
Thanks to Adventure Sage for this great Award
I love the blogs of these people and I’m glad to pass this award onto them! All they need to do is to leave the following message on their post when they pass the award on to their chosen eight bloggers.
They all are charmed with the blogs, where in the majority of its aims are to show the marvels and to do friendship; there are persons who are not interested when we give them a prize and then they help to cut these bows; do we want that they are cut or that they propagate? Then let’s try to give more attention to them! So with this prize we must deliver it to 8 bloggers that in turn must make the same thing and put this text.
I’m passing this award to: ALLMY BLOGGER FRIENDS ’cause you deserve it all!…c”,)
The open Source of development model of today has its roots in the academic computer science of a decade or more ago. What makes Open Source dramatically more successfully today, however, is the rapid dissemination of information made possible by the Internet. When Watson and Crick discovered the double helix, they could reasonably expect the information to travel from Cambridge to Cal tech in a matter of days, or weeks at most. Today the transmission of such information is effectively instantaneous. Open Source has been born into a digital renaissance made possible by the internet, just as modern science was made possible during the Renaissance by the invention of the printing press. The Middle Ages lacked an affordable information infrastructure. Written works had to be copied by hand at great expense, and hence the information had to have an immediate value attached to it. Trade records, banking transactions, diplomatic correspondence; this information was concise enough and carried enough immediate value to be transmitted. The speculative writings of alchemists, priests, and philosophers- the men who would later be called scientists- took a much lower priority, and hence the information was disseminated much more slowly. The printing press changed all this by dramatically lowering the barriers to entry in the information infrastructure.
Meanwhile, interest in the error recovery work in the Pascal Compiler brought in requests for copies of the system. Early in 1977, Joy put together the “Berkeley Software Distribution.” This first distribution included the Pascal system, and, in an obscure subdirectory of the Pascal Source, the editor ex. Over the next year, Joy, acting in the capacity of distribution secretary, sent out about thirty free copies of the system. With the arrival of some ADM-3a terminals offering screen-addressable cursors, Joy was finally able to write vi, bringing screen-based editing to Berkeley. He soon found himself in a quandary. As is frequently the case in universities strapped for money, old equipment is never replaced all at once. Rather than support code for optimizing the updating several different terminals, he decided to consolidate the screen management by using a small interpreter to redraw the screen. This interpreter was driven by a description of the terminal characteristics, an effort that eventually became termcap. By mid-1978, the software distribution clearly needed to be updated. The Pascal systems had been made markedly more robust trough feedback from its expanding user community, and had been split into two passes so that it could be run on PDP-11/34s. The result of the update was the “Second Berkeley Software Distribution,” a name that was quickly shortened to 2BSD. Along with the enhanced Pascal System, vi and termcap for several terminals was included. Once again Bill Joy single-handedly put together distributions, answered the phone, and incorporated user feedback into the system. Over the next year nearly seventy-five tapes were shipped. Though Joy moved onto the other projects the following year, the 2BSD distribution continued to expand. The final version of this distribution, 2.11BSD, is a complete system used on hundreds of PDP-11’s still running in various corners of the world.
I am so thankful to my blogger friend Emzkie for this tag…
My roommate and I once: we shared about our sexual life.
Never in my life have I: love someone as I love my parents.
High school was: Exciting, Fun, Interesting and most of all it is my most unforgettable experience in my entire life.
When I’m nervous: there is many negative thing well comes in into my mind.
My hair: Just a normal hair like almost of the men.
When I was 5: I used to play with my elder sister, and always stay “makulit”.
When I turn my head left: as of now, I see the Television.
I should be: Studying in my College Degree right now, instead of going to stop.
By this time next year: I hope so I should able to be in school already.
My favorite aunt is: in the Philippines.
I have a hard time understanding: of some movies in ABS-CBN.hehe,lolz
You know I like you if: if you like me too;-)
My ideal breakfast is: Hot Coffee, Fried Rice, Corn Beef and Fried Egg.
If you visit my home town: you should try to eat Durian.
If you spend the night at my house: you can see a lot of DvD tapes.
The animal I would like to see flying besides birds: are Pig,heheh,lolz
Last night I: have a dinner with my friends.
A better name for me would be: Joshua, I really love that kind of Name.
I’ve been told I look like: my Mom, and most of all my Nose,hahaha.
If I could have any car, it would be: the Lamborghini Luxury Car.
I am going to passed this to all my Blogger Friend’s, I hope you well repost this in your blog.
Can you see, how beautiful the God’s Creations is?

Have a Good Day!
Join us, here.
Open Source was not an idea decreed from the top. The open Source movement is a genuine grass roots revolution. While evangelists like Eric Raymond and Bruce Perens have had a great success changing the language around free software, that change would have been impossible if the conditions were not light. We have reached the stage where an entire generation of students who learned computer science under the influence of GNU is now at work in industry, and have quietly been bringing free software in through the back doors of industry of years. They do so not from altruistic motives, but rather to bring better code to their work. The revolutionaries are in place. They are the network engineers, system administrators, and programmers who have thrived on open-source software throughout their education, and want to use open-source software to thrive professionally as well. Free software has become a vital part of many companies, often unwittingly, but in some cases quite deliberately. Open Source has come of age: there is such a thing as an Open Source business model. Bob Young’s company, Red Hat Software, Inc., thrives on giving away its core product: Red Hat Linux. One good way to deliver free software is to package it as a full featured distribution with a nice manual. Young is primarily selling convenience, as most do not want to have to bother with downloading all the pieces that make up a full-featured Linux system.
Taken when we have our family day at Swimming Pool

Have a Good Day!
Join us, here.
If you’re joining;
+ try to leave some love to the others! Specially to the one up above you !
+ A link back to this post or to this blog would be appreciated. So that others would know and join!
+ If you have sets of questions that you like to ask, email it to me. And we will post it next week!
1. When you see a man and woman walking together, do you automatically see them as ‘a couple’?
Answer: Nope
2. Is it always okay to walk along minding your own business, not bothering anyone?
Answer: Nope
3. Which foods that you believe are bad for you that you stubbornly refuse to stop eating?
Answer: Ampalaya with egg
4. How would you handle these three things: a rainy day, lost luggage, and tangled Christmas tree lights?
Answer: Just Smile and well think then positively in my mind
5. Do you easily adopt habits or phrases from the people around you?
Answer: Yes
6. What do you think of this situation?
~ In a checkout line at a store, someone is angrily yelling at the cashier because she’s waiting for minutes already. A long line of people are behind them with no other checkout line available. Does the angry person have a right to be yelling?
Answer: Nope
7.How often are you greeted by strangers in a friendly manner while walking around in public?
Answer: I think there is no time I have encountered that thing…Thanks God
8. What do you think of Crocs?
Answer: An Expensive Sandals
9. How long does it take you to get ready to go out?
Answer: I think about 1 hour
10. What kind of accent do you find attractive?
Answer: I don’t know
Have a Good day guys! Join us in our weekly Questions.
When we have an Island Hopping, I hope you like it guys!

Happy Wordless Guys!
Join us, here.