Christmas is nothing, unless it’s all about pissing into the snow. Oops, sorry, Giving.
It’s also important to remember that Christmas is mostly celebrated on the 31st December (which is just as well for this post).
Well, it’s almost five years since Carla Schroder first posted, and as we all know, five is a magic number in the Land of Loon.
Maybe next year things will turn out right for her?
Maybe not.
Festive greetings, and I hope you all got that Win 7 system or that iPad or even the “laugh at me, I’m Google” Android toy under the tree. Whichever one it was, you should cherish it and love it and despite its deficiencies NEVER EVER WASTE YOUR VALUABLE TIME posting some snidey comment to a blog.
It’s just a piece of fucking hardware. That is all.
Merry Christmas!


Comments
“The world is taking about GNU/Linux and Free/Open source software”
Am i the only one to be annoyed by the sheer amount of slashes in the above sentence? For the 99.9% of the population, the slash (/) means “or”, and it’s rarely used in written speech.
I don’t know how much of a loon you need to be to change the meaning so that it will mean “with” and also use it as a product name (Stallman has confessed that the “/” in “GNU/Linux” means “with” or “plus”).
The “free/open source” thing is another sign of the perversity that goes on in freetardia. See, there is a minor philosophical difference between “free software” and “open source software” (head over to fsf.org for more) and if the one was eclipsed in favor of the other, some freetards would be upset. For that reason, lets use them both, and stick a slash between them, yay!
See? Even the names of their products (and even their wording) reeks of douchebaggery and an indecision as to where to go.
BTW, does anyone know how the sentence “All GNU/Linux distros suck” is pronounced (if you were about to read it in front of an audience, how would you interpret the slash?). Is there any standard way to do it?
What’s funny is that some freetards actually say “GNU slash Linux”. When it comes to differentiating between free software and open source software, just say it. “free software”, “open source software”, “free open source software”.
The problem is, these terms are often considered interchangeable so trying to make a distinction doesn’t help.
You must be signed in to leave comments.