[Napster] 11 - End of the Road.mp3 137
psoriac writes "Looks like the long sad saga of Napster is drawing to a final close; after being shut down by the courts, losing its execs, filing for chapter 11, and having its sale to Bertelsmann AG blocked, the remaining physical assets of Napster are being sold at auction by Dovebid. The auction site is close to my house; I think I'll stop by and pick up some memorabilia."
Dovebid (Score:3, Interesting)
The main thing that discouraged me, other than lack of money, was the insanely high minimum proxy bid. Most of the stuff wasn't worth that much.
It was also confusing the way they listed a lot of identical items seperately, and then also had "lots" but apparently the minimum bid was still something like $250 for each item in the lot, not the lot as a whole.
Re:Dovebid (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Dovebid (Score:2, Interesting)
Most of my experience is with storage unit auctions, I really get into those when I have some extra cash.
It seems the opposite is true there, anything with a power supply goes for pennies on the dollar, but furniture and hard goods get bid up a little high, especially if they look like real wood and not that pressboard junk.
That's for the ones where they actually unload the unit before bidding and let you bid on lots they make up on the spot, which is exceptional, but my favorite kind. Most unit auctions are blind, you just get to stick your head in the unit, then they start the bidding.
Different class of bidders of course, I've seen people at storage unit auctions that I have a hard time believing they even have a house capable of containing the amount of junk they buy.
I even saw people bid up a unit full of dirty old matresses once. That was about the most hilarious thing. I bet the previous owner of the unit just saw it as a cheap way to dispose of the things, since the landfill makes you pay to get rid of that kind of stuff, and charities won't touch those.
Re: Dovebid (Score:3, Funny)
> Did anyone buy any of the Enron stuff from Dovebid when that went down a while back? The main thing that discouraged me, other than lack of money, was the insanely high minimum proxy bid. Most of the stuff wasn't worth that much.
For some reason I find it unsurprising that Enron's stuff was overvaluated.
Re:Dovebid (Score:2)
that is a fricking crock... the cost of the biddind shoudl come out of the sellers not the bidders...
dovebid = ebay with added ripoff features.
Besides all that equipment is horribly out-of-date now. and unfortunately.. it will go for way higher than it is worth.. (workstation? not more than $200.00 with monitor and keyboard... I DONT care what it is... this is a liquidation auction.)
Uh, Look who the seller is. (Score:1)
And where are the Aeron Chairs ? (Score:1)
So, why don't they show in the auction ?
Featured Items - nice! (Score:4, Informative)
Sun Microsystems
VA Linux Servers
Network Appliance Servers
EMC
Dell Servers and More!!
Desktop and Notebook Computers By Apple, Dell, Hewlett-Packard and Others!!
Monitors
Printers and Faxes By Hewlett-Packard, Canon, Brother and Others!
Hundreds Of Napster Logo'd Shirts, Hats, Jackets and More!!
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:1, Funny)
It's rather interesting to see that the hardware actually reflects the technology used...
If they used P2P the hardware was much less interesting
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:2)
- Sam
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:1)
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:2)
The company may suck, but the names gotta be worth a mint.
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:2, Funny)
The Ajax Novelty Item Manufacturer, Inc. of Chicago, Illinois has bought the 'Napster' brand. They plan to come out soon with the Sean Fanny "Napster" vibrating butt plug.
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:1)
From P2P music distribution to the software that copies CDs... I don't think that's the smartest thing that I've ever heard of, but what the heck...
So, I guess you'll have to go elsewhere for the vibrating butt plug.
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:1)
Re:Featured Items - nice! (Score:1)
Bout Time (Score:1)
Bout time that thing died, then again I thought it was long gone already. Oh well, I hear the new LOTR movie is on Kazaa *scurries away*.
Napster is still around for the forseeable future (Score:2)
Yes, Napster *Inc*'s Napster servers no longer exist. A large number of independent servers have sprung up, however, mostly overseas where the RIAA can't get at them (particularly, for some reason, Italy). The content available is not as comprehensive as it was in Napster's heyday, but if you're looking for a piece of music, it's likely still available.
Re:Bout Time (Score:2)
Sorry. It might not be pleasant, but it's best to be accurate.
Re:Bout Time (Score:2)
When will they ever learn ... (Score:1)
P2P is here to stay, and it will just continue to get better for those who use them, and worse for those who oppose them.
Really too bad... (Score:3, Insightful)
A bit dramatic perhaps, but I continue to think that they should have gone out with their proverbial heads held high, instead of after this miserable sequence of events...
