[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Would he be able to shape RTP somehow on its Type of Server (TOS)
designation of 0xba (dec 184)???
--On Thursday, September 11, 2008 11:18 AM -0500 Steven S.
Critchfield
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Chris McQuistion [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Bill
I like Curt's point. We all have something to teach and we all have
something to learn. Linux, in general, and our user group, as well, is
designed to be something that everyone can participate in, from both a
learning and teaching perspective.
I'll admit that most of last week's presentation
It is technically still available, but we have a strong candidate that
we are considering.
Chris
ware wrote:
Hey! Just now seeing this post and I was curious if the position is
still available? Please let me know, thanks!
-Jay
On Wed, Sep 10, 2008 at 12:29 PM, Chris McQuistion
[EMAIL
Do you know about the big DNS vulnerability that was recently unveiled?
It required that ISP's update their DNS servers or be vulnerable to some
very serious hijacking.
I use OpenDNS's servers. They are kept up to date and offer some nice
little features like DNS name correction (say you
What about the Hacker Consortium's place?
Do they have the room for a meeting our size?
Chris
Andrew Farnsworth wrote:
We just need to find a rich sponsor who will donate a piece of land and
a building big enough to act as a meeting room, training room, server
room, etc :-)
Andy
Bucky
I've used VMWare, in the past, and I currently use Virtual Iron, because it
has fairly simple administration and is far cheaper than VMWare, if you want
the bells and whistles.
The big reasons to use VMWare or Virtual Iron (in my opinion) is the nice
gui administration tools and their ability to
I would MUCH prefer an earlier start time, for the reasons you've suggested.
Chris
John F. Eldredge wrote:
Kevin Eldridge wrote:
Hello NLUG,
It has been said by quite a a few members at the meetings that 7pm is
too late of a start time. This is because the meetings usually last
until
Wow. You commute all the way from Hoptown? That's about 1.5-2 hours
each way, isn't it? Don't they have a LUG in Clarksville or something?
Don Delp wrote:
If I get a vote, I'll take 6pm. I still might not be able to make it
often, but it'll get me back to Hopkinsville a lot earlier at
I spent some time with Gentoo, too. Gentoo is similar to Linux from
Scratch, in that you have to build everything.
I spent more time, just trying to do the basic stuff on Gentoo, then I ever
spent with any other distro. Dozens and dozens and dozens of hours, just
trying to get a decent, working
Realized problem was that I did NOT have a hot-spare associated with that
array (as I thought) so I could NOT afford to have 3 drives fail. I could
only afford to have 2 drives fail...
I'm hosed...
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are
I would stick with Comcast. Their service is MUCH faster than DSL.
Here is the trick to getting a lower bill. I just did this a couple months
ago.
Call Comcast and ask for the customer retention dept. They will try to
argue with you and see if they can help you with your problem. Stick to
cable service up to 16 mbps (and higher, I've heard.)
Chris
On Wed, Feb 4, 2009 at 7:03 AM, Perkins, Jerry je...@jperkins.us wrote:
Chris McQuistion wrote:
I would stick with Comcast. Their service is MUCH faster than DSL.
It has been my experience that DSL is faster. This is from 6
Ditto for me. I can't make it tonight, but I am VERY interested in the
topic.
Chris
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 1:40 PM, Jim Peterson jim.sokytec...@gmail.comwrote:
I'm not going to be able to make it in, and I'd really like to be there
due to subject matter. Unfortunately, I have prior
I have some PC133 SO-DIMMS at the office. I'll check the capacity in a
little while. I think they are all 256 MB sticks pulled from old
Powerbooks, when they were upgraded. I'll drop you a line, when I've
checked them out and you can have a pair for free, if you'll come pick them
up.
Chris
On
, 2009 at 8:58 AM, Bucky 'Igneous' Wolfe
pmigne...@gmail.comwrote:
On Mon, Feb 16, 2009 at 08:47:12AM -0600, Chris McQuistion wrote:
I have some PC133 SO-DIMMS at the office. I'll check the capacity in
a
little while. I think they are all 256 MB sticks pulled from old
Powerbooks
I might be able to make it, but it will probably be 6:30-6:45.
