encrypted; in this case, it should be). The PDA
should never read or write to inform (or, in the case of 0.4, it should
never use node announcement). It will connect to a publicily available IP
(this would preferably be the IP of the user's real node).
Timm Murray
Life
some
Windows and Mac users (I think)).
Question: Did you seperate presentation and functionality
like a good OO designer?
Timm Murray
---
Theory is when you know how it works, but fails. Practice is when something
works, but you don't know why. Here, Theory and Practice come together
- Original Message -
From: David McNab [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 03, 2001 3:53 PM
Subject: Re: [freenet-chat] Attn - all freenet site authors - grab your
FreeWeb domains now!
Question: Did you seperate presentation and functionality
like a good OO
Leo Howell wrote on 5/6/01 2:25 am:
Sounds a promising system
though - I can't see how
discharging energy into the
ground could be objected to
by even the wierdest
government.
And if governments worked on logic, I would agree. But these days,
nothing seems too shocking.
Timm Murray
tried installing Mandrake
8.0, but it's got some serious
gaps - I sense I could be
hacking the kernel for
months to get all my devices
recognised).
I don't know about 8.0, but 7.2 was the most broken distro I've
seen. It did have good driver support, though.
Timm Murray
---
Theory
David McNab wrote on 5/6/01 4:23 pm:
Considering: Done! Results:
fuckem!
These posts are on public
record and could be
admissible in court.
Which is as good a reason for censorship as any.
Timm Murray
---
Theory is when you know how it works, but fails. Practice is when
the
SOB if I had the ability and lack of morals required for murder.
Congradulations! You just got on the Secret Service's Special List.
Welcome to the club.
Timm Murray
Life is like a perl script: Really short and messy
Yes, I've already sent them the info on how to use apt-get over Freenet.
Timm Murray
Life is like a perl script: Really short and messy.
- Original Message -
From: Dev Random [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, May 18, 2001 10:23 AM
Subject
There is a Mpeg layer 4 (it covers compressing both audio AND video, IIRC),
but I think the orginal poster ment MP3
Timm Murray
Life is like a perl script: Really short and messy.
- Original Message -
From: Aaron P Ingebrigtsen
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent
is for a specific application (such as FreenetFS),
then you don't have to bother.
Timm Murray
Life is like a perl script: Really short and messy.
- Original Message -
From: David McNab [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2001 6:11 PM
Subject: Re
David McNab wrote:
From: Seth Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.slashdot.org/yro/01/02/23/2134255.shtml
http://pcsupport.about.com/compute/pcsupport/library/weekly/aa030101a.htm
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/2/17230.html
Looks like the copy protection 'arms race' is set to
in an afternoon or two. Freenet is really complicated (just
look at Whiterose development) and doesn't serve that goal well.
- --
Timm Murray
. . . example of a mobious. This sentance is an example of a mobious. This
sentance is an . . .
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it.
- --
Timm Murray
. . . example of a mobious. This sentance is an example of a mobious. This
sentance is an . . .
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Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org
iD8DBQE7E7Mv9FVoObiUQx8RAiEIAJ40+4fc03fLBOWBVzo6bRj3N2phsACg1Pc7
This won't work anymore. I believe that sometime in the 0.3 series, a
probablistic decrement on the htl was added (meaning there is a certain
chance that the htl won't be reduced and thus the message will be passed on
to another node). I don't remeber when this was added (or even if it was
0.4 is incompatible with 0.3. Even if there weren't good design decisions
for doing so (which there are), I still think 0.4 should be incompatible
with 0.3 just for the sake of starting with a fresh network.
0.3 sucks. Let it die.
- Original Message -
From: John Goerzen [EMAIL
- Original Message -
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'toad' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2001 9:41 PM
Subject: [freenet-chat] RE: [freenet-devl] MercuryFS
You need to read the UNI ID design. Tell me how they are going to get
somebody's info.
All
Call it whatever you want, just not Open Source and definatly not Free
Software. Managed Source sounds a lot like Shared Source.
(Sorry aboutt the previous messages to devl; I'm putting all further
messages on chat).
- Original Message -
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL
- Original Message -
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 24, 2001 9:09 PM
Subject: RE: [freenet-devl] MercuryFS
Shareware! That may be a better title. It will be open source
shareware...???
