Why Computers Crash!
If a packet hits a pocket on a socket on a port,
and the bus is interrupted at a very last resort,
and the access of the memory makes your floppy disk abort,
then the socket packet pocket has an error to report.
If your cursor finds a menu item followed by a dash,
http://www.bayliner.com/
On 01/26/04 03am, horst wrote:
Sorry to bug this list, but this situation is quiet damaging to us(*),
and I know there are folks on this list who can fix the problem in no
time. (*)us being [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cascade Canoe Club).
We have sent out invitations to a
That's pi-thon:
3.
1415926535 8979323846 2643383279 5028841971 6939937510
5820974944 5923078164 0628620899 8628034825 3421170679
8214808651 3282306647 0938446095 5058223172 5359408128
4811174502 8410270193 8521105559 6446229489 5493038196
4428810975 6659334461 2847564823 3786783165 2712019091
Let me guess, we need to be using the latest version of IE, with all the
safety settings off, and we need to watch a powerpoint(r) show first in
order to take the survey...
--
But I am being nice!
On 12/19/03 01pm, Bob Miller wrote:
Michael Surkan at Microsoft would like to find some Linux
On 12/18/03 12pm, Wayne Scace wrote:
DISCLAIMER: While I do most of my browsing with lynx. IMHO still the
fastest browser on the web, bar NONE!
I prefer elinks myself, because it does a better job IMO at rendering
tables, even though it tests a bit slower than lynx. The fastest
browser
run at various times during the day
and in various order to prove your results? :) I know that if
Mozilla is already open and I bring up a new tab I can have
euglug.org loaded before I get to blink. Of course if you're
counting loading time for the browser too then I'm at a loss.
--- Ralph
Here too, in Cottage Grove.
On 12/12/03 02pm, Ben Barrett wrote:
We're getting some power fluctuations here at work, by the river
roughly across from the UO.
Anyone else?
Ben
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Don't we have an activist list for stuff like this?
On 12/10/03 02pm, Bob Miller wrote:
For a good time...
1. Go to Google. http://www.google.com/
2. Enter two words: miserable failure
3. Click I'm Feeling Lucky
Sorry if you've already seen it...
On 11/26/03 10am, Bob Miller wrote:
Speaking of Buy Nothing Day, anyone have any idea where/who/how
BND is being celebrated in Eugene?
How America celebrates BND: http://s87271508.onlinehome.us/
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On 11/21/03 10am, Cory Petkovsek wrote:
On Thu, Nov 20, 2003 at 08:06:27PM -0800, Dirk Ouellette wrote:
I'm planning to take my Nursing pre-reqs now so when I retire from the
Post office in Oct '06, I'll be ready to go. the following is a
requirement for my first online Math 60 class.
Neat idea; I tried it but it didn't work, the status_format command
doesn't interpret the %fmt command the same as the index_format
command, and even that doesn't update without some keyboard activity as
far as I can tell. How about something silly like this:
ping -i 840 myisp.net /dev/null
Jamie,
Hope your father's ok.
I don't know that much about iptables; there seem to be plenty of tutorials
about it, though. The main thing is to close everything up, then be very
selective about what comes through.
Here's a iptables trick I use home. Sometimes the win98 box does dial-up
I changed mine from the default to opening a new tab, entering all
this on one line in the preferences:
ps x |grep -q '[m]ozilla' mozilla -remote openURL(%s, new-tab)
|| mozilla %s
On 10/08/03 01pm, Bob Miller wrote:
I recently discovered something cool in KDE. Some of you already
know
Works for me using Redhat 7.3:
$mkdir blah
$touch blah/tmp
$tar cvf ./blah
blah/
blah/tmp
$ls blah*
blah.tar
blah:
tmp
$tar t blah.tar
blah/
blah/tmp
$ls -l `which tar`
-rwxr-xr-x2 root root 155240 Apr 9 2002 /bin/tar
$
On 09/24/03 03pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Redhat 7.3:
Tim,
If you're just trying now, beware efn just changed the mail server and it
might not have propagated to your local DNS server. You should be trying
to connect to pop.efn.org, which should resolve to 207.189.190.10
Thanks Larry for helping me understand this!
