On Wed, 20 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
(Have you forgotten that you once put Warren in your killfile?)
I can't forget something that never happened. I have never created a
killfile in my life.
I am saying you are free to fork the list, and always have been. I am
(expressly) not
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
or have you backed off from your position here:
http://lists.hosef.org/pipermail/luau/2002-September/010356.html
quoting
Perhaps specialized topics like linux for schools does not belong in a
general purpose mailing list like Luau. I believe the idea of
On Thu, 21 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
Eben Moglen has participated in a great many technical discussions.
Its part of his vocation (job) and avocation (the thing he loves).
Do we have the same definition of technical? I'm talking about technical
software discussions. I.e. design,
On Dec 21, 2006, at 10:13 PM, Jimen Ching wrote:
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
(Have you forgotten that you once put Warren in your killfile?)
I can't forget something that never happened. I have never created
a killfile in my life.
On Dec 21, 2006, at 11:45 PM, Jimen Ching wrote:
On Thu, 21 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
Eben Moglen has participated in a great many technical discussions.
Its part of his vocation (job) and avocation (the thing he loves).
Do we have the same definition of technical?
Likely.
I'm
On Dec 21, 2006, at 10:59 PM, Jimen Ching wrote:
In reviewing parts of the archive, I also see that you are
confused about the terms of the GPL.
http://lists.hosef.org/pipermail/luau/2003-October/014441.html
Point in fact, if you distribute binaries of **unmodified** code
covered by the
LUAU and HOSEF, like soylent green, are made of people.
On Dec 21, 2006, at 9:40 AM, Robert Green wrote:
It appears to me that this argument is largely a matter of semantics,
but I find it ironic that Jim spends a whole paragraph dissecting the
various meanings of the “free” in “free
RedHat Summit:
http://www.redhat.com/magazine/020jun06/features/video_moglen/
Plone conference:
http://plone.org/events/conferences/seattle-2006/agenda/watch-eben-
moglen-s-plone-conference-keynote-address
While Moglen gave both speechs to technical audiences, I think the
import of what he
On Thu, 2006-12-21 at 23:45 -1000, Jimen Ching wrote:
On Thu, 21 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
Eben Moglen has participated in a great many technical discussions.
Its part of his vocation (job) and avocation (the thing he loves).
Do we have the same definition of technical? I'm talking
Vince Hoang wrote:
On Wed, Dec 20, 2006 at 05:51:10PM -1000, HawaiiDakine.com wrote:
I'll give a $50.00 check to the mirror server project with the
hopes of FreeBSD being part of it.
Done! http://mirrors.hosef.org/FreeBSD/
I cheated, FreeBSD ISOs have been there for at least two years
now.
Quoting HawaiiDakine.com [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Can anyone recommend a spam blocker, with a how to, that works? I was
told that Spam Assissin is good, but I tried it and it does not kill off
the spam and return it to sender. It does mark it as spam, but I could
do the same manually.
Hi Al,
On Fri, 2006-12-22 at 14:24 -1000, HawaiiDakine.com wrote:
Can anyone recommend a spam blocker, with a how to, that works? I was
told that Spam Assissin is good, but I tried it and it does not kill off
the spam and return it to sender. It does mark it as spam, but I could
do the same
Quoting jon:
A couple of other things to look into for spam fighting. A 30 second sleep
during the smtp exchange will reduce spam, sendmail uses what is called a
'GreetPause'. Testing for valid users during the smtp process then rejecting
the email if the user doesn't exist will also help.
On Dec 22, 2006, at 7:50 AM, Julian Yap wrote:
On Thu, 2006-12-21 at 23:45 -1000, Jimen Ching wrote:
On Thu, 21 Dec 2006, Jim Thompson wrote:
Eben Moglen has participated in a great many technical discussions.
Its part of his vocation (job) and avocation (the thing he loves).
Do we have
Quoting Wilson Chan [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Quoting jon:
A couple of other things to look into for spam fighting. A 30 second sleep
during the smtp exchange will reduce spam, sendmail uses what is called a
'GreetPause'. Testing for valid users during the smtp process then
rejecting
the
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