Chris
On Sat, Feb 28, 2009 at 5:34 PM, Kevin Eldridge crash...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello NLUG,
We have not had a BP in quite some time, so let's have one and enjoy
some BP at a fairly famous pizza place downtown, Mellow Mushroom,
I could do a brief presentation on Clarkconnect, our Linux
file/email/ftp/web server that we use a lot, here at work. I could also
talk briefly about iSCSI distributions I've used and the pluses and minuses
of them (Openfiler and NexentaStor.)
I'd love to do a presentation on the super router I'm
into a thoroughbred,
but if you spend enough time and money,
you sure can make a mighty fast pig
On Wed, Mar 4, 2009 at 11:46 AM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
I could do a brief presentation on Clarkconnect, our Linux
file/email/ftp/web server that we use a lot, here at work
One thought is that you could continue to use FTP, but just email your
clients with direct links, including
ftp://username:passw...@host.com/somefolder/somefile. That makes it easy
for them because all they have to do is click the link you sent them.
Of course, I don't the details of your setup
We used to use some little homebrew project called bfd (brute force
detection) that would basically check the logs every 10 minutes, see if
there were a lot of invalid logins from a particular IP and then
automatically create a firewall rule to drop all packets from that IP. This
would remain in
Don't forget that tonight's NLUG meeting starts at 6:00 PM.
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
NLUG group.
To post to this group, send email to nlug-talk@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group,
I've uploaded the Powerpoint from last night's discussion of Virtualization
and iSCSI to the website, for anyone interested.
Chris
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
NLUG group.
To post to this group,
You may want to consider a typical consumer grade router, like a Linksys,
but use one of the open-source alternative firmwares, like DD-WRT or Tomato.
I've used both extensively. DD-WRT has more functionality, but is harder
to use and (in some cases) less stable. Tomato is has a very good user
I have to agree with Kevin, whole-heartedly. I've seen this situation play
out over and over, specifically with trying to get someone with (applicable)
Linux experience. Solaris experience is even more rare.
One thing that I do lover about Solaris, however, is the ZFS filesystem.
That rocks,
I think you should go with Microsoft Server 2008. I think their having a
sale, since it is April 1st.
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 6:47 AM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.com wrote:
Ok, I'll be the first to say it.. I would change the Operating System.
I would also consider moving up to 1 Tb
Resistance is futile...
On Wed, Apr 1, 2009 at 2:28 PM, crash...@gmail.com wrote:
We control your internets. We control your televisions. We control your
radios.
Please remain calm as we take your home, vehicle, life from you. Do not
resist. Do not struggle.
The message was paid for by
I'll chime in with another vote for DBAN. The only thing I have to add is
that DBAN (stable) supports most, but not all controllers. I have a second
CD with DBAN beta that seems to support other (AHCI) controllers. Between
the two of those CD's, I don't have any problem wiping drives. I
wrote:
Interesting... I didn't know IDE did hot swap.
On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 10:05 AM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
I'll chime in with another vote for DBAN. The only thing I have to add is
that DBAN (stable) supports most, but not all controllers. I have a second
CD
Howard, why are you using WEP? WEP is totally broken and can now be cracked
within 60 seconds! Please, please, please use WPA.
In this installation, if they need two wireless networks, why not just set
up one with WPA encryption called Private_Network and another one using no
encryption (on a
Has anyone offered to do a presentation at tomorrow's NLUG meeting?
If not, anyone got any ideas for presentations or discussions?
Chris
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
NLUG group.
To post to this
I'm a big fan of the Linksys and Buffalo routers that are compatible with
the open source firmware. We used these all over our campus (at Watkins
College) for our campus-wide wireless network. We use the Tomato firmware
(a few less features, but stable and simple to set up) and have our whole,
I like to install Windows Defender on every Windows machine, first of all.
It is actually pretty good and is self-updating and runs tests
automatically on a regular schedule. Next, I usually install Spyware
Blaster which performs spyware immunization of the machine and various
browsers installed
, 2009 at 2:05 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.edu wrote:
I like to install Windows Defender on every Windows machine, first
of all.
It is actually pretty good and is self-updating and runs tests
automatically on a regular schedule. Next, I usually install Spyware
Blaster which
My 2 cents on this topic:
If you can do this small scale (and this may not apply to your situation)
get a Kill-A-Watt and hook up each of your devices through it. It will
tell you EXACTLY how may watts/amps/etc each device is actually pulling from
the wall. You can test different devices under
I think there are some minimalist distributions, a la Puppy Linux and
Knoppix that can be installed on a small USB/Flash drive and can be
customized to your needs. That might be a little easier way to go. You
will be able to change hardware platforms at will and you won't have to
build it from
I've started to see them for sale on Newegg and Amazon just in the past
month or two.
