It seems that you're using an outdated browser. Some things may not work as they should (or don't work at all).
We suggest you upgrade newer and better browser like: Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer or Opera

×
This stimulates a question for me. How do people from your country feel about the American invasion to capture Noriega? I have studied a bit of the politics behind it, but not the views of the people involved.
avatar
KneeTheCap: Question to...well, everyone :)

Do you guys know any finnish athletes/celebrities? I'm quite curious :D
Anyone who follows the NHL could probably name a few.
avatar
KneeTheCap: Question to...well, everyone :)

Do you guys know any finnish athletes/celebrities? I'm quite curious :D
one of my best friends' mother is a cousin of Linus Torvalds. That should count as a celebrity in these circles :p
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.

The worst part is you are paying Norways TV channel that is called NRK. It was a method that goes back to the days when NRK was the ONLY TV channel Norway had, so paying them was logical.

Now however this method of pay is outdated, but NRK still demands you to pay. Even though they now get millions from advertising. And they even have people that come around and knock on your door to see if you have a TV.

Just 1 year ago we are now allowed to own TVs without paying TV license as long as we do NOT have any TV signal into our home. In other words, we can use the TV as a monitor. Which I now have done. I get all my shows from the Internet.
we have exactly the same system, and the production values are just awful. Haven't watched NRK much, but i like their Jazz-jukebox :p
But the country/danseband... well you know...
Post edited December 09, 2010 by Floydinizer
avatar
Floydinizer: one of my best friends' mother is a cousin of Linus Torvalds. That should count as a celebrity in these circles :p
Git is awesome. I would never think of using anything else.
avatar
Shalgroth: Also a damn shame about Guy Fawkes, one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter. Though I'm impartial to his plight and his act, I'll agree that it was ballsy.
And to the average peasant at the time no different to each other. Pretty much fighting to replace one controlling religion with another controlling religion that the first religion had already replaced doesn't really do much for me. Also questionable whether Guy Fawkes actually did plan it and whether it was all a setup, shows that same shit happened back then as it does now really.

A question to the Americans: how close was the American Civil War? I mean, was there a fair chance that the Confederates would have won or was it pretty much a cert as to who would win, and if the South had won how do you think things would have turned out? Always wondered what the average American Joe thought of it outside what the extreme points of view shown by the media.
Post edited December 09, 2010 by FlintlockJazz
avatar
Floydinizer: one of my best friends' mother is a cousin of Linus Torvalds. That should count as a celebrity in these circles :p
avatar
PhoenixWright: Git is awesome. I would never think of using anything else.
Subversion rocks. I'd highly suggest trying it out. Most of the original CVS guys took all their lessons learned and actually made an amazing piece of software. What's more with TortoisSVN (I use an Eclipse plugin myself) I can set new people up to update/commit wrapped in a SSH session authenticated via public/private keypair in a snap. It's nearly transparent to them, they just have to load their key into pagent when they boot up or need access.
avatar
Equlan: Oh! I also have a question for the folks from southern Europe! I'm here thinking of pretty much everyone south of Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. I don't know if it's a commonly held belief. But my impression has somehow become that it isn't that common to drink beer in those countries. Wine being preferred or some such. Is there any validity to that?
Not at all, at least here in Spain; although I guess we drink a lot more wine than most northern european countries, we still drink A LOT more beer than wine. Of course it's a generalization but, in Spain beer is a drink for almost any social occasion, while wine is more closely associated with food. You won't see folks in a pub drinking wine while watching a soccer match.
As an example, when you're on a dinner with people, it's very common to have one or two beers for starters and then go for a red wine with the main course.
And a last word of advice: never, repeat, NEVER buy bottled sangria when you're in Spain. Spaniards very rarely drink sangria, It's a mixture of cheap wine with soda and fruit juices we only make and consume when in summer parties and such, very much like your punch. And when we do, it's never one of those poisonous bottled concoctions.
avatar
orcishgamer: Subversion rocks. I'd highly suggest trying it out. Most of the original CVS guys took all their lessons learned and actually made an amazing piece of software. What's more with TortoisSVN (I use an Eclipse plugin myself) I can set new people up to update/commit wrapped in a SSH session authenticated via public/private keypair in a snap. It's nearly transparent to them, they just have to load their key into pagent when they boot up or need access.
I used it exclusively until I switched to Git. You don't think the distributed nature or extremely enhanced merging capabilities make it worth using Git? I'd say it could do anything SVN could with a wealth of advantages, but it's possible I'm wrong about that.
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.
It was like that here too. We had to pay a radio-transfusion tax (or something like that). Meaning if we wanted to listen to radio or watch TV we would have to pay to the Macedonian Radio Television, on top of the monthly subscription.

Few years ago, people got fed up with that. Nobody, and I say nobody was paying them one bit. Hell you can't sue almost every citizen of your country...

