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Ubuntu irritation

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  • C Christian Graus

    I did better - I saw the guy who sells guitars with lessons and has his students play with him in the show. I'm watching a doco now on that woman who killed her kids by drowning them in their car. Much better than sleeping.

    Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

    R Offline
    R Offline
    Rama Krishna Vavilala
    wrote on last edited by
    #9

    :omg: Are you late to bed or early to rise? or Are you still on Aussie time?


    Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

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    • C Colin Angus Mackay

      I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


      Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Martin Haesemeyer
      wrote on last edited by
      #10

      I gave your post a 2 - wanted to vote 3 but missed ;-) I have Ubuntu 6 running on my desktop and was pretty impressed with it - it recognized everything out of the box and even works with my strange USB-port cable modem (after shutting off IPv6 support). So thats pretty nice - and install was really fast compared with my previous Debian endeavour. So I was pretty impressed - BUT only because I didn't expect it from Linux. Same thing on a windows box and I would probably have complained - which already tells a lot IMHO :rolleyes: But I still don't think its really desktop ready. Its all those little things. Like shutting off IPv6 to get the modem to work - I had to read through three instruction sets because the way to do it changed from release to release (the name of the file I had to created simply changed between kernel versions - now how stupid is that???). Ohh, and why, oh why are all updates that are available selected by default and can only be deselected one by one - which means a lot of work considering how, ugh, dispersed linux is. Ahh and why exactly is my network interface sometimes named eth1 and then suddenly eth2 making firestarter (the firewall monitor I use) completely break down? Is that really necessary - considering that I only have two adapters (eth0 and eth1)?? Well thats just my 2 cents cheers Martin

      "When your own heart asks - how will you respond?" Gosen waka shū "Situation normal - all fu***d up" Illuminatus! My photos on flickr

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      • C Colin Angus Mackay

        I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


        Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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        S Offline
        Sceptic Mole
        wrote on last edited by
        #11

        Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

        "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work.

        Hi, how's the weather in Redmond? So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable! :suss:

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        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

          :omg: Are you late to bed or early to rise? or Are you still on Aussie time?


          Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it. -Brian Kernighan

          C Offline
          C Offline
          Christian Graus
          wrote on last edited by
          #12

          A have a wake up call for 4 am, flying to Toronto today. My sleep patterns so far: on the plane I took a sleeping pill and slept 4 hours the next night I got about 5 hours, with a pill the next night I saw Def Leppard and slept from 2 am to 10 am this morning and tonight, I just couldn't sleep. I got to bed at 11:30, and gave up at 2 am. Tonight I hope I'll sleep well, as tomorrow night is Iron Maiden with Nish

          Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

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          • L Lost User

            Greeeg wrote:

            You might also try

            That's the point - with Windows you don't have to. Elaine :rose:

            The tigress is here :-D

            L Offline
            L Offline
            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #13

            Trollslayer wrote:

            That's the point - with Windows you don't have to.

            Because some things just don't work on any version?

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            • M Mike Dimmick

              With the attitude of the kernel developers towards binary-only, no-source drivers, this will simply not happen. I believe the hardware manufacturers have every right to keep their source private. The kernel developers consider the kernel 'tainted' if there is any non-GPL (or non-GPL-compatible) code loaded into the kernel, and will not investigate crashes - see here[^]. Of course the manufacturers have a general problem towards any 'minority' platform - see the continued poor state of Windows x64 drivers, where if they're actually coding the 32-bit driver correctly, a 64-bit driver should be mostly just a recompile.

              Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder

              G Offline
              G Offline
              Gary R Wheeler
              wrote on last edited by
              #14

              Mike Dimmick wrote:

              Windows x64 drivers, where if they're actually coding the 32-bit driver correctly, a 64-bit driver should be mostly just a recompile

              Actually, it is. We have a 32-bit driver that took less than a day to get working as 64-bit. Most of it was involved in modifying some IOCTL parameters to be 64 bits wide. The end result compiles either as 32-bit or 64-bit with a command line #define.


              Software Zen: delete this;

              Fold With Us![^]

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              • S Sceptic Mole

                Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work.

                Hi, how's the weather in Redmond? So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable! :suss:

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                C Offline
                Christian Graus
                wrote on last edited by
                #15

                In other words, what do you expect, of course it sucks ? Is your point meant to be pro Linux, or pro Microsoft ?

                Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

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                • S Sceptic Mole

                  Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                  "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work.

                  Hi, how's the weather in Redmond? So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable! :suss:

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #16

                  Sceptic Mole wrote:

                  So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable!

