Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | allerratio's commentslogin

I have it remapped to backspace (colemak layout). The problem I had under OS X was that key repeat didn't work. Additionally setting Capslock in the OS X settings to control solved that problem.


They will yearn for Gnome 3, just like they yearned for Gnome 1 when Gnome 2 was released.


Why should I use this when systemd offers the same (minus the AUFS root fs)?


We get that question a lot... Until people start playing with it. Then they never ask it again :)


It should, they have added secure boot support in 12.3

At least heise (the publisher behind the H) that installing worked on a test computer with activated secure boot in their German article

http://www.heise.de/open/artikel/Die-Neuerungen-in-Opensuse-...

On their wiki opens use writes that it's still experimental: https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:UEFI#Secure_Boot



It's not the same. Unity heavily relies on Ubuntu specific patches. There was quite some effort to get unity running under arch Linux


What would be nice is a library that you can load with LD_Preload and replaces zlib compression. That way I could easily use e.g. Optipng with this new algorithm.


I don't think that would be of much use, since only it only deals with compression.


It only needs to overwrite the compression methods


Right, but compressors are easy to change, it's decompressors that are in hard-to-update software.


Also the compression for example in libpng


That's already part of the soc and also most likely part of the Apple AX SOCs of the iOS devices as Apple uses PowerVR for graphics.


Actually I had to write a ntp spoofer for an university class. With arpspoof it is easy to manipulate all ntp traffic. At least ntpdate didn't complain when you sent it some years forward or backward.


ntpdate won't complain because it's entire purpose is to set the time on a system that isn't synchronized with the rest of the world. So it is expected that the clock may have drifted by a substantial amount, and it is only meant to be used occasionally. It is especially bad practice to run it from cron.

On the other hand, ntpd is a daemon that is meant to be run continuously. It will complain if lower-strata time servers start jumping around, and has a built-in mechanism for ignoring time servers that seem to be giving incorrect time (compared to both other servers and the system's own idea of the current time). Note that, if having accurate time is important, ntpd also supports using external reference clocks with a pulse-per second connected to, for example, a serial port.


Actually it is already fixed in many distros. For example in Arch Linux it took a day to fix since the CVE request: https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/34005 http://seclists.org/oss-sec/2013/q1/420

On the other hand my system here still crashes if I type file:/// with one big letter.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: