imagine that the more feedback he gets, the more he'll
be motivated to continue improving on an already impressive piece of
software.
Thanks for the advice and help everyone.
Regards,
-Colin
--
Colin J. Raven
Sat Dec 18 11:42:01 CET 2004
11:42AM up 1 day, 17:32, 5 users, load averages: 1.38, 1.26
LDA. You would then get completely
granular control over your incoming mai stream.
my $0.02.
Regards,
-Colin
--
Colin J. Raven
NetBSD on a Cobalt Qube2 - http://www.NetBSD.org - No Hype Required
Sun Dec 19 08:54:00 CET 2004
8:54AM up 2 days, 14:44, 5 users, load averages: 1.69, 1.41, 1.30
://www.opengroupware.org/en/applications/calendar/index.html
Screenshots:
http://www.opengroupware.org/screens/index.html
It does also play nicely with Palm.
http://www.opengroupware.org/en/applications/palm/index.html
I hope this is of some use to you.
Regards,
-Colin
--
Colin J. Raven
The Netherlands,
-Colin
--
Colin J. Raven
Wed Dec 22 21:43:00 CET 2004
9:43PM up 6 days, 2:33, 7 users, load averages: 1.16, 1.36, 1.40
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On Dec 24, Josh Paetzel launched this into the bitstream:
On Friday 24 December 2004 16:06, Andrew L. Gould wrote:
On Friday 24 December 2004 09:53 am, Andy Firman wrote:
On Mon, Dec 20, 2004 at 04:54:51PM -0500, Jerry McAllister wrote:
Then the thing to do is create another root account and make
On Dec 25, Dag-Erling Smørgrav launched this into the bitstream:
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
One does not need to know how to rebuild an engine to know how to
drive the car.
One should not criticize the design of an engine while vehemently
claiming to have no interest in how enginges are
On Dec 25, Peter Harmsen launched this into the bitstream:
I have a FreeBSD box on a Elitegroup K7S5A mobo with a Asus TI4200 AGP 8x
graphics card and AMD 512 MB sdram XP2000+ CPU.I get 3600 FPS with glxgears
after i recompiled the kernel without agp and tweaked the Nvidia driver source
a
On Dec 25, Nikolas Britton responded thusly:
Colin J. Raven wrote:
On Dec 25, Dag-Erling Smørgrav launched this into the bitstream:
Chris [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
One does not need to know how to rebuild an engine to know how to
drive the car.
One should not criticize the design of an engine
On Dec 28, Dinesh Nair launched this into the bitstream:
On 28/12/2004 05:08 Greg 'groggy' Lehey said the following:
On Monday, 27 December 2004 at 13:21:51 -0600, Dan Thomas wrote:
A friend gave me a laptop with a Pentium 100 and 24 megs of ram. It
only has a floppy drive. What version of
On Dec 28, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
Your just not going to be able to do this one as it is,
you need to boot into FreeBSD in order to write a FreeBSD
boot selector or boot loader on the hard disk.
Borrow another laptop and temporairly move the hard drive from
the first
On Dec 28, Tom Vilot launched this into the bitstream:
Colin J. Raven wrote:
How about this one...a laptop with the CD inoperable and the floppy
missing. The PCMCIA controller may/may_not be fried...
I'm assuming built-in networking is asking too much of this poor old machine?
Sadly yes. It's
On Dec 29, Rob launched this into the bitstream:
I'm running 5.3-Stable on all PC's.
I have a master/router with 7 diskless slaves. One of the
slaves shows irregular reboots, without a trace, not even
a shutdown message in the logs.
Until now I have the following sudden reboots of one particular
On Dec 29, Rob launched this into the bitstream:
Colin J. Raven wrote:
On Dec 29, Rob launched this into the bitstream:
I'm running 5.3-Stable on all PC's.
I have a master/router with 7 diskless slaves. One of the
slaves shows irregular reboots, without a trace, not even
a shutdown message
Has anyone sucessfully gotten an HP psc2105 printer to work on
5.3-RELEASE? I have a box that I'd like to put to use as (in
addition to his other tasks) a workgroup print server for a herd of
XP/2000 PC's.
I don't see *any* *nix drivers for this device on the HP site, and
buying another
On Jan 3 at 13:44, Timothy Luoma launched this into the bitstream:
On Jan 3, 2005, at 1:19 PM, Eric F Crist wrote:
I'm trying to create a shell script for firewalling. What I'm hoping to do
is create a generic script that looks for variables in /etc/rc.conf. I've
tried looking at other scripts
On Jan 4 at 16:58, Timothy Luoma launched this into the bitstream:
On Jan 4, 2005, at 4:45 PM, Bruce Campbell wrote:
The only processes for which we have hundreds running would be sendmail,
procmail, ipop3d and imapd.
I love procmail and would hate to live w/o it, but that would be my first
On Jan 6 at 13:08, Rowdy launched this into the bitstream:
John W Ward II wrote:
I can burn the other downloads but disc2.iso freezes up the system and
won't
respond. I have a PIII 1ghz w/512 ram, XPPro and Nero v5 software. I have
never had a problem burning an iso before and even downloaded the
On Jan 5 at 19:20, [EMAIL PROTECTED] launched this into the bitstream:
In a message dated 1/5/05 7:16:29 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Why are you here?
I wish I could be as arrogant and condescending as you, but clearly you
were born with an advantage in that are
He has a
On Jan 6 at 21:04, Anthony Atkielski launched this into the bitstream:
Reko Turja writes:
RT Actually not command line options as such, but you can make a login
RT class for the top user in /etc/login.conf and feed the options via TOP
RT environment variable from there.
RT
RT You cant shell out
On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
Use IMP. Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
to setup. However, IMP is one of those programs that is worth
the effort, as if you install the entire suite of programs you
have a very powerful front end mail
On Jan 7 at 09:41, Peter Risdon launched this into the bitstream:
On Fri, 2005-01-07 at 09:59 +0100, Colin J. Raven wrote:
On Jan 6 at 21:41, Ted Mittelstaedt launched this into the bitstream:
Use IMP. Of course, some people pooh-pooh it saying it's hard
to setup. However, IMP is one of those
Hi all!
I occasionally get these in my daily security run output (which is
worrying in itself)
Limiting closed port RST response from 1629 to 200 packets per second
the number of these can range from one or two, to sometimes 25 - 30
although the latter case is rarer. Usually there's about six
On May 14 at 09:19, Daniel Gerzo responded helpfully:
Limiting closed port RST response from 1629 to 200 packets per second
your kernel is limitting number of icmp ping requests to 200, someone
is possibly trying to ping -f you. You can also decrease/increase this
limit with net.inet.icmp.icmplim
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