Dear all,
On 06/07/2010 09:00 AM, nore...@centos.org wrote:
The following page has been changed by GeerdDietgerHoffmann:
http://wiki.centos.org/Newsletter/1004?action=diffrev2=11rev1=10
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Estimados aprovechando la linea me pueden indicar una guia efectiva para
preparar el CentOS Directory Server
Muchas gracias.
*Xavier Mauricio Tirado L.*
Rafael Guillermo Dipré Peña escribió:
Saludos yo monte un directory server también pero todavía no he
validado clientes windows se
Dear All
Do you have any experience with hardware emulator for Motorola PowerQuicc on
MS Windows host (dedicated for centos installation)?
Thank you
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What will be the intended audience? How much technical detail can be
mentioned? Does one assume that the readers know what is grub, initrd,
xen, amavisd etc?
- Jussi
The intended audience is anyone in the Systems Administration or Systems
Engineering field at any technical level. It is
I have a machine that has worked fine for years on CentOS5.
kernel-PAE-2.6.18-164.15.1.el5 is the last works fine kernel, but
kernel-PAE-2.6.18-194.3.1.el5 crashes at boot every time.
I tried banging on the side of the monitor to no avail.
All kidding aside, here are pictures of my monitor when
On Sun, Jun 6, 2010 at 7:35 AM, John Thomas
gmane-2006-04...@jt-socal.com wrote:
I have a machine that has worked fine for years on CentOS5.
kernel-PAE-2.6.18-164.15.1.el5 is the last works fine kernel, but
kernel-PAE-2.6.18-194.3.1.el5 crashes at boot every time.
I tried banging on the side
On Sun, Jun 6, 2010 at 4:04 AM, Robert P. J. Day rpj...@crashcourse.ca wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WM977mANl8
There's also this one on the the impotence of proofreading:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OonDPGwAyfQfeature=related
(No, that was NOT a typo.)
mhr
On 10-06-06 06:19 AM, Geoff Galitz wrote:
Hello,
I'm compiling a collection of stories from the systems administrator
trenches. They can be short or long, funny or about a particularly
challenging problem or period, or even something that appeared very
technically challenging and ended up
Let's see - you're running a Dell and the second photo is out of focus
It's worse than that. It's a Dell monitor on a custom built machine by
someone who does not know what they are doing (me). Would a more
focused picture help?
Sorry, I just couldn't resist.
No worries, just keeping
All nighters are bad news, mistakes are easily made at these times as
we have all learnt the hard way ;)
*cough* erased the backups and spent the night re-backing up data so
nothing actually got done *cough*
I do remember spending a few days putting together some systems check
for my self and
On Sun, Jun 06, 2010 at 08:22:22PM +0100, James Bensley wrote:
redundancy, connectivity etc...) only to have something fail the next
day (so it really paid off!) and then nothing has broken since?...Just
goes to show you never know!
Also recently upgraded my personal Ubuntu server to a RAID
On Jun 6, 2010, at 1:11 PM, John Thomas wrote:
Let's see - you're running a Dell and the second photo is out of focus
It's worse than that. It's a Dell monitor on a custom built machine by
someone who does not know what they are doing (me). Would a more
focused picture help?
I think Whit you have raised some deeper questions maybe about
probability, sod's law, the uncertanty principle, karma, etc
etc...Maybe a venn diagram covering luck and preparedness is in order,
who knows, we/I am digressing
I would like to point out that at home I'm pretty sure I'm jinxed;
On Sun, Jun 6, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Digimer li...@alteeve.com wrote:
Under the category of learn from the mistake of others...
About eight years ago, I was working on a program with tight deadlines.
I'd worked through the night, only catching an hour or two of sleep in
the office.
The next
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