Monday, June 29, 2009

全世界骡子资源下载网站列表

Our list of popular ed2k linksites(英语类网站):
shareconnector.com (down)
dead-donkey.com (and their scifi forum)
ShareTV.net (formerly bucktv.net) (closed) - get their database
the-realworld.de (gone) Alternative: the-freeworld.6x.to (gone) Alternative: tvunderground.org.ru
pleasuredome101.com
svcdplaza.com
fileheaven.org
ac3-guru.com (offline)
filedonkey.com
isoheaven.com (closed)
shareprovider.com
Schwa Video Media
mangareactor.tk
animereactor forum
musicdonkey.org
musicdonkey mirror (You can also get the 13.100 music links via ed2k)
shareheaven.net
Asian Cinema Forum
Comic-Central
pornoholic.org
ed2k-it.com
nforce.nl
cthragsardius.co.uk
sharethefiles.com
MVGroup documentaries
lazy-sod.tk (SSL version)
imaxmovies.tk
FASO ed2k p2p community
dapcentral.org
mpc-donkey.net
divxserwis.com (also in polish)
overnetworld.com
sharelive.com
crystalshare.com
warezunderground.net
findhash.com
gerbilgenocide.co.uk
Best of British Links
filesyouneed.com
vcdquality.com
unitedp2p.com/nef2k
feedthemule.net
psyreactor.com
hell-spawn-inc.com
koolmonkey.netfirms.com
isozonepx.com
riddlerswarez.2ya.com
ELINK
desireactor.com - (BollyWood / Hindi eD2k Links)
nasty-pages.com/~analjunkie
666fs.tk
novastorm.info
p2ptv.co.uk
sharevirus.com
crazy-share.tk
p2p.xboard.org
jahreactor.com
life-is-sharing.com
6esel.de
indypeer.org
share-4-life.com
hqshare.net
e-linkprovider.com
macdonkey.com
velvetundergroundforum.com
nfoogle.com
Matrix File Share
share-fox.com
dreamxland.proboards57.com
titanesel.sytes.net
braziliandonkey.blogspot.com
sharetown.biz
seti-xfiles.webhop.net

non english sites(非英语网站):
edonkeyargentina.com.ar (ar)
divx4arab.com (arabian)
p2pgate.net (arabian)
cdmsshare.org (br)
divxtation.ezdir.net (br)
ed2kbrasil.org (br)
edonkers.org (br)
jeguebr.blogspot.com (br)
pootz.org (br)
rippershare.org (br)
share.coloniabrasil.com (br)
wmasters.org (br)
emulechile.cl (cl)
cmule.com (cn)
edonkey2000.cn (cn)
emule.com.cn (cn)
VeryCD.com (cn)
shareforum.net (cz)
audio-esel.com (de)
emoogle.de (de)
eselkult.de (de)
eselmetal.de (ed2k section) (de)
eselpsychos.to (de)
goldesel.6x.to (de)
HoerBar (de)
musicangel.de (de)
p2pworld.to
releaseboard.6x.to (de)
saugstube.to (de)
superesel.com (de)
bluesbolilla.com (es)
Club Donkey (es)
elitedivx.com (es)
Emuleitor (es)
emulesex.com (es)
game-donkey.com (es)
indicemule.net (es)
pornodonkey.net (es)
redfiles.net (es)
sharedonkey.com (es)
soloelinks.com (es)
spanishare.com (es)
finreactor.com (fi) (down)
demoniac-team.org (fr)
divxovore.com (fr)
emulefuturx.com (fr)
filmovore.com (fr)
muledonkey.org (fr)
other-ways.net (fr)
oxmo.org (fr)
peer2p.com (fr)
warez-fr.org (fr)
extremule.com (il)
my-share.com (il)
communist.myd.co.il (il)
files.co.il (il)
shift.co.il (il)
movierg.com
ShareManija (lt) (formerly linkomanija.net)
ted2k.net (lt)
e-share.biz (nl)
ed2kreleases.tk (nl)
emule.nl (nl)
emulenl.com (nl)
lieved2k.qtea.nl (nl)
oeshare.biz (nl)
divxnorway.com (no)
e-emule.com (pl)
emulek.com (pl)
osiol.com (pl)
osiol.net (pl)
osiolek.com (pl)
osloskop.net (pl)
shareosiol.com (pl)
max-pt.com/forum2 (pt)
tugamania.com (pt)
friends-forum.com (ru)
netlab.e2k.ru (ru)
rusdvd.tk (ru)
ruvideo.com (ru)
sharereactor.ru (ru)
webpatrol.ru (ru)
zevel.ru (ru)
sloreactor.com (si)
sevensreactor.tk (tr)
sipacik.de (tr)

 

Saturday, June 20, 2009

互动百科之高也

高也,是2009618日被《焦点访谈》采访的大学生。在当日节目中,谷歌中国被曝光,涉嫌传播色情信息。高也在镜头前讲的一番话,受到了观众的唏嘘,遭人肉搜索,被网名们称作"纯情的大学生",也有网友称高也系央视实习记者。

 

高也-相关事件   

节目中高也这样说道:"我觉得这个黄色啊什么淫秽信息在网上那个毒害特别大,特别是经过一些像Google这样的链接,那种毒害特别大。就是我一个同学,他以前,就比较好奇这些东西,他就去点击黄色网站,搞得那段时间心神不宁。后来国家打击淫秽黄色网站,他就没上,那段时间好了。

 

结果后来他又发现,通过Google这些用户比较多的搜索引擎可以打开这些网址。然后又进入了这些黄色网站,链接特别多,导致又反复了。"

 

奚伟,互联网违法和不良信息举报中心:我们这次强烈谴责曝光Google之后,我们会进一步对它的整改情况进行核查。也欢迎广大网民继续监督,对他们的整改情况。如果还有这方面的不良信息传播,及时向我们进行举报,我们会继续进行跟踪。另外我们也呼吁,包括所有的互联网站在内,互联网行业这一块,要加强他们的行业自律。尽量地杜绝减少有害信息的传播,为青少年的健康成长创造良好的环境,为互联网创造一个洁净的空间。

 

林青,教师:应该是一个很干净的网络,就是我想上的那个网站,不要有不愿意看到的这些东西,或者说不健康的这种东西,就不应该出现在正常的网页上面。必经也是孩子的家长,以后咱们的孩子长大以后也会接受到这种网络,我觉得应该还这个网络一个纯净的空气。

 

高也,大学生:用户特别多,大的搜索引擎,特别是像Google这样的,它更应该担负起这样的社会责任。

 

高也-未来流行词   

做人不要太高也。

做人,不能太高也!

 

一句"很黄很暴力",北京学生张殊凡一度成为热点人物。

 

在这期《焦点访谈》过程中。男版"张殊凡"--大学生高也,也浮出水面,他"现身说法",对着镜头说:我有一个同学,以前爱上黄网,经常"心神不宁",后来,我国互联网打击低俗,看不到,就好了。后来,发现通过GOOGLE搜索,可以看到黄色的东西,于是又"心神不宁"了。

 

相比于张殊凡,高也算是成人了,那么说的话想必不是被"引导"的吧。然而奇怪的,这位很纯洁的大学生,本人没上过黄网,又如何知道别人看了黄网的反应是--"心神不宁"呢?

做人,不能太高也!

