Tim Haynes wrote: > Hmmmm. I dislike the word `prejudice' there, even if it does sum my > approach to non-free up very well.
I understand that feeling, I have it myself, its why I used the term. I'm not gonna let myself off the hook anymore than anyone else, I get on my soapbox regularly and rant against having any NT machines at my place of employment for much the same reason. And I have total knee-jerk reactions when people talk about using this or that proprietary solution. We all have prejudices, I feel its usefull to recognise and be comfortable with that fact, so I can take it into account when I'm trying to be impartial about something. > Technical merits are of stuff-all use if the software can't be > redistributed freely in sensible packages. "Well thats just like, your opinion, man." ;) (here's to hoping you've seen The Big Lebowski) > > > 2. author write like "alle shit then my" > > > > Uh, sure. > > Whatever the quote means, I don't need *another* DJB-war barely a fortnight > after the last one. Aww, but they contain the same addictive chemical found in the Colonel's chicken! Yeah anyway, I just didn't understand the quote either. -- Jamie Heilman http://audible.transient.net/~jamie/ "Paranoia is a disease unto itself, and may I add, the person standing next to you may not be who they appear to be, so take precaution." -Sathington Willoughby