Re: Really too bad... (Score:3, Insightful)
> Excerpt: Some things change our lives so significantly that they deserve better than to be trampled out of existence by the changing face of subtle bureaucratic oppression. A bit dramatic perhaps...
Not IMO. I think this is sad because Napster was the most innovative use of the internet since the WWW came along. And notably, it started out as a garage app rather than as the effort of some big software machine. In the IP age it's the big businesses who are breaking up the machines that scare them [wikipedia.org].
Re:Really too bad... (Score:2)
This is not the same as the RIAA going after colleges or the Rio makers, or the MPAA and DeCSS, or all the TV networks and SonicBlue. This is like going after the people burning VCDs of Harry Potter over in East Asia.
Re:Really too bad... (Score:1)
Saying that Napster was "oriented" towards IP violations is like saying the Internet as a whole is oriented towards distributing child porn. How technology is used is different from how it ought to be used, and one must distinguish between the two when discussing the merits of using technology at all.
Re:Really too bad... (Score:1)
Are you going to make the ludicrous claim that the Napster business plan expected the business to thrive based on people exchanging home recordings and legal MP3 files??
Re:Really too bad... (Score:2)
Re:Really too bad... (Score:2)
Re:Really too bad... (Score:4, Insightful)
Agreed. To me there are only 3 major breakthroughs in personal computing technology (and Windows isn't one of them). They are Netscape - literally changed the world (doesn't matter that Mosaic came first, Netscape is the one that did it), Doom - literally exploded first person, multi-user gaming and is the foundation of a multi-billion dollar industry, and Napster who completely 'rocked' the world of content connected computing (CCC - did I just make that up?). If you look back at Doom, how grainy the graphics, limited function etc, and compare to today's spectacular graphics, ability to swim, side step, etc. Netscape and the first web pages - grey, simple, one font, no indents or bullets. Now we have interactive pages, e-commerce, etc. Napster never got to become what it could have been. Just like early explorers confronting something with teeth, the **AA shot it dead before finding out if it was friend or foe.
Re:Hi, I'm new to the internet? (Score:1)
No
Arbitration
Peer2Peer.
Suck
Toes
Eterna
of
RIAA.
Hrmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hrmm (Score:1)
Kierthos
Re:Hrmm (Score:4, Funny)
not a big deal (Score:4, Insightful)
And Napster won't be the last peer to peer technique that goes under, but one of these days we'll cobble something together that is *really* beyond shutdown. The only major problem so far seems to be that for the creator of that piece of software there will be no income to be made (he/she can't control access to it either).
Maybe freenet will be the one, maybe not.
But that is just one aspect of the technological war, the other one is that even a perfect peer to peer protocol / search engine is still vulnerable to all kinds of attacks by those with enough money (such as RIAA) or those with enough time on their hands (like the sicko's that try to destroy IRC) and that will probably be the next frontier,
to maintain data integrity, and to be able to search and destroy bogus clients and their malicious payloads without centralised control.
Bah (Score:3, Insightful)
there was always a way to get music, and there always will be.
one strange thing is, i dont remember such horrible queing in napster, like there is in kazaa, the wait rivals that of certain extremely busy irc channels.,
Re:Bah (Score:1)
Re:Bah (Score:1)
Re:Bah (Score:1)
Re:Bah (Score:1)
I wonder if there is Data in tha HDs (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wonder if there is Data in tha HDs (Score:1)
Re:I wonder if there is Data in tha HDs (Score:1)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
Taco still can't spell. Perhaps there's going to be a spell checker up at auction. We can only hope.
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
-Kevin
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Except:
Alright, I'll shut up now.
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
I don't even have a site so what do I know? I'm a pothole on the information superhighway. I do know that Slashdot has been propagating bad spelling and grammar for years. Don't even get me started on its/it's and their/there/they're. It's not that difficult, people!
-Kevin
Napster is alive (Score:1)
Re:Napster is alive (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.napigator.com/servers/ [napigator.com]
We can sleep better now (Score:5, Funny)
Good place for a slashdot-proof server (Score:2, Offtopic)
Yes, I know it's offtopic, but I'm trying to be funny on a Sunday morning... cut me some slack
RickTheWizKid
I love typos. (Score:2)
Good thing there's no step 2. I HATE second steps.
Re:I love typos. (Score:3, Funny)
(don't say it)
2) ???
(I said don't say it)
4) Profit!
(Great, he said it. Mod his ass DOWN!)