Ralph
On 09/20/03 10am,
On 09/13/03 09pm, Mr O wrote:
How many are using a UPS on a linux system? What program are you
using to monitor? I have a Belkin UPS hooked up to my serial
port but haven't quite found software for it yet. Hoping for a
little advice before I go about breaking things. I read that if
you send
localhost$ xhost +remotehost
remotehost being added to access control list
localhost$ ssh remotehost
[EMAIL PROTECTED]'s password:
Last login: x
remotehost$ xterm
On 08/15/03 03pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
Does anyone have tips on SSHing and launching X apps on the remote
machine and have
Capslock is useful for SQL; all keys are useful for xmodmap.
SELECT message FROM mail WHERE subject LIKE eug-lug;
On 08/09/03 11am, Ben Barrett wrote:
Yeah that's the worst, when, say caps lock is accidentally enabled while
you enter a new password. Isn't caps-lock outdated? Does anyone make
statements, but it sure
helps the readability thereof
Ben
PS - do you use a custom script to put your mail in your DB, or is it
some nifty package?
On Sat, 9 Aug 2003 11:50:43 -0700
Ralph Zeller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| Capslock is useful for SQL; all keys are useful for xmodmap
Evolution and Mutt peacefully co-exist using MailDir; that's what
I use--Most of the time I use mutt for reading mail. But some of
the time, it's nice to use Evolution for email.
If you want Mozilla mail as well I think you could set up an IMAP
server, which would (theoretically) let you use
Now it's up to the Lego's to keep my kids busy so I can make it
to a eug-lug meeting...
On 07/28/03 12pm, Mike O wrote:
Ralph has made a call for them since he has children. Sorry :)
--- Linux Rocks! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
hh I love legos! I may have to take you up that! if
Rob,
You can look for yourself; something like:
cd ~
cp /boot/initrd-xxx.img ~/whats_this.img.gz
gunzip whats_this.img.gz
mkdir mnt
mount -o loop,ro whats_this.img mnt
ls -laR mnt
Ralph
On 07/18/03 11am, Rob Hudson wrote:
So, since RedHat9 uses ext3, initrd probably has the ext3 module in it
put a link in your mozilla plug-in directory, something like:
cd /usr/local/mozilla/plugins
ln -s /usr/java/j2re1.4.1_02/plugin/i386/ns610/libjavaplugin_oji.so .
delete any other java plugins in your mozilla plug-in directory.
On 06/25/03 02pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
Thanks for the replies. It
Yes. Can you run other java programs? Can you run `java` and `javac`
from your shell?
On 06/25/03 04pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
I've done that. If I check Help-About plugins it doesn't show up
there. Should it?
On 20030625.1636, Ralph Zeller said ...
put a link in your mozilla plug
This one works for reading at least. I haven't tried writing.
http://www.tux.org/pub/people/kent-robotti/looplinux/rip/
On 06/24/03 02pm, Mike O wrote:
Anyone know of a bootable CD that includes NTFS support? Even
read-only would satisfy me since I'm trying to copy off NTFS
onto FAT. From
on the website.
Thanks though. I'll check out the other one later for the heck
of it.
Mr O.
--- Ralph Zeller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This one works for reading at least. I haven't tried writing.
http://www.tux.org/pub/people/kent-robotti/looplinux/rip/
On 06/24/03 02pm, Mike O wrote
On 06/19/03 01pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
I ran into this today and thought it was interesting...
http://starship.python.net/crew/theller/py2exe/
There's also a perl2exe.
http://www.indigostar.com/perl2exe.htm
Anyone ever play with these?
py2exe works great. Except, the binary files can get
you can use it to quickly create gui forms, menus, toolbars,
and grids that work. You can add your own code, and drag it all back
into boa to change the gui stuff.