                  Sounds unbelievable, but there there are also lots of Linux developers who get paid work developing for linux (Novell, Redhat, Suse, Ubuntu/Canonical)

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                  • C Christian Graus

                    Looks like you got a 1 for telling the truth. I just saw the ad for the cancer place again. You can also buy a home heart start machine. I'm watching a doco on life within some prison. History and Discovery play extended ads for exercise machines at this time of the morning, apparently.

                    Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

                    C Offline
                    C Offline
                    Colin Angus Mackay
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #17

                    Christian Graus wrote:

                    Looks like you got a 1 for telling the truth.

                    There's always some idiot like that.


                    Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                    • S Sceptic Mole

                      Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                      "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work.

                      Hi, how's the weather in Redmond? So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable! :suss:

                      C Offline
                      C Offline
                      Colin Angus Mackay
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #18

                      Sceptic Mole wrote:

                      how's the weather in Redmond?

                      Don't know - never been there.

                      Sceptic Mole wrote:

                      you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers?

                      I don't have Windows pre-installed - the pre-installed version is full of pish which (if I don't have a choice and have to take) I get rid of by installing a clean build as soon as I get a new PC, and Windows installs drivers fine without hassle.

                      Sceptic Mole wrote:

                      Unbelievable!

                      Your incredulity does not alter the facts that Ubuntu is a lot more hassle to set up than it should be. Why should I need to be concerned that my Wireless card was manufactured in Taiwan or China and then have to take different steps to install it. I have never ever needed to know a piece of hardware's country of manufacture in order to get it to work before now. And if there is a way to get something as basic as a network card to work I shouldn't have to follow instructions spread across a wiki, 2 forums and 3 blogs that demand I have an intenet connection because it wants to run some command that needs an internet connection. What if I don't have an internet connection because until I get the card set up I cannot access the intenet. Did they never think of that? In fact they did, and their solution is to get a wired connection that works first! :wtf: The crazy thing is that once I get some bit of stuff done, I should be able to plug in the Windows XP driver and it will work. I just need some sort of NDIS wrapper first, which I cannot get unless Ubuntu is connected to the internet.


                      Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                      • S Sceptic Mole

                        Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                        "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work.

                        Hi, how's the weather in Redmond? So, you seriously compare the pre-installed product of the Billion Dollar company to the free software given gratis to you from volunteers? Unbelievable! :suss:

                        K Offline
                        K Offline
                        Kevin McFarlane
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #19

                        Well, if Linux wants to be taken seriously as a viable alternative to Windows then it has to be compared. It's just too bad that MS has billions to play with vs. the volunteers. If Linux doesn't like this then maybe it should just give up the ghost or concentrate on the commecial Unixes or go work for Apple.

                        Kevin

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                        • C Colin Angus Mackay

                          I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


                          Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                          C Offline
                          Colin Angus Mackay
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #20

                          Well, I got an internet connection - but it is a wired connection so I am currently typing this from Ubuntu at a very odd angle because the length of cable I found wasn't very long (thank goodness I'm a hoarder when it comes to computer equipment) and I found an old PCMCIA ethernet card that worked as soon as it was plugged in. Now, lets see if I can follow all those instructions so I can get my wireless card to work. It looks like I'm going to have to set up the Wireless USB device (which is also not recognised) first, then switch to the Wireless PCMCIA device because I can't fit two PCMCIA devices in at the same time.


                          Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                          • C Colin Angus Mackay

                            I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


                            Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                            V Offline
                            Vivek Rajan
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #21

                            The wireless chipset/card manufacturers are not open about their specifications to the open source world. It is not just Ubuntu, most likely you are going to have to get your hands dirty with Fedora too. You cant really blame Linux for that. Most likely your card (if it is Netgear) will not work with Mac OSX either (without paying $15 to Orangeware). So OSX is as guilty as Ubuntu on that front. Linux actually has better wireless support once you get it up and running. It can put a wireless card in RFMON mode. This is why you dont find software like Kismet for windows. This is why most wardrivers run Linux. BTW: Are you talking about an Atheros card ?

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                            • V Vivek Rajan

                              The wireless chipset/card manufacturers are not open about their specifications to the open source world. It is not just Ubuntu, most likely you are going to have to get your hands dirty with Fedora too. You cant really blame Linux for that. Most likely your card (if it is Netgear) will not work with Mac OSX either (without paying $15 to Orangeware). So OSX is as guilty as Ubuntu on that front. Linux actually has better wireless support once you get it up and running. It can put a wireless card in RFMON mode. This is why you dont find software like Kismet for windows. This is why most wardrivers run Linux. BTW: Are you talking about an Atheros card ?