 

高也-致高也的一封信

高也同学, 你好:你可能不认识我, 我是从今天的焦点访谈上认识你的, 我当时认真听了关于你谈论的"谷歌中国利用黄色图片, 低俗内容毒害你同学"的事情, 感触很深, 收获也很大. 不管那位同学是不是你本人, 这不重要, 但我希望能给你一些忠告。

 

1、 千万别多看黄色图片, 低俗内容高也同学, 我不知道你有没有和你的同学一起通过谷歌中国链接到别处看黄色图片, 低俗内容, 作为一个从青春期发育过来的大哥对你说, 平时要少看点A, 少碰一些低俗内容. 这对你的皮肤不好.这两天是不是为了准备CCTV的采访, 经常要熬夜上网找毛片, 看黄色图片做功课呀?你看看你, 才两天时间, 就已经不成人样了: 两眼涣散;法令纹加深;嘴巴张太大过于饥渴.所以大哥奉劝你一句, 少看黄色图片, 多去外面走走机动车道不是很好么? 另外, 班上总有几个女生吧, 偶尔调戏一下她们都比看黄色图片来的要强呀。

 

2、千万别接受CCTV关于低俗内容的采访高也同学, 不是我眼红你上CCTV,真的. 因为就我60余年对CCTV节目的潜心研究发现, 凡是上CCTV接受关于低俗内容采访的同学最后都木有好下场.我们就拿前年的张殊凡同学作为一个案例吧.就在陈冠希老师影展的前几天吧, CCTV的新闻联播就放出了关于"张殊凡同学回答网络黄色, 低俗内容采访"的新闻, 当时张殊凡同学仅仅说了"很黄很暴力"这几个字. 结果你知道她的下场是什么么?还有更加猥琐的图片, 我就不放出来了, 你作为一个正在读大学的有痣青年, 应该知道接受这种采访对你以后的前途会是怎样。

 

3、千万要用百度来搜索黄色图片, 低俗内容当然, 大哥总是劝你也不对, 作为对AV 了解不深, 但对网络还有些心得的我来说, 谷歌中国绝对不是一个能大量AV, 黄色图片, 低俗内容的网站.如果你真的是熬不住了, 我这里教你几招, 保证比用谷歌搜索来的好.你可以平时多去去techweb, 看看每条帖子评论, 有的时候会有惊喜. 当年的陈冠希老师影展我就是从techweb 获得的消息. 而如今这里流行一种叫"百度关键词"的东西, 只要通过百度搜索关键词准没错, 虽然我也不知道为什么百度有那么多关键词可以看到黄色图片, 低俗内容.除了百度, 你还可以利用一个叫"绿坝-花季护航""的软件, 不过千万别安装, 因为这个软件的屏蔽能力很强, 传说当你在看一张黄颜色的图片时, 只要上面有一撮黑色,"绿坝-花季护航"就会反三俗掉. 不过呢, 通过网络上高手的破解呀, 你可以得到一张"绿坝-花季护航"的黄色网站地址过滤表,你有了它还需要上谷歌么?

 

4、结语高也同学, 希望你看完了我写给你的信之后能有所收获. 也希望今后, 每当静悄悄的深夜里, 你不再通过谷歌中国搜索黄色图片, 低俗内容来配合五姑娘满足自己.多出去走走机动车道, 你会发现生活更加美好!此致敬礼,啦啦啦。

 

高也-人肉搜索   

博客截图网友对央视曝光谷歌中国节目中被访大学生高也做了人肉搜索,发现高也是央视自己内部人,高也已经离开大学在央视进行实习,这是高也在他的新浪博客上日志透露的,不过博客日志已经被高也删除。但是,网友人肉搜索出来的高也真实身份让焦点访谈很尴尬,因为在百度贴吧的高也吧,高也做了一个声明,里面有一句"记者让我怎么说我就怎么说啦"。

 

有网友反映,高也是重庆人,中南财经大学大四学生,目前在中央电视台做实习生。

 

去年张殊凡 小萝莉的"很黄很暴力"仍历历在目。

 

高也-高也被焦点访谈给毁了

办谷歌这事,用的是组合拳,焦点访谈应该算是摆拳,力道猛,用料足。

 

618日的焦点访谈,有一个"同学",名叫高也,现身说法,举了他同学为例,说明了:"被谷歌这样的黄色搜索搅动得心神不宁"。

 

常在网上混,哪有不留痕的。高也的校内信息很快被人发现了,并被饭否等来源的网友们组团围观。

 

原来小高也同学不但是学生,而且还是焦点访谈栏目组的实习人员。

 

用事实说话的焦点访谈,为了做节目方便,竟然使用自己栏目组的实习人员作为采访对象,而不是真实地进行采访。

 

高也这次跑龙套上镜,可能是主动请缨,也有可能是表现突出被发现,或者被强迫中奖。

 

正是这个最讲事实的节目,轻率地毁了这个年青人的形象。

 

有网友说得好,"这事留一辈子阴影"。

 

想告诉高也,知耻而后勇,但这也太难了。到不如赖上焦点访谈,要丫负责,留在焦点访谈节目组算了。

 

央视算是死猪不怕开水烫了,上次出了个"很黄很暴力"毁了一个小女生,这会儿又来毁实习生,不愧为毁人不倦啊。

 

高也-参考资料   

[1]业界 http://forum.techweb.com.cn/thread-305528-1-1.html

[2]杭州网http://bbs.hangzhou.com.cn/thread-5488733-1-1.html

From: (互动百科) http://www.hudong.com/wiki/%E9%AB%98%E4%B9%9F

Monday, June 15, 2009

经典的句子

1.一个人总要走陌生的路,看陌生的风景,听陌生的歌,然后在某个不经意的瞬间,你会发现,原本是费尽心机想要忘记的事情真的就那么忘记了。
1.One is always on a strange road, watching strange scenery and listeningto strange music. Then one day, you will find that the things you tryhard to forget are already gone.   

2.幸福,不是长生不老,不是大鱼大肉,不是权倾朝野。幸福是每一个微小的生活愿望达成。当你想吃的时候有得吃,想被爱的时候有人来爱你。
2.Happiness is not about being immortal nor having food or rights inone's hand. It's about having each tiny wish come true, or havingsomething to eat when you are hungry or having someone's love when youneed love.   

3.爱情是灯,友情是影子,当灯灭了,你会发现你的周围都是影子。朋友,是在最后可以给你力量的人。

3.Love is a lamp, while friendship is the shadow. When the lamp is off,you will find the shadow everywhere. Friend is who can give youstrength at last.   

4.我爱你不是因为你是谁,而是我在你面前可以是谁。
4.I love you not for who you are, but for who I am before you.

5.爱情,要么让人成熟,要么让人堕落。
5.Love makes man grow up or sink down.   

6.举得起放得下的叫举重,举得起放不下的叫负重。可惜,大多数人的爱情,都是负重的。
6.If you can hold something up and put it down, it is calledweight-lifting; if you can hold something up but can never put it down,it's called burden-bearing. Pitifully, most of people are bearing heavyburdens when they are in love.  

7.我们每个人都生活在各自的过去中,人们会用一分钟的时间去认识一个人,用一小时的时间去喜欢一个人,再用一天的时间去爱上一个人,到最后呢,却要用一辈子的时间去忘记一个人。
7.We all live in the past. We take a minute to know someone, one hour tolike someone, and one day to love someone, but the whole life to forgetsomeone.

8.一个人一生可以爱上很多的人,等你获得真正属于你的幸福之后,你就会明白一起的伤痛其实是一种财富,它让你学会更好地去把握和珍惜你爱的人。
8.One may fall in love with many people during the lifetime. When youfinally get your own happiness, you will understand the previoussadness is kind of treasure, which makes you better to hold and cherishthe people you love.   

9.年轻的时候会想要谈很多次恋爱,但是随着年龄的增长,终于领悟到爱一个人,就算用一辈子的时间,还是会嫌不够。慢慢地去了解这个人,体谅这个人,直到爱上为止,是需要有非常宽大的胸襟才行。
9.When you are young, you may want several love experiences. But as timegoes on, you will realize that if you really love someone, the wholelife will not be enough. You need time to know, to forgive and to love.All this needs a very big mind.

10.当明天变成了今天成为了昨天,最后成为记忆里不再重要的某一天,我们突然发现自己在不知不觉中已被时间推着向前走,这不是静止火车里,与相邻列车交错时,仿佛自己在前进的错觉,而是我们真实的在成长,在这件事里成了另一个自己。
10.When tomorrow turns in today, yesterday, and someday that no moreimportant in your memory, we suddenly realize that we r pushed forwardby time. This is not a train in still in which you may feel forwardwhen another train goes by. It is the truth that we've all grown up.And we become different.  

11.离开我就别安慰我,要知道每一次缝补也会遭遇穿刺的痛。
11.If you leave me, please don't comfort me because each sewing has to meet stinging pain.   

