At 16:52 29.03.00 -0800, James P. Salsman wrote:
>Some educational software advocates and I are considering
>asking the IETF to suspend control of certain aspects of
>HTML forms from the W3C until microphone upload issues are
>addressed.
No matter what may be thought of the merits of the case, suc
Murray,
Thank you for the substance of your debate:
>... Get a life
A life is best given with education (Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, Article 27.) If microphone upload were prevalent,
would asynchronous audio conferencing make spoken language
instruction easier enough to help
"James P. Salsman" wrote:
>
> Some educational software advocates and I are considering
> asking the IETF to suspend control of certain aspects of
> HTML forms from the W3C until microphone upload issues are
> addressed.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. Gad. Get a life. Really.
I'm gone a month from www-h
Some educational software advocates and I are considering
asking the IETF to suspend control of certain aspects of
HTML forms from the W3C until microphone upload issues are
addressed.
I am very interested in any public comments and private
opinions on this matter. Please follow up or reply
Does anyone know of any sites, or resources that might be helpful in
implementing packet filtering at a hardware level using a HDL like VHDL. I
need this real urgent.
---
"time and space are modes by which we think.. |
they are not the conditi
The subscription address for the foglamps mailing
list is "[EMAIL PROTECTED]," not the
address I sent earlier. Apologies.
Melinda
The mailing list for discussion of getting difficult
protocols across firewalls and NATs is
[EMAIL PROTECTED] To subscribe, send mail to
[EMAIL PROTECTED], or those so inclined
can use the web interface at http://www.egroups.com.
Thanks,
Melinda
> From: Tim Salo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > I recently noticed that ftp.ietf.org requires the use of an e-mail
> > address (well, ok, something that looks like an e-mail address) as
> > a password for anonymous login. ...
>
> I obviously wasn't particularly clear about my c
Normally, I'd view this as rather cranky, since many implementations
have asked for this information for rather a long time. I usually
access them with the generic user "ftp", not "anonymous". I long
ago gave up an expectation of anonymity. I believe that the proper
security technique is th
> I recently noticed that ftp.ietf.org requires the use of an e-mail
> address (well, ok, something that looks like an e-mail address) as
> a password for anonymous login. ...
I obviously wasn't particularly clear about my concerns in my original note.
I'm concerned that by asking for an e-mail
David,
>There are plenty of books describing how IP packets are encapsulated in
>Ethernet frames or ATM cells, or PPP frames. But I have not seen a book
>describe how IP packets be carried in DS1, Fractional DS1, DS3, Fractional
>DS3 signals. These signals are point to point, byte streams. I thin
> -Original Message-
> From: Thomas Wolfram [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 29, 2000 1:32 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: RE: Privacy and IETF Document Access
>
...
> For Netscape try: ftp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> resp.: ftp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> -Original Message-
> From: Lloyd Wood [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 28, 2000 10:03 PM
> To: Robert G. Ferrell
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: Privacy and IETF Document Access
[...]
> which shouldn't be called 'anonymous', then.
>
> Just because it's a standa
Lloyd Wood wrote:
> > Folks, this is just a standard feature of anonymous FTP servers.
>
> which shouldn't be called 'anonymous', then.
>
> Just because it's a standard feature doesn't make it a good
> idea. Speaking of invasions of privacy, I can't find where in
> Navigator to set the anonymou
This is not the case. Here in Adelaide at the 47th IETF, there were
problems with the wireless LAN early on, so several people were looking for
PCMCIA network cards. I spent two hours going through several computer
stores, some of which had sold out of network cards, and finally found a
card. I
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