On 06/19/03 02pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
How is the executable on speed? Does it start up pretty quickly?
On 20030619.1439, Ralph
Rodney,
I hope this is not a dumb answer!
$bunzip2 Gentoo-Sparc64.iso.bz2
Ralph
On 06/09/03 09am, Rodney Mishima wrote:
Hope this does not reveal how dumb I am.
I downloaded a Gentoo Sparc file which is a compressed ISO
It is not the specific name, but the suffix is
I use RedHat; I have it installed on about five PC's. It's easy, it
works, but my uptimes aren't as good as some because of my cheap
hardware and habit of turning off computers when not in use. I use
Mandrake on the kids' computer--the menu's were better organized on
Mandrake, and it came
Maybe try something like:
$x=0; for i in mp3/*; do let x=$x+1; echo $i $xsortlist; done;
$less sortlist #does it look sorted right?
$mkisofs -r -J --sort sortlist -o mymp3s.img mp3/*
On 06/02/03 10am, Dave Wyatt wrote:
I have created a single MP3 music CD of a multi-CD
set. I have tried
Or use a find statement, `find mp3/* -printf %p %TY%Tm%TH%TM%TS\n`
On 06/02/03 01pm, Dave Wyatt wrote:
It didn't quite come out correct, but this gets me in
the right direction. A little tweaking and all should
be good... Thanks.
Dave
--- Ralph Zeller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Maybe
In prior release of KDE:
Control Center -- Look Feel -- Shortcuts -- Navigation -- Walk
through Windows
On 03/26/03 10am, Rob Hudson wrote:
I just installed KDE 3.1.1 via Konstruct (the Garball thing for KDE).
It's installed and I'm playing around with it, customizing things.
The one
Lots of us use mutt, looks like it's time to upgrade:
http://www.mutt.org
Mutt 1.4.1 and 1.5.4 were released on March 19, 2003. These releases both fix
a buffer overflow identified by Core Security Technologies. The only
differences between 1.4 and 1.4.1 are bug fixes. If you are currently using
Rather, How come phpgroupware is broken?
On 03/24/03 12am, Bob Crandell wrote:
How come your messages are empty?
Joseph Carter ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote*:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: 1024D/20F62261F1857A3E79FC44F98FF7D7A3DCF9DAB3
Maybe something's wrong with Joseph's gpg encoding?
On 03/24/03 02am, Bob Crandell wrote:
Broken? Email from Joseph and Klez are about the only ones that show up empty.
What's broken?
Ralph Zeller ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Rather, How come phpgroupware is broken?
On 03/24/03 12am
John,
Nettraverse is usually about three kernel patches behind, so prepare to
compile your own kernel if you're running something recent. I doubt they
have precompiled kernels for gentoo anyway...
It's not that hard to patch a generic kernel for win4lin.
Ralph
On 03/22/03 01am, john fleming
On 03/21/03 11am, Jamie wrote:
Dear jamie:
This is an exciting time for [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On March 18-20 2003 we travel to the Arecibo radio telescope
to re-observe the most promising candidates produced by our search so far.
There is a chance that these new observations will yield
the
Click the Contacts icon. On the grey-bar above the listing of contacts,
select Search, Category is, and select the Category.
As long as we're talking about Evolution, I can't figure out where the font
substitution table is--when I print messages encoded with unusual fonts,
Evo prints in a
If only we had grub. (sorry!)
On 03/04/03 11pm, Mike O wrote:
How about I boot my roomie and we go back to my place :) If only
.
--- Bob Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Tim Howe wrote:
Is there a meeting this week? Today, tomorrow?
This week, the clinic is on Wednesday.
together? Anyone else?
:
: TimH
:
: On Wed, 5 Mar 2003 08:47:33 -0800
:
: Ralph Zeller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
: If only we had grub. (sorry!)
:
: On 03/04/03 11pm, Mike O wrote:
: How about I boot my roomie and we go back to my place :) If only
: .