12.曾经拥有的,不要忘记。不能得到的,更要珍惜。属于自己的,不要放弃。已经失去的,留作回忆。
12.Don't forget the things you once you owned. Treasure the things youcan't get. Don't give up the things that belong to you and keep thoselost things in memory.   

13.我喜欢并习惯了对变化的东西保持着距离,这样才会知道什么是最不会被时间抛弃的准则。比如爱一个人,充满变数,我于是后退一步,静静的看着,直到看见真诚的感情。
13.I love and am used to keeping a distance with those changed things.Only in this way can I know what will not be abandoned by time. Forexample, when you love someone, changes are all around. Then I stepbackward and watching it silently, then I see the true feelings.

14.男人的爱是俯视而生,而女人的爱是仰视而生。如果爱情像座山,那么男人越往上走可以俯视的女人就越多,而女人越往上走可以仰视的男人就越少。
14.Men love from overlooking while women love from looking up. If love isa mountain, then if men go up, more women they will see while womenwill see fewer men.  

15.好的爱情是你通过一个人看到整个世界,坏的爱情是你为了一个人舍弃世界。
15.Good love makes you see the whole world from one person while bad love makes you abandon the whole world for one person. 

16.在自己面前,应该一直留有一个地方,独自留在那里。然后去爱。不知道是什么,不知道是谁,不知道如何去爱,也不知道可以爱多久。只是等待一次爱情,也许永远都没有人。可是,这种等待,就是爱情本身。
16.We shall always save a place for ourselves, only for ourselves. Andthen begin to love. Have no idea of what it is, who he is, how to loveor how long it will be. Just wait for one love. Maybe no one will comeout, but this kind of waiting is the love itself.  

17.有谁不曾为那暗恋而痛苦?我们总以为那份痴情很重,很重,是世上最重的重量。有一天,暮然回首,我们才发现,它一直都是很轻,很轻的。我们以为爱的很深,很深,来日岁月,会让你知道,它不过很浅,很浅。最深和最重的爱,必须和时日一起成长。
17.Is there anyone who hasn't suffered for the secret love? We alwaysthink that love is very heavy, heavy and could be the heaviest thing inthe world. But one day, when you look back, you suddenly realize thatit's always light, light. We all thought love was very deep, but infact it's very thin. The deepest and heaviest love must grow up withthe time.   

18.在这个世界上,只有真正快乐的男人,才能带给女人真正的快乐。
18.In this world, only those men who really feel happy can give women happiness

19.女人如果不性感,就要感性;如果没有感性,就要理性;如果没有理性,就要有自知之明;如果连这个都没有了,她只有不幸。
19.If a woman is not sexy, she needs emotion; if she is not emotional, sheneeds reason; if she is not reasonable, she has to know herselfclearly. coz only she has is misfortune.

20.一段不被接受的爱情,需要的不是伤心,而是时间,一段可以用来遗忘的时间。一颗被深深伤了的心,需要的不是同情,而是明白。
21.An unacceptable love needs no sorrow but time- sometime for forgetting.A badly-hurt heart needs no sympathy but understanding.  

22.我知道这世上有人在等我,但我不知道我在等谁,为了这个,我每天都非常快乐。
22. I know someone in the world is waiting for me, although I've no idea of who he is. But I feel happy every day for this.  

23.一生至少该有一次,为了某个人而忘了自己,不求有结果,不求同行,不求曾经拥有,甚至不求你爱我。只求在我最美的年华里,遇到你。
23.In your life, there will at least one time that you forget yourself forsomeone, asking for no result, no company, no ownership nor love. Justask for meeting you in my most beautiful years.  

 90.我不觉得人的心智成熟是越来越宽容涵盖,什么都可以接受。相反,我觉得那应该是一个逐渐剔除的过程,知道自己最重要的是什么,知道不重要的东西是什么。而后,做一个纯简的人。
90.Idon't think that when people grow up, they will become morebroad-minded and can accept everything. Conversely, I think it's aselecting process, knowing what's the most important and what's theleast. And then be a simple man.  

35.当你的心真的在痛,眼泪快要流下来的时候,那就赶快抬头看看,这片曾经属于我们的天空;当天依旧是那么的广阔,云依旧那么的潇洒,那就不应该哭,因为我的离去,并没有带走你的世界。
35.When you feel hurt and your tears are gonna to drop. Please look up andhave a look at the sky once belongs to us. If the sky is still vast,clouds are still clear, you shall not cry because my leave doesn't takeaway the world that belongs to you.

国家,荣誉,责任

General Westmoreland, General Grove, distinguished guests, and gentlemen of the Corps!

As I was leaving the hotel this morning, a doorman asked me, "Where are you bound for, General?" And when I replied, "West Point," he remarked, "Beautiful place. Have you ever been there before?"

No human being could fail to be deeply moved by such a tribute as this [Thayer Award]. Coming from a profession I have served so long, and a people I have loved so well, it fills me with an emotion I cannot express. But this award is not intended primarily to honor a personality, but to symbolize a great moral code -- the code of conduct and chivalry of those who guard this beloved land of culture and ancient descent. That is the animation of this medallion. For all eyes and for all time, it is an expression of the ethics of the American soldier. That I should be integrated in this way with so noble an ideal arouses a sense of pride and yet of humility which will be with me always: Duty,   Honor, Country.

Those three hallowed words reverently dictate what you ought to be, what you can be, what you will be. They are your rallying points: to build courage when courage seems to fail; to regain faith when there seems to be little cause for faith; to create hope when hope becomes forlorn.

Unhappily, I possess neither that eloquence of diction, that poetry of imagination, nor that brilliance of metaphor to tell you all that they mean. The unbelievers will say they are but words, but a slogan, but a flamboyant phrase. Every pedant, every demagogue, every cynic, every hypocrite, every troublemaker, and I am sorry to say, some others of an entirely different character, will try to downgrade them even to the extent of mockery and ridicule.

But these are some of the things they do. They build your basic character. They mold you for your future roles as the custodians of the nation's defense. They make you strong enough to know when you are weak, and brave enough to face yourself when you are afraid. They teach you to be proud and unbending in honest failure, but humble and gentle in success; not to substitute words for actions, not to seek the path of comfort, but to face the stress and spur of difficulty and challenge; to learn to stand up in the storm but to have compassion on those who fall; to master yourself before you seek to master others; to have a heart that is clean, a goal that is high; to learn to laugh, yet never forget how to weep; to reach into the future yet never neglect the past; to be serious yet never to take yourself too seriously; to be modest so that you will remember the simplicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, the meekness of true strength. They give you a temper of the will, a quality of the imagination, a vigor of the emotions, a freshness of the deep springs of life, a temperamental predominance of courage over timidity, of an appetite for adventure over love of ease. They create in your heart the sense of wonder, the unfailing hope of what next, and the joy and inspiration of life. They teach you in this way to be an officer and a gentleman.

And what sort of soldiers are those you are to lead? Are they reliable? Are they brave? Are they capable of victory? Their story is known to all of you. It is the story of the American man-at-arms. My estimate of him was formed on the battlefield many, many years ago, and has never changed. I regarded him then as I regard him now -- as one of the world's noblest figures, not only as one of the finest military characters, but also as one of the most stainless. His name and fame are the birthright of every American citizen. In his youth and strength, his love and loyalty, he gave all that mortality can give.

He needs no eulogy from me or from any other man. He has written his own history and written it in red on his enemy's breast. But when I think of his patience under adversity, of his courage under fire, and of his modesty in victory, I am filled with an emotion of admiration I cannot put into words. He belongs to history as furnishing one of the greatest examples of successful patriotism. He belongs to posterity as the instructor of future generations in the principles of liberty and freedom. He belongs to the present, to us, by his virtues and by his achievements. In 20 campaigns, on a hundred battlefields, around a thousand campfires, I have witnessed that enduring fortitude, that patriotic self-abnegation, and that invincible determination which have carved his statue in the hearts of his people. From one end of the world to the other he has drained deep the chalice of courage.

