hey theo,
wish you a very happy birthday.
hope you have an interesting year ahead.
and hope everybody out here "only" wish theo instead of
also going off at a tangent and creating a mess.
-mayuresh
Just a note, in case this has missed discussion out here (didn't find
any references on the mailing list via Google search).
Some of you might be aware of the CHERI project [1] to enhance security
of computer systems from the hardware level up through the software stack.
They had moved away
t; > > Happy Birthday to Theo!
> > > On Thu, May 19, 2022 at 4:46 AM Brodey Dover
> > > wrote:
> > >>
> > >> Happy Birthday Theo!
> > >>
> > >> On Thu, 19 May 2022 at 02:51, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
> > >>
here's wishing theo deraadt a very happy birthday.
wish you many more years of producing great software and being cantankerous. :p
have a great day today and an amazing year ahead.
-mayuresh
it's theo deraadt's birthday on the 19th.
please remember to wish him.
and after you've done so, stop blabbering around, and just shut-up and hack. ;)
-mayuresh
i am not a c hotshot, so pardon my ignorance.
i read that all new code under openbsd has to be c99.
may i know what's so special about c99 over c89 which has been under heavy
use for so long?
also, does the mandate hold true for modifications to old (c89) code?
thank you.
is installation to a 16gb optane disk (built-in to my laptop) supported?
currently running ubuntu 18.04 and it runs really well off the optane.
even gives me an additional 1 hour of battery usage.
what do i need to read regarding steps and procedure
for building a new package and having it included in
the openbsd repository?
i thought "spleen" was made the new default console
font under 6.5+, it doesn't look like it's there on
my fresh install under amd64?
not currently, but when i work with openbsd,
i work at the text-console exclusively.
i do use the web occasionally, via "lynx".
i hate the 'pui' and hence graphical web
browsers.
i prefer to make annual donations to the
openbsd foundation, typically 1st april.
is there any method to automate that
i stumbled upon the book "c: a reference manual, 5ed" by harbisson and
steele.
may i know what benefits it might impart to a budding c programmer?
Don't know if this has been discussed here before, but I found the
following excerpt from the article at
http://www.yodaiken.com/2018/12/31/undefined-behavior-and-the-purpose-of-c/
unnerving;
... often the writers of the ISO C Standard have thrown up their hands
and labeled the effects of
hi, what happened to the service at wolfman.devio.us?
it's now been 15 days that i have been unable to log in.
hope all is well.
is there a process to adhere to while requesting creation of a new package?
i don't have the skills nor the experience to accomplish this, so here.
can there be a swi-pl-tiny edition of swi-prolog?
as it stands today, swi-prolog has a whole lot of dependencies, as here;
gmp, libexecinfo, pcre, ossp-uuid, jpeg, bzip2, lz, xz, libarchive, db,
iodbc.
it would be really
18
> From: "C." <christ...@hiberno.net>
> To: Mayuresh Kathe <mayur...@devio.us>
> Cc: misc@openbsd.org
> Subject: Re: 6.2 : x : not working as expected
> X-Virus-Status: Clean
>
>
> --vswgxdlct7jiejdq
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
> Content-
a startx starts up the graphical environment, but only partially
works as expected. i have included the .cwmrc and .xinitrc and
request help.
-- cwmrc --
#fontname "-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1"
bind CM-t terminal
bind CM-l lock
bind CM-s ssh
bind CM-r restart
have been informed by the developer of zenlisp that it's
not going to be supported any further.
thanks solene for you efforts.
i think i'll let of the excuses and start (re)learning
c89, and results will follow. :)
i can't do it myself, hence this email.
would someone please create a package for zenlisp
(http://www.t3x.org/files/zenlisp.zip)?
thanks.
i just installed 6.0 amd64 and rebooted the machine after creating
/etc/hostname.iwn0.
the boot script(s) issued a warining related to the permissions on the above
file.
