Urgent : BlackDown on familiar 0.7 (Thanks)

2004-01-11 Thread Nick Wong
Urgent : BlackDown on familiar 0.7 (Thanks)Hi all,Recently, I am installing Blackdown 1.3.1 on my iPAQ 3970 32MB on familiar linux 0.7, but there seems not enough space? how to solve?? familiar should eat about 12MB , and only around 19MB left,after downloading the blackdown ipkg (11MB), only

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-12-07 Thread John D. Mitchell
> "jknutson" == jknutson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: [...] > I haven't put up anything because I assumed commercial products were > "right out". We use perforce (www.perforce.com) for our configuration > management. It sits on top of RCS. Not really, Perforce is a completely standalone, se

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-15 Thread jknutson
(bcc: John Knutson/GISD/SGG/ARLUT) Subject: Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks Barnet Wagman wrote: > Thanks for the advice. CVS is clearly the system to use. Well, noone else has really put forward any other alternatives ;). You could also look at similar systems such as Aegis <http:/

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-14 Thread Greg Lewis
Barnet Wagman wrote: > Thanks for the advice. CVS is clearly the system to use. Well, noone else has really put forward any other alternatives ;). You could also look at similar systems such as Aegis <http://www.canb.auug.org.au/~millerp/aegis/aegis.html> PRCS <http://www.cs.

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-14 Thread Nathan Meyers
On Tue, Nov 14, 2000 at 10:59:11AM -0600, Barnet Wagman wrote: > Thanks for the advice. CVS is clearly the system to use. > > It does appear to lack one feature: I'd like to have projects that > contain files in more than one directory subtree (due to relationship > betw

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-14 Thread Pete Brower
/docs/ These all have files in them. Pete [EMAIL PROTECTED] >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Original Message <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< On 11/14/00, 11:59:11 AM, Barnet Wagman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote r

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-14 Thread Joi Ellis
On Tue, 14 Nov 2000, Barnet Wagman wrote: > Thanks for the advice. CVS is clearly the system to use. > > It does appear to lack one feature: I'd like to have projects that > contain files in more than one directory subtree (due to relationship > between Java package and dir

Re: CVS vs RCS vs ? Thanks

2000-11-14 Thread Barnet Wagman
Thanks for the advice. CVS is clearly the system to use. It does appear to lack one feature: I'd like to have projects that contain files in more than one directory subtree (due to relationship between Java package and directories), but since everyone else lives with this, I can to. B

Re: Thanks for the effort

1999-12-08 Thread David Milner
Here ! Here !!! I second the statement made in this memo. We silent, but grateful users in the linux community own you and the entire blackdown team a case of beer -- each! Thanks david Jo Uthus wrote: > Since we all (to some extent) agree that we have to have a JDK/JRE > 1.2(.2 or wh

Thanks for the effort

1999-12-08 Thread Jo Uthus
-team): Thanks for doing this on your sparetime and at the same time taking lots of crap from people not recognizing your efforts (like "java on linux is running _way slow_", a fact that no-one seems to look at the final-prev2label glaring at you from README.linux or whereever) T

Re: Working with many .java files - thanks

1999-08-01 Thread alx
Yes, point 1 is correct. I use JDE with emacs and when I'm working on a file, I just do ctrl-cvc to compile that file. It works really nice. There really should be a better way to do projects though without using a fast compiler like jikes as a crutch for dealing with large projects. JBuilder

Working with many .java files - thanks

1999-07-31 Thread Kontorotsui
Thank you all for the many advices and the big discussion. I sorted out this strategy: 1) If I change only a class because I edit the java file to add a ; I forgot, I compile by using javac onlythisclass.java 2) If I change a lot, I compile with jikes 3) Since javac does better optimization

Re: My Thanks--Re: JNI Errors: Need Help

1999-07-28 Thread Jacob Nikom
Sun Tutorial is not for Linux. If you use JNI on SGI, you have to use -shared too. Jacob Nikom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Many, many thanks. > The Sun Tutorial DOES NOT show that little trick. > > _ > Steve Gee > Java Developer > Maxor National Pha

My Thanks--Re: JNI Errors: Need Help

1999-07-28 Thread sgee
Many, many thanks. The Sun Tutorial DOES NOT show that little trick. _ Steve Gee Java Developer Maxor National Pharmacies Information Technologies [EMAIL PROTECTED] 806.324.5540 www.maxor.com 806.324.5400

Thanks!

1999-05-17 Thread Bojan Smojver
To all of you a big thank you! Keep up the good work. Bojan -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Thanks!

1999-04-22 Thread Owen Densmore
Steve, are you there? Gawd, I gotta thank you for Linux JDK. We're running it on CardPC in a Java electric car! Wow. Owen -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL

RE: Fonts messages again. Thanks, it worked.