Re:I love typos. (Score:1)
Re: I love typos. (Score:1)
> > Webcast bidding requires 1) a unique bidder number for each auction and 3) an open telephone connection with a touchtone phone.
> Good thing there's no step 2. I HATE second steps.
They left it out on purpose, as a memorial to Napster:
2) profit
And we should be sorry... why? (Score:5, Insightful)
But that doesn't excuse Napster. They were a corporation, not an activist group - they made money by helping people violate copyright. Yes, I am aware that many people used Napster to trade non-copyrighted music - but for the most part, it was all the stuff that is being sold in stores right now (right then).
And to those of you that think that we should be able to just violate copyright because we don't like the content controllers, well, then fuck the GPL, right? Let's just use someone elses work for profit there too!
Re:And we should be sorry... why? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a lot of reasons why stealing music is the preferred method for basically this whole upcoming generation.
a)We are aware of actually how much money it takes to create a cd. We all have cd burners, and know how cheap the media is. Many of us even have friends that have their own hobbled-together studios, and can record their music in their basement. We know that we are getting totally and utterly ripped off if we buy a cd.
b)We know that the artist will most likely hardly see a dime anyway. We've watched enough VH1 behind the music to know that even the most successful stars in the most popular music can wind up owing their record label money, unless they throw a tantrum and acquire a new contract. We know that the artists are getting ripped off, too.
c)We know that we aren't actually taking something physical. We are copying an arrangement of bits in a file into a replication on our computer. There is no cost to the company. There is only the supposed lack of profit, which assumes that we would have paid for the album just to hear that one song we downloaded. We are aware that Radiohead "released" Kid A on Napster before it was in stores, and that people went out and made it a collossal best seller. It had no marketing campaign to speak of. The only marketing used was word of mouth from people who had downloaded it.We understand the difference between music downloading and theft, and we aren't afraid to pay for music worth paying for.
d)We respect musicians. We don't really care if the day of super-millionaire pop-stars disappears. What we want to see is musicians with websites, where you can just pay them directly, per song, and support who you listen to, without the huge, outdated, corrupt, technophobic, greedy, bloated middleman that is the music industry. We will wait to support the artist, but we will not stop listening to music.
Re:And we should be sorry... why? (Score:2)
This is no different than the current garment industry. People pay premium for a swoosh on their track pants, some woman in indonesia gets screwed, and Phillip Knight laughs all the way to the bank. But nobody seems to give a shit. I find it hilarious that everyone here gets mad at the MPAA/RIAA when we have companies that are screwing millions just so we can have our coffee, our oil, and our Levi's.
Yes, that's why I hope big media dies. But it won't because nobody cares. Fuck, I don't care - compared to the injustice that other companies dish out it's small potatoes.
Nobody used the t word. I did not say anybody was stealing. I said they were violating copyright. Big difference, though a lot of people gloss over it. I didn't in my post. Incidently, if Radiohead released Kid A on napster, one could arguably say that the people downloading it were not violating copyright (that is, if Radiohead owns the copyrights to their music) - bad example. In any case, if the copyright holder says "do not distribute my content" you are violating copyright and are (arguably) a criminal - end of story, whether it ultimately helps them or not.
That's essentially what I said. Seriously, did you even read my post?
Reply to reply to reply (Score:1)
well, I did not set out to strawman you, and I certainly appreciate the response. I have to admit, I got myself a little worked up there.
This is no different than the current garment industry.
I think I agree. I think the only place where they differ is that stealing shoes would be actual theft. Copying music is not. One is taking a physical object away from it's owner. The other is replicating a piece of information.
Nobody used the t word. I did not say anybody was stealing. I said they were violating copyright.
This is true. You did not say theft, and I apologize that my post took that leap in logic. However, my point was more that the whole concept of copyright is kinda not very solid.
Your point about violating the GPL is very true. But I've always seen the GPL as sort of a workaround to the fact that information isn't acknowledged in it's very nature to be free. The GPL is kind of an enforced, viral freedom designed to work around the current system of information oppression.
I disagree (Score:2)
This is more than a little misleading. You know how much it takes to burn a CD. You are ignoring the costs of production, marketing (we all hate it, but it's necessary to compete against others that market), and the fact that music is *not* fungible. When you want a CD, you don't want just any CD. You want a particular CD by a particular artist. IMHO, being "ripped off" happens when the other person misleads you about what you're getting. You *know* that you're paying a premium for a particular CD because you can only get it from one place. You aren't being "ripped off".