Chris
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 2:47 PM, Wayne Fay wayne...@gmail.com wrote:
The Buffalo routers seem to have more transmission power, but they are
sometimes a bit more expensive. You can get the Linksys
We're having a recycling event at Watkins, next week on May 21 and 22.
The Green Earth Computer Recycling folks will be here with a few tables and
such collecting recyclables including computers, monitors, servers,
printers, copiers, TVs (limit 1), wires, cell phones, batteries, etc. on
those
I'm interested in an Install Fest. I think I can get approval to use some
rooms, here at Watkins. I don't know how large to expect the event, but I
can get 3 or more room that will handle about 20 people computers each.
(Each room has Wifi and a projector, as well.)
I assume we would hold this
in!
Jim Peterson
Technology Coordinator
Goodnight Memorial Library
203 S. Main St.
Franklin, KY 42134
(270) 586-8397
www.gmpl.org
Library Technology Blog http://jimmythegeek.livejournal.com
On Mon, 2009-05-18 at 16:55 -0500, Jonathan Moore wrote:
On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 4:51 PM, Chris
I've got a couple options.
Option 1 - Just buy IP phones and use those. Have all of them talk to the
SIP provider and be done with it.
Option 2 - Buy a VoIP appliance (there are lots of different ones) with
enough analog jacks for your phones (or maybe a mix of analog and digital
phones) and
Good point. Something Russ mentioned to me off-list, was Myth TV. There
seems to be a lot of interest in it and a lot of people that would love some
hands-on help getting it set up. Perhaps a targeted kind of install fest,
like a MythTV Install Fest (as just one example) would be a good idea?
Very interesting. I'm checking this out today!
Chris
On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 11:50 PM, Alex Smith (K4RNT) shadowhun...@gmail.com
wrote:
A great tool for installfests would be the Ultimate Deployment Appliance, a
free VMware appliance that has everything you need for PXE booting
unattended
I think we've got enough bandwidth for Uustream or Stickam. It isn't
two way conferencing, just unidirectional broadcasting. The viewers
could chat back on IRC.
Chris
Sent from my iPhone
On May 19, 2009, at 10:26 PM, sophri...@gmail.com wrote:
On May 19, 2009, at 10:01 PM, Howard
Watkins
College of
Art Design.
Know where the BBQ is; what time is the planning meeting. I have
another meeting at 2000 on Elm Hill Pike.
Chris McQuistion and Curt Lundgren are going to allow us
to use 2 - 3 classrooms for this event.
They are very kind to offer their facility and time
*Please do not worry, it will take that long to install Linux on your
computer.*
*I think you meant Please do not worry, it will NOT take that long to
install Linux on your computer.*
*
*
*
*
*
*
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 10:30 PM, Kevin Eldridge crash...@gmail.com wrote:
Hello NLUG,
We have
I just threw my multimeter on the power led connector on my motherboard and
it measured 5V DC.
Chris
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 3:21 PM, ./aal aalh...@gmail.com wrote:
any idea where one might find that?
or if there is a standard level they all meet
I have a case with no hdd led on it, but
wrote:
thanks, but what is the power rating(watts)
or maxCurrent
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 3:43 PM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
I just threw my multimeter on the power led connector on my motherboard
and it measured 5V DC.
Chris
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 3:21 PM, ./aal aalh
percentage points.
Chris
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 6:26 PM, Greg Donald gdon...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 4:34 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.edu wrote:
If you are a super-performance enthusiast with money to burn, then yes,
overclocked memory is worth the extra cost
I'm not a roll-your-own firewall kind of guy. I generally find a
distribution that is already tailored to my needs and go from there.
Over the years, I've used MANY different Linux-based firewall distros and a
couple BSD-based firewall distros. In my experience, the BSD-based systems
require
*you can swat flies with a shotgun, but a flyswatter is better you can
spread spackling with a flyswatter, but a spackle knife is better*
you can kill zombies with a spackle knife, but a shotgun is better.
-- Forwarded message --
From: ./aal aalh...@gmail.com
LOL!
Actually, I really like Windows 7, too. It's no Linux, of course
(pardon me, while I put on my flame-proof jacket...)