they mentioned "hostname.iwn0 is insecure, fixing it".
that word should not be insecure, but should be "unsecured".
after all,
i have been reading up online news about the core team considering a move
from 'gcc' to "clang/llvm".
is it really true? wouldn't that add a whole lot of complexity to the base
system? isn't clang/llvm written in c++11? wouldn't 'pcc' be a better
alternative? especially because (i think) openbsd
> From dera...@openbsd.org Fri Oct 23 09:23:36 2015
> From: Theo de Raadt <dera...@cvs.openbsd.org>
> To: Raul Miller <rauldmil...@gmail.com>
> cc: Mayuresh Kathe <mayur...@devio.us>,
> OpenBSD general usage list <misc@openbsd.org>
> Subject: Re: [m
64-bit supposedly supports upto 16 exabytes of memory ('ram').
would such large capacities actually be possible to ue with
openbsd for amd64 architecture?
use-case: working with large in-memory storage for financial applications.
thanks.
-Google-Sender-Auth: IKmvhqt48rk7l4iDtc9vhUAcBew
Subject: Re: 64-bit amd64 : actual memory limitations?
From: =?UTF-8?Q?Martin_Schr=C3=B6der?= mar...@oneiros.de
To: Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@devio.us
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
14:01:02 -0700 (PDT)
References: 20141026190245.b09d21b5...@wolfman.devio.us
Subject: Re: 64-bit amd64 : actual memory limitations?
From: Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com
To: Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@devio.us
Cc: OpenBSD misc misc@openbsd.org
Content
: Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com
To: Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@devio.us
Cc: OpenBSD misc misc@openbsd.org
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
List-Help: mailto:majord...@openbsd.org?body=help
List-ID: misc.openbsd.org
List-Owner: mailto:owner-m
%20misc
X-Loop: misc@openbsd.org
Precedence: list
Sender: owner-m...@openbsd.org
2014-10-27 1:56 GMT+01:00 Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@devio.us:
if the intended application actually requires larger memory to be
accessible, would it be better to go for a non
i am using mailx under openbsd, and instead of using the said
combination of tilde + p, i used tilde + m while attempting
to include original messages in my replies.
i apologize for the screw-up.
hello, i have been trying to fix the problem of mailx including the entire
header-set when issuing a tilde + m in a reply to include only the previous
emails body text (content).
one of the docs suggested using tilde + p, but dang, it didn't work for me
during tests executed just now.
if anyone
hello,
i was fiddling around with ada95 under openbsd 5.4 using gnat-4.6.
i created a sample program as below.
with Ada.Text_IO;
use Ada.Text_IO;
procedure Hello is
-- no variables required
begin
Put_Line (Hello, world!);
end Hello;
the code compiled (not cleanly)
i am running 5.4 and have installed erlang using pkg_add.
works well, just can't access the man pages.
have added the following line to /etc/man.conf
erlang/usr/local/lib/erlang/man/
am sure about either having done something wrong or missed a step somewhere.
can i be helped?
thanks.
just install another 'os' like ubuntu-desktop on your laptop first.
openbsd will install on it flawlessly after that, it did on mine.
and yes, there was no need to change any options anywhere.
hello,
i've been using lenovo laptops for the past 4 years and have faced a
whole lot of problems, vis-a-vis heating, disk performance and battery
life;
* heating: temperatures reach 70 deg centigrade in less than 5 minutes,
* disk performance: even untaring a compressed file takes too long,
*
have been using 'cwm' for over a week now.
enjoying every moment of it.
very well thought out and well executed from an openbsd perspective.
questions;
* is there any mailing list for keeping an eye on 'cwm' progress?
* can the openbsd 'xdm' be made to look equally minimalistic?
(i tried
thanks jmz.
