SCO Files Objections to Novell's Bill of Costs

 
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Old 08-27-2010
SCO Files Objections to Novell's Bill of Costs

SCO has filed, as expected, its objections to Novell's bill of costs:
08/26/2010 - 890 OBJECTIONS to 879 Bill of Costs filed by Plaintiff SCO Group. (Attachments: # 1 Exhibit A)(Normand, Edward) (Entered: 08/26/2010)

Novell's bills, SCO argues, "beg credulity". They are too high. Who makes that many copies? Some items are not authorized by statute. They are not demonstrated to have been necessary. They were for a mock trial, in one case. They are for things like slides that they should have asked the judge for permission to have made. The judge, SCO argues, should deny Novell's bill of costs entirely.
I will translate for you. What that means is that SCO would like to pay less. If Novell had lost, and they had been ordered to pay SCO's bill of costs, SCO would have fervently argued the opposite. Last time, SCO was able to get a bit knocked off the bill, so they may again. But they'll probably still have to pay something. But will they? In real life, I mean. Not on paper.

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FACE(6) 							   Games Manual 							   FACE(6)

NAME
face - face files DESCRIPTION
The directory /lib/face contains a hierarchy of images of people. In that directory are subdirectories named by the sizes of the corre- sponding image files: 48x48x1 (48 by 48 pixels, one bit per pixel); 48x48x2 (48 by 48 pixels, two bits per pixel); 512x512x8 (512 by 512 pixels, eight bits per pixel); 512x512x24 (512 by 512 pixels, twenty-four bits per pixel (3 times 8 bits per color)). The large files serve no special purpose; they are stored either as bitmaps (see bitmap(6)) or as picture files (see picfile(9.6). The small files are the `icons' displayed by seemail (see mail(1)); their format is special. Icons are stored as text, one line of the file to one scan line of display. Each line is divided into 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit big-endian words, stored as a list of comma-separated hexadecimal C constants, such as: 0x9200, 0x1bb0, 0x003e, This odd format is historical and the programs that read it are somewhat forgiving about blanks and the need for commas. The files /lib/face/*/.dict hold a correspondence between users at machines and face files. The format is machine/user directory/file.ver The machine is the domain name of the machine sending the message, and user the name of the user sending it, as recorded in /sys/log/mail. The directory is a further subdirectory of (say) /lib/face/48x48x1, named by a single letter corresponding to the first character of the user names. The file is the name of the file, typically but not always the user name, and ver is a number to distinguish different images, for example to distinguish the image for Bill Gates from the image for Bill Joy, both of which might otherwise be called b/bill. For exam- ple, Bill Gates might be represented by the line microsoft.com/bill b/bill.1 If multiple entries exist for a user in the various .dict files, seemail chooses the highest pixel size less than or equal to that of the display on which it is running. Finally, or rather firstly, the file /lib/face/.machinelist contains a list of machine/domain pairs, one per line, to map any of a set of machines to a single domain name to be looked up in the .dict files. The machine name may be a regular expression, so for example the entry .*research.att.com astro maps any of the machines in AT&T Research into the shorthand name astro, which then appears as a domain name in the .dict files. SEE ALSO
mail(1), tweak(1), bitmap(6) FACE(6)