On Thu, Jun 02, 2005 at 09:28:09PM -0400, Bill Sconce wrote:
> The mentoring organizations include heavy hitters from Apache and
> Asterisk, to Perl and Python, to Wine and XWiki, and of course
> Google themselves.
I know the people on the Inkscape project, and I think that anyone who
is intereste
Know any needy student hackers? The deadline is June 14th.
This came up on the Python mailing lists today. The Python
Software Foundation is one of the listed mentoring organizations.
This is an extremely cool, and public-spirited, and self-serving,
idea.
http://code.google.com/summerofcod
On Jun 2, 2005, at 18:07, Randy Edwards wrote:
Since the list is a bit slow, I'm curious to hear if
others think I am way over the top or off base on this:
What I noticed most from GoDaddy was when they charged my credit card
for a domain I had let expire. It was a 1-shot throw-away domain (
That's an interesting experience. I say that because when I worked
there, the end of last year, they were actively working on improving
that. In fact, I had seen the beta of it and played around with it for
a while. The beta was moving away from the click through, to have a
seperate section
FWIW, your experiences with GoDaddy are just about exactly what I would
expect from them, based on my own observations of other friends who have
used their "services".
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> Randy Edwards
> Sent: Thursd
>So I wrote the below e-mail to them. I doubt it'll have any
> impact, but it felt good writing it.
I even felt good just reading it! The money-grubbers are certainly
over the line these days. More customers have to speak up - and then
act on their convinctions.
Jim
__
Forgive me for venting, but I know a lot of folks use GoDaddy to manage
their domains. I just renewed some domains today and was less than impressed
(understatement=ON) at the customer experience.
So I wrote the below e-mail to them. I doubt it'll have any impact, but it
felt good writi
On Thu, 2 Jun 2005, Bill McGonigle wrote:
> On Jun 1, 2005, at 20:46, TARogue wrote:
>
> > Jun 1 19:09:38 gore inetd[467]: pid 21168: exit status 1
>
> That means one of the processes inetd launched exited with a bad
> status. In this case, inetd is process # 467 and the process that
> cause
On Jun 1, 2005, at 20:46, TARogue wrote:
Jun 1 19:09:38 gore inetd[467]: pid 21168: exit status 1
That means one of the processes inetd launched exited with a bad
status. In this case, inetd is process # 467 and the process that
caused the error was 21168. As Kevin mentioned it would be h
TARogue <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> About every fifteen minutes, the following entry gets logged:
> Jun 1 19:09:38 gore inetd[467]: pid 21168: exit status 1
>
> Obviously, the dates and times change, but it's been happening ever
> since the 30th. Any idea what it means, and how i might fix it
The monthly meeting of CentraLUG, the Concord/Central New Hampshire
chapter of the Greater New Hampshire Linux Users Group, occurs on the
first Monday of each month on the New Hampshire Institute Campus
starting at 7 PM. (Note that we're likely to reschedule the July
meeting as it falls on
About every fifteen minutes, the following entry gets logged:
Jun 1 19:09:38 gore inetd[467]: pid 21168: exit status 1
Obviously, the dates and times change, but it's been happening ever
since the 30th. Any idea what it means, and how i might fix it?
--
TARogue (Linux user number 234357)
Dram
On Jun 1, 2005, at 22:24, Benjamin Scott wrote:
I believe *BSD has their own smbfs, independent of Samba and Linux. I
expect Apple's BSD-derived OS either uses that, or Apple's own code.
Practical upshot: I suspect Samba isn't going to apply much here.
Right, Apple forked somebody's BSD ker
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