I had the same reaction: to me they were contradicting themselves in no more than two sentences. Then I read on and followed links: http://zuckerbergfiles.org/?page_id=41
So this is indeed a copyright issue. Like all copyright issues, bittorrent is the answer.
Great stuff there, I actually learnt from what I thought was an interactive tutorial for beginners. The commands (like 'reset' to go back to the beginning of a level) are not that straightforward from the beginning though. Also I haven't found how to actually see your solution yet (not that I have really searched for it, but it would be nice to have a big button).
Pirated content is free content: you can't really say that one person pirating your game equals one lost sale. Would have he bought it, if he was given no alternative choice to get it? When the price is null, there are low to no expectations as to how good the product should be, hence there's a lot more people using it. Someone gives you something that has value for free in the street, would you take it? There's a good chance the answer is yes, even if you do need it.
We've been working on a minimal LXC manager for a week now, but docker seems to be exactly what we need. Can't wait to check this out. https://github.com/cpra-lcoffe
Wow reading through these assignments I'm blown away this is for a first year course. At this time in my first year half of the class couldn't handle an if statement. Wish I could of went to Stanford.
Thanks. I'd found those but what I'm really interested in are the course assignments which only seem to be available for the actual course. The first two are the only ones I can't find right now