How differently do they behave? I've never used a Windows one for anything other than, say, putting a program in the start menu, or a quick launch bar, or the desktop, or... etc.
And similar for directories, or network shares
But I'm not a Windows user, so, I'm not surprised they might have features I've never heard of
But from checking Wikipedia, and from what I've used them before, they seem more like *.desktop files
seriously, who up vote this soft ball, I'm not saying that rep is bad but seriously, there are other even better answers that I've wrote without votes D:
I will try to remember what I said, but none of the answers so far are correct (every one of them was done in the 60s and 70s before the commercialization of PCs in the 80s).
However, we could start all over and try to think of new inventions in computing since the 1980s.
When it's 135 pages of users (almost all of which aren't bound by any confidentiality), and you're giving the content out under a CC license, that's still pretty public
@strugee - yeah but he can get a pass on voting since he does a lot for the site in other ways 8-)
I've played with windows .lnk files they're more similar to .desktop files, but they aren't pure text, they're binary files. They're not really OS files like symlinks, they're data files to windows explorer.
I discovered today that I was awarded the Steward badge for edit reviews, but there was no notification of this. In the previous top bar, there were two types of alerts - red for inbox, gray for notifications (or whatever they were called). In the new top bar, I can only see the inbox. Did I miss...
yeah. although I think no one really considers this work. the interesting thing is that everyone knows that they're "playing the game", but not really. and yet they still opt in
yeah i think most ppl fall into that category, also some ppl don't want to look stupid/wrong so a comment is less dangerous, also some ppl don't want to be bothered with writing up the answer
I really like U&L, because the community's small. I mean, I'm not against expansion, but it's nice getting to know most of the regulars. on SO, that's impossible, seems like
as an aside: my math teacher does this programming unit where we do Python alongside regular math and so he was introducing us to stuff and his advice for solving problems was: "Google for it and look for the results from Stack Overflow. Stack Overflow has the best answers." and I was just like, the internet has been won
Uppercase is less easily recognised than lowercase, especially with serif fonts (based on psychological experiments). Apart from that it gives the idea from shouting.
OK I see now, looking at this page (infohost.nmt.edu/tcc/help/xfer/scp.html) - I know its not a nice looking page, but kinda explains it. Thanks for explaining, I honestly didn't know it was a command
See, I would help the OP if I knew they were using SCP (the program, like WinSCP, etc.), as I use it everyday to connect to my VM's. I am not a 100% user on Linux, as my main OS is Windows Vista. So I am still learning on Linux
I recommend that when there might be doubt, don't assume the protocol is meant. And yes of course the OP might have the understanding and use a series of programs based on the the Secure Copy Protocol. but combined with the legibility issue I recommend leaving things at scp
BTW it easier to change "... scp ..." into "... scp ..." than into "... SSH ...": just select the word and hit Ctrl+K
RAS syndrome (short for "redundant acronym syndrome syndrome"), also known as PNS syndrome ("PIN number syndrome syndrome", which expands to "personal identification number number syndrome syndrome") or RAP phrases ("redundant acronym phrase phrases"), refers to the use of one or more of the words that make up an acronym or initialism in conjunction with the abbreviated form, thus in effect repeating one or more words.
A person is humorously said to suffer from RAS syndrome when he or she redundantly uses one or more of the words that make up an acronym or initialism with the abbreviation ...
Can someone clarify to me why did Raphael Ahrens choose to "Edit" my edit suggestion to this question rather than just pressing "Approve". That's because I didn't notice any difference between my suggested edit and the "edit" that Raphael did.
I am not sure if you actually see them or not, I don't think I ever added that (or bold/italics).
obviously Rafael did not think it to be a major infringement otherwise he would have indicated your contribution was not useful (and you would have missed your 2 rep).
@RistoSalminen @Anthon - Anthon is right, back ticks shouldn't be in titles, but I've seen them too. If you see them edit the post and fix them.
@Anthon Yeah @strugee altered me to the posts. I saw your meta Q Good Q and good response from Gilles. Not sure if I like keeping the content as fully quoted but I guess that's how it should be handled.
I was pointed out in chat that some user might have strange behaviour. I had actually ok-ed Late Answers from that user and had another look at one of them.
This text is copied verbatim from http://forums.fedoraforum.org/archive/index.php/t-85446.html ( post from 2008-12-14). Should I flag this ...
If you find a neat approach to solve a problem from Bob, you ought to give credit to Bob for the idea, even if you write your own version of the code...
When I was searching around on meta.SO for info about if deleted questions are included in the data dump, it appears that is the accepted workaround...
@derobert yes, because academic papers are about presenting novel ideas: anything you write in an academic paper is assumed to be new by default, so you must acknowledge any pre-existing idea
On SE, we don't guarantee originality of ideas and don't require citations