As I listened to those songs [of the glee club], in memory's eye I could see those staggering columns of the First World War, bending under soggy packs, on many a weary march from dripping dusk to drizzling dawn, slogging ankle-deep through the mire of shell-shocked roads, to form grimly for the attack, blue-lipped, covered with sludge and mud, chilled by the wind and rain, driving home to their objective, and for many, to the judgment seat of   God.

I do not know the dignity of their birth, but I do know the glory of their death.

They died unquestioning, uncomplaining, with faith in their hearts, and on their lips the hope that we would go on to victory.

Always, for them: Duty, Honor, Country; always their blood and sweat and tears, as we sought the way and the light and the truth.

And 20 years after, on the other side of the globe, again the filth of murky foxholes, the stench of ghostly trenches, the slime of dripping dugouts; those boiling suns of relentless heat, those torrential rains of devastating storms; the loneliness and utter desolation of jungle trails; the bitterness of long separation from those they loved and cherished; the deadly pestilence of tropical disease; the horror of stricken areas of war; their resolute and determined defense, their swift and sure attack, their indomitable purpose, their complete and decisive victory -- always victory. Always through the bloody haze of their last reverberating shot, the vision of gaunt, ghastly men reverently following your password of: Duty, Honor, Country.

The code which those words perpetuate embraces the highest moral laws and will stand the test of any ethics or philosophies ever promulgated for the uplift of mankind. Its requirements are for the things that are right, and its restraints are from the things that are wrong.

The soldier, above all other men, is required to practice the greatest act of religious training -- sacrifice.

In battle and in the face of danger and death, he discloses those divine attributes which his Maker gave when he created man in his own image. No physical courage and no brute instinct can take the place of the Divine help which alone can sustain him.

However horrible the incidents of war may be, the soldier who is called upon to offer and to give his life for his country is the noblest development of mankind.

You now face a new world -- a world of change. The thrust into outer space of the satellite, spheres, and missiles mark the beginning of another epoch in the long story of mankind. In the five or more billions of years the scientists tell us it has taken to form the earth, in the three or more billion years of development of the human race, there has never been a more abrupt or staggering evolution. We deal now not with things of this world alone, but with the illimitable distances and as yet unfathomed mysteries of the universe. We are reaching out for a new and boundless frontier.

We speak in strange terms: of harnessing the cosmic energy; of making winds and tides work for us; of creating unheard synthetic materials to supplement or even replace our old standard basics; to purify sea water for our drink; of mining ocean floors for new fields of wealth and food; of disease preventatives to expand life into the hundreds of years; of controlling the weather for a more equitable distribution of heat and cold, of rain and shine; of space ships to the moon; of the primary target in war, no longer limited to the armed forces of an enemy, but instead to include his civil populations; of ultimate conflict between a united human race and the sinister forces of some other planetary galaxy; of such dreams and fantasies as to make life the most exciting of all time.

And through all this welter of change and development, your mission remains fixed, determined, inviolable: it is to win our wars.

Everything else in your professional career is but corollary to this vital dedication. All other public purposes, all other public projects, all other public needs, great or small, will find others for their accomplishment. But you are the ones who are trained to fight. Yours is the profession of arms,   the will to win, the sure knowledge that in war there is no substitute for victory; that if you lose, the nation will be destroyed; that the very obsession of your public service must be: Duty, Honor, Country.

Others will debate the controversial issues, national and international, which divide men's minds; but serene, calm, aloof, you stand as the Nation's war-guardian, as its lifeguard from the raging tides of international conflict, as its gladiator in the arena of battle. For a century and a half you have defended, guarded, and protected its hallowed traditions of liberty and freedom, of right and justice.

Let civilian voices argue the merits or demerits of our processes of government; whether our strength is being sapped by deficit financing, indulged in too long, by federal paternalism grown too mighty, by power groups grown too arrogant, by politics grown too corrupt, by crime grown too rampant, by morals grown too low, by taxes grown too high, by extremists grown too violent; whether our personal liberties are as thorough and complete as they should be. These great national problems are not for your professional participation or military solution. Your guidepost stands out like a ten-fold beacon in the night: Duty, Honor, Country.

You are the leaven which binds together the entire fabric of our national system of defense. From your ranks come the great captains who hold the nation's destiny in their hands the moment the war tocsin sounds. The Long Gray Line has never failed us. Were you to do so, a million ghosts in olive drab, in brown khaki, in blue and gray, would rise from their white crosses thundering those magic words: Duty, Honor, Country.

This does not mean that you are war mongers.

On the contrary, the soldier, above all other people, prays for peace, for he must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war.

But always in our ears ring the ominous words of Plato, that wisest of all philosophers: "Only the dead have seen the end of war."

The shadows are lengthening for me. The twilight is here. My days of old have vanished, tone and tint. They have gone glimmering through the dreams of things that were. Their memory is one of wondrous beauty, watered by tears, and coaxed and caressed by the smiles of yesterday. I listen vainly, but with thirsty ears, for the witching melody of faint bugles blowing reveille, of far drums beating the long roll. In my dreams I hear again the crash of guns, the rattle of musketry, the strange, mournful mutter of the battlefield.

But in the evening of my memory, always I come back to West Point.

Always there echoes and re-echoes: Duty, Honor, Country.

Today marks my final roll call with you, but I want you to know that when I cross the river my last conscious thoughts will be of The Corps, and The Corps, and The Corps.
I bid you farewell.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Open Government: the Latest Member of the Open Family

One of the most exciting developments in the last few years has been the application of some of the core ideas of free software and open source to completely different domains. Examples include open content, open access, open data and open science. More recently, those principles are starting to appear in a rather surprising field: that of government, as various transparency initiatives around the world start to gain traction.

Sometimes, open government – or lack of it - can involve open source directly. A good example is the recent procurement scandal in Switzerland:

The Swiss federal government published in the Swiss Official Gazette of Commerce that it has granted a maintenance contract over CHF 42 million to Microsoft — however, without a prior tender. The monopolist apparently had been granted the contract under exclusion of any potential competition.

The Federal Office of Construction and Logistics (BBL) apparently signed the maintenance contract over Windows and Office licenses, SharePoint et cetera in February already. A tender had never been held, so competitors had never been given a chance to demonstrate their own products. This, however, is clearly against the official regulations for acquisition of resources. A speaker of the Open Source corporation group /ch/open announced that the decision would be contested in front of the Federal Court which, incidentally, is a known user of the OpenOffice.org suite.

Fortunately, the days when the free software world was powerless in the face of such abuses are long gone by. Led by Red Hat, a group of open source companies has fought back:

Red Hat is a leader of an appeal by 18 technology companies of a Swiss government agency's award of a no-bid contract to Microsoft. The challenge raises important issues of openness in government and of a level playing field for open source and other competitors of Microsoft. Red Hat is seeking a public bidding process that allows for consideration of the technical and commercial advantages of open source software products.

The three-year contract, worth 14 million Swiss Francs per year, was awarded by the Swiss Federal Bureau for Building and Logistics (BBL) to Microsoft for standardized workstations, including applications, maintenance, and support. There was no public bidding process. The Swiss agency justified this no-bid procedure on the ground that there was no sufficient alternative to the Microsoft products.

Au contraire. Whatever one's opinion as to Microsoft's products, it is hard to ignore the existence of numerous competitive alternatives to them. Indeed, Kanton Solothurn, the City of Zurich, the Federal Agency for Computer Sciences and and Telecommunictions (BIT), the Federal Institute for Intellectual Property (IGE), and other Swiss agencies are already using some of those alternatives provided by Red Hat.

In a brief filed yesterday with Swiss Federal Administration Court, Red Hat and other concerned companies requested that the court reverse the agency decisions and hold a public bidding process. This public process will allow for fair consideration of the merits of open source and other non-Microsoft software products.

The court has accepted the appeal, temporarily at least:

The Federal Administrative Court of Switzerland has ruled invalid a software licence contract between a Swiss government agency and Microsoft, the Swiss press agency SDA reported today.