On Thu, Jun 18, 2009 at 12:01 PM, Chris Faulkner cfaulkne...@gmail.comwrote:
Flame me if you like but I really like Windows 7 so far...lol
Just wanted to send out a reminder about the Linux InstallFest tomorrow
(Saturday, June 20) at Watkins College.
More details (and directions) at the NLUG website: http://nlug.wikispot.org/
If you're bringing a desktop computer, please remember to bring a mouse,
keyboard, ethernet cable, power
I've been thinking about our InstallFest this last weekend and what worked
well and what we can learn from the event and maybe do better next time.
I've been passing this around the IRC channel for a little while and this is
what I've got so far:
- I think we need to do a better job of
Yes on both counts. For ease of use, just use the same SSID on all access
points, but use different channels, where possible. Try to just use Channel
1, 6, and 11, as those are the so-called clear channels. If you have some
close neighbors using any of those channels, then avoid them.
Chris
On
Sent from my iPhone
On Jul 15, 2009, at 9:54 AM, Greg Jones ci...@yahoo.com wrote:
My first question is what kind of liquid latex? Plaza Art carries a
variety of liquid latex for molding and casting and they do have it
in a gallon (I think it was $45ish a gallon). Those are from
Very nice read. I have to agree with Linus entirely that Microsoft Hatred
really is a disease. To be honest, blind Microsoft hatred and
unproductive/unnecessary Microsoft-bashing are the two things that really
put me off of the Linux community at times.
Is Linux a better option for many, many
Blu Ray (movies) won't play under Linux. It has a bunch of DRM wrapped
around it and the only OS that can play Blu Ray movies (right now) is
Windows. Mac OS X can't even do it, yet.
Chris
On Mon, Aug 3, 2009 at 10:01 AM, Jim_Peterson jim.sokytec...@gmail.comwrote:
My brother is wanting to
There are some more Android phones coming out in the next few months. If I
weren't hopelessly in love with my iPhone, I'd get an Androd, just not the
G1. It has terrible battery life.
Chris
On Fri, Aug 28, 2009 at 12:23 PM, Michael Schultheiss schul...@gmail.comwrote:
JMJ wrote:
Who's
The new flyer looks great!
Thanks!
Chris
On Aug 30, 2009, at 10:46 AM, Curt Lundgren verif...@gmail.com wrote:
The flyer for the September LinuxFest at Watkins College is available:
http://www.curtlundgren.com/linuxfest_sept09_flyer.pdf (150k)
If the PDF doesn't work for you, here's a
Resistance is futile...
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 3, 2009, at 6:20 PM, JMJ roadr...@gmail.com wrote:
Ken Barber wrote:
Two words: Macbook Pro.
Sent from my iPhone
You've obviously been assimilated. LOL
JMJ
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this
7200 RPM *IS* worth it, in almost every case.
Chris
On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 2:32 PM, JMJ roadr...@gmail.com wrote:
Paul Boniol wrote:
Long term, other than having more to lug and keep up with I agree another
laptop would be your best option given that the company laptop is a
lease.
Wondering if anyone out there on the list might be able to shed some light
on a problem I'm having with VMware ESX.
First, the background...
We are currently running what we call the Super Router, which is a CentOS
5 system with VMware Server installed (the free server version.) The system
has 3
, but it can't ping out
to the gateway or any computer on the other side of the Untangle server and
no host outside can ping in to the Windows host, either?
Chris
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:25 PM, Jonathan Moore supermegat...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:10 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:31 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.eduwrote:
That makes total sense. It should work and I tried doing that (creating a
virtual switch with no actual adapter attached and connecting both VM's to
that switch.)
The strange thing is that ~some~ things sort
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 3:06 PM, Jonathan Moore supermegat...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:31 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.edu wrote:
That makes total sense. It should work and I tried doing that (creating
a
virtual switch with no actual adapter attached and connecting
they are
plugged into would have those VLANs configured so it could pass data from
one host to another on any VLAN if necessary.
Chris
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 3:21 PM, Jonathan Moore supermegat...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Sep 10, 2009 at 2:34 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.edu wrote
Just wanted to send out a reminder about the Linux Fest tomorrow, from 10-5
at Watkins College of Art, Design Film. There are directions and more
details at the site (www.nlug.org).
I also wanted to throw out a request for a couple volunteers to help set up
and/or tear down. If you are
Well that's a problem. Who is responsible for the web site?