1999-04-20 Thread Kapoor, Nishikant X
27;ve seen some responses about unwrapping a few lines > containing > > zapf in $JAVA_HOME/jre/lib/fonts.properties (I think the path is right > !) > > but I guess, the EXACT 'diff' would be highly app

Re: JNI from JDK1.2 on Linux-2.0.36 hangs in method JNI_CreateJavaVM() - RESOLVED (THANKS)

1999-04-16 Thread Marcel Ruff developer
> > Please try again with 'export LD_PRELOAD=libpthread.so'. > > Juergen > That helped, it runs now fine. Thank you for your instant help! Solving problems in the free software world is done in minutes :-) thanks, Marcel -

Thanks Team

1999-03-21 Thread Gavin M. Bell
Thank you oh so much -- Gavin M. Bell (UNIX SEMPI) RandomWalk -> *Software Developer http://www.randomwalk.com/~cue/ [EMAIL PROTECTED] (212) 480-5823 --- "I'm trying real hard to be the shepherd." -Samuel Jackson (Pulp Fiction)

Thanks everyone

1999-03-10 Thread Kevin White
Thanks to everyone's help the last several days on jni programming with linux, help with Makefile suggestions, and even helping me with stupid errors, I was able to get my first linux project released (development release, of course). Just thought I'd thank everyone on this list for

Re: My big stupid mistake - Thanks!

1999-03-09 Thread Kevin White
Thanks to all the pointers. I decided to get jad as the decompiler to use, and it worked great. I still have to test all the class files after compiling them from what it creates, but going through the source, jad sure did a good job. Also thanks for the pointers on the Makefile problems I had

thanks for the info

1999-01-22 Thread andrew scott
unsubscirbe, please. begin:vcard n;quoted-printable;quoted-printable:=A7=C7=F6TT;=AA=F1=D0=AE=EBW tel;home:510-644-2297 x-mozilla-html:TRUE url:TBA fn;quoted-printable:=AA=F1=D0=AE=EBW =A7=C7=F6TT version:2.1 email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED] title:Tê©h gêêK org;quoted-printable:=E5=A7h=DF=A5

Thanks(regex stuff)

1998-12-27 Thread Rick Bauman
Thanks to all who replied for the pointer to http://www.cacas.org/~wes/java/ it looks like just what I was looking for. r -- Rick Bauman Lowcountry Linux http://www.lowcountry.net/

Re: Read Huge File using Java - thanks

1998-12-19 Thread Christopher Hinds
Chris Quanyu Zhu wrote: > Hi,there: > Thanks for the comments on reading huge file using java . > Following some of your comments, right now I got a solution, which > tested for one 150M file just using 1 minutes and then draw the image. > That sounds a good r

Read Huge File using Java - thanks

1998-12-18 Thread Quanyu Zhu
Hi,there: Thanks for the comments on reading huge file using java . Following some of your comments, right now I got a solution, which tested for one 150M file just using 1 minutes and then draw the image. That sounds a good result I can get. Actually, I just used the bufferIO, and

Re: thanks

1998-12-18 Thread Rachel Greenham
o put our product out for Linux. It makes me feel very >good, and I wanted to take the time to thank you for putting in so much work on >the project. Thanks, At the risk of sounding like an Advocacy group, I agree. I work for a web design company and we programmers are trying to move away fr

thanks

1998-12-17 Thread August West
and I wanted to take the time to thank you for putting in so much work on the project.   Thanks, John Stotler Eutectics Corporation    

Re: How to get VisiBroker for Java on Linux running? Thanks, it runs now!

1998-12-10 Thread Marcel Ruff
> 2) > I tried running the JacORB example1 with the VisiBroker NamingServer > using the URL naming from JacORB: >   The JacORB server connects to the VisiBroker Naming Service, >   but stops then with an Exception. It seems there is a missmatch in the > IIOP protocol? > > Any

Thanks... and other problem.

1998-11-06 Thread Carlos Alberto Roman Zamitiz
AVA_HOME=/users/local/bin/HotJava/HotJava1.1.5 set JDK_HOME=/users/local/bin/java/jdk1.1.5 I didn't modify anything, but appears the following: HOTJAVA_HOME is set to /users/local/bin/HotJava/HotJava1.1.5 Can't execute: /users/local/bin/HotJava/HotJava1.1.5/runtime/bin/jre why? than

Thanks

1998-10-14 Thread Syed Mubin
Hi, Thanks everybody, after setting the CLASSPATH the java is working the problem was rectified. Thanks Syed __ Syed Mubeen Tata Institute of

THANKS

1998-09-21 Thread Syed Mubin
__ Syed Mubeen National Centre For Biological Sciences, [EMAIL PROTECTED]TIFR Centre, P.B #1234, 80-334-5615 or 4062 or 3035 IISc Campus, Resi :3452848Banga

Thanks for all the work.

1998-09-17 Thread Michael Hamilton
Being able to use Linux and the JDK at home has made a real difference on recent projects. Michael

Thanks

1998-07-30 Thread Alejandro Canales
I whish to thanks to all the people that help me to develop and run servlets on Linux. Sincerely A Canales