Spice up your device with unique Linux wallpapers that showcase your love for open-source software. Choose from a variety of designs that will make your screen stand out.
米カリフォルニア州の「コンピューター歴史博物館」は、14日(米国時間)から始まるLinux関連の見本市で、Linux誕生15周年の記念展を開催する。生みの親のリーナス・トーバルズ氏が91年9月に初公開して以来、現在に至るまでの歴史を振り返る。 展示するのは、草創期の関係者の写真や映像、歴史的な試作機器などで、全米から収集した。同州で開かれる「LinuxWorld Conference & Expo」の会場で披露する。 来場者が記念の品を持ち込むことも歓迎。場所の許す限り、陳列するという。今回の展示物のうち価値の高い資料は、同博物館で恒久的に収蔵する。【南 優人/Infostand】 コンピューター歴史博物館 http://www.computerhistory.org/ LinuxWorld Conference & Expo http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/
先般のGNU General Public Licenseバージョン3(GPLv3)ドラフト第2版の公開を受けて、DRM(Digital Rights Management)が再び紙面を賑わしている。ドラフト第2版は、DRMを扱う第3項の書き直しをめぐって懸念を生んでいるようだ。FSF(Free Software Foundation)は“Digital Rights Management”(デジタル著作権管理)という用語に反感を抱いており、それよりも “Digital Restrictions Management”と呼びたいと考えている。だが、LinuxのようなフリーソフトウェアにおけるDRMの意味合いを本当に理解する人はそう多くない。 FSFが、DRMをユーザーの自由を制限するものと考えるのはなぜか。その理由を理解するには、copyleftの意味とGPLの要諦を知る必要がある。GPL
Herewith for your approval, a few handy tricks I've been discovering for getting the most out of the peerless Omni Outliner Pro/kGTD combo. And don't forget -- as noted last week -- through the end of this month, when you buy any OmniOutliner product from the OmniGroup site, you can use the checkout code 43FOLDERS to get 25% off your order. Disco! 1. "Hiding" fallow projects In last Thursday's pod
Getting Things Done (Book review) | 456 Berea Street Roger Johansson at 456 Berea Street has a short review of Getting Things Done that nicely captures the book's tactical practicality and the subsequent stress relief it can bring (which happen to be a couple of my favorite bits, too): One technique that I feel works well for me is the two-minute rule. Whenever something shows up in your “inbox” (
Everybody falls off the Getting Things Done wagon from time to time. Maybe you got completely caught up on your work for a while, but then got lazy and slid back into slack. Maybe you had a crapflood of new projects that made you "too busy" to do GTD properly. Heck, maybe you just decided it was a big waste of time and threw in the towel altogether. But, for whatever reasons of frustration, neglec
This post is part of the periodic “Back to GTD” series, designed to help you improve your implementation of David Allen’s Getting Things Done. Whether you learned GTD from the book or heard it from The David himself (via one of his excellent seminars), you know that the vital first stage of Getting Things Done is Collection. As laid out in Chapter 5: Basically, everything is already being collecte
This post is part of the periodic “Back to GTD” series, designed to help you improve your implementation of David Allen’s Getting Things Done. As we've noted before, GTD contexts lose a lot of their focusing power when either a) most of your work takes place at one context (e.g. "@computer"), or b) you start using contexts more for taxonomical labeling than to reflect functional limitations and op
I recently ran across a mostly-helpful post on a website that mentioned the importance of using email folders for "organization." For some reason, this made me wince. I suspect it's because the day I got good at email was the day when I stopped organizing my messages and started focusing on doing something about them. Is this a distinction without a difference? I don't think so, and I'll tell you
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