Stage 7: Bourg-en-Bresse - Le-Grand-Bornand Today is Bastille today, France's national celebration of independence. Today is also the Tour de France's first day in the mountains, as the peloton enters the Haute Savoie region of France (darn near the Alps) an route from Bourg-en-Bresse to le Grand Bornand. So, let the fireworks begin! Lord knows that television viewers need some excitement after yesterday's stage 6. With the exception of pay per click banner advertising he last 2KM of the race where the sprinters made their play for overall victory (Boonen got his first victory since March along with the green jersey), Stage 6 was the most boring stage of the Tour to date. The peloton let Bradley Wiggins go it alone the entire day. While Wiggins suffered the peloton enjoyed a 5:20 recovery ride. Hopefully, that means we have some fresh legs today and some excitement for the fans. The last time the peloton came to Le Grand Bornand in the Tour de France was in 2004. That's when Floyd Landis and Larnce Armstrong battled Jan Ullrich and Andreas Kloden for victory on an amazing downhill run. Lance pipped Kloden on the line to take his 6th stage win of that amazing Tour de France. Now that was exciting. Today being Bastille Day, we can reasonably expect a Frenchman to win. It's a virtual tradition in the Tour de France. Today's stage is not really all that difficult. A couple of Cat 3s and a Cat 4 precede the big climb of the day, the Category 1 Col de Columbiere. 16KM in length with an average grade of 6.
Click Here
Matthew Aslett got a hold of MySQL AB CEO Marten Mickos yesterday and asked him about plans by Oracle to provide support for MySQL on their Unbreakable Linux distribution. Mickos seemed almost welcoming of the move implying that MySQL AB was supportive of having Oracle serve as a distributor of their database management system. Obviously, as is the case with Unbreakable Linux only Oracle is fully aware of its intended purpose and underlying strategy. However, here are some things to take into consideration: Oracle already realizes that MySQL AB is eating its lunch from the bottom up, MySQL support on Unbreakable Linux can help them hold onto customers who might be seriously considering making the transition. MySQL continues to gain some serious traction. Plus, they're not going to exactly disappear anytime soon with an IPO in the imac g4 ram upgrade orks . It only makes sense to respond to their growing status as a competitive threat in some form or fashion. Large proprietary vendors like Oracle already understand that countering the growth of open source ecosystems will entail different methods and approaches from those which are used with closed sourced types. The Microsoft-Novell pact is an example of how their strategies have changed to reflect the unique and potent threat that open source embodies. MySQL support is only the first of a series of moves by the database giant.
by emptywheel As people smarter than me have reminded me, there is a good reason to allow innocent people to invoke their Fifth Amendment right. The reason is Joseph McCarthy, who would deem those who refused to answer his questions " Fifth Amendment Communists ." Murrow: On one thing the Senator has been consistent. Often operating as a one-man committee, he has traveled far, interviewed many, terrorized some, accused civilian and military leaders of the past administration of a great conspiracy to turn over the country to Communism, investigated and substantially demoralized the present State Department, made varying charges of espionage at Fort Manmouth. (The Army says it has been unable to find anything relating to espionage there). He has interrogated a varied assortment of what he calls "Fifth Amendment Communists." In the face of someone like Joseph McCarthy, we must retain our right not to incriminate ourselves, particularly if we're innocent. But in invoking McCarthy in their latest letter to John Conyers (and Linda Sanchez), Monica Goodling's lawyers flip that principle on its head. panama tours ere's what they said to Conyers : Contrary to what your April 3 letter suggests, Ms. Goodling's exercise of her Fifth Amendment Rights can in no way be interpreted to suggest Ms. Goodling herself participated in any criminal activity.
It’s all starting to kick off in Chambers following the envelope I left in TopFirst’s pigeon-hole about ThirdSix and his affair with a client. Predictably, TopFirst got to work on the rumour mill pretty sharpish and by Friday lunchtime Worrier had come round to my room asking for advice. TopFirst had whispered the story to her and she was concerned as to whether she should tell ThirdSix. “Why don’t you ask BusyBody?” I suggested knowing full well that BusyBody employee scheduling programs ould live up to her name. Sure enough, by this morning BusyBody had had a long talk with ThirdSix who had in turn had gone to Worrier and asked how ThirdSix had gotten this information. It won’t take long for him to find out that a Data Protection Act request was made to his old Chambers and TopFirst is going to have difficulties explaining how he came upon the information given that in fact he opened a letter addressed to ThirdSix.
Click Here
Matthew Aslett got a hold of MySQL AB CEO Marten Mickos yesterday and asked him about plans by Oracle to provide support for MySQL on their Unbreakable Linux distribution. Mickos seemed almost welcoming of the move implying that MySQL AB was supportive of having Oracle serve as a distributor of their database management system. Obviously, as is the case with Unbreakable Linux only Oracle is fully aware of its intended purpose and underlying strategy. However, here are some things to take into consideration: Oracle already realizes that MySQL AB is eating its lunch from the bottom up, MySQL support on Unbreakable Linux can help them hold onto customers who might be seriously considering making the transition. MySQL continues to gain some serious traction. Plus, they're not going to exactly disappear anytime soon with an IPO in the works . It only makes sense to respond to their growing status as a competitive threat in some form or fashion. Large proprietary sleep and slim endors like Oracle already understand that countering the growth of open source ecosystems will entail different methods and approaches from those which are used with closed sourced types. The Microsoft-Novell pact is an example of how their strategies have changed to reflect the unique and potent threat that open source embodies. MySQL support is only the first of a series of moves by the database giant.

0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home