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 <version>1.0</version>
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 <provider_name>Rainbow Dash Network</provider_name>
 <provider_url>http://rainbowdash.net/</provider_url>
 <title>Omni (omni)'s status on Tuesday, 31-Jul-12 06:51:32 UTC</title>
 <author_name>Omni (omni)</author_name>
 <author_url>http://rainbowdash.net/omni</author_url>
 <url>http://rainbowdash.net/notice/1760649</url>
 <html>@&lt;span class=&quot;vcard&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://rainbowdash.net/user/9434&quot; class=&quot;url&quot; title=&quot;Jim Kuback&quot;&gt;&lt;span class=&quot;fn nickname&quot;&gt;abigpony&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt; Never claimed that, and I only post facts. It's not my fault Linux has better out-of-the-box support for old hardware due to drivers being in the kernel (at the possible cost of new hardware not working out-of-the-box until a new kernel update if it doesn't use a standardized protocol). Not putting drivers in the kernel (like Windows does) has good sides as well, though (like a smaller kernel size and possibly cleaner code). I just prefer having drivers in the kernel, so stuff works out-of-the-box, instead of having a smaller kernel.</html>
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