[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
No problem. I got started in Linux by learning to install a mail server as a matter of fact. I made the mistake (several times over the years) of joining the official Qmail mailing list and asking a question. They're almost as bad as an embedded processor mailing list I'm on that's run by MIT as far as looking down their noses at people. I think Linux in general would do a lot better if people just answered the damn question instead of having to first prove how much more they know than you do. <sigh> I'll get off my soapbox now. ;)One of the first questions I asked I got that attitude thing from someone who took the time to tell me that I should learn about what I'm doing rather then just ask. He pointed out that he was not going to give me the answer because he wanted me to learn. Funny, I've been building networks using the very latest technology for over 15 years, constantly on the cutting edge and you know, we can't all be pro's at everything out there and sometimes, don't care to be. We just want to get something working by seeing some example of it then learn from there as we have a little more time. Wish people would figure that out.Thanks for being cool about it, I guess I jumped to conclusions when I saw 'huh' and thought it meant something else :).
As for what I meant, I just mean that I did go to your site, I did read and try to get a handle on what the ISO was. From what I could tell, it was either of two things. It appeared to be either a full install of QMT or it could also have been tools which one adds to their QMT install.I get very little input back on any of the scripts/projects I write to be honest. To date there have been 114 successful installs of the QMT-ISO, but I've only gotten 4 emails off-list with any kind of feedback or problem. One of those was to tell me thanks for the hard work which was appreciated. Which site had you gone to? The wiki or my site? Or did you goto qtp.qmailtoaster.com? That's another project we started here (it's run mainly by me and Eric Shubes, but we've been neglecting it lately) that is just add-on tools for your installation. The ISO is in a subdir on that machine just because I have a 3/3 pipe on that machine that's un-metered. Bandwidth still isn't free everywhere so I put the ISO downloads where they will affect me the least financially. If that's the case I'll make a note on qtp.qmailtoaster.com as well as the ISO dir of where to go for the real docs.That's just one guy's input of course.
Thanks.
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