Lobbyists: More of a network of people willing to lobby for alternative software style legislation in countries that allow such lobbying. This network should be able to move quickly and have a central elected government that can mobilize the network very quickly
   - Feature Fighters: Another network of people willing to help implement features in Open Source software in a quick manner, so that Feature Fighter troops can be mobilized to implement important features that may be important to obtaining new users on Linux/Open Source platforms, like drivers (provided specs are available)
   - Partner Fighters: A group that works with 3rd party companies to negotiate support for Linux/Other OSes, convince device manufacturers to write drivers for Linux, or to open source drivers they have written but that are inconsistent with the OS's/Xserver's license, thus creating problems.

More ideas later. The idea is that FMS is a big place, why dont we begin actually eradicate MS?
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jtpenrod

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« Reply #8 on: 20 May 2003, 12:11 »
To lazygamer:

The 14th Amendment passed in 1868, and was a part of Reconstruction after the "Civil" War. Its intent was to basically dilute States' Rights and consolidate Federal power to attempt to prevent a repeat of seccession amoung the states. The Southern states were essentially blackmailed into voting for it, as that was a condition for re-entry into the Union and the end of the Reconstruction occupation. All references to "rebellion" and "insurrection" are references to participation in the Confederacy. Either in the revolution that led to the Confederacy's establishment, or participation in its government or military.
quote:
Section 2-WTF does this mean? It sounds like it's saying something stupid, and also saying that people who are criminals(no concern over what crime was commited) or took part in rebellion, are denied voting rights. About the crime thing though, does this mean criminal record or being in jail?
As for what this section means, its intent was to prevent the denial of voting rights to the emancipated Blacks. If any state denied the Blacks the right to vote, that state could not then count those same Blacks as being part of the state's population for tax purposes, nor could they count towards seats in Congress. As for "...excluding Indians not taxed...", this provision existed as various Indian tribes were recognized by treaty as being semi-autonomous national groups. As such, the states had no authority over them. The exclusion from voting for having a criminal record is something left up to the individual state to determine. It refers to conviction in a court of law.
quote:
Section 3-I get it. Basically, if you want to hold civil or military office in the US, you must not of aided or comforted enemies or engaged in rebellion or insurrection. Ok I find it funny that the founding fathers are all concerned about governments being unstopable, and this ammendmant basically says that rebellion is a very bad thing to do. Didn't the founding fathers think that rebellion is a sign of government corruption, and the people have the right to overthrow any government that is corrupt? You also get into the "Who's to say that is rebellion" can of worms. Oh, and by this section, the red cross is comforting the enemy by treating their wounded during a war.
Here, again, "rebellion" refers to having participated in the Confederacy. Another provision designed to stick it to the Southern states.
quote:
Section 4-I get this also. Ok so if the US government spends money on aiding insurrection or rebellion against itself, it is illegal to pay it back as the national debt. But spending money on preventing rebellion and insurrection is debt... WTF?! There is no need to spend such money! Preventing rebellion is for dictatorships, not democracy.
Actually, this section is a repudiation of debts the Confederacy racked up. Basically, Southerners were prohibited from suing if they lost slaves, nor could they sue the Federal government to have Confederate bonds honoured: they were just plain SOL on that account. OTOH, the Feds would honor whatever debts it had incurred in order to fight the "Civil" War.
quote:
Ok so when was this amendment passed, and why was it allowed to pass? Quite a stupid and terrible amendment...
Actually, most of the power of the 14th Amendment was diluted in a series of cases before the Supreme Court in the 1870s. However, this amendment would prove quite useful during the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s -- 60s. It served as a basis for the Brown v. Board of Education ruling that put an end to the legalized apartheid "Jim Crow" system, the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, The Voting Rights Act of 1965.

It may sound like so much legalese gobbldy-gook, and be difficult to understand unless you know something about the times, the issues involved during the "Civil" War era. In that context, it does make sense.
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lazygamer

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« Reply #9 on: 20 May 2003, 13:22 »
Thanks for clearing that up JT!

I assumed that rebellion and insurrection would refer to a point where the government started to become more corrupt and take away the power of the people. The way you describe it makes this amendment seem more mundane and make alot more sense. But the way the US government is nowadays, such first reactions would make sense.
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suselinux

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« Reply #10 on: 20 May 2003, 13:34 »
I read that not only was MS going to buy roghts to use UNIX, but they might buy out SCO

Then they would have Unix and Caldera


Creepy no?

