search for: _pay_

Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "_pay_".

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2005 May 25
2
Re: Demonizing generic Linux issues as Fedora Core-only issues -- WAS: Hi, Bryan
...he "Enterprise" flavor (although the funds _do_ pay for extensive GPL development, R&D and other integration attempts in Fedora Core and SuSE Linux). > Or with the logic of asking customers to pay extra to get something with > features removed... Again, the people who actually _pay_ for RHEL/SLES are _not_ paying for features. ;-> You are complaining about CentOS not coming with things standard, and then assinging blame for that to Red Hat, because you believe they are supposedly paid and should have more features. I can only label this as "ignorance" of how RH...
2010 May 01
0
Mutually assured minefields.
...if it does you can cross-license your patents with the other "winners" and completely avoid paying to use the resulting format. So even if you're not looking to make a profit from your participation, you'll be sure to get some patents into the result so that you don't have to _pay_ for the result of your own labors. As a result these formats end up rife with inconsequential or even detrimental patented techniques which could have _easily_ been avoided, as essential elements. ?? and this is the outcome when all of the parties are playing by the rules. For an in-depth analysi...
2017 Feb 04
4
Greeter openssh 7.4 is not according rfc4253.
Hi, I discovered when using my fuse fs for connecting to a remote host using sftp that the new server version 7.4 sends a greeter which is not according the format desribed in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4253#section-4 There is written that the greeter "MUST be terminated by a single Carriage Return (CR) and a single Line Feed (LF) character (ASCII 13 and 10, respectively)." Now
2007 Aug 20
3
RAID storage - SATA, SCSI, or Fibre Channel?
I have a Dell PowerEdge 2950 and am looking to add more storage. I know a lot of factors can go into the type of answer given, but for present and future technology planning, should I look for a rack of SATA, SCSI, or fibre channel drives? Maybe I'm dating myself with fibre channel, and possibly SCSI? I may be looking to add a few TB now, and possibly more later. What are people