We know that the artists are getting ripped off, too
Sure, but you using it as a justification to pirate their music is laughable. You aren't going to do anything to drive the associated organizations out of business, you aren't sending a check to the author...you just want "free" music. Admit it.
We know that we aren't actually taking somethign physical...There is no cost to the company.
That is simply stupid. The entire concept of property is completely artifical anyway (remember the deals struck with the American Indians by settlers over land rights, which frequently the natives didn't comprehend?). To say that "intellectual property" or a potential customer has no value or legitimacy is just dumb.
And if it's worth *downloading*, why isn't it worth *paying* for?
We respect musicians
You can send them a check now. Have you?
Re:I disagree (Score:1)
"You know how much it takes to burn a CD. You are ignoring the costs of production, marketing"
Actually, I was trying to address that issue directly in my post, so let me restate it here. I know kids who have their own studios. Basement jobs with styrofoam sound proofing, going from their equipment straight into digital mixing. And you know what? It sounds fine. So production does not need to be the justification for whatever multiple of 100% markup they charge at Sam Goody.
As for marketing, I specifically used Kid A as my example because the only real marketing they did WAS P2P sharing. I've gotten into several bands only because I found them through filesharing, and when they are bands that are self-publishing, I have bought their albums.
"We know that the artists are getting ripped off, too
Sure, but you using it as a justification to pirate their music is laughable. You aren't going to do anything to drive the associated organizations out of business, you aren't sending a check to the author...you just want "free" music. Admit it.
No, I will not admit it. I stated it before, but I will restate it here. We will wait to support the artist, but we will not stop listening to music.
"That is simply stupid. The entire concept of property is completely artifical anyway (remember the deals struck with the American Indians by settlers over land rights, which frequently the natives didn't comprehend?). To say that "intellectual property" or a potential customer has no value or legitimacy is just dumb."
I feel like you are contradicting yourself here. You present a culture that didn't even believe in property owning, and then state that differing viewpoints copyright are "just dumb"?
The point I was trying to make is that a lot of young people just don't agree with the concept of owning information. We both read Slashdot. Every day there are stupid patent pieces, innovation squashing lawsuits from Big business, and draconian new laws that limit our freedom just to protect our Big Media's "intellectual property". Can you really own an idea? I just don't know anymore.
You can send them a check now. Have you?
This one I just don't get. How can I send them a check? I am willing to wager that even if I could find the mailing addresses of the bands I listen to, that it is almost certainly illegal for me to directly compensate them, without paying their labels.
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
I tend to think that many industries blow too much money (*cough* IT *cough* Sun) on overpriced services or hardware, but that doesn't mean that you can always just rip out the expensive studios and throw in a basement studio. I'm not a sound engineer...anyone here care to comment?
only real marketing they did WAS P2P sharing
But the fact that P2P sharing can generate sales doesn't mean that it can replace existing marketing. Using a little oomph and connections and some money to get reviews of your music tossed around or played is hard to compare to.
You present a culture that didn't even believe in property owning, and then state that differing viewpoints copyright are "just dumb"
I'm just pointing out that the claim "that nothing is being taken", doesn't really make a lot of sense as an argument. We feel that it's certainly wrong to steal products from a store, but who owns them, their invisible property nature, is artificial and comes from humans. Many proponents of IP elimination draw a picture of a huge gap between copyright infringement and taking posession of a physical object -- that the first isn't really wrong at all, but the second is. My complaint is that they're both (intellectual property and physical property) simply constructs we've built up because they're convenient and improve our lives. To point at one as inherently invalid is silly. The justification for using either is the same.
it is almost certainly illegal to directly compensate them
Yes, but so is just grabbing a copy of their music -- you do that. You don't have to say "Here's $15 for the album I didn't buy." If you simply send them a check that says "I'm a fan, here's a tip", there's nothing that anyone can say or do to stop that.
As for getting the addresses of musicians...yes, I can see how that would be an issue.
Re:I disagree (Score:2)
Why do CDs cost more than tapes? Tapes are much more complicated to manufacture, yet cost less. Even ingoring the complexity of a tape, there are fewer and fewer tapes sold, making for decreased economies of scale, so they should be pricier, yet cost $1-$2 cheaper, always. You market the albium (and the singer, but thats another diatribe) not the medium, so that has no bearing on costs.