Chris
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 18, 2009, at 12:08 PM, Justin W Elam justin.w.e...@gmail.com
wrote:
the www.nlug.org domain name has expired
please renew at your earliest conveinence
cheers
justin
--
Just wanted to send out a reminder about the Linux Fest tomorrow, from 10-5
at Watkins College of Art, Design Film. There are directions and more
details at the site http://nlug.wikispot.org/.
I also wanted to throw out a request for a couple volunteers to help set up
and/or tear down. If you
. Would
someone mind feeding me for my time? Food and some Mountain Dew
perhaps would be all that I'd ask for my time. :)
On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 13:26, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
Would you like to present on it?
Chris
On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 1:17 PM, Alex Smith (K4RNT
If you have any topics that you'd like to see demonstrated at the Install
Fest (or would like to do the demonstration), please chime in.. There are
some pages on there already for recommend a presenter and Brainstorm
ideas for presentations. You can edit the website directly, with your
ideas,
I've got ISO's here for CentOS, Fedora Core 11, Linux Mint, Openfiler,
OpenSolaris, pfSense, Ubuntu, and Untangle.
Chris
On Fri, Sep 18, 2009 at 2:06 PM, Howard White hwh...@vcch.com wrote:
Alex Smith (K4RNT) wrote:
Anyone who wants a distribution put up on the demo appliance PLEASE
BRING
It is a very limited, stripped down Linux with only preinstalled apps,
no customization. A lot of desktop motherboards have this capability.
Chris
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 30, 2009, at 1:52 PM, Russ Crawford russ.m.crawf...@gmail.com
wrote:
I think the new Intel Core i5 systems are the sweet spot.
Chris
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 18, 2009, at 4:12 PM, Jack j...@coats.org wrote:
What is the latest high end desktop or low end gaming system config
around that is near the
knee in the curve between price and performance?
My
I use Tomato and love it, but it doesn't have any captive portal
functionality, if you're looking for that.
Chris
On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 2:23 PM, Wayne Fay wayne...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks Don! I'm looking into DD-WRT now, it looks like it might be a bit
nicer than OpenWRT
I use
I'm a big fan of Gparted for projects like this. You can very easily and
quickly resize that second partition to be smaller, then resize the first
partition to be larger. One boot and you can do it all from there.
A (we need a bigger hammer) approach is the Windows Ultimate Boot CD, which
is a
Yep. Dec 19th is the plan for the next Install-Fest.
Chris
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 1, 2009, at 1:32 PM, Howard hwh...@vcch.com wrote:
Just a quick note to report we had great traffic Friday and Saturday
at
our InstallFest table in the phreakNIC vendor area. We did more
installs and
Thought you all might find this interesting, if you haven't seen it
already. It's a comprehensive user manual for Google Wave. From what I've
heard, Google Wave is really confusing for newcomers, so perhaps this might
help.
www.completewaveguide.com
Chris
On Wed, Nov 4, 2009 at 2:37 PM,
The i5 series is Intel's newest chip and socket so I wouldn't buy into an
older socket, if I were building a system today. Additionally, the
performance of i5 is better, in most cases, and future i5 chips will be even
faster.
Chris
On Sun, Nov 8, 2009 at 9:39 AM, Mark J. Bailey m...@jobsoft.com
home screen so I can access it with one click.
So it's not ideal, but if you absolutely need to show the google voice
number it works.
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 10:59 AM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.edu wrote:
It does? I haven't been able to find one. Can you post the name of the
app
I know that older versions of VMware server would let you do that, but they
removed that ability in more recent versions.
You can user vmware's free converter to convert an OS off a physical drive
into an image file, though. I've done this a few times to do P2V
conversions. I even used it to
To give more detail, I think what you're asking about is what VMware calls
raw device mappings. You can do this under certain conditions on ESX and
ESXi but you cannot do this on VMware Server.
Chris
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 1:37 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist...@watkins.eduwrote:
I know
Why don't you just keep doing that? Is the new laptop not a Mac?
Chris
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 1:48 PM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.comwrote:
Thanks everyone,
Yes, what I am looking at doing is buying a new computer with OS
installed and then, before ever booting it, put in a blank
* several = 8+ TB of physical disk space.
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 2:50 PM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
Why don't you just keep doing that? Is the new laptop not a Mac?
Chris
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 1:48 PM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.comwrote:
Thanks everyone,
Yes
Well if Windows comes preinstalled on one drive, you could always just leave
that drive alone and install your other OS's on other drives.
