iamworking

September 26, 2009 at 5:41am
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Social Media” jobs really aren’t. They are just ppl that now have tools to do sales, outreach, pr,marketing and support. And WANT to.

— Twitter / Rob La Gesse: “Social Media” jobs really …

July 25, 2009 at 4:44am
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I agree that it’s driven by selfish reasons, but that’s how all open source code gets written! We all “scratch our own itches”. It’s why I started Linux, it’s why I started git, and it’s why I am still involved. It’s the reason for everybody to end up in open source, to some degree. So complaining about the fact that Microsoft picked a selfish area to work on is just silly. Of course they picked an area that helps them. That’s the point of open source - the ability to make the code better for your particular needs, whoever the ‘your’ in question happens to be. Does anybody complain when hardware companies write drivers for the hardware they produce? No. That would be crazy. Does anybody complain when IBM funds all the POWER development, and works on enterprise features because they sell into the enterprise? No. That would be insane. So the people who complain about Microsoft writing drivers for their own virtualization model should take a long look in the mirror and ask themselves why they are being so hypocritical.

— Linus Torvald: Microsoft Hatred is a Disease

July 23, 2009 at 5:53pm
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When the code drop was announced Monday, nor Microsoft, nor Kroah-Hartman spoke of the violation. To confirm the story, About-Microsoft blogger Mary-Jo Foley contacted Kroah-Hartman, and he confirmed that Hemminger is indeed correct: the code drop seems to have been brought on by a GPL violation. A “break from the ordinary” and a “significant milestone”? None of that - just a silently handled case, with an overdose of marketing spin, to prevent a major embarrassment for Microsoft.

— Microsoft’s Linux Kernel Code Drop Result of GPL Violation

July 21, 2009 at 5:09am
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xkcd - A Webcomic - Sandwich

xkcd - A Webcomic - Sandwich

5:02am
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Palermo non mi piaceva, per questo ho imparato ad amarla. Perché il vero amore consiste nell’amare ciò che non ci piace per poterlo cambiare.” — Paolo Borsellino

— “Palermo non mi piaceva, per questo ho imparato… - Dario Salvelli - FriendFeed

July 20, 2009 at 8:40pm
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Recently several Visa card holders were, um, overcharged for certain purchases, to the tune of $23,148,855,308,184,500.00 on a single charge. The company says it was due to a programming error, and that the problem has been corrected. What is interesting is that the amount charged actually reveals the type of programming error that caused the problem. 23,148,855,308,184,500.00 * 100 (I’m guessing this is how the number is actually stored) is 2314885530818450000. Convert 2314885530818450000 to hexadecimal, and you end up with 20 20 20 20 20 20 12 50. Most C/C++ programmers see the error now … hex 20 is a space. So spaces were stuffed into a field where binary zero should have been.

— Slashdot IT Story | Software Glitch Leads To $23,148,855,308,184,500 Visa Charges

July 19, 2009 at 4:48pm
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This is the point where the chain of trust broke down, as the attacker discovered that the account specified as a secondary for Gmail, and hosted at Hotmail was no longer active. This is due to a policy at Hotmail where old and dormant accounts are removed and recycled. He registered the account, re-requested the password recovery feature at Gmail and within a few moments had access to the personal Gmail account of a Twitter employee. The first domino had fallen.

— The Anatomy Of The Twitter Attack

July 18, 2009 at 4:28pm
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Imagine a team of reporters – together with witnesses on the scene – able to contribute photos and news to the same Wave (formerly known as a story or a page). One can write up what is known; a witness can add facts from the scene and photos; an editor or reader can ask questions. And it is all contained under a single address – a permalink for the story – that is constantly updated from a collaborative team. [..] Wave takes this to the next level. It combines the notions of a process as people add and subtract and update; it has the benefit of a wiki – a snapshot of current knowledge; it can be live; it can feed a blog page with the latest; it can feed Twitter with updates; it is itself the collaborative tool that lets participants question each other.

— Google Wave and news « BuzzMachine

July 15, 2009 at 7:07pm
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Reblogged from lickypickystickyme
lickystickypickyme:
For Boggs.

lickystickypickyme:

For Boggs.

5:17am
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la vita prima del feed reader era diversa, questa sera ci sto pensando… com’è cambiata, la tua?

— nikink - la vita prima del feed reader