... Ever since then, we have free radio (nothing is regulated here, its a free radio as it should be!) and free TV (a dozen channels). If we want more (usually an addition of around a hundred channels (including Fox Crime/Life, CNN, Discovery, Explorer, Eurosport, and similar high profile channels) we only have to pay $10-$20 per month.
avatar
orcishgamer: Subversion rocks. I'd highly suggest trying it out. Most of the original CVS guys took all their lessons learned and actually made an amazing piece of software. What's more with TortoisSVN (I use an Eclipse plugin myself) I can set new people up to update/commit wrapped in a SSH session authenticated via public/private keypair in a snap. It's nearly transparent to them, they just have to load their key into pagent when they boot up or need access.
avatar
PhoenixWright: I used it exclusively until I switched to Git. You don't think the distributed nature or extremely enhanced merging capabilities make it worth using Git? I'd say it could do anything SVN could with a wealth of advantages, but it's possible I'm wrong about that.
No, I think if you have those as a requirement that SVN doesn't fulfill then you should definitely use Git. I'm just a SVN fan (I've been cheerleading that project since around the time they started self hosting their source code in their own built code). I wouldn't move away unless requirements indicated I should. I will acknowledge that it is partially because I am more comfortable (I usually do source code control admin wherever I work so this plays into it as well).
avatar
KavazovAngel: ... Ever since then, we have free radio (nothing is regulated here, its a free radio as it should be!) and free TV (a dozen channels). If we want more (usually an addition of around a hundred channels (including Fox Crime/Life, CNN, Discovery, Explorer, Eurosport, and similar high profile channels) we only have to pay $10-$20 per month.
Wow, no FCC equivalent with stupid decency standards? I would be in Nirvana.
Post edited December 09, 2010 by orcishgamer
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.

The worst part is you are paying Norways TV channel that is called NRK. It was a method that goes back to the days when NRK was the ONLY TV channel Norway had, so paying them was logical.

Now however this method of pay is outdated, but NRK still demands you to pay. Even though they now get millions from advertising. And they even have people that come around and knock on your door to see if you have a TV.

Just 1 year ago we are now allowed to own TVs without paying TV license as long as we do NOT have any TV signal into our home. In other words, we can use the TV as a monitor. Which I now have done. I get all my shows from the Internet.
I don't quite understand what you mean. Do you mean that you pay for the right to watch TV, or that you pay for the channels? If it's the latter, it's the same thing in North America : we get a basic cable package free, but anything beyond a few channels is in other packages that you have to pay for.
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.

The worst part is you are paying Norways TV channel that is called NRK. It was a method that goes back to the days when NRK was the ONLY TV channel Norway had, so paying them was logical.

Now however this method of pay is outdated, but NRK still demands you to pay. Even though they now get millions from advertising. And they even have people that come around and knock on your door to see if you have a TV.

Just 1 year ago we are now allowed to own TVs without paying TV license as long as we do NOT have any TV signal into our home. In other words, we can use the TV as a monitor. Which I now have done. I get all my shows from the Internet.
avatar
Crassmaster: I don't quite understand what you mean. Do you mean that you pay for the right to watch TV, or that you pay for the channels? If it's the latter, it's the same thing in North America : we get a basic cable package free, but anything beyond a few channels is in other packages that you have to pay for.
It's basically paying because you can watch TV. I think.

Though I could imagine they have to pay for more channels, beyond the free ones.
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.

The worst part is you are paying Norways TV channel that is called NRK. It was a method that goes back to the days when NRK was the ONLY TV channel Norway had, so paying them was logical.

Now however this method of pay is outdated, but NRK still demands you to pay. Even though they now get millions from advertising. And they even have people that come around and knock on your door to see if you have a TV.

Just 1 year ago we are now allowed to own TVs without paying TV license as long as we do NOT have any TV signal into our home. In other words, we can use the TV as a monitor. Which I now have done. I get all my shows from the Internet.
avatar
Crassmaster: I don't quite understand what you mean. Do you mean that you pay for the right to watch TV, or that you pay for the channels? If it's the latter, it's the same thing in North America : we get a basic cable package free, but anything beyond a few channels is in other packages that you have to pay for.
You pay just for the right to watch, then having to pay for the channels as well.

Even if I didn't have the TV hooked up, I would still have to pay. I had to get an electrician to come in and physically remove the TV outlets in my apartment. It was not good enough that they where disabled, or that I didn't have any TV channel subscriptions. They would still demand payment.
Post edited December 09, 2010 by Filthgrinder
avatar
Filthgrinder: Here in Norway you have to pay a yearly TV license if you want to watch TV. On top of that, you then have to pay to get the actual channels.

The worst part is you are paying Norways TV channel that is called NRK. It was a method that goes back to the days when NRK was the ONLY TV channel Norway had, so paying them was logical.

Now however this method of pay is outdated, but NRK still demands you to pay. Even though they now get millions from advertising. And they even have people that come around and knock on your door to see if you have a TV.

Just 1 year ago we are now allowed to own TVs without paying TV license as long as we do NOT have any TV signal into our home. In other words, we can use the TV as a monitor. Which I now have done. I get all my shows from the Internet.
avatar
Crassmaster: I don't quite understand what you mean. Do you mean that you pay for the right to watch TV, or that you pay for the channels? If it's the latter, it's the same thing in North America : we get a basic cable package free, but anything beyond a few channels is in other packages that you have to pay for.
It sounds like a tax on having a TV, just like in the UK.
Tax? Well that I would accept.

Except it's not the government/state/country behind it. It's just a TV company that has been enforcing this on them, and have even managed to make it "law" that people HAVE to pay them.

Think of it this way: BBC demands you pay them X amount of money just because you have a TV. Even if you do not watch their channel, or have access to their channel.
Post edited December 09, 2010 by Filthgrinder