Chris
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 2:26 PM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 3:11 PM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist
I did it with the beta version of Windows 7 and Ubuntu, I believe. No
problems at all, just installed Windows first and Ubuntu second.
Chris
On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 3:14 PM, Howard White hwh...@vcch.com wrote:
Chris McQuistion wrote:
Well if Windows comes preinstalled on one drive, you
I've got a really old P4 Williamette system around here with 1.5 GHz P4 and
~384 MB PC100 SDRAM (not sure about the exact amount, it might be 512 MB.)
If you're interested, let me know and I'll wipe the drive.
Chris
On Fri, Nov 20, 2009 at 12:35 PM, Chris Faulkner cfaulkne...@gmail.comwrote:
The Pentium D's and some of the really low end Core 2's do not have hardware
virtualization on the chip. Intel calls this Intel VT, AMD calls it AMD-V.
There are some programs that do software (para) virtualization and don't
require this built into the CPU, but most virtualization software
I've been using RapidSSL for several years and have no complaints. Even
when I've screwed up the certificate generation, they have been pretty good
about helping out.
Chris
On Mon, Nov 23, 2009 at 2:03 PM, Mark J. Bailey m...@jobsoft.com wrote:
In particular, GoDaddy and/or Comodo? If not
I've used it with DD-WRT and Tomato firmware.
What are you trying to achieve? Specifically, do you need to extend a
wireless network with wireless access point to access point communication or
do you have the capability of running ethernet to each WAP?
Chris
On Tue, Nov 24, 2009 at 12:12 PM,
as experience with that, please speak up as
well!! Thanks ;)
Karl
*From:* Chris McQuistion [mailto:cmcquist...@watkins.edu]
*Sent:* Tuesday, November 24, 2009 12:15 PM
*To:* nlug-talk@googlegroups.com
*Subject:* Re: [nlug] Wireless distribution system or other wireless mesh
According to all I've heard, we are NOT having a regular Tuesday meeting
this month.
We are having a Linux Fest at Watkins this Saturday from 10 to 4, but no
regular meeting this month. (This has been posted to the NLUG site.)
There is some conflicting information on the mailing list,
Could I ask a couple people to volunteer to come out to Watkins for the
Linux Fest a little early, this Saturday, to help set up tables and such? I
think the building opens at 9:30 and the event starts at 10. We probably
only need a few helpers (2 or 3 is probably enough.)
Thanks,
Chris
--
I've got several Untangle servers at work and have been using it for
years. I love it, but it dies require some resources to run well. I
use a lot of modules and it takes at least 768 Mab of RAM to run well
for me.
What kind of hardware are you using?
Chris
On Sunday, December 13, 2009, Steven
Prichard
gibsonprich...@gmail.com wrote:
I've got it on a box with a Sempron 1800 /768mb ram/ 20gb hdd with
only a few modules. The nics are 1 onboard and a cheapie no-name nic.
Should I run it on something beefier?
Gibson Prichard
On Dec 13, 2009, at 2:11 PM, Chris McQuistion
cmcquist
You can run that command in lower case. Case doesn't really matter on
Windows. They just put it in uppercase in the documentation so you know
that it is a command to run.
Chris
On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 6:29 PM, Greg Donald gdon...@gmail.com wrote:
On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 6:15 PM, Howard
Curt Lundgren and I are in the process of migrating everyone at
Watkins to Google Apps. We love it. It took a whe to figure everything
out but we have been doing a phased migration for the past couple
weeks without any problems.
I can give you more specific information and advice if you like,
and the one's we're
using. (We use the desktop app for Outlook users, because it also grabs
their contacts and calendars and local folder emails.)
Chris
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 1:13 PM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist
version has a max mailbox size of 25 GB/user, compared to 7.25 GB/user for
the other versions.
Chris
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 1:48 PM, Andrew Farnsworth farn...@gmail.comwrote:
On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 2:41 PM, Chris McQuistion cmcquist...@watkins.edu
wrote:
You're exactly right. You can sign
Manoj, you're being very rude.
On Tue, Jan 5, 2010 at 8:37 AM, Manoj Srivastava sriva...@debian.orgwrote:
On Sun, Jan 03 2010, VampirePenguin wrote:
I prefer to top post because I'm answering questions. People don't
want to go thru 18 pages of email, oh and heaven forbid chain letter
1 - 100 of 443 matches
Mail list logo