Hello people,
Earlier this week I wanted to find a C++ testing library. I tried gtest and
cppunit but both of them seemed way too much overkill for my needs. So I
wrote this:
https://github.com/renra/prehash_challenge_phasor_cpp/blob/master/simple_test.cpp
Now I'm thinking. Is there some way for
> Now that systemd has wrecked all kinds of previously working stuff, and
many are beginning to realize the *impossibility* of getting systemd to >
work *with* linux -> I think this might have some effect this time around.
Hello everybody,
I've been watching this discussion, quite curious what wo
mments, I'll be watching on.
Jan
On Sat, Mar 29, 2014 at 9:30 PM, Russ Allbery wrote:
> Jan Gloser writes:
>
> > 1) I think some valid questions have been raised to which I have not
> > seen ANY satisfactory answer that no doubt a person who truly
> > understands
Hello Lumin,
I am not an active member of the debian community, just a listener on this
thread, but you got my attention. I also admire free software makers
although I think one must always keep in mind the reality of the world and
the rules of the game called 'trade'.
Software is a product like
Hendrik Sattler
wrote:
>
>
> Am 4. Juli 2015 19:40:28 MESZ, schrieb Jan Gloser <
> jan.renra.glo...@gmail.com>:
> >This is a very nice philosophy. It has a history though. It also has a
> >name. Communism. And history has shown us that communism on a large
> >scale
Michael Ole Olsen has written:
>Keep the profit at work, but I certainly wouldn't charge in my sparetime
>If you code on something you are hired to do, then its fine you charge,
because you can't say what you want to code on, your employeer >decides so
I partly agree but what would you do if you w
Octavio Alvarez has written:
> That could be the reason behind your analogy with communism, which turns
out to be out of bounds. The Free Software community is > not against
trade or capitalism at all. Maybe some individuals do, but that's another
story. In fact, Free Software is legally based on
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