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                              C Offline
                              Colin Angus Mackay
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #22

                              It is a Netgear WG511 v2 (made in China)


                              Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                              • C Christian Graus

                                Looks like you got a 1 for telling the truth. I just saw the ad for the cancer place again. You can also buy a home heart start machine. I'm watching a doco on life within some prison. History and Discovery play extended ads for exercise machines at this time of the morning, apparently.

                                Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++ Metal Musings - Rex and my new metal blog

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Marc Clifton
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #23

                                Christian Graus wrote:

                                I'm watching a doco on life within some prison.

                                A prison of your own mind? Marc

                                Thyme In The Country

                                People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer
                                People who say that they will refactor their code later to make it "good" don't understand refactoring, nor the art and craft of programming. -- Josh Smith

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                                • L Lost User

                                  Trollslayer wrote:

                                  That's the point - with Windows you don't have to.

                                  Because some things just don't work on any version?

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #24

                                  At work we have to cope with 4 different distributions to get various combinations working and have just decided not to use Fedora Core 4 because it is too broken to be worth the time required. Everything we have for Windows works under XP SP2. Elaine :rose:

                                  The tigress is here :-D

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                                  • C Colin Angus Mackay

                                    I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


                                    Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                                    N Offline
                                    Nemanja Trifunovic
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #25

                                    Colin Angus Mackay wrote:

                                    I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like.

                                    The only distribution so far I know that can come close to being usable as a home system is Mepis[^]. It is Ubuntu - based, but recognizes more hardware out of the box.


                                    Programming Blog utf8-cpp

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                                    • C Colin Angus Mackay

                                      I installed Ubuntu (Dapper Drake) onto my old laptop to see what it was like. It has no network connections built in so I wanted to use a Wireless PCMCIA card to communicate with the outside world. Ubuntu does not recognise the card natively, but I found some instructions of how to get it to work.... However, to follow the instructions you need an internet connection because it uses some commands that download and install things before installing the driver. When I did this under windows it just WORKED! Plug card in - Found new hardware - Installing driver - Set wireless password - Working internet connection! No faffing about on forums, no worrying about if the card is a V2 made in China or the V2 made in Taiwan model (because they actually use different chip sets, so you need to install different things). "Linux for humans!" they call it! This human is pissed off at the amount of work required just to get a damned network card to work. If Linux really is to take over from windows it needs to be plug-and-play. No messing around with command line rubbish and updating config files manually to get a network card to work. Rant over - normal service is resumed....


                                      Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

                                      E Offline
                                      E Offline
                                      ed welch
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #26

                                      You know Linux is a hobbist OS. In other words, people install it because they want to try out something other than windows and have some free time to play around with it. I assume that's why you installed it.

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                                      • E ed welch

                                        You know Linux is a hobbist OS. In other words, people install it because they want to try out something other than windows and have some free time to play around with it. I assume that's why you installed it.

                                        C Offline
                                        C Offline
                                        Colin Angus Mackay
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #27

                                        ed welch wrote:

                                        You know Linux is a hobbist OS

                                        Given that there is a Server edition I had hoped it would be more than that.

                                        ed welch wrote:

                                        In other words, people install it because they want to try out something other than windows

                                        Which is why I installed it on my old laptop

                                        ed welch wrote:

                                        and have some free time to play around with it.

                                        Which is what I want to do. But without wireless connectivity I cannot play with it very much. Messing around with NDIS drivers is not my idea of fun - if you think it is then each to their own I suppose.


                                        Upcoming Scottish Developers events: * UK Security Evangelists On Tour (2nd November, Edinburgh) * Developer Day Scotland: are you interested in speaking or attending? My: Website | Blog

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                                        • M Mike Dimmick

                                          With the attitude of the kernel developers towards binary-only, no-source drivers, this will simply not happen. I believe the hardware manufacturers have every right to keep their source private. The kernel developers consider the kernel 'tainted' if there is any non-GPL (or non-GPL-compatible) code loaded into the kernel, and will not investigate crashes - see here[^]. Of course the manufacturers have a general problem towards any 'minority' platform - see the continued poor state of Windows x64 drivers, where if they're actually coding the 32-bit driver correctly, a 64-bit driver should be mostly just a recompile.

                                          Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder

                                          S Offline
                                          S Offline
                                          Shog9 0
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #28

                                          Mike Dimmick wrote:

                                          I believe the hardware manufacturers have every right to keep their source private.

                                          Damn right. Why, i suspect that if the source for HP's LaserJet Win9x PCL drivers were ever released, the poor souls who wrote it would need protective custody. The jeering, OMG, think of the jeering! :omg:

                                          every night, i kneel at the foot of my bed and thank the Great Overseeing Politicians for protecting my freedoms by reducing their number, as if they were deer in a state park. -- Chris Losinger, Online Poker Players?

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