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From: houghi on 25 Dec 2005 19:32 Roy L Fuchs wrote: > Where did I say you weren't allowed? Your tone carries through, > however. I am surprised that you aren't French. Who says I am not French and what if I were? Don't you like your comrades of the first Gurlf War anymore? -- houghi Please do not toppost http://houghi.org You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, Usenet
From: houghi on 25 Dec 2005 19:41 felmon davis wrote: > I am thinking of Lessig's thesis that the old idea that "information wants > to be free" (and specifically that the internet treats controls like > 'damage' or blockage which it can work around) was inevitably doomed. more > and more control will get built in as powerful interests dictate. There will be more and more bariers build, till there is some kind of a revolution that will tear these barriers down. No idea when that will happen, or how. I just know that it will happen, as it has happend in the past. Information still wants to be free. Kepping it restricted does not change that fact. The bad part is that people, or rather companies, want to maintain this information and cash in on it. Trying to tell that otherwise people will not give us new information (wich they can sell). Shakespear is not copyrighted and since the arrival of the copyright he has not written anything new. What they want is not only copyright, they also want you not to be able to write anything similar. Probably duer to the fact that people are still apes who only want to get as many banana's as possible and if they don't get them, throw their own feces. -- houghi Please do not toppost http://houghi.org You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, Usenet
From: Roy L. Fuchs on 26 Dec 2005 00:20 On Mon, 26 Dec 2005 01:32:33 +0100, houghi <houghi(a)houghi.org.invalid> Gave us: >Roy L Fuchs wrote: >> Where did I say you weren't allowed? Your tone carries through, >> however. I am surprised that you aren't French. > >Who says I am not French and what if I were? Don't you like your >comrades of the first Gurlf War anymore? It's a reference to the line that the French have used for a while "Stupid Americans". I like the French.... people. It is the government that I have a problem with.
From: houghi on 26 Dec 2005 03:58 Roy L Fuchs wrote: > I like the French.... people. It is the government that I have a > problem with. Same here with the Mericans. -- houghi Please do not toppost http://houghi.org You are about to enter another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, Usenet
From: John Howell on 2 Jan 2006 17:08
<posted & mailed> Henk Oegema wrote: > felmon davis wrote: > >> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 09:07:03 -0700, Valentin Guillen wrote: >> >>> Streamripper is the one. It's a command line utility which will record >>> and separate the tracks. There are also GUI front-ends available for it. >> >> I use one of the gui's which is very attractive and useful, kstreamripper >> (under kde). > > I can't find kstreamripper. I've looked under Multimedia but can't find > it. (SuSE9.3) > >> >> there are all these drm restrictions on making copies of materials. >> anyone know if any of them apply to making copies by ripping a stream? of >> course I assume one is prohibited from reselling, etc. >> >> it seems almost as easy and convenient to find a good radio station or >> two and rip mp3's. sound quality is fine (for me). >> >> Felmon It seems that Kaffiene (0.7.1) has an option to record streams but I haven't really tried it out yet. |