Who creates the marketing needs? The labels themselves. In the need for bigger and bigger blockbusters, each album now has to sell a million records or it will never make back the initial costs. It's only the bottom line now (one could argue it's ALWAYS been just the bottom line) so you have musicians being marketed as products now, not artists. Witness "American Idol", "Making the Band". NSync, 98 degrees, NKOTB, New Edition, 3rd Bass - all manufactured bands. Created not by the artists but by the labels. They wanted a quick buck from these guys, so instead of having the guys start small and build a fan base, you spend and market the hell out of them to get name recognition, and hope that the music is good enough that some folks even might buy it. The musicians not good enough? Well, ask Milli Vanilli if that stood in their way. They were cute, they got on stage. Hmm, my point in all this rambling? The marketing cost monster is a problem, but it's one of the labels' own creation.
Public Enemy released There's a Poison Going On on Atomic Pop, an internet only label (which has since gone under). It cost $8 to download, $10 if you wanted a physical CD, which had a value add - an autograph by Chuck D. (which I have - there's a good way to have people spend money, give them a value add). The same CD cost $18 at Virgin megastore. What costs, marketing or otherwise, did they do to warrant the $8-10 markup, esentially a 100% markup?
I'm not defending piracy. Dorks who say "well I'm stealing this because they're ripping off the artists!' are just rationalizing bullshit artists. But the recording industry also has it's faults. If they didn't price CDs well past their production costs, there would be less incentive to steal (though the stealing would still be equally morally wrong). This is just one of those situations where nobody is completely clean, and having either side talking about how dirty the other side is doesn't clean anybody up much.
Re:And we should be sorry... why? (Score:1)
Rationalize all you want. In the end, you still got some information without the creator's permission. This is illegal and (by most definitions) wrong.
Now I'm off to do it anyway.
Re:And we should be sorry... why? (Score:2)
Oh yes, Eeeeevil Napster.
What exactly did they do? They made a program that lets you move files across the internet. I have about 10-12 programs that do that. Everything from IRC to OutlookExpress to game services. That's all the internet does, move data from one place to another. And letting people designate arbitrary files to move is basic functionality for hundreds of things.
So, was anything different about their program? They specialized in one file format which isn't particularly unusual. Even if that was Eeevil they could always generalize to all file formats like more recent P2P programs.
Anything else? It included search functions. Ooooo! Searching is Eeeevil. Lets all go lynch Google while we're at it. I've found quite a few MP3 files using Google.
You may as well outlaw the internet itself for contributory infringement. It would shut down every single P2P service in shot. It would solve plenty of other problems too.
-
Re:And we should be sorry... why? (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't it be more like "yeah, I used your source code in this software I am selling and no, I'm not releasing the source code" then they are violating the GPL and there would be nothing the original authors could do without copyright law.
Don't get me wrong, there are problems with copyright, but I view it as ultimately necessary (though not in it's current form).
Hell, even with copyright laws there are examples of people abusing the GPL (no specific ones handy, but don't just take my word for it - check google or something
Wait, is this a troll?
So now all muscians are compensated fairly. (Score:5, Funny)
Thank god and the record industry for making the world a better place.
Request (Score:3, Funny)
IP (Score:2, Interesting)
Haven't seen this mentioned yet, but last I heard Roxio is buying [com.com]Napster's intellectual property. Not sure what they intend to do with it though :)
-nwp
Re:IP (Score:1)
More on Roxio (Score:2, Informative)
Roxio is trying to buy "substantially all" of Napster's assets which is mainly the Napster name and the IP patents Napster has. Roxio passed on the physical assets (obviously) as it didn't need them, and on just buying the company outright as it didn't want to inherit Napster's debt load or pending lawsuits. The proposed sale is for $5 million in cash and 100,000 shares ($300-$400 thousand), and needs to be approved by the Delaware bankrupcy court handling Napster's bankrupcy.
What they intend to do is "secret" until Napster is actually bought, but with a reasonable assumption or two you can figure it out. Roxio's business is computer software, and about 40% of their income used to come from OEM bundling of lite versions of the software with computers and CD-R/RW drives. When the PC market took a dive, the OEM agreements made less, but also slowed the rate at which new users were upgrading from the lite to the standard version of the software which further reduced revenue. If you look at the income they reported this last summer, it was well below expectations and at that point the stock dove from the $16-$18 range to the $3-$5 range.
Roxio needs/wants a source of income that is not tied to how often people buy new computers or CD burners. A subscription music service may just be the ticket. Remember, Roxio has agreements and contacts with all the major recording labels and even with some movie houses.
For the record, I don't work for Roxio, I just know about an eighth of the company.