:
: --- Bob Miller
Neil's suggestion is better, and for clarification I meant to say 'nroff'.
On 03/03/03 04pm, Cory Petkovsek wrote:
Recall a discussion when Dexter left the list about his last email that was
fully left and right justified without additional spaces. Ralph said, How
quickly we forget the
Tim,
I'd use Imagemagick to convert the big pictures so an appropriate sized
thumbnail picture.
Ralph
Something like this (which also converts the files to gif):
---
#!/bin/bash
for i in myBigPictures/*.jpg
do
f=`basename $i`
f=${f%.jpg}
convert -resize 140x140 -colors 16
Here's a link to a 525-page book about Vim:
http://www.newriders.com/books/opl/ebooks/0735710015.html
And since Vim users are always looking for something a little faster,
here are direct links to the book's quick-reference pages:
In mutt, you can add a line in your .muttrc like this:
color underline brightgreen default
which will make Cory's underlined words appear in bright green on a
display that supports color.
On 01/27/03 08pm, Jacob Meuser wrote:
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 05:29:30PM -0800, Cory Petkovsek wrote:
Actually, that should be _I
On 01/27/03 05pm, Cory Petkovsek wrote:
Well for those of you not viewing your mail through a terminal they are
characters that tell the tell the terminal to underline the text.
I had typed: I^H_ to get I_ or an underlined I. ^H is the backspace
character so
My num-pad has decided to be a mouse today. I must have pressed
something that turned my num-pad keys into a mouse driver, which
(for example) makes the insertion point or arrow zoom up if I hold
my finger down on the eight, and down if I hold my finger down on
the two.
I want my regular
if there were accelerators to help
get the cursor across the screen quickly. I hope someone posts some
good documentation links on this feature, er, bug. Ciao!
BenB
On Wed, 2003-01-15 at 10:21, Ralph Zeller wrote:
My num-pad has decided to be a mouse today. I must have pressed
something
nice
when you don't have a mouse.
Garl
-Original Message-
From: Ralph Zeller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2003 11:27 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Eug-lug]Unusual num-pad behavior
It is nice--or, it would be nice, if I knew how to turn
for it?
On Wed, 2003-01-15 at 11:34, Grigsby, Garl wrote:
Ralph,
You can turn this feature on and off by hitting CTRL-SHIFT-NUMLOCK. Works nice
when you don't have a mouse.
Garl
-Original Message-
From: Ralph Zeller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2003 11
This would have been a great mascot for ELUG, with a Northwest theme,
too bad it's already taken:
http://trace.wisc.edu/linux/pics/lars.gif
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http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug
How soon we forget the wonders of troff! This
is how all communications had to prepared back
in the days before we had troff to make all of
our communications and man-pages both left and
right-justified, even when printed by teletype
or other fixed-character device.
On 01/09/03 05pm, Tim
James is right:
$ echo dammit|aspell -l
$
On 01/10/03 06am, Linux Rocks ! wrote:
bubba@bubba:~$ dammit
bash: dammit: command not found
On Friday 10 January 2003 06:02 am, James wrote:
: Not that it matters.. as you have all been so helpful here.. but the
: correct spelling is dammit.
:
:
Each of the topics Cory mentioned in this recent email would be great
topic for a meeting presentation: snmp, certs (in general), vpn, nis,
nfs, ldap, and boot disks. Any volunteers?
In particular, I'd like to figure out how to setup a shared address
book in Evolution. I think you have to
swapoff -a
On 12/31/02 09am, Dexter Graphic wrote:
I just tried copying my partitions one at a time with DMA support turned
on and there were no DMA errors reported. You may recall that when I copied
the entire drive at once (dd if=/dev/hda of=/dev/hdb bs=1k) with DMA turned
on I got DMA
On 12/24/02 06am, Dexter Graphic wrote:
I will try it again tonight before bedtime. I figure it will take several
hours to duplicate my 40 GB drive. Which block size do you think I should
use to improve the speed? Is bigger better?