SAJChurchey

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« Reply #11 on: 20 May 2003, 20:00 »
Unfortunately Solo,

I'm not sure how many computer engineers we actually have as members here.  As a comp. sci. major going into my sophmore year, I do not personally have the capabilites to make drivers, as much as I would like to, but I plan on supporting open source however I can.  

I've done some lobbying about TIA and open source to local governments, and I have e-mailed congressmen.  Legal research is not my strong point either, but I'm sure if anyone here is capable and willing to use up good deals of their time in research.  I certainly welcome it, and will help out if I can.

I think it is time for MES to take a more pro active stance then bitching about M$ in these forums.  I think it's time to lobby and try to convert people to the superior platforms of Linux and Mac.

I am glad to see RH has taken a stance in the SCO matter, shortly after the proposal by M$ (and they say we are the only ones that see a conspiracy brewing ;).  RH has not been officially sued yet,but they see the storm coming.

Let us rally the troops and create a plan of action.  I say we start listing our skills, finding a way to consolidate them to this cause, and begin doing what we can.
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solo

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« Reply #12 on: 21 May 2003, 00:53 »
I certainly dont have a computer science degree (I am still in high-school) but I believe if I took some time to learn how the drivers worked, how the interfaces worked etc I could write them. Not to say that the first ones I wrote would be good   . I do understand what you are saying though, all with the not many people able to do drivers. But maybe more in general we could have a network of general coders. Let's say Microsoft/Apple comes up with some good feature or in M$'$ ca$e buy the $oftware that ha$ the cool feature. We could direct the community to help the important projects implement the features quickly (one of the big reasons features take awhile is because most of the developers that contribute are busy or not interested. If we had a large base of developers willing to code more generally on projects, we could get a killer feature implemented in KDE/GNOME or Redhat/SUSE/Mandrake/Slack etc very quickly and synchronously.

Ok let's pretend people are just getting the XP leak builds now (travel back in time people). There are reports of a cool multi-display system for multiple users. A proper group of people are recruited from the developer network to research and implement a similiar feature in XFree86. Each member in the group is assigned a position, such as Research leader, Engineering (implementation) leader, and coders. The positions would be based on the skill and amount of free time the developer has. The Engineering leader instructs the coders to wait for further instructions, and gives them the email address of the Research leader. Meanwhile the research leader is looking through the code and looking for the ways it could be done, designs an X extension, etc, and brings his/her ideas to the Engineering leader. The engineering leader creates a report on the way it will be implemented, and takes feedback from the coders. The coders begin implementing the changes (perhaps on a different CVS server for the dev network). Once the code is stable, the engineering leader performs the proper steps to submit the code to XFree86.
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SAJChurchey

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« Reply #13 on: 21 May 2003, 02:27 »
You realize that when it comes to major projects such as KDE, GNOME, and Linux in general, there are hundreds, if not thousands of developers working on the many features.  There is close to 3 million or so lines of code to GNOME alone.  To add a feature takes familiarity w/ the code, and massive amounts of time to spend on getting it to work w/ everything else, and just working on the projects is not going to get rid of M$ and quicker.

People have to start widely using and standardizing on open source projects.
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KernelPanic

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« Reply #14 on: 21 May 2003, 03:21 »
quote:
Originally posted by SAJChurchey:
Unfortunately Solo,

I'm not sure how many computer engineers we actually have as members here.  As a comp. sci. major going into my sophmore year, I do not personally have the capabilites to make drivers, as much as I would like to, but I plan on supporting open source however I can.  

I've done some lobbying about TIA and open source to local governments, and I have e-mailed congressmen.  Legal research is not my strong point either, but I'm sure if anyone here is capable and willing to use up good deals of their time in research.  I certainly welcome it, and will help out if I can.

I think it is time for MES to take a more pro active stance then bitching about M$ in these forums.  I think it's time to lobby and try to convert people to the superior platforms of Linux and Mac.

I am glad to see RH has taken a stance in the SCO matter, shortly after the proposal by M$ (and they say we are the only ones that see a conspiracy brewing ;).  RH has not been officially sued yet,but they see the storm coming.

Let us rally the troops and create a plan of action.  I say we start listing our skills, finding a way to consolidate them to this cause, and begin doing what we can.



That is the aim of OpenOpen, where have you been  ;)

Read through this thread.

Links to their page are toward the end.
Happy reading  :D
Contains scenes of mild peril.