Yet another opaque procurement deal followed hot on the heels of the one in Switzerland:

The Romanian government is about to spend millions of euro on proprietary software, drawing flak from the country's budding open source movement. "This government is out of touch with reality."

The Romanian government announced its renewal of a framework software licence with Microsoft in the middle of May. The framework licence deal is worth 100 million euro in software licences to be used by government agencies between 2010 and 2012. Romania will also pay the software giant another 58 million euro this fall, as the final payment for the 2004 - 2009 framework licence agreement that expired last month.

The government further announced the awarding of a 300 million euro contract to a Romanian IT company for PC hardware and Microsoft software licences to be used in education.

As the President of the Free Software Foundation in Europe, Georg Greve wrote to me, Romania's action is particularly unfortunate since the country has been roundly criticised (along with Bulgaria) by the European Commission for its failure to combat deep-seated corruption in the country. Greve pointed out:

It seems ironic that the European Commission has to fine Microsoft repeatedly over sustained monopoly abuse, then transfers part of that money to Romania, which enjoyed the highest level of financial support ever granted to a candidate country in the history of the European Union, and the Romanian government then decides to return part of that money to Microsoft with close to no tangible benefit for Romania.

Considering the recent freeze of EU funds due to corruption in Bulgaria, this decision of the Romanian government seems careless and dangerous for the sustained economic growth of the country in more than one way: By endangering EU support, by increasing dependency on proprietary software for the economy, and by wasting funds that could have been used for much-needed infrastructure projects.

Switzerland and Romania are just two examples where transparency could help level the playing-field for open source, and allow its wider use in government. But beyond these specific cases where that would be good news for free software, there is a growing recognition that shining light on the murky processes of government through openness could bring benefits in many other ways.

To his credit, President Obama has decreed that openness will be the default setting for US government. In a statement entitled "Transparency and open government" he wrote:

My Administration is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in Government. We will work together to ensure the public trust and establish a system of transparency, public participation, and collaboration. Openness will strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness in Government.

Government should be transparent. Transparency promotes accountability and provides information for citizens about what their Government is doing. Information maintained by the Federal Government is a national asset. My Administration will take appropriate action, consistent with law and policy, to disclose information rapidly in forms that the public can readily find and use. Executive departments and agencies should harness new technologies to put information about their operations and decisions online and readily available to the public. Executive departments and agencies should also solicit public feedback to identify information of greatest use to the public.

Government should be participatory. Public engagement enhances the Government's effectiveness and improves the quality of its decisions. Knowledge is widely dispersed in society, and public officials benefit from having access to that dispersed knowledge. Executive departments and agencies should offer Americans increased opportunities to participate in policymaking and to provide their Government with the benefits of their collective expertise and information. Executive departments and agencies should also solicit public input on how we can increase and improve opportunities for public participation in Government.

Government should be collaborative. Collaboration actively engages Americans in the work of their Government. Executive departments and agencies should use innovative tools, methods, and systems to cooperate among themselves, across all levels of Government, and with nonprofit organizations, businesses, and individuals in the private sector. Executive departments and agencies should solicit public feedback to assess and improve their level of collaboration and to identify new opportunities for cooperation.

I direct the Chief Technology Officer, in coordination with the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the Administrator of General Services, to coordinate the development by appropriate executive departments and agencies, within 120 days, of recommendations for an Open Government Directive, to be issued by the Director of OMB, that instructs executive departments and agencies to take specific actions implementing the principles set forth in this memorandum.The independent agencies should comply with the Open Government Directive.

Now, fine words butter no parsnips, but we have already seen some fruits of this initiative, notably with the creation of the Data.gov site, whose purpose is:

to increase public access to high value, machine readable datasets generated by the Executive Branch of the Federal Government. Although the initial launch of Data.gov provides a limited portion of the rich variety of Federal datasets presently available, we invite you to actively participate in shaping the future of Data.gov by suggesting additional datasets and site enhancements to provide seamless access and use of your Federal data.

Morever, independent organisations like the Sunlight Foundation ("Sunlight is said to be the best of disinfectants") are starting to play a crucial role in holding politicians to their easy promises of openness in government.

The Sunlight Foundation is currently running a competition called "Apps for America 2: the Data.gov challenge":

Just as the federal government begins to provide data in Web developer-friendly formats, we're organizing Apps for America 2: The Data.gov Challenge to demonstrate that when government makes data available, it makes itself more accountable and creates more trust and opportunity in its actions. The contest submissions will also show the creativity of developers in designing compelling applications that provide easy access and understanding for the public, while also showing how open data can save the government tens of millions of dollars by engaging the development community in application development at far cheaper rates than traditional government contractors.

Significantly:

While not required, bonus points go to using one of Sunlight's open source libraries, APIs or APIs and libraries of our partners like maplight, opensecrets, and followthemoney.org!

All software you write has to be licensed under any OSI approved license

This initiative makes clear the close relationships between software code and legal code, and between open source and open government. It also shows how free software is beginning to impinge on and shape some of the most fundamental aspects of democracy – just as Richard Stallman intended.

From:http://www.linuxjournal.com/content/open-government-latest-member-open-family

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

游戏人间

歌手:郑智化 专辑:游戏人间
世界太罗嗦不份对和错
像我这样的老百姓
谁会在乎我
有钱的当老大
没钱的难过活
就算是看不惯我又能如何
爱人离开我
不说为什么
伤心难过的时候
我学会了喝酒
每次都喝醉
但从来不犯错
明天酒醒以后我依然是我
笑容太甜
泪水太咸
山盟海誓到了最后难免会变
烦恼太多未来太远
何不陪我一起放荡游戏人间日子怎么过快乐不快
像这种无聊的问题你不要问我
该来的回来该走的会走
反正都是没把握
不必太强求
我有我的痛
我有我的梦
装疯卖傻的时候你不要笑我
也许有一天你我再相逢
睁开眼睛看清楚我才是英雄
笑容太甜泪水太咸
山盟海誓到了最后难免会变
烦恼太多未来太远
何不陪我一起放荡游戏人间
酸甜苦辣尝过
人间冷暖看过
江湖的路上身不由己
是是非非抛开
恩恩怨怨不在
自由自在我浪迹天涯
笑容太甜泪水太咸
山盟海誓到了最后难免会变
烦恼太多未来太远
何不陪我一起放荡游戏人间
笑容太甜泪水太咸
山盟海誓到了最后难免会变
烦恼太多未来太远
何不陪我一起放荡游戏人间

Red Hat's Fedora 11: So easy you'll forget it's Linux

Hat has taken heat over the past few years for allegedly neglecting the personal computer in favor of more profitable enterprise servers. It's a fair critique: Red Hat is an enterprise software company, a decision it made years ago, and to good effect.

 

But anyone thinking that Red Hat has somehow forgotten consumer markets in its rush to win the enterprise need only try the final release of Fedora 11, its community-focused operating system for desktops and laptops. I've been evaluating Fedora 11 for the past week and find it polished and professional while meeting or beating Windows in key performance areas.

 

Reading through Fedora 11's feature list, the geek in you may get giddy seeing the use of ext4 as the default file system. Not me. I don't care about the underpinnings of the operating system. I just want it to work.

 

This is, in fact, Fedora 11's biggest selling point: it just works. And fast, too: from powering on to logging in takes 20 seconds or less. Beat that, Windows!

 

(Ironically, if Windows hopes to catch Linux in boot-up performance, it's going to have to turn to Linux, like DeviceVM's Splashtop, for help.)

 

This, however, is an experience I've been having with several Linux distributions, including Moblin Beta 2, Ubuntu 9.04 Netbook Remix (reviewed here), and OpenSUSE 11.1. While none is perfect, the same is true of my preferred Mac OS X and Windows (Vista or XP). They all work, with little or no fiddling required.

 

In fact, as an experiment I've been leaving my Linux-based Netbook around the house and have given my children and wife free rein to use it whenever and however they want. My wife looks up actors on IMDB. My daughter writes a school paper. Not one of them has struggled to perform these basic tasks, set up the wireless, etc. Everything just works, and works in a way very familiar to a Mac or Windows user.