It should take 1-2 hours, if you have all
The first three are needed for an install. The last two are sources.
There is also another iso for extra documentation.
You can see which rpm's are on them with `ls /mnt/cdrom/Redhat/RPMS`
On 12/21/02 09pm, Rob Hudson wrote:
I'm downloading the RedHat 8 ISOs for an installation for a friend.
On 12/17/02 02am, Joseph Carter wrote:
You can use whatever editor you prefer for writing your mail. I guess you
already have a favorite? I use vim, which works for me but is certainly
not for the faint of heart. Debian now uses nano as its default editor
because of its onscreen commands
Q: How do you read your .muttrc configuration file from mutt?
A: You can enter the command 'source .muttrc' or define a macro to
do it, like:
macro generic f8 \
enter-command'source .muttrc'enter \
'Re-read .muttrc'
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[EMAIL
I haven't had problems with tables. If you have, please post a bug
report to http://www.openoffice.org/issues/query.cgi
On 11/19/02 11am, Joseph Carter wrote:
On Tue, Nov 19, 2002 at 09:40:12AM -0800, Ralph Zeller wrote:
Have you tried OpenOffice.org? Or, depending on specifically what
cat /proc/version
On 11/18/02 10am, Bryan Kane wrote:
Quick question: What command will state the current
kernel version one is using (like 'pwd' tells the
current working directory). I saw it at one time, but
don't remember.
___
Eug-LUG mailing
On 11/06/02 04pm, Dexter Graphic wrote:
On Wed, 2002-11-06 at 15:30, Mike O wrote:
gunzip filename.gz
tar -xzvf filename.tar.gz
couldn't resist.
The gunzip worked but it deleted the original file.Is there some way to
stop it from doing this?
Next time, just use:
tar xzvf
And rdate gets the time from another computer that's setup as a time server.
On 11/06/02 05pm, Cory Petkovsek wrote:
date prints the os's clock
hwclock prints the hardware's clock
you can set one from the other with
hwclock --hctosys or hwclock --systohc
If you want your system in UTC/GMT
Or you could try a really scary costume:
http://images.ucomics.com/comics/ft/2002/ft021031.gif
On 10/31/02 08am, Larry Price wrote:
On Thu, 31 Oct 2002, Mike O wrote:
Will there be a meeting tonight?
Yes
Do we dress up so
we're not so ugly?
If YOU want to wear a pink tutu and
Sid is always unstable.
---
FYI, here's a graph posted to debian-users showing how the debian releases
are organized.
sid---
\ \
\ \
\ === etch
\
Hey, there are a few of us here who haven't figured out how to
configure every program ourselves yet.
On (10/16/02 05:08), Joseph Carter wrote:
On Tue, Oct 15, 2002 at 09:28:08AM -0700, Ralph Zeller wrote:
Is it almost time for a road trip, anyone?
I wonder how many RH guys we can kill
Is it almost time for a road trip, anyone?
- Forwarded message from Paul Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
To: plug [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Paul Nelson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 14 Oct 2002 17:27:26 -0700
Subject: [PLUG] Red Hat Road Tour coming to Portland
Should I have put free beer in
Bob,
Elegant solution.
The solving concept seems similar to linear programming. You may also be
interested in 'pysimplex' at http://www.pythonpros.com/arw/pysimplex/
Pysimplex tries to be an engine to solve this general genre of problems.
The tricky part is to figure out how to represent the
Horst,
I didn't think we needed to encourage cross-posting. ;)
Ralph
Potential topics:
-latex
-printing
-email clients compared
-Linux in a SOHO
-conferencing
-programming language comparisons
-gimp/drawing
-mysql/php
-interoperability w/other os's
-kernel development trends
-cvs
-apache
There's an analysis of the topic at developerworks:
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-pycon?t=grl,l=252,p=iterators
On (10/04/02 08:41), Bob Miller wrote:
Those of you who were at the clinic last night know that I
was asking for help on a weird limitation of Python.
