Slashdot's 50 Millionth Page 55
Seems like just a few days ago that we announced number
10 million, but here we are again- not only did we break
our "Pages in a Single Day" record (was 387,000, but on Tuesday
we got 410,000) but this morning at 1:08am EST, a Windows
User (who was at least running Gecko *grin*) from bigpond.com
was the recipient of the 50 millionth Slashdot page. Yee haw.
Idiot flamers (Score:1)
I most certainly hope not. (Score:1)
If it's "better than sex", though, I'm going to be mighty disappointed one o' these days...
Congratulations /. (Score:1)
Go go slashdot!
Very Few (Score:1)
nuff said,
use at work != fan (Score:1)
I use NT4 at work and Linux at home...It's fun watching that BSOD pop up on NT4, helps to break up my day (and productivity)
206164 (Score:1)
Gecko (Score:1)
MS OS == bad
Open Source Browser == good start
NT4/IE4 at work, OS/2 at home (Score:1)
At home, I run OS/2, but I rarely read Slashdot at home.
--
Timur "too sexy for my code" Tabi, timur@tabi.org, http://www.tabi.org
Legacy WinHardware Can Make OS Upgrades Difficult (Score:1)
Legacy winhardware like winmodems and winprinters can make upgrading to a new operating system difficult. Their costs associated with their poor performance, low efficiency, and limited operating system comatibility rarely offset the small decrease in price versus standard devices. Futureproof your hardware investments by avoiding devices that lock you into the current operating system fad. There's no guarantee that you winmodem or winprinter will work with anything other than the current version of Windows. Some winhardware designed before the release of Windows 98 doesn't work with '98. Many windevices don't work with Windows NT due to changes in how it handles device drivers. For similar reasons, it's likely that these devices won't work with the upcoming Windows 2000 either.
A cheapie 56k modem can be had for $60, and an Ensonic PCI sound card in retail box is $50 at Circuit City. Shop these items carefully and you could replace all your legacy winhardware for well under a hundred bucks.
8bpp Framebuffer... (Score:1)
I have two machines on my desk at work. My favorite of the two is an old SPARCstation IPX. With a 40mhz CPU and 32mb of ram, it's still faster for most tasks than the p200mmx with 48mb of ram and NT that sits next to it.
The only problem with the old SPARC is its 8bpp framebuffer. It makes most websites hard to read, and despite degrading the content, Netscape still sucks up too many colormap entries. If I want to run Netscape, color xterms, and XEmacs at the same time, I have my choice between missing colors or colormap flashing. Yuck.
Consequently, I usually run Netscape on the PC with Windows NT, even though I do all my imporant stuff on the old SPARC. At one point, I used to run Netscape over the network from one of the faster sparcs, but NT's poor networking performance and the frequent crashing of my NT X server brought a stop to this. Now I just go get a cup of coffee when I see "Cache cleanup, removing 1342 files..."
My favorite machine of all is at home. It's a dual ppro-200 with 384mb of ram, two 18gb ultra-wide scsi disks, one 9gb ultra scsi disk, a fast cdrom, 48gb DAT autoloader, and a 2x cd writer. It has a great video card that can do 1280x1024x16bpp, which is just the right size for my 20" trinitron monitor. Netscape on my home machine makes for some comfortable slashdotting.
that domain... (Score:1)
Sure it wasn't bigpond.com?
(an Australian ISP)
Hey, dipsh*t, the article had the follwing text:
from bigpond.com was the recipient
Come back when you have learnt to read AND comprehend.
In fact, I am sure I smell that uniquely Austalian pong which consists of sheep that have been through one too many Australian military installations and dingo sh*t.
Linux at home NT at work (Score:1)
At home I use Linux of course.
DOH... 'Tis a pity it was Big Pond (Score:1)
Aaah, I love the smell of deregulation in the morning. It smells like... purgatory.
Verrrrrrrrrrrrrry interesting . . . (Score:1)
NT / Slashdot fans... (Score:1)
Wouldn't call myself an NT fan, but I use NT at work (which is where I access /. - big pipeline here). IE4 is on the machine, but my primary browser is Communicator 4.5. Our company web server is an NT4 box with IIS (which is why you'll never see my real e-mail address or web site address above - like I need to be /.-ed!), but I'd rather be running Linux (have to reboot the web server at least once every week or so).
________________________
chance occurance (Score:1)
You've probably tried WINE right? (Score:1)
NT *and* Linux (Score:1)
...though I'd sooner sell my whole cd collection than resort to IE (Been using Netscape since
I have one linux box sitting next to me, and another one at home, but always get my daily news dose on the office NT box. So yeah, there are a bunch of us 'hybrid' geeks out there..
Gecko - Netscape5 (Score:1)
I guess that settles it... (Score:1)
M
Windows - HAH (Score:1)
FLAME FLAME FLAME FLAME FLAME FLAME
Some of us just plain can't run linux and it sucks (Score:1)
Some of us just plain can't run linux and it sucks (Score:1)
More than you might think . . . (Score:1)
I'm currently running NT4, but most of the day I run the latest builds of NT5. Occasionally, I run linux here at work.
And yes, I do work in Redmond, too.
Windows - HAH (Score:1)