On Tue, Jun 25, 2013 at 6:08 AM, Jon Elson <el...@pico-systems.com> wrote: > Well, I fired up my old CNC control computer, and was > able to dump all the Linux and EMC tgz files off it > with no trouble. So, I have four EMC files > straight from NIST, from March 24 1999 to > 7 June 2000. A quick scan seems to show that > all the expected files are there. It is a LOT smaller > than the current LinuxCNC source, these tgz files > run 3 - 5 MB each (not sure why they vary so much). > I have some other files labeled Linux-<date> but > they also seem to actually be EMC, but maybe they don't > contain source. > > So, now the question is, what do I do with them? > I could put a couple of the tgz files on my web server > and let anybody download them. I won't put a link on > the web server so the search engine crawlers won't > discover them, otherwise they'd be downloading them > every day to see if they changed. I don't want that!
The search engines are clever and they do look for change but before they download so the index page just needs to be constant I handle up 30k pages a day on an ADSL line here google spots a change and varies its rate http://www.archivist.info/cnc/Screenshot-2.png Dave Caroline ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Emc-developers mailing list Emc-developers@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-developers