It's really a management issue: I want to advantages of
Subject: Re: [freenet-devl] MercuryFS
PLEASE! Elsewhere.
On Wed, Jul 25, 2001 at 10:18:45AM -0500, Timm Murray wrote:
yadadaadadadda
--
'DeCSS would be fine. Where is it?'
'Here,' Montag touched his head.
'Ah,' Granger smiled and nodded.
Oskar Sandberg
[EMAIL PROTECTED
- Original Message -
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2001 9:57 PM
Subject: RE: [freenet-devl] MercuryFS
I never responded to this email, and am not a member of this email group
anymore (want to be, but have to manage my inbox). So here it
[crossposted to chat]
- Original Message -
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Freenet Developers Email List (E-mail) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, July 27, 2001 12:29 AM
Subject: [freenet-devl] words of wisdom
I will not drop any more emails into the group, since
-Original Message-
From: Jeremy G Byrne [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Monday, July 30, 2001 9:47 AM
Subject: [freenet-chat] p2p = child-endangerment
. . . In this case, parental awareness and parental involvement matter
more than legislation.
And
Better soldiers? Did you know that arguably the best army in the ancient
world were all homosexuals? Not only that, but both Rome and Greece were
full of all sorts of sexual behavior, and their ability on the battlefield
is unquestioned.
Sexual repression through religion is also bunk. While
-Original Message-
From: David McNab [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tuesday, July 31, 2001 8:50 PM
Subject: Re: [freenet-chat] Re: p2p = child-endangerment
Such as in Aldous Huxley's visionary novel Brave New World.
Oh yeah, we really want the world
Eric S. Raymond, one of the ring-leaders of the Open Source movement.
-Original Message-
From: Josh [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Timm Murray' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wednesday, August 01, 2001 3:52 PM
Subject: RE: [freenet-chat] RE: open source trademark
Who's ESR? I hope they attract
Title I -- Security System Standards
Sec. 101: Prohibition of Certain Devices
(a) In General -- It is unlawful to manufacture, import,
offer to
the public, provide or otherwise traffic in any
interactive digital
device that does not include and
Every computer should be running a Freenet node anyway. There are
ways to make Freenet work behind firewalls, though it's a bit
tricky last I heard. Something like a Squid proxy server for
Freenet is actualy redundant.
That's ridiculous. Run _one_ node per LAN.
Sorry Mark, but the
Timm Murray ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Sorry Mark, but the one computer, one node rule is something I
picked up from Oskar (I think), and I decided I agreed with him (and
not just because he's Oskar). Freenet works better with lots of
smaller nodes to spread the data out
From David McNab:
A Hypothetical Question:
If the system of software patents, plus the DMCA and SSSCA, had been
written into law
in 1950, what would have happened in the computer industry since then?
Think about it.
From: Scott Haman
I am working on a research
paper covering the
From David McNab:
A Hypothetical Question:
If the system of software patents, plus the DMCA and SSSCA, had been
written into law
in 1950, what would have happened in the computer industry since then?
Think about it.
From: Scott Haman
I am working on a research
paper covering the
Timm Murray:
Over time, the large node simply accumulates more data from Freenet. This means
there should be more nodes which point to data on the large node. Thus, there will
be more requests routed to the large node.
Uhh... so? The node's big; it can handle lots of requests. That's
to
twist
my brain around it more.
Mark J Roberts:
Timm Murray:
Over time, the large node simply accumulates more data from Freenet. This means
there should be more nodes which point to data on the large node. Thus, there
will
be more requests routed to the large node.
Uhh
I haven't seen _any_ compelling argument why above-average nodes
should attract more than their fair share of requests. What's
yours?
Over time, the large node simply accumulates more data from Freenet.
This means there should be more nodes which point to data on the large
Copyright and IP rights are legalized theft from the
public of a idea or piece of work.
So obtaining a few million of investment to create a
cure for a cancer, and patenting that cure in order to
ensure re-payment of that investment is theft from the
public? Even though that return on
Centralization. While it's not so bad if a better machine does a
little more work, it get's bad when that same machine is getting
requests from half the network.
Wouldn't that be more a problem of routing requests than saying it is
horrible if you want your node to have more data? I
But why wouldn't a node just stop allowing connections when it sensed it
was being used to much? Limit bandwidth and CPU usage within a given time
frame and maybe watch for DoS type issues by only letting a certain number
of connections per host per timeframe through? Then you know enough for
This doesn't have anything to do with Freenet, but I thought I'd share it with the
group.
