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At the time the Öresund strait was Danish and not a border between Sweden and Denmark.

What is now the most southern part of Sweden was à resultat of the peace of 1658


I worked with a couple of the commercial alternatives to aspera and aspera as well and I used UDT, Tsunami, GridFTP, syncthing[1] as a poor mans alternative to Aspera.

For real transfer with big (> 500TB) Aspera will deliver what it says over WAN (over the Atlantic).

If you have better connections and not so much data syncthing will probably work if you can have someone manually take care of all exceptions.[2]

If you know your data and you can build quite a lot of stuff yourself you can get almost the same speed as Aspera with UDT.

There is also a go implementation of UDTs used by kcptun[3] but I haven't tried that.

1 https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing

2 I don't intend to disrespect syncthing here, but when your dealing with TB scale 24/7 things are never really up all the time, the network is unreliable, the sender host filesystem is corrupt and the receiver host filesystem is full or broken or ...

3 https://github.com/xtaci/kcptun


Has anyone had good experiences with KCP? Syncthing removed their implementation [1] because it didn't live up to expectations.

1 https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/issues/4737


My understanding of this from older relatives was that question divided within the parties of the Parlament. This is usually solved in Sweden by postpone until every party sorts out there own standing. However, if that isn’t successful we have a advisory referendum that commits to nothing but will break some party deadlocks.


In uk? If in France, Germany or Scandinavia maybe.


Second that. There was a program on svt play a couple of years ago in the series ”hitlåtens historia” where the band talked a lot about the song.


After a Quick Reading of the issues it reminds me of an old linux Kernel bug.

https://groups.google.com/forum/m/#!topic/mechanical-sympath...


Everyone involved has to know the objective, which is a lot of more work than most people understand. Besides that I think that the selection and training for the BA0X where uniq for the swedish army who could pick from a large volunteer base.


overall moral: even if your own country don't collected your internet traffic, always assume that another country does.


... and will hand it to your country willingly.


I do think this example http://computationalthoughts.blogspot.se/2008/03/some-exampl... is a lot better than the one in the article.


TryHaskell uses http://hackage.haskell.org/package/mueval and not ghci You can eval expression so following works let t ="foo" in t


Yeah, I saw that it uses mueval, but it's still conceivable that TryHaskell itself could hack support for let on top of it. Apparently Chris planned to do it [1].

Note that in "let t=bar in foo" the scope of t is restricted to foo, so the example above still doesn't work.

[1] http://www.reddit.com/r/haskell/comments/b58rk/try_haskell/c... ([deleted] = Chris Doner)


Fair enough but you could do let f = map reverse in f ["ab", "cd"]

IMHO the tryhaskell expose more or less only simple pure functions and I doubt that anyone with a real interest in haskell will get any substantial out of it. However if one is completely new to programming maybe TryHaskell and these 6 short lessons have a value.


Agreed.

Incidentally, Chris Doner has been producing far more exciting things like Fay, so I'm not gonna complain about TryHaskell.


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