 

This is the state of "desktop" Linux today: it really has nothing left to prove. It took years to become user friendly, but it has arrived, helped along by the world's move to browser-based computing. At this point, the only thing that Fedora and the other Linux distributions can do is embrace and extend the Windows or Mac computing experience, because they've largely matched them (especially Windows).

 

Perhaps it's not surprising, then, that Ubuntu's Mark Shuttleworth has targeted the Mac as the "desktop" operating system to beat, with plans to do just that.

 

In fact, my only real complaint with Fedora 11 is that it doesn't yet have a Netbook-focused "spin." I'm not alone in seeking a "Fedora Netbook Remix," but Fedora Mini, as it's called, is not yet ready for prime time.

 

In the meantime, yes, Fedora 11 provides support for cross-compiling Windows applications directly on Fedora Linux using the MinGW environment, and yes it provides the latest and greatest in open-source software like Firefox 3.1 for Web browsing.

 

Just don't expect it to be weird/geeky anymore. Those days for the Linux "desktop" are gone. It still needs some spit and polish but, again, so does Windows. The Mac is the closest any 'desktop' operating system gets to being both beautiful and super user friendly. Linux, however, if Fedora 11 is any indication, isn't far behind.

 

Fromhttp://news.cnet.com/8301-13505_3-10260478-16.html

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

郎咸平关于《白领陨落,黑领升起》一文的声明

     《白领陨落,黑领升起》已经确认不是郎咸平先生所写,而且言辞之中不乏激烈,但是仍然是一片好文章,很值得一读。

 

  最近大家在盛传《白领陨落,黑领升起》一文,我曾经在我的官网(www.jsmedia.tv)上做过声明,表示此文非本人所写,而是别人冒写或误传所致。现在很多网站及杂志不经过查实,随意刊登以"郎咸平"为署名作者的《白领陨落,黑领升起》一文,对此我保留相应的权利。

  现在网络上还有很多文章系别人冒用我的名字所写,在此我再次声明,我的文章都会发表在我的官网和我的博客里面,不在我的官网和博客里刊登的文章一定是别人冒写的或误传的。

  同时,我也对那些伪作者们的低劣人品予以严厉谴责!

Monday, June 8, 2009

Underestimating the Mission Critical Role of Linux

To what extent is Linux serving in mission critical environments today? There are still IT leaders that consider Linux a non-contender in such environments.

Despite a steady stream of research verifying the use of Linux in the enterprise, there are lingering doubts as to the prevalence of Linux in mission critical environments.

Some industry experts continue to believe that Linux remains an "edge of the enterprise" solution. These IT leaders see Linux relegated to the function of print and web serving, but not used extensively for core applications roles like email, data management, etc.

A segment of IT leaders still hold the view that Linux is neither prolific in their data centers nor does it run mission critical applications.

This perspective seems at odds with reality, considering that as far back as 2004 several research firms were reporting the role of Linux in mission critical application environments. Forrester research then showed that "fifty-three percent of the 140 corporate executives surveyed run mission-critical applications on Linux, and 52% choose Linux for new apps.", from their Linux Crosses Into Mission-Critical Apps.

Not suprisingly, the many recent publications indicate that the role for Linux in mission critical deployments is continually growing. The recent IDC whitepaper found that:

"IDC has seen a movement to increasingly favor the use of Linux as a platform to support more mission-critical workloads on all architectures where Linux is used"

More details are available in the IDC WHITE PAPER: The Opportunity for Linux in a New Economy, by Al Gillen, sponsored by Linux Foundation. While such studies are prevalent, a portion of corporate IT leaders still do not understand the significance and capacity of Linux for mission critical roles.

Many executives I have spoken with over the past few months simply have no idea that Linux is there in the first place.

IT engineers often implement enterprise Linux deployments without explicitly communicating the platform to their leadership. As a result, few decision makers are actually aware that Linux currently addresses their business need and requirements.

Explaining or defending the underlying platform, when it will clearly meet key requirements, becomes irrelevant.

In some cases, engineers wish to avoid expending time clarifying this to edge of technology leader (CFO, CTO, CEO, SVP of Technologies) the details that could see the project hung or rejected.


In many cases, Linux use occurs across the enterprise without any recognition or emphasis. This subtle deployment of Linux servers impacts the overall acknowledgment of its use in mission critical functions of the business.

However, Linux deployments for mission critical functions are steadily increasing. I've reiterated this in several earlier articles including: Linux in Enterprise Is Already Prime Time.

The healthcare industry serves as a reasonable example, where the mainframe market growth has been significant over the past few years. Much of this growth is led by major corporations like IBM -- with the underlying OS being Linux.

Linux is used extensively in Hospitals, Data centers, Call centers, and a growing number of email and business systems contexts.

What some leaders do not understand is that with today's emphasis on virtualization and multiplatform support, Linux is just another integral part of most mission critical environments.

Moreover, Linux also remains the fastest growing OS for High Performance Computing (HPC), which frequently ties directly to business mission critical applications.

Finally, as the impact of monetary liquidity hits on bottom line corporate spending, Linux use has expanded aggressively to counter the rising costs associated with capital expenditures.

This was also stated in the recent IDC document, which indicated that Linux is:

"well-positioned to ride existing and new market trends."

Functionality and costs factor strongly in current mission critical deployments and Linux is an overt fit.

Leading mission critical solutions companies like IBM, Unisys, and Fujitsu continue to increasingly deploy their Linux based systems, ensuring long term growth.

Hopefully this article serves to remind IT leaders that Linux and mission critical business roles remain quite congenial even in today's economic shifts.

Mark Rais is a Linux and FOSS technologist and writer who previously served as a senior manager for Netscape and AOL.

Form:http://www.reallylinux.com/docs/missioncriticallinux.shtml

 

Firefox 3.5 delayed to 10 June

"Even before shipping the RC, we've managed to find a number of issues that needed fixing," said Mike Beltzner, the director of Firefox.

The web browser was initially set for release in the first week of June. However it now looks likely that the browser won't be made available until June 10 at the earliest.

Beltzner attributed the bug finds to a "newfound rigor" in testing, as well as a larger number of users hammering on the RC code. "[All this] makes it easier for us to spot potential problems with a milestone much earlier than ever before," he said.

Last year, Mozilla delivered the final release candidate of Firefox 3.0 on June 4, then launched the browser two weeks later, on June 17. Assuming it meets that same timeline this year, Mozilla could ship Firefox 3.5 by June 25 if it sticks to just one RC and drops that on users by June 12.

Firefox currently accounts for 22.5% of the browser market, according to web metrics company Net Applications' most-recent data. But it faces renewed competition on almost every front, including Microsoft and its Internet Explorer 8, Google's Chrome browser, and even Opera Software, which launched a public beta of Opera 10 yesterday.

Firefox 3.5 is the new moniker by which Firefox 3.1 goes by. Mozilla changed the browser's name earlier this year after developers said '3.1' didn't properly reflect the amount of new features and changes from last June's Firefox 3.0.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Why Linux is ready for the desktop today

Commentary--Over the years, the question "is Linux ready for the desktop" has been raised time and time again, and countless articles have been written about the strengths and weaknesses of this operating system. While desktop Linux adoption has yet to go completely mainstream, recent indicators show that a major change is underfoot.

 

Linux is primed to take the PC market by storm as more enterprises recognize the value proposition that Linux offers business - more flexibility, customization and affordable options. We're also seeing hardware manufacturers expanding their Linux offerings on a range of devices. The recent roll out of the new ProBook series of HP notebook devices available with a fully supported Linux operating system is one example and these options is only expected to grow.

 

Until recently commercial desktop Linux deployments had mostly been limited to single task applications, such as cash registers or transactional workstations. But Linux offerings are now mature enough and ideal for a wide range of workers. In fact, power users all the way down to users who perform such basic tasks as word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, email and web browsing are benefiting from a Linux operating system. In addition, due to the current economic environment, enterprises are required to rationalize the cost of their server and desktop software and thus they are reevaluating their use of costly proprietary software. As customers seek fully functional operating systems and applications at a fraction of the price of Windows or Mac, Linux has become a truly attractive alternative.