Ridiculous (Score:1)
For God's sakes, they went belly up because they bought so much damned gear!
13 - Sun Microsystems Enterprise 420R Server With Up to 4ea 450mhz Ultra Sparc Iii Processors , 4GB Memory 72GB Of Total Storage
91 - VA Linux fullon 2230 Server Server With Up to Dual P3 800mhz 1GB 18 GB Of Total Storage
what the hell?!?
They've got more gear than Nasa, CIA, and the FBI combined.
Re:Ridiculous (Score:2)
eeh? [dovebid.com]
I didn't know Napster was *that* big until now... jeez
Re:Ridiculous (Score:1)
And there are things in the list like Ultra2's, Sparc1's, and a Portmaster 2E. From which draw(s) did they find that crap?
What happens to the owners? (Score:2, Interesting)
If it does, i suggest them writing a book "The Woes of Napster - The Secrets revealed"
Re:What happens to the owners? (Score:1)
It's not foolproof, as clever legal twats can find ways to pierce the corporate veil and collect personal assets for repayment of creditors; but in most cases true corporations that have a board of directors, keep acceptable records and the like generally have only the business assets repoed.
Re:What happens to the owners? (Score:1)
Shawn Fanning is "hangin out" in mountain view. I hardly think he's having money problems.
Will they spend the rest of their life paying off their debts?
If you are a sole proprietor, and you file for bankrupcy, you are not personally liable for your debts. Thats what bankruptcy is. If you are a corporation (a seperate entity) and you file for bankrupcy, the corporate entity is no longer liable for it's debts.
Will no bank ever going to supply them credit again?
Credit is more than your past. It's your present too. It should take about a decade for the bankrupcy to be forgotten, but I don't think Fanning would have much trouble getting some capital for any bright idea he might have.
Does setting up such a groundbreaking company and failing affect the rest of your life?
Yes. It makes you better than the rest of the population. Theres nothing wrong with failing. Theres only something wrong with not doing.
If it does, i suggest them writing a book "The Woes of Napster - The Secrets revealed"
I think MTV might be making the "napster" movie.
Re:What happens to the owners? (Score:2)
Auction catalog inaccessible to non-MS browsers (Score:1)
Works fine with Netscape 6 (Score:2)
Look at all those VA Linux servers! [dovebid.com] Over 150 of them for sale. Somebody actually did buy VA Linux products!
Re:Auction catalog inaccessible to non-MS browsers (Score:1)
the incredible expanding disk drive (Score:2)
What's that 3 disk raid?
End of the road was track 10. (Score:1)
Napster is Dead! Long Live Napster! (Score:1)
Now, back to KaZaa, WinMX, Gnutella, and Morpheus!
Ahhh Napster.... (Score:1)
Back in the late nineties when we were so easily impressed. P2P was new, and I was very impressed...
"Wow! Look at that 4kb/s transfer rate you got! Lemme guess, you got a new 56k Modem?"
Then firing up the 2X CD burner... heaven on Earth...
Danger Danger (Score:1)
fuckedcompany (Score:1)
Pieces of History (Score:2)
On the other hand, I tried to post a story about the DoveBid auction when it was first announced 3 days ago, but it got rejected. See? See? It was worth space on
Last Post! (Score:1)
an imbedded system. The salient characteristic of an imbedded system is that
it cannot be allowed to get into a state from which only direct intervention
will suffice to remove it. An imbedded system can't permanently trust anything
it hears from the outside world. It must sniff around, adapt, consider, sniff
around, and adapt again. I'm not talking about ordinary modular programming
carefulness here. No. Programming an imbedded system calls for undiluted
raging maniacal paranoia. For example, our ethernet front ends need to know
what network number they are on so that they can address and route PUPs
properly. How do you find out what your network number is? Easy, you ask a
gateway. Gateways are required by definition to know their correct network
numbers. Once you've got your network number, you start using it and before
you can blink you've got it wired into fifteen different sockets spread all
over creation. Now what happens when the panic-stricken operator realizes he
was running the wrong version of the gateway which was giving out the wrong
network number? Never supposed to happen. Tough. Supposing that your
software discovers that the gateway is now giving out a different network
number than before, what's it supposed to do about it? This is not discussed
in the protocol document. Never supposed to happen. Tough. I think you
get my drift.
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Stupid answer... (Score:1)
Re:Stupid question time... (Score:1)
Downloading MP3s, of course.
Sorry, couldn't resist
Re:Napster Logo... (Score:1)
Napster Good!