/etc/X11/xdm/Xresources is the file i tried to edit.
what ever changes i did must've been bad, made my system freeze.
luckily i had a backup of that file.
i attempted to make the login screen be even more minimalistic,
and have the same kind of font and font-size as what's there in
yes, did do those changes using xsetroot, etc. looks even better.
about the login dialog itself, i'm trying to emulate the look of
a/ux login screen. it used to be radically minimalist yet well
designed.
.91.1380979382499; Sat,
05 Oct 2013 06:23:02 -0700 (PDT)
References: 20131005075910.e9beb1b5...@wolfman.devio.us
Subject: Re: a good workstation configurations?
From: Dmitrij Czarkoff czark...@gmail.com
To: Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@devio.us
Cc: OpenBSD-Misc
went through theo's presentation slides at eurobsdcon (via undeadly)
looks like 5.5 is the one that i've been saving money for all along
thanks theo and gang. :)
hi, how do mailx users currently handle mime?
how do i find out which font is being used by xterm under cwm under openbsd?
then i could use that same font (and size) for the cwm menu to give me
a consistent user experience. ;)
hello, does anyone have any experience with
installing and running openbsd on a present
day macintosh, say a macmini?
would like to know words of caution and
advice before i commit to purchasing a
macmini and using it exclusively for openbsd
software development (my current thinkpad is
dying quite
thanks for the response.
if present day (intel based) macbook runs fine
so will a macmini.
would like to know if you had to jump any hoops
during first boot, i.e. the install boot.
i will have to use an external (usb) optical
drive, and don't know if i have to issue any
special key-press
i intend to move away from laptops.
too many issues with power-management and heating.
currently, have very little desk space, hence a
macmini. :)
thanks.
-mayuresh
hello, may i know which would be the most suitable
edition of 'apue' (1st or 2nd) to learn more about
programming services under openbsd?
thanks.
hello, how do existing users of mailx manage mime?
thanks.
may i know the sort of mbox management strategies used
by those using mailx (hence mbox) as the mail handler?
i wish to know how mailx users keep their mbox within
manageable size limits.
do they start a new mbox every month/year?
do they use folders support to sort mails?
or do they simply
hi, my system (dmesg below mail) occasionally goes into ddb at boot.
it shows the following message;
kernel: protection fault trap, code = 0
Stopped at 0x80437d70: pushq %rbp
(null)() at 0x80437d70
end trace frame: 0x0, count: 10
ddb
how do i stop this from happening?
once
hello, i've got a thinkpad x100e-amd64 (dmesg below mail).
all of its communications functions are well supported under ubuntu
(current), but some of them (wifi and bluetooth) aren't even configurable
under openbsd 5.2 (amd64).
is there any way i can assist the core team to support my
demons galore,
of the microsoft lore,
lurking in windows disks,
lying near my hard disks,
drawing my attention,
giving me too much tension,
how do i purge,
this crazy scourge?
best.
~mayuresh
ps: it's driving me crazy... :)
yes, original by author.
born out of sheer frustration. :)
On Fri, 21 Dec 2012, mxb wrote:
Original by author?
Well rimed :)
On 21 dec 2012, at 17:22, Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@wolfman.devio.us wrote:
demons galore,
of the microsoft lore,
lurking in windows disks,
lying near my hard disks
hello,
i'm running 5.2 (amd64) on my existing machine (dmesg below mail).
works great, except for heating problems and lowered battery life.
have experimented and run tests (windows 7, ubuntu 12.04.1 and memtest).
the heating and battery life problems only surface under openbsd.
wondered if
On Mon, 17 Dec 2012, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
There is also a problem with some SSDs and the AHCI driver.
any way to find out which ssd drives don't work with the ahci driver?
as far as the real problem of excessive heating and power drain goes;
i've been using the apmd with '-C' flag (on
On Mon, 17 Dec 2012, sven falempin wrote:
So much to just print ...
so:
1 echo is crap (not portable, not very usefull)
2 print is doing echo job in ksh print [-nprsu[n] | -R [-en]] [argument
...] (but this is completly different on pengouinOS)
3 printf is everywhere and works fine
why do
anyone on the list with infrastructure support to help us with the following?
a way to host our project webpage and email system via a shell interface.
the domain name is owned by us.
we would like to have;
a website like http://www.project_name.org/
email addresses like member@project_name.org
On Tue 24/07/12 02:04, Wojciech Puchar woj...@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl
wrote:
a way to host our project webpage and email
system via a shell interface.
install alpine or mutt
use alpine regularly.
thanks for the quick response.