 

So the question remains: is Linux ready for the enterprise desktop today? A steady increase in user adoption and key developments over the past six to 12 months suggest that the answer is yes:

 

* Open source applications reach maturity

First, a number of open source applications have become more technical mature, and a lot more user-friendly over time. One example of this is OpenOffice.org, which has reached new levels of sophistication that allow it to be used by almost any worker in the enterprise without losing a single degree of productivity.

 

In addition, open source software adoption is growing. According to a recent CIO.com survey of IT and business executives and managers, more than 50 percent of enterprises are already using open-source applications. Interestingly enough, a number of public sector organizations such as government and education are also beginning to migrate away from proprietary standards and are embracing open standards such as Open Office XML and the Open Document format, for storing and sharing content. Because these open source applications are based on open standards, these organizations are helping to drive the adoption of Linux forward.

* Linux preloads on PCs increase

Another key trend impacting the growth of enterprise desktop Linux can be found within the hardware ecosystem. Several key OEM vendors, such as HP, Lenovo and Dell, are preloading desktop Linux, and more importantly, they are preloading desktop Linux at a much faster rate than ever before. What we're hearing from several vendors in the industry is that they want to be able to offer preloaded Linux systems at the same time as proprietary Windows systems. That's really an inflection point in the industry - Linux is no longer the laggard.

 

In fact, industry research shows that Linux, as an operating system, is growing. Gartner predicts the install base for Linux users will be 34 million by 2012. This growth is very appealing to many hardware vendors, who are hearing from their customers that they want choice and flexibility.

 

Customers don't want to be locked into using Windows – they clearly want a more cost-compelling solution, and that's something that hardware vendors are increasingly offering on a wide range of devices.

* Netbook and Thin Client growth leads to Linux surge

New form factors have emerged recently which make desktop Linux a logical choice. Netbook sales, for example, have really taken off in the past 12-18 months and offer a bright spot on the computing landscape, as consumers are fleeing from higher-end products to these low-cost devices.

 

In many cases, enterprises are using netbooks as a companion form factor to their existing desktops. Due to its small footprint, netbooks have become ideal for road warriors as well as for those who simply want a light-weight, secondary PC.

 

As a result, we're seeing Linux adoption on the netbook from vendors such as ASUS, MSI, HP and Lenovo. In reality, the low cost of the netbook, combined with the small footprint of desktop Linux, makes this an ideal choice to meet the needs of the enterprise user.

 

Other form factors include thin clients. Where customers don't need a fully loaded Windows operating system; they can simply use a slimmed down thin client Linux operating system and be just as productive at a fraction of the cost. The growth of these new and right-sized devices are just another reason desktop Linux is becoming more attractive to the enterprise.

* Security issues plague Windows

Following several high-profile, headline-grabbing data breaches in recent months such as TJX, Monster and Société Générale, organizations are beginning to look closer at their security systems and question the safety of using Windows on desktops. The Windows operating system comes complete with plenty of security holes and Microsoft is slow to release patches for these holes. In addition, viruses on Windows are still very much alive and Windows continues to be their number one target.

 

While patches and virus alerts are routine for many organizations, the increasing frequency and severity of the threats have put pressure on IT departments to implement better security practices and standards. Take, for example, the recent Conficker virus, a Windows-only virus that has infected roughly seven to 10 million PCs to date. Experts are still trying to understand its impact and what kind of downstream implications it will have in terms of clogging network traffic. As a result, IT is starting to question if there aren't more secure options that reduce this risk. That option is Linux, which, while not necessarily immune to attack, is certainly less susceptible and by design can quickly detect and correct potential threats, reducing costs and headaches for the IT department.

* Computing heads for the clouds

Yet another key trend affecting desktop Linux adoption is the resurgence of web-based software systems. We know many organizations are moving toward the cloud, or are transitioning off of Microsoft Office in favor of applications such as Google Docs, Google Apps, Zoho, and so on. In essence, enterprises are beginning to ask themselves if they really need a fully-blown Microsoft operating system, with all the bells and whistles, to access applications in the cloud, or if they can simply get a slimmed down, less expensive solution to do the work that they need to do. Again, if all you need is a browser, then you definitely don't need a Microsoft operating system and the associated licensing costs. Here's another place that a more cost-effective, flexible Linux system gives you everything you need and protects your bottom-line.

 

Conclusion

Linux is ready for the desktop – of that, there is no doubt. The ever increasing number of users adopting Linux is testament to its accessibility. According to a March 2008 IDC survey, about two-thirds of IT executives stated that they are "actively evaluating" or "accelerating adoption" of Linux on the desktop.

 

Furthermore, the report suggested that economic downturns have a tendency to accelerate emerging technologies and punish solutions that are not cost competitive. With cost-cutting pressures expected to continue into the post-recessionary phase, we can expect desktop Linux adoption to only increase. From economic arguments to innovative enhancements, Linux on the desktop clearly offers a compelling value proposition to customers now more than ever.

 

biography

Kevin Foster is Senior Product Marketing Manager at Novell, a leading supplier of both open source and proprietary software solutions.

 

From:http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-308528.html

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

针对Twitter的翻墙课

1.利用其他Twitter网页端
http://itweet.net/web/
http://m.tweete.net/login
http://twitzap.com/
http://tweetree.com/
https://filttr.com/
http://twaitter.com/

2.使用第三方的Dabr。使用这个方法需要先翻墙一次,以后都无需翻墙了。
目前可用无需翻墙的Dabr列表:
官方Dabr: http://dabr.co.uk
@neolee: http://t.neolee.cn/
@Ksky: http://t.ydo.me/
@Chada: http://funp.org/
@ikemi: http://t.ikemi.org/
@xzzxyd: http://t.zhe.la/
@wzy: http://t.80sfamily.com
@billzhong: http://heix.pp.ru/
@shizhao: http://shizhao.org/dabr/
@Kevin: http://okevin.net/twitter/
@Sofish: http://g.happinesz.cn/
@zhutouinfo:http://t.zhutou.info/
@jason5ng32: http://chanmao.ws/dabr/
@tinn: http://touke.net/t/
@zuola: http://s.zuo.la/
@Herock: http://wespeaker.com/t/
@haitai: http://t.huhaitai.com/
@noirz: http://oaic.cn/mu/
@xzheng:http://t.16class.cn/
@fenng: http://cafebeta.com/twitter/

 

China Blocks Twitter, Flickr, Bing, Hotmail, Windows Live, etc. Ahead of Tiananmen 20th Anniversary

This cartoon was created today by Chinese Twitter user "junde" to protest China's censorship of Twitter: The bird bound and gagged represents Twitter. The crab catching the bird is a well-established symbol for censorship used by Chinese netizens. (For the full history of how the "river crab" 河蟹 came to represent censorship click here.)

 

On Herdict, the global crowd-sourcing censorship-tracking website, people are reporting censorship of Twitter on networks all over China… with some people adding frustrated commentary, often including the f-word. You can also see blockage reports for Hotmail, Windows Live, Bing, Flickr, YouTube, Blogspot, etc.

 

Twitter users are expressing their anger by using the #fuckgfw hashtag on Twitter (gfw = "great firewall"), though the good folks at Twitter appear to be keeping this hashtag off their "trending" page - I assume due to the use of of obscenity. Perhaps people will switch to plain old #gfw, or something.

 

Isaac Mao has issued an appeal to Twitter management, asking them to fully enable "https" so that people in China can access it in encrypted form. Google enables https encryption on many of its services.

 

Many Twitter users also hope that the company will speak out publicly against the blockage.

 

Active Beijing-based Twitter user David Feng sent the following email to me and some other friends. I reproduce it here with his permission:

 

I am not one to use Twitter for what I call "obvious political means", as in most of the content I post is tech, mass transit or city-related and concerns the events of Tian'anmen much less. However, my Twitterstream has been picking up with tweets such as "Twitter is more than a website". This in itself is "the truth", so to speak. Quite a number of us don't even text message each other. We DM or tweet each other instead. It's for real even in "far far away" China, so to speak.