The
I'm trying to get sendmail setup (under RedHat for now) and I'm having
a problem with the X-Authentication warning when I'm sending from a
transient host. Is there something in my setup that I can change that
prevents the warning from showing up in my emails, or do I have to fix
my DNS settings?
iptables
On (10/04/02 10:21), Rob Hudson wrote:
I'm setting up a firewall/gateway at my house.
What should I use? IPchains? What's the other option? Isn't there a
standard packet filter for 2.2 and a different one for 2.4? I'm in the
kernel config for 2.4.19 right now and don't see
Here's an well-commented example of iptables setup, that includes info
about loading modules:
http://www.ecst.csuchico.edu/~dranch/LINUX/ipmasq/examples/rc.firewall-2.4
On (10/04/02 10:33), Ralph Zeller wrote:
iptables
On (10/04/02 10:21), Rob Hudson wrote:
I'm setting up a firewall
From: Frederick Noronha [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.announce
Subject: COMMENT: Ten ways to promote communication within a LUG...
Date: 27 Sep 2002 01:20:28 GMT
Ten ways to promote communication within a LUG:
***
kuickshow
At 07:57 AM 8/27/02 Bob Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've used xv for 15 years to view images of all sorts. It's very
effective at what it does, which is show one picture, step through a
bunch of pictures, or do minor editing (cropping, gamma correction,
etc). It doesn't add any
Or you might be running ipchains. On a RedHat system, you would try
/etc/init.d/ipchains stop and /etc/init.d/iptables stop, or use
the setup command for automated firewall configuration. I think
there is a gui tool in Mandrake to change firewall settings.
Ralph
At 11:22 PM 7/30/02 Bob Miller
Apologies in advance for this commercial message--it's only related
to Linux in that I've been thinking about buying a laptop to bring to
EugLug meetings...
I think I'm going to pass up on buying a laptop from a friend of mine,
but it seems like such a good deal that I thought I'd let you know:
I prefer Wednesdays too. I've got a conflict most of the summer on
Thursday night.
At 02:46 PM 6/20/02 Horst wrote:
I prefer Wednesdays, because of conflicts with other activities. In
addition, people could walk from the TechBrew (also We.) straight to EFN.
EFN is the best location so far. In
There is a section in the man-page about remapping keys in your .screenrc
file for emacs users.
There is also a good summary statement about screen near the end of the
man-page: A wierd imagination is most useful to gain full advantage of
all the features.
e-- v++
At 09:49 PM 6/4/02 Larry
Rob,
I think you can use the 'detach' and 'attach' of 'screen' to do what
you are trying to do. man screen
Ralph
At 09:57 AM 6/4/02 Rob Hudson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was thinking it would be nice to regain control of a process by
using the PID? Not sure if that's possible or not.
One
Try something like:
dd if=/dev/zero of=mybigfile bs=1024k count=300
At 10:03 PM 5/9/02 Grigsby, Garl [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bob,
First thanks for the tool. I have been wanting to play around with
large files on Linux, but have not wanted to deal with 3 Gb files...
Second it would seem
You can use wget options, like --convert-links, --base-url, and
force-html.
At 09:54 AM 4/29/02 Mark Bigler [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 29 April 2002 09:40, Bob Miller wrote:
So, who knows of a tool that will scan a directory of files (or even
a single file) and change all href and
Hey Tim, we have most of those features even on a text-terminal using 'screen'!
At 05:17 PM 4/28/02 Timothy Bolz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I found this on freshmeat and thought it was the greatest idea. A terminal
with Tabs. Instead of having four terminal windows open you can have one and
Tim,
Other similar tricks--
--With win4lin running, one of the x sessions can be a win98 session--So
then you Ctrl + Alt + F9 and you're running windows fullscreen.