On Tue 24/07/12 01:55, Jiri B ji...@devio.us wrote:
On Mon, Jul 23, 2012 at 09:27:56PM +0200, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
anyone on the list with infrastructure support to
help us with the following?
Yes, install OpenBSD.
i don't have a spare machine nor enough
would it be there?
http://www.openbsd.org/plat.html shows nothing.
googling around too showed information not upto date (from my location).
need a reliable desktop system with a good resale value, hence a mac mini. :)
thanks.
--
simplicity can be marvelously powerful.
- rahul jindal
anyone with expertise in setting up infrastructure
for a small (3 member) team of volunteers doing
part-time development for openbsd?
the development effort will last for 12 months
starting august 2012.
no remuneration involved nor intent to fork. :)
thanks.
On Wed 27/06/12 08:32, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
On Tue, Jun 26, 2012 at 3:24 PM, richardtoo...@paradise.net.nz wrote:
I'd prefer the (small) team of developers
to work on the code.
Well, that's a false dichotomy: not all OpenBSD
committers work on the
code. A
hello, my system (dmesg below) has a built-in video camera on the display.
the region around the video camera heats up phenomenally, it happens
everytime, irrespective of whether i use it for 2 minutes or 2 hours.
anything i could do to help the systems guys resolve this problem?
thank you.
have attempted to find images of puffy but haven't been successful.
there's some place on the openbsd.org server which used to hold puffy images,
can someone please point me to
the location?
thank you.
thanks for that steve... :)
On Sun 21/08/11 12:20, STeve Andre' and...@msu.edu wrote:
On 08/21/11 02:37, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
have attempted to find images of puffy but haven't
been successful.
there's some place on the openbsd.org server which
used to hold puffy images,
can someone
Hey, it's Theo's birthday today, have you done anything?
Yeah, you could wish him, but, how about a small gift?
How about donating US$10 to the project today?
hello,
i plan to purchase the following device;
http://www.edimax.com/en/produce_detail.php?pd_id=289pl1_id=13pl2_id=78
i intend to use it to connect to the internet over a gprs based cell phone via
bluetooth.
is this kind of connectivity possible under openbsd at the moment?
i apologise for
On Wed 27/10/10 13:56, David Coppa dco...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, 27 Oct 2010, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
would like to know if my modem is supported under
4.7, if not, what about 4.8,
if
not what assistance can i provide the person/people
who have the capability
to
add in support
would like to know if my modem is supported under 4.7, if not, what about 4.8,
if
not what assistance can i provide the person/people who have the capability
to
add in support?
if supported, can someone please provide me the chat-script?
i have tacked in the dmesg (while the modem was plugged in)
Has anyone experimented with using a set of shell scripts as CGI under the
stock Apache delivered with
OpenBSD?
On Sat 24/07/10 19:41, Gilles Chehade gil...@poolp.org wrote:
On Sat, Jul 24, 2010 at 03:53:36PM +0200, Gilles Chehade wrote:
You dont want to do that...
Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@ka
the.in a C)critB :
Has anyone experimented with using a set of
shell scripts as CGI under the
stock
On Mon 12/07/10 11:09, Otto Moerbeek o...@drijf.net wrote:
On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 10:22:41AM +0200, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
Hello, may I know of limitations on supporting large
directories (over 5
million files) with small files
(less than 10 KB) under FFS/FFS2?