 

So here you have the typical apolitical twitter-er who is far less interested in reactionary propaganda so-called and far more interested in conveying stuff that is "much closer to life". This GFW thing is a major inconvenience and I am sure it is by no means your fault. It lies with the censors far closer to home (thankfully not "your" home States-side!) and I think that while this recent blocking is not unexpected, it was a real pain in the back when it finally struck.

 

I'm hoping that this most recent block goes away quickly after a few days, when the whole anniversary is done with. I cannot exclude, however, the possibility of a block extending through right after National Day, which is October 1 in China. The public security authorities have already launched a never-before-seen scale campaign to clean just about every last thing in Beijing up—we're not just talking about "officially published acts", such as the taking away of illegal weapons and stuff like that.

 

In the meantime, let me echo the latest hashtag of the Chinese Twitter community floating around: #F***GFW. This is pretty much a good sentiment of how people feel about this most recent of dumb acts done by no-one else than the censors themselves.

 

Fromhttp://www.circleid.com/posts/20090602_china_blocks_twitter_flickr_bing_hotmail_windows_live/

Volcanic Eruption In China May Have Caused Mass Extinction

ScienceDaily (May 30, 2009) — A previously unknown giant volcanic eruption that led to global mass extinction 260 million years ago has been uncovered by scientists at the University of Leeds. 

The eruption in the Emeishan province of south-west China unleashed around half a million cubic kilometres of lava, covering an area 5 times the size of Wales, and wiping out marine life around the world.

Unusually, scientists were able to pinpoint the exact timing of the eruption and directly link it to a mass extinction event in the study published in Science. This is because the eruptions occurred in a shallow sea – meaning that the lava appears today as a distinctive layer of igneous rock sandwiched between layers of sedimentary rock containing easily datable fossilised marine life.

The layer of fossilised rock directly after the eruption shows mass extinction of different life forms, clearly linking the onset of the eruptions with a major environmental catastrophe.

The global effect of the eruption is also due to the proximity of the volcano to a shallow sea. The collision of fast flowing lava with shallow sea water caused a violent explosion at the start of the eruptions – throwing huge quantities of sulphur dioxide into the stratosphere.

"When fast flowing, low viscosity magma meets shallow sea it's like throwing water into a chip pan – there's spectacular explosion producing gigantic clouds of steam," explains Professor Paul Wignall, a palaeontologist at the University of Leeds, and the lead author of the paper.

The injection of sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere would have lead to massive cloud formation spreading around the world - cooling the planet and ultimately resulting in a torrent of acid rain. Scientists estimate from the fossil record that the environmental disaster happened at the start of the eruption.

"The abrupt extinction of marine life we can clearly see in the fossil record firmly links giant volcanic eruptions with global environmental catastrophe, a correlation that has often been controversial," adds Professor Wignall.

Previous studies have linked increased carbon dioxide produced by volcanic eruptions with mass extinctions. However, because of the very long term warming effect that occurs with increased atmospheric carbon dioxide (as we see with current climate change) the causal link between global environmental changes and volcanic eruptions has been hard to confirm.

This work was done in collaboration with the Chinese University of Geosciences in Wuhan and funded by a grant from the Natural Environment Research Council, UK.

From: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/05/090528142827.htm

Monday, June 1, 2009

IT人士群聚喝酒的讲究

大家喝的是啤酒,这时你入座了……

你给自己倒了杯可乐,这叫低配置。

你给自已倒了杯啤酒,这叫标准配置。

你给自己倒了杯茶水,这茶的颜色还跟啤酒一样,这叫木马。

你给自己倒了杯可乐,还滴了几滴醋,不仅颜色跟啤酒一样,而且不冒热气还有泡泡,这叫超级木马。

你的同事给你倒了杯白酒,这叫推荐配置。

人到齐了,酒席开始了。

你先一个人喝了一小口,这叫单元测试。

你跟旁边的人说哥们咱们随意,这叫交叉测试。

但是他说不行,这杯要干了,这叫压力测试。

于是你说那就大家一起来吧,这叫内部测试。

这个时候boss向全场举杯了,这叫公开测试。

菜过三巡,你就不跟他们客气了。

你向对面的人敬酒,这叫p2p.

你向对面的人敬酒,他回敬你,你又再敬他……,这叫tcp.

你向一桌人挨个敬酒,这叫令牌环。

你说只要是兄弟就干了这杯,这叫广播。

可是你的上司jj听了不高兴了,只有兄弟么,罚酒三杯。这叫炸弹。

可是你的下级mm听了不高兴了,我喝一口,你喝一杯,这叫恶意攻击。

有一个人过来向这桌敬酒,你说不行你先过了我这关,这叫防火墙。

你的小弟们过来敬你酒,这叫一对多。

你是boss,所有人过来敬你酒,这叫服务器。

酒是一样的,可是喝法是不同的。

你喝了一杯,boss喝了一口,这叫c#.

你喝了一杯,mm喝了一口,这叫vb.

你喝了一杯,你大哥喝了半杯,这叫c++.

你喝了半杯,你小弟喝了一杯,这叫汇编。

你喝了一杯,你的搭档也喝了一杯,这叫c.

死就是一念的事,活着却是一辈子的事,所以活着比死更需要勇气 says:

酒是一样的,可是喝酒的人是不同的。

你越喝脸越红,这叫频繁分配释放资源。

你越喝脸越白,这叫资源不释放。

你已经醉了,却说我还能喝,叫做资源额度不足。

你明明能喝,却说我已经醉了,叫做资源保留。

你喝一段时间就上厕所,这叫cache.

酒过三巡,你也该活动活动了。

你一桌一桌的走,这叫轮巡。

你突然看到某一桌的漂亮mm,走了过去,这叫优先级。

你去了坐下来就不打算走了,这叫死循环。

你的老大举杯邀你过去,你只好过去,这叫激活事件。

你向一桌敬酒,他们说不行不行我们都喝白的,于是你也喝白的,这叫本地化。

你向boss敬酒,可是boss被围了起来,你只能站在外圈,这叫排队。

你终于到了内圈,小心翼翼的向前一步,这叫访问临界区。

你拍着boss的肩膀说哥们咱们喝一杯,这叫越界。

你不知喝了几圈了,只会说两个字,干了,这叫udp.

可是还有人拿着酒瓶跑过来说,刚才都没跟你喝,这叫丢包。

喝酒喝到最后的结果都一样

你突然跑向厕所,这叫捕获异常。

你在厕所吐了,反而觉得状态不错,这叫清空内存。

你在台面上吐了,觉得很惭愧,这叫程序异常。

你在boss面前吐了,觉得很害怕,这叫系统崩溃。

你吐到了boss身上,只能索性晕倒了,这叫硬件休克。
From:http://www.anseo.cn/seo/u/IT-090305113833458.html

浙江湖州女副市长坠楼身亡 死因调查中

热门评论 (评论共4836条 显示3862条)
网易加拿大网友 ip:99.244.*.*: 2009-05-02 11:06:05 发表
服务员:先生,请问要点什么?
顾客:我要死!
服务员:好的,先生,就死来说,有自然死亡跟非自然死亡,你要那种?
顾客:非自然死亡吧!
服务员:好的,先生,就非自然死亡来说,有他杀跟自杀,你要那种?
顾客:那就自杀吧!
服务员:好的,就自杀来说,有自己自杀跟被自杀,你要那种?
顾客:有什么区别?!
服务员:有很多种死法,被自杀有很多新颖的死法。
顾客:被自杀!
服务员:是的,先生,就被自杀来说,有俯卧撑、躲猫猫、醉梦死.....
顾客:能不能快点,我赶时间!就俯卧撑吧!快!
服务员:就俯卧撑来说有被网民接受跟不被网民接受的,
请问你要那种?
顾客:......(怒)
服务员:我帮你选被网民接受的吧,稍安勿躁,先生,我帮你查查库存。
(片刻)不好意思,先生,被网民接受的俯卧撑是上一年的款式,已经卖完了。
现在有最新的款式,叫被堕楼,要不要试试。
From:http://comment.news.163.com/news_guonei6_bbs/58A7MHVV0001124J.html

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