money

Google's geeky IPO humour

If you take a close look at the form
Google filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the exact
value of its planned offering is $2,718,281,828 dollars, which some
would immediately recognize as the mathematical constant e.

E, for those not blessed with a PhD and a job at Google, is Euler's number, which is used as the base for natural logarithms.

sco declined to comment...

SCO was told by benz to .. wel basically //get lost.

DaimlerChrysler has responded robustly to SCO's Linux lawsuit. SCO
claimed Daimler had refused to provide it with a "certificate of
compliance" over its long-term Unix contract. Daimler response? Tough.

The car manufacturer asked a Michigan court to dismiss the
lawsuit because there was "no genuine issue of material fact" in it.
Daimler says it has no obligation to provide SCO with any such
certification, but that it had nevertheless sent it a letter about the
situation.

Good news, und viele Dankenach unser Ost-naber (or something like that)! The //pinkfairies.org is rather funny too. One can earn up to $433.18 as a bounty value (as of today), when one shows the SCO code in the kernel. Donations welcome! //[shit or get of the pot]

Google IPO

---hot from the press---
Google "seaches" for IPO. See the word on the //thestreet.com.

Google will seek to raise $2.7 billion in the
deal led by Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse First Boston, according to
a form S-1 filed Thursday afternoon. As had been speculated, Google
will take the unusual step of selling all of the shares in the offering
through an auction-based process.
//Search for Google IPO on Google and //checkout the googleblog. IPO..? So 90-ies!

Yes, the GPL stands!

--- breaking news ---
Yes!!! Just a quicky, it seems that the GPL stands in court (at least in Germany's OSS capital). So either play by "our" rules, and dont (ab)use "our" products.

/etc/rc.d/init.d/netfilter start :-)

money walks, sco talks.

What are the changes that sco is right and will the IP war with IBM regarding Linux? Well, if the market is right (and it always is) less than 3%. See //this insurance posibility.

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