Check the repo above. It's a super-lazy way to set them all up.
I had to move all of mine to an external HD though to free up space.
My 500Gb HD is was nearly full. To think I used to install and uninstall games after copying out savegames to free up space on a gasp 540Mb HD, and it was big at the time.
You have a link? I would expect the thing they would be working on would either be docker containers of Windows images that are just the whole shebang or making you not need to use boot2docker to use docker on windows. More probably the latter.
Well it's better than the super-stripped minimal choices model they have going now, I think.
Windows Starter
no features and really stripped
Windows Home Basic
can't auth to a domain
basic multimedia
Windows Business
can auth to a domain
no multimedia
Windows Ulitmate
who really doesn't choose this one?
well, that's a hardware thing too.. and the ffmpeg/avconv/vlc teams have all said they're open to taking things in to their code-base for that. the problem is furnishing a decode key doesn't really work for everyone. so unless you can get one.....
All the ways I've seen people do stuff like chip key recovery was a sort of interesting power consumption attack that basically determined how right something was by how much juice a black-box chip pulled. Not exactly something easy to do in your basement with a multimeter and a linux box.
I know they say it's only to stop the bad guys from getting the content, but guess what the bad guys already got the content and now I can't watch it/read it/whatever on x device I own.
Because the bad guys won't just get an hdcp box with a 3 channel component out and press record. I mean obviously. They would never do something like that...
So, it just stops the wrong people from buying/using that content.
The big problem is that once some really clever guy figures out how to bypass some form of DRM, he'll write an app that makes it easy for the common guy to do it as well.
@NathanOsman It was the first google result. I'm sure there's one that does all the nice things. The point was - 50 bucks on amazon to bootleg blu-ray? Yeah. That was effective.
@Seth Yeah. My thing is, I shouldn't have to buy more hardware to buy your blu-ray or install some other OS. If I have some random hardware that will read a blu-ray... I should be able to have it just work. I shouldn't have to get together with a bunch of reversers to dump your firmware, steal your vendor key every couple of months when you change it, and keep distributing it.
In other news, the model I've seen locals use to pirate blu-ray resolutions is to buy the "special editions" at WalMart that include a copy digital streamed via VUDU then screen-grab it or rip the stream.
I haven't personally done either, but we had a guy come in buying stacks and stacks of blu-ray discs and redeeming his VUDU copies in store. I have my doubts it was for legitimate use.
geez, used a one-liner to clean out my /boot of old linux kernels, and it purged some things i didn't want purged. it broke build-essential dependency chains. i think i got the apt-cache back in a consistent state. hopefully i didn't hose my box. i may need a really big bandaid on my next reboot.
Not a Ubuntu related question, but on in a bit of a panic and this is the most active room. I seem to have broken the DNS for one of my customers domains. I changed the name server and everything stopped working so I have changed it back. A record resolution for qldconservation.org.au is still failing after 12 hours.
If you use the "right" DNS server directly and query the domain, does it still fail? Think, resolve directly on the NS for the domain instead of 8.8.8.8 or whatever?
@JeffreyLin I used one a lot like that, but the reason it didn't work was that it looked for old versions of more than one thing... and cleaned up my current gcc install because a newer one was in repo and in the apt-cache. The problem was that, I couldn't install anything - boot was too full. So when the old versions were installed, I hit dependency hell. I think I have it fixed. It has just been a while since I oopsed on something this possibly horrible.