On 04/14/2011 09:11 PM, Richard Pieri wrote:
On Apr 14, 2011, at 8:30 PM, Jerry Feldman wrote:
I think you have a bad choice of words, I don't think this is a
reformed SCO. Since the SCO litigation is not finished, currently
Novell owns the copyrights and The Open Group owns the trademarks.
Hi Folks
In short, I need a way to keep commit log history per file when I merge
one branch into another in SVN. I know this is a limitation of SVN, but
I was wondering if anyone has come up with a creative solution for this
thorny issue. Also, much as I would like to move to 'git' I cant, it is
On 04/15/2011 08:46 AM, theBlueSage wrote:
However, if I then merge foo.txt back into trunk and do svn log foo.txt
I will only see 3 commits. the two I did before the branching, and the
commit message from the merge back into trunk. I need to find a way to
see all the history.
Interesting
Thank you everyone who have been offering their opinion and intepretation on
this.
I had been following the SCO case off and on for a number of years. But based,
on what I have
been reading from you folks, there is more than meets the eye on this. And
there
may yet be more
repercussionsÂ
On Apr 15, 2011, at 11:35 AM, Doug wrote:
How might people in Blu use the Genesi's Efika MX Smarttop on a home
network? I always power down all my boxes when not at home. When I do
boot up, I have a bigger box with a screen and keyboard.
I'm thinking about getting one to replace the two G4
On Apr 15, 2011, at 4:39 PM, Jerry Feldman wrote:
I know that The Open Group has sent a letter to Unxis. Unixs is
currently NOT licensed to use the Unix or UnixWare trade names as,
according to The Open Group, it was not transferrable, but Unxis could
simply fill out a few forms. I don't see
Doug wrote:
How might people in Blu use the Genesi's Efika MX Smarttop on a home
network?
Product specs are here:
http://www.genesi-usa.com/products/efika
which includes:
* Freescale i.MX515 (ARM Cortex-A8 800MHz)
* 3D Graphics Processing Unit
* WXGA display support (HDMI)
*
On Apr 15, 2011, at 8:34 PM, Tom Metro wrote:
You would attach the drives via the 2 USB 2.0 ports?
That's the idea.
If it had a few port-multiplier compatible eSATA ports that you could
wire to an external drive cage, and GB Ethernet, then it would make for
a decent NAS controller.