Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 4th Nov 2006 21:56 UTC
Mono Project Some interesting bits of his blog entry in which De Icaza replies to emails he has received concerning the Novell-Microsoft deal: "I do not know of any patents which Mono infringes. (...) Although I did not take part of the actual negotiations, and was only told about this deal less than a week before the announcement, I had been calling for a long time for a collaboration between Microsoft and Open Source and Microsoft and Novell. (...) Similar deals have been done in the past, in 1997 Microsoft signed a similar deal with Apple, and Apple used that agreement and the incoming monies to turn the company around. Sun signed a similar agreement with Microsoft in 2004, which at the time I realized enabled Sun to ship Mono on Solaris (which we already supported at that time)."
Permalink for comment 179047
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Doc Pain
Member since:
2006-10-08

"That's punctuation."

Difference: the punctator (the sign), the interpunctuation (the use of the sign(s) in a sentence or something similar). Regarding "-uation", you're right, of course. As you see, english is not my native language and termini technici are often translated from german to english language with a little difference (it's "Interpunktion" in german).

"And ellipses."

Ellipsis is singular and derived from the greek "élleipsis". You surely mean the plural form, which I didn't mean.

"Plus, you forgot a couple of periods there yourself."

None in my post. The second line in braces is an itemization (or alliteration), if you're thinking of this.

"Oh, and you really should capitalise the first word of each sentence. "

Please have a look on the capital "C" at the beginning of the sentence - the only sentence I wrote in my post. Maybe, it's not capital enough.

"Smilies are out, too.."

What's in then, in your opinion?

BTW: There are two periods after "too", only one would be correct. Is the other one optional if the first one isn't working?

See? No smiley added. Recognize rhetorical means by yourself.

Edited 2006-11-05 13:51

Reply Parent Score: 2