Week 2, Day 9 of SCO v. Novell Trial - Jury Hears About Kimball's Rulings - Updated

 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements UNIX and Linux RSS News Week 2, Day 9 of SCO v. Novell Trial - Jury Hears About Kimball's Rulings - Updated
# 1  
Old 03-18-2010
Week 2, Day 9 of SCO v. Novell Trial - Jury Hears About Kimball's Rulings - Updated

Chris Brown's first report of the day is in, filed by phone during an extended break in the court session. The jury got to hear today about Judge Dale Kimball's earlier court rulings.
We have all the important rulings in a new, special section on Groklaw's Novell Timeline page, so you can follow along. But for speed, here's the 2004 ruling and the 2007 ruling that his report references and that the jury heard excerpts from or a summary about today.
Update: Hey, look at this, a new searchable database, CourtWeb where you can search full text of court rulings for free. Not every order is in there, but eventually I hope they will be. I see Google seems to be in this project. I want to say thank you. Be sure to choose to expand to 100 documents, if you are searching for SCO Group. This is exciting.

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread
Login or Register to Ask a Question
holidays(4)							   File Formats 						       holidays(4)

NAME
holidays - prime/nonprime table for the accounting system SYNOPSIS
/etc/acct/holidays DESCRIPTION
The /etc/acct/holidays file describes which hours are considered prime time and which days are holidays. Holidays and weekends are con- sidered non-prime time hours. /etc/acct/holidays is used by the accounting system. All lines beginning with an "*" are comments. The /etc/acct/holidays file consists of two sections. The first non-comment line defines the current year and the start time of prime and non-prime time hours, in the form: current_year prime_start non_prime_start The remaining non-comment lines define the holidays in the form: month/day company_holiday Of these two fields, only the month/day is actually used by the accounting system programs. The /etc/acct/holidays file must be updated each year. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Example of the /etc/acct/holidays file. The following is an example of the /etc/acct/holidays file: * Prime/Nonprime Table for the accounting system * * Curr Prime Non-Prime * Year Start Start * 1991 0830 1800 * * only the first column (month/day) is significant. * * month/day Company Holiday * 1/1 New Years Day 5/30 Memorial Day 7/4 Indep. Day 9/5 Labor Day 11/24 Thanksgiving Day 11/25 day after Thanksgiving 12/25 Christmas 12/26 day after Christmas SEE ALSO
acct(1M) SunOS 5.10 28 Mar 1991 holidays(4)