This came from my linux user group's mailing list, and I've personaly talked to some
of the people who were there; this really happened.
IDIOT SIGHTING
At one of the computer stores today, I asked,
Yes, in fact if you hang around long enough, you will find a lot of
people suggesting using Freenet to overcome the Slashdot Effect.
Freenet is still slower then HTTP in the sense that it will use more
bandwidth. An HTTP server under normal bandwidth load will allways be
faster then
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Read up on journaling file systems.
On Friday 24 May 2002 13:14, Aaron Ingebrigtsen wrote:
I wrote this up on the bus going home last night. Tell me what you think
of it. I know I am useing ideas that I got from other sources and that it
isn't
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On Friday 24 May 2002 13:36, David Allen wrote:
It's a decent idea, but I would like to point out that this type of error
correction is already implemented in many different devices and protocols
to ensure the quality of the data that's coming
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I may have missed this part of the conversation, but why not just
post it on freenet?
Because right now, it's a miracle if Freenet works at all.
- --
X windows: It could be worse, but it'll take time.
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On Tuesday 04 June 2002 19:33, Revenant wrote:
Greg Wooledge wrote:
SNIP
Let's start with this: Freenet is an anonymous, decentralized data
storage and retrieval system. The physical resources are provided by
volunteer nodes around the
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On Friday 07 June 2002 08:47, Mark J Roberts wrote:
Timm Murray:
No. The web is all about storage of data. Freenet is about routing.
You can lie to average people all you want (people are lied to enough for
the sake of dumbing down
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On Friday 07 June 2002 09:35, Mark J Roberts wrote:
Timm Murray:
RIP, IGRP, OSPF, etc. Not very convienant for your non-techie, but more
accurate, IMHO.
I'm so happy to not know what those abbreviations mean. Though I
suspect they have
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On Saturday 08 June 2002 19:51, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Revenant ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
To take the extreme example, a system based around all transient
nodes would require greater 'mirroring' of any given piece of data.
[...]
I don't
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There we go with the terminology again. Please don't use the word
transient to mean something other than a node that has set
transient=true in the freenet.conf or freenet.ini file. Call it
something else. Temporary node would be my first
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On Wednesday 12 June 2002 15:23, Mark J Roberts wrote:
It's pretty compelling, isn't it?
No.
What does gravity smell like?
- --
A language that doesn't have everything is actually easier to program
in than some that do.
--Dennis
been away.
--
Timm Murray
GPG Key: E4E143C6
Fingerprint: 591D DD8C 078C 7D45 ECE6 7B04 B62A 02C0 E4E1 43C6
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
Version: 3.1
GCS d- s+: a-- C++() UL++ P$ L+++$ !E W--@ N++@
!o
!K w--- O@ M !V !PS !PE Y+(++) PGP+++ t@ 5+++ X@ R tv b++() DI++@
D
a Republican. MJR gave
up coding in favor of knitting. AGL is working for Microsoft. And
Marcel is nowhere to be seen (yay!).
--
Timm Murray
GPG Key: E4E143C6
Fingerprint: 591D DD8C 078C 7D45 ECE6 7B04 B62A 02C0 E4E1 43C6
-BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-
Version: 3.1
GCS d- s+: a-- C++() UL
> I just watched that move, Pirates of Silicon Valley, and have gained a new
> hatred for Microsoft and Bill Gates. But, the Mac people, especialy Steve
> Jobs, aren't all that much better, moraly. Jobs' people basicaly stole
> thier GUI technology from Xerox, but only because the Xerox execs
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On Friday 19 April 2002 14:23, Aaron Ingebrigtsen wrote:
> I started pondering recently over distributed networking, which is
> obviously being achieved by Freenet, but I was thinking more along the
> lines of Hardware. The network architecture here
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On Friday 19 April 2002 14:23, Aaron Ingebrigtsen wrote:
<>
> They seem to be constantly recieving data even when
> the OS hasn't loaded any drivers for working with the NIC.
<>
If it seems like they are always receiving data, that is because they
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On Saturday 20 April 2002 19:32, krepta at juno.com wrote:
<>
> So thats why the network sometimes just goes down, or parts of it anyway.