--You launch vncserver using display :1. Then connect to it fullscreen
with vncviewer, locally or from anywhere. Your session
Team Ranking: 23
At 10:11 PM 3/27/02 Bob Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ralph Zeller wrote:
I see we moved up a notch to Team #24:
http://folding.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/teampage?q=668
It pays to pick your battles. I bet we wouldn't have done this well
in [EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
Bob Miller
Tim,
If performance (speed) is not a factor then here's something to try: There
is a single-floppy linux distribution that only runs a vnc-viewer from a
floppy. There's no x-server, it just uses vnc and svgalib. I set it up
once a long time ago, and it wasn't difficult. It should run just
I see we moved up a notch to Team #24:
http://folding.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/teampage?q=668
EFN is a business?? I thought it was a non-profit organization. I'm
not knocking efn, I think efn provides a great service to the community.
At 01:02 PM 3/23/02 Seth Cohn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
efn's price is slightly higher I believe, but you
are supporting local business, getting much
Thanks, Larry, that works. a language feature would not be worthy of the
name 'class' without supporting inheritance.
At 11:49 AM 3/11/02 Larry Price [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 11 Mar 2002, Ralph Zeller wrote:
KBob's script works fine in python2.2, but how do you make work
I'm glad you're the president of this organization and not the
treasurer. ;
On Sat, 9 Mar 2002, Bob Miller wrote:
* 28th by the Folding@home server's numbering, in which the top team
is #2 and the We are all individuals team is #1. We're 27th by
Chris Allen's numbering, which discounts
Bob,
I'm new to Python, too. I was wondering if there is a way to
inherit some of the list properties like min, max, len, etc
rather than redefine them? If it's possible it could save
25 lines of code at least.
Another newbie question--rather than parse the date/time yourself,
would it
ifruit-of-the-loom?
At 11:36 PM 2/25/02 Sean Reifschneider [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2002 at 04:53:57PM -0800, Tim Howe wrote:
Tim is amused.
Sean wants to know where HE can get some. :-)
Sean
--
Why would I want to be a Doctor, when I could be a MASTER?
Sean Reifschneider,
I just started folding. It's fun to see who's participating at
http://folding.stanford.edu/cgi-bin/teampage?q=668
My feeble 486/100 ran all night and completed 1/100 of a work unit.
At 02:41 PM 2/14/02 Rob Hudson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've got my little p200 laptop folding, and finally
Great links! By the way, did anyone send a message to RMS telling
him that he should refer to Word as Microsoft/Word ?
At 12:19 PM 2/6/02 Dexter Graphic [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Great references, Bob! Thanks, I really enjoyed them. Here
are two more word-processor related links I found.
Jamie,
OpenBSD must support some kind of compressed filesystem (remember Stacker?)
Ralph
At 03:16 PM 1/25/2002 Jamie wrote:
All in all OpenBSD seems ok I wish I had a bigger disk so I could do more
stuff though I may write some scripts to pkg_add apps and pgk_del apps
for different
You need to build your game room farther from your office. Try it at
about 800 feet. If that doesn't work, try building it 900 feet away
or so. By altering the environment around the acoustic characteristics
of your current hardware and icecast's buffer settings, you should be
able to adjust
Here's an interesting article by Temple Grandin that talks briefly about
Linux and educating gifted kids in use of computers.
Temple Grandin has a Ph.D. in animal science from the University of Illinois
and has designed one third of all of the livestock handling facilities in
the United States
Something is very wrong, like conflicting DNS or inability to satisfy
samba's name resolution, or a problem with authentication. Samba should
be just about as fast as ftp.
There are a couple of different ways to solve the resolution and
authentication problems depending on the size (and
It might be useful to run lsof to see which files are causing the problem,
or if someone is opening a bunch of really big files?
At 05:12 PM 12/20/2001 Bob Crandell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a client with a Linux server running Samba. Something is
filling up memory and the swap space.
could tell, this time, Samba 2.2.2
is the
bad guy. I copied a directory with about 7,000 files worth maybe 100M.
The server
ran out of memory before the copy was done. I had to cancel it and reboot the
server in order to finish.
Now I'm off to research Samba problems.
Thanks
Ralph Zeller ([EMAIL
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