Tel-Aviv is going to have its own DevOpsDays - enjoy:
http://devopsdays.org/events/2013-telaviv/
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WorldMate is looking for a web operations person to work within the
Operations department. He/she will be expected to take full
responsibility for our production environment, which will include
server software and OS maintenance, system scalability; tune ups for
systems such as JBoss, Tomcat,
On 2013-06-27 10:14, Nadav Har'El wrote:
I also ripped all the "legally-bought"
CDs and DVDs I had at home (almost a 1000 of them, altogether) and
now all
of it is on the hard disk as well.
I should be doing that too. Will appropriate CLI software
2013/7/3 vordoo vor...@yahoo.com:
On 2013-06-27 10:14, Nadav Har'El wrote:
I also ripped all the legally-bought CDs and DVDs I had at home (almost a
1000 of them, altogether) and now all of it is on the hard disk as well.
I should be doing that too. Will appropriate CLI software
On Thu, Jun 27, 2013, Omer Zak wrote about Re: Blu-Ray and Linux:
So the only reason to buy a Blu-Ray drive would be to view Blu-Ray
movies and TV series (such as Dr. Who).
Or look those up in bittorrent ;-)
Are there any legal means, available to oxymoron_alertfrayer
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013, vordoo wrote about CLI Ripping (was Blu-Ray and Linux):
type=cite I also ripped all the legally-bought
CDs and DVDs I had at home (almost a 1000 of them, altogether) and
now all
of it is on the hard disk as well.br
I should be doing that too.
Nadav Har'El n...@math.technion.ac.il writes:
Time shifting is legal fair use, as determined in the famous Betamax court
case (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_shifting).
So if you pay for cable TV, you're free to record anything, and watch it
any time later on any device.
OK, let's
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote about Re: Blu-Ray and Linux:
Eh, I think that the problem is copying/sharing. You can record a 10
year old Dr. Who but you cannot give out copies of the recording to
others. Even if they have had cable TV for 20 yars and *could* have
recorded Dr. Who
I'm not such a GUI user, but for rarely performed tasks like these, it
makes sense.
For CDs, I use asunder which is a GUI tool, to rip to flac. I then use
Picard to get the tags correct (MusicBrainz is a wonderful service).
For ripping DVDs, I use dvd::rip with great success.
Hope this helps.
2013/7/3 Nadav Har'El n...@math.technion.ac.il:
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote about Re: Blu-Ray and Linux:
Eh, I think that the problem is copying/sharing. You can record a 10
year old Dr. Who but you cannot give out copies of the recording to
others. Even if they have had cable
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 04:06:40PM +0300, E.S. Rosenberg wrote:
I *don't* know if this is the case in Israel, I do know that jewish
law does *not* recognize copyright and downloading is *not* considered
theft, it is however definitely a moral question, which has lots of
factors that go into
2013/7/3 Tzafrir Cohen tzaf...@cohens.org.il:
On Wed, Jul 03, 2013 at 04:06:40PM +0300, E.S. Rosenberg wrote:
I *don't* know if this is the case in Israel, I do know that jewish
law does *not* recognize copyright and downloading is *not* considered
theft, it is however definitely a moral
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