> Signal collisions!!! Jeeze. :(
Well, collisions are not the sole source of network problems, but they are
> David Allen:
> > Maybe I'm just a humorless bastard, but I didn't think that one in
> > particular was very funny.
>
> Last year's was just incomparably better:
>
> http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0104.0/0007.html
Yeah, last year's was better. Although I liked his
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On Thursday 07 February 2002 20:02, you wrote:
> I got a message in my email, from some unknown solicitor, about a program
> that supposedly lets you record DVD disks with only a regular CDR or CDRW
> drive, no DVDR drive. It said that you can copy
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On Thursday 07 February 2002 20:13, you wrote:
<>
> I grew up with symptoms completely consistent with the diagnostic
> protocols for ADD/ADHD, and now enjoy a life completely free of that
> condition. I do owe my healing to a process seen in some
> If you know someone with a home computer, you can connect to their Freenet
> node using just your web browser and pointing it at their Fproxy port. I'm
> sure that eventually there'll be public gateways to Freenet as well, but I
> haven't seen one yet.
The person has to say to give public
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On Monday 07 January 2002 11:21, you wrote:
> Hi,I have been reading all your mail regarding "coming storm" with
> interest. If one knows the history of America one comes to the conclusion
> that it is a Country which could be best described as
tes add themselves to your
bookmarks or make themselves your homepage without even asking (though I
suspect such things only work in IE). That is /my/ computer you're altering
and I don't accept people who alter /my/ stuff without asking.
- --
Timm Murray
- ---
This message has been en
> On Sat, 19 Jan 2002 krepta at juno.com wrote:
>
> > I think Content on Demand has a future. Thats what freenet is. But TV,
> > hmmm, I dunno. Advertisers really want people to watch thier stuff at
> > particular times of day or night, or during special events like the Super
> > Bowl. They
in the release
> version of windows? So it will already be installed by default?
>
> Could you point me to your source?
>
> -Original Message-
> From: chat-admin at freenetproject.org [mailto:chat-admin at
> freenetproject.org]
> On Behalf Of Timm Murray
> Se
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On Sunday 06 January 2002 21:47, you wrote:
<>
> I seriously doubt that congress and the president consider you and I to be
> expendable.
And that's when they reinstitue the draft . . .
- --
He's like a function--he returns a value, in the form of
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On Wednesday 09 January 2002 20:48, you wrote:
> Hey guys, I've got an off topic question for ya.
>
> Is it possible to remove our email addresses from the email archives?
>
> I know that I started getting spam when I first posted on this list,
>
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On Sunday 06 January 2002 22:03, you wrote:
> Ok, one more post
>
> What's pathetic is that America let the cesspool in Afghanistan grow and
> multiply into what it is/was.
Being that it was America who trained the lot in the first place, I can't
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On Saturday 05 January 2002 22:16, you wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Jan 2002 16:26:48 +1300 David McNab
>
> writes:
> > IMO, there should be laws passed that all unsolicited promotional
> > material have the string 'SPAM:' at the start of the subject field,
>
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On Saturday 05 January 2002 23:07, you wrote:
> > I'm even beginning to wonder whether or
> > not certain individuals in our government
> > KNEW of this attack before it
> > occured and were just waiting to grab at the
> > chance to take away our
Travis, I thought you were starting to learn to avoid Mark's trolls.
> On Sun, Jan 06, 2002 at 08:37:12PM -0600, Mark J Roberts wrote:
> > Travis Bemann:
> > > government is amoral and has no ethics
> >
> > Why, then, does our government punish criminals and not innocent
> > people? Why does it
>
> On Sun, 20 Jan 2002 12:44:42 -0600 Mark J Roberts writes:
> > Timm Murray:
> > > If you want, you could get a TV-in card that is compatible with
> > > Video4Linux and a big hard drive (40-80 GB).
> >
> > What's worth watching?
>
> Lots of thi
>
> On Sun, 13 Jan 2002 13:32:43 -0600 Timm Murray
> writes:
> > -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> > Hash: SHA1
> >
> > On Saturday 12 January 2002 22:57, you wrote:
> > > On Fri, 11 Jan 2002 18:27:01 -0600 Mark J Roberts
> > writes:
>
> I am going to try once again to start an intelligent conversation. If
> this develops into a flame war I'm out of here.
