Quoting guy keren, from the post of Sat, 14 Dec:
> > PC Magazine, for example, has done a great job for years, with 22
> > annual comparisons, per year. One of those comparisons, repeated any
> > year, compared all the printers that were announced that year (more
> > than 100 PER YEAR). These compa
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002, Eli Marmor wrote:
> PC Magazine, for example, has done a great job for years, with 22
> annual comparisons, per year. One of those comparisons, repeated any
> year, compared all the printers that were announced that year (more
> than 100 PER YEAR). These comparisons covered a
On 2002-12-13, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> (anyone still seriously using GNUStep? fvwm?)
For the record, yes: at home my main wm currently is fvwm2.
And a collegue of me at work is actually using twm..
=
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On Fri, 13 Dec 2002, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Eli Marmor wrote:
>
> >The real thing that is missing, is the opposite one.
> >We have a problem of rich men: too many choices.
> >
> >
> >
> Isn't that what "Free Market" means? The usual sequence of events is
> that when you have 10 options for a lib
Eli Marmor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You can't just "harvest" details from the Internet and build a check
> list;
> You should try all of the choices in order to get a decision.
> This is the only way to decide which of them is really the easiet.
> And which of them is really the fastest.
> Bu
On 2002-12-13, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
> hehe... a signature I caught the other day on some random mailing list:
>
> Emacs is a fine OS, but what it lacks to be able to hold it's own against
> Linux and Windows is a good text editor.
>
> ;-)
I've heard it in a shorter version: (even better IMO
Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> There is an ongoing thread on comp.lang.c.moderated that started when
> someone posted a question about the best book to learn C from. He was
> told to figure out first what it was he wanted to do with (in?) C. The
> OP said he had a very good idea what he wanted, and that
Eli Marmor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I just wish to have a site that will allow me to choose the right tool
> for my needs.
There is an ongoing thread on comp.lang.c.moderated that started when
someone posted a question about the best book to learn C from. He was
told to figure out first wha
Quoting Eli Marmor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> - You need a text editor?
> - No problem; We have emacs for you, we have vi, etc. Just take one.
hehe... a signature I caught the other day on some random mailing list:
Emacs is a fine OS, but what it lacks to be able to hold it's own against Linux
and
Eli Marmor wrote:
Chazal said: "Kin'at Sofrim Tarbe Hochma".
What I really miss in Open Source? What does it lack?
Open Source offers almost everything we need.
Actually, much more than we need:
How should I choose my choices?
The first choice I make is the distribution. The advanta
Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Isn't that what "Free Market" means? The usual sequence of events is
> that when you have 10 options for a library, 7-8 of them die out, and
> you are left with two. That's what happened in the desktop env (anyone
> still seriously using GNUStep? fvwm?)
>
> It's a good th
Eli Marmor wrote:
The real thing that is missing, is the opposite one.
We have a problem of rich men: too many choices.
Isn't that what "Free Market" means? The usual sequence of events is
that when you have 10 options for a library, 7-8 of them die out, and
you are left with two. That's wh
Chazal said: "Kin'at Sofrim Tarbe Hochma".
What I really miss in Open Source? What does it lack?
Open Source offers almost everything we need.
Actually, much more than we need:
- You need a text editor?
- No problem; We have emacs for you, we have vi, etc. Just take one.
- You need a deskto
I don't want to start a distro war, but as a satisfied Mandrake user since 7.0,
I have to say that MDK 9.0 is really greatly improved. The installation and
hardware identification is much better and almost everything has been improved
in some way. The Conrol panel is easier to use. My scanner was a
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