[Alan] has just released an Ubuntu screencast that will advise you through an extensive course on Ubuntu repositories. If you are new to Ubuntu, it will give you a better understanding of how software repositories are managed.
Different types of updates are discussed: Security updates fix bugs that cause a formula vulnerability. Updates (generic) are to fix errors that do not pose a security threat. Proposed updates must be tested before an update appears in the “Updates” section. Finally, backports are updates to a newer edition that have been “back-rolled” so that formulas running previous editions of Ubuntu can take advantage of newer features and constant bugs.
It also provides some tips on how to decide on package resources (main, universe, limited and multiverse) and opt for the fastest mirror to reduce download times. This screencast is only the first component and we expect to see third-party component repositories, non-public package files, and cached repositories covered in long-term versions.
Great, um … Hack. Yes.
I’m not regularly the type complaining, but the lack of hacking content in a hackaday post, however, this will have to be the back of the barrel.
wow wow slow month?
^^^^ stfu crybebez
Sensational. I agree with posters 1, 2 and 3 … O.o
We’re making adjustments to our content. Make wonderful crops. Let’s experiment a little, so keep your eyes open.
We’re also looking for a way to make sure we navigate only the type of message you’re interested in. It’s going to be great. We know that many of you will appreciate it.
More to come.
I agree. This turns out to be content for the sake of content. This adds very little price to the ‘hacked community’. Fewer pieces of this nature, please.
What do I deserve to say? Besides Ubuntu, that’s not all good … It sucks. I’m sorry about that.
well I like
what I locate hackers is the concept of training other people to have non-public package deposits. This is for a smart ubuntu platform.
but other than that, uh. Okay. I come here to hack hardware, so I’m too critical.
[b] As bad debts continue to rise, the country’s chief debt authority, Bill Bartmann, is back! [if]
With a new e-book to be published in May 2009 and sold-out seminars on how to buy bad debts, a rebel billionaire has ENCORE in high demand
In June 1999, the Department of Justice ended the world’s largest, best-trained and maximum-effective debt collection operation, Commercial Financial Services, Inc. (CFS), founded through Bill Bartguyn. However, Bill Bartguyn lost his company, did not lose his faith. As Wall Street panicked, demands and accusations rained down on Bartguyn, the guy who, according to Inc. magazine, had “remade one of the ugliest industries” and who, according to Fortune magazine, had put a “miserable and ineffective industry on the road to respectability.” In December 2003, after eight weeks of testimony from 53 prosecution witnesses, Bartguyn was acquitted of the 57-count indictment opposed to Enron through former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft. No evidence of irregularities was found.
CFS called for itself because of its ability to buy deleted credit card accounts for pennies for a dollar, and then produce five-cent, cent and twenty-five-cent coins, a limitation that the company eventually extended to Wall Street. Praise and praise for the company never seemed to end: BusinessWeek called it “one of the ten most sensible family-oriented companies in the United States.” while Working Woman said it as one of the ‘100 most productive corporations for executing mothers’. Inc. The magazine rated it as one of the “500 fastest growing companies in the United States” for 4 consecutive years and the Better Business Bureau awarded it the Flame Award for Market Ethics.
In addition to amassing a private fortune, estimated through Inc. at $3.5 billion, Bartmann named one of Forbes’ “400 Richest People” and the national entrepreneur of the year through the NASDAQ. He also earned a permanent position at the Smithsonian Institute’s Museum of American History for the “visionary use of data technology” that produces positive social, economic, and educational changes.
As Bartmann says, “I’ve already realized this movie and I know how to write the ending. Not only is it incredibly profitable, but we replace the way debt was repaid in this country. Compassion has never been a component of the equation before. The debt collection procedure is obviously more confusing than simply being great for sufferers, the business style can be incredibly lucrative for those who know how to buy debt.”
He added: “The market was extraordinarily inefficient at the time and still is now, and there is a huge hole to be made.” History has shown that he is right: the CWS has charged more than 3 times what it paid for an uncobril loan, pocketing an average of 35 cents for every dollar of debt. These figures had never been reached before in the history of the industry, nor since.
Now Bartmann is in a position to do it again, training others along the way.
For more data and a seminar calendar, http://www.billbartmann.com
fucking bots.
If you don’t like the message, don’t read it. the homepage has a synopsis and I’m sure your RSS reader is doing the same. If you see a name you’re not interested in, skip it.