Umm, this is freenet-chat. You'd have better luck having an intelligent
conversation on
Slashdot.
>
> With the reality that copy protection is going to fail and the fact
<>
> > If you want, you could get a TV-in card that is compatible with
> > Video4Linux and a big
> > hard drive (40-80 GB). Unless you find the right software, you
> > wouldn't get the full range of features you'd get on a TiVo (like
> > skipping commercials), but it'll record of the TV just
<>
> > Linux by its very nature strongly encourages technical learning,
> > but
> > for every Linux box on the desktop, there are 50 W--dows boxes,
> > with
> > an operating system that increasingly encourages technical
> > ignorance.
>
> But Linux, thanks to GUI interfaces, is getting closer
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On Saturday 12 January 2002 23:01, you wrote:
> On Sat, 12 Jan 2002 12:14:57 -0500 Greg Wooledge
>
> writes:
> > Maarten (freenetmaillist at mgeurts.tmfweb.nl) wrote:
> > > -please tell me where the #freenet irc channel is, what network do
> >
> > i
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On Sunday 06 January 2002 21:27, you wrote:
> On Sun, 6 Jan 2002 20:37:12 -0600
>
> "Mark J Roberts" wrote:
> > Travis Bemann:
> > > government is amoral and has no ethics
> >
> > Why, then, does our government punish criminals and not innocent
> >
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On Tuesday 08 January 2002 17:13, you wrote:
> I propose that all further posts from MJR be ignored. All in favor say
> "YAY!". :)
Nay, only communists would want to ignore MJR.
- --
X windows: There's got to be a better way.
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On Saturday 12 January 2002 22:57, you wrote:
> On Fri, 11 Jan 2002 18:27:01 -0600 Mark J Roberts writes:
> > Your "my right to [do some relatively unusual thing] is being
> > trampled by legislation that is necessary to enforce copyright"
> >
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On Tuesday 08 January 2002 17:45, you wrote:
> Said krepta at juno.com on Tue, Jan 08, 2002 at 04:13:43PM -0700,
>
> > I propose that all further posts from MJR be ignored. All in favor say
> > "YAY!". :)
>
> New to the list?
>
> Let me be the first
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On Friday 11 January 2002 11:06, you wrote:
> Hello, I edited your email for my response, hope you don't mind. :)
>
> I don't know what this DRM is,
Digital Rights Management. In theory, it stops "pirates" from illicitly
copied software. In
> >You remind me of the king of the 1-dimention in "Flatland" :)
>
> Huh? Flatland? 1-dimention?
You can read the book here (once you get past the Project Gutenberg legaleese
at the beginning, anyway):
ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext95/flat10a.txt
<>
> And the telnet method of getting to IRC.openprojects.org didn't work. It
> sais it can't open port 6667. Which I'm pretty sure is the right port for
> IRC connections.
It could be that port 6667 is blocked at your school.
___
Chat mailing list
You remind me of the king of the 1-dimention in "Flatland" :)
> My little nephew, Cody, is screaming and crying all the time now, and my
> parents were talking about it like it was Cute, Adorable!! ARGH!! I wanted
> to rip off their arms and beat them with the bloody stumps It isn't
>
> > >You remind me of the king of the 1-dimention in "Flatland" :)
> >
> > Huh? Flatland? 1-dimention?
>
> You can read the book here (once you get past the Project Gutenberg legaleese
> at the beginning, anyway):
> ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext95/flat10a.txt
hrm, I
<>
> I really don't
> see a point in giving freenet more than say 1 or 2 GB max, because you may
> be hard pressed to fill that much up. That said, I really doubt that it
> would *hurt* to give your freenet node 40GB. :)
Many believe 200 MB is an optimal ammount per node. You shouldn't worry
> Hey, can someone here help me understand Ratios?
>
> Here is my problem, my instructor yesterday wrote a bunch of stuff on the
> board and lectured and stuff about the speed ratio between the System Bus,
> or Motherboard embedded wires and paths and stuff, and the Micro Processor.
>
> Here
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On Wednesday 01 May 2002 21:52, qcxcGary Michaels wrote:
>
>
> Untitled Document
>
What is the point of having the MIME type and charset in the HTML? That stuff
should be in the underlingprotocol headers.
>
>
>
> I noticed your email address
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