This is for a research
Hello, may I know of limitations on supporting large directories (over 5
million files) with small files
(less than 10 KB) under FFS/FFS2?
This is for a research project under AMD x86 with SATA Disk[s].
On Sun 11/07/10 23:05, Ted Unangst ted.unan...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 4:22 AM, Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@ka
the.in wrote:
Hello, may I know of limitations on supporting large
directories (over 5
million files) with small files
(less than 10 KB) under FFS/FFS2
I'm willing to donate the above mentioned device to anyone ready to add support.
Please contact me off-list with your snail mail address.
has anyone got the above mentioned device to work under openbsd?
if yes, may i know the process to get it working at my end?
i'm with vodafone plan in mumbai, india.
From: Jona Joachim j...@hcl-club.lu
Sent: Friday, May 14, 2010 7:17 PM
On 2010-05-14, Mayuresh Kathe mayur...@kathe.in wrote:
has anyone got the above mentioned device to work under openbsd?
if yes, may i know the process to get it working at my end?
i'm with vodafone plan in mumbai, india
In case the community hasn't already noticed or been made aware of.
Gilles requires funds (900 Euro) to buy himself a decent desktop computer.
Gilles initiated and works on the new SMTPd code.
To cross check, his site is at http://www.poolp.org/~gilles/
Please donate via paypal: gil...@poolp.org
Hello,
I'm not aware if this has been brought up here before, didn't know how
to search for this particular question through the archives, so
writing to the list.
Pardon me if I'm repeating.
I'm under OpenBSD 4.2 running ksh (PD KSH v5.2.14 99/07/13.2) as my shell.
I tried to do the following;
Hello,
Are there any other Java developers using OpenBSD as their native platform?
~Mayuresh
http://mayuresh.kathe.in/
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 6:26 PM, Marco Peereboom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
However having chosen C# is in my opinion not optimal. C# is very
limited when it comes to generic and meta-programming.
What's next? an OS in java and php?
Marco, it would be better for you if you make informed
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 10:08 PM, Gilles Chehade [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Mayuresh Kathe a icrit :
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 6:26 PM, Marco Peereboom [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
However having chosen C# is in my opinion not optimal. C# is very
limited when it comes to generic and meta
Hi,
There's a strange incident that's repeatable on my system (4.2).
Open up Firefox, make it load www.dilbert.com, then open another tab
and visit any other website, then do the same for 2~3 more tabs.
The first (dilbert) tab takes a long time to load during which the
other tabs too show
On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 5:46 PM, Karl Sjodahl - dunceor
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 12:59 PM, Mayuresh Kathe
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
There's a strange incident that's repeatable on my system (4.2).
Open up Firefox, make it load www.dilbert.com
On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 6:50 PM, Paul de Weerd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, Mar 05, 2008 at 01:47:23PM +0100, Landry Breuil wrote:
| On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 1:18 PM, Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
|
| On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 5:46 PM, Karl Sjodahl - dunceor
| [EMAIL
On Wed, Feb 27, 2008 at 6:42 PM, Gustavo Polillo [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sun +Mysql.. The mysql database will be portable in the next Openbsd
versions? How openbsd team loook this?
Didn't quite grasp your mail clearly, but based on what-ever I
understood of it, here goes;
SUN is going to
Hello,
Is there any way to monitor the charge left on the battery of a laptop?
Like how much percentage of the battery charge is left to allow us to
estimate how long it will work without connecting to a wall socket?
I googled for monitoring battery openbsd but got nothing satisfactory.
Best,
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 5:45 PM, Antoine Jacoutot [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 25 Feb 2008, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
I googled for monitoring battery openbsd but got nothing satisfactory.
apm(8)
Thanks for that Antoine.
I tried 'apm -b' to get the battery status, but it showed 255, which
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 6:25 PM, Karl Sjodahl - dunceor
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 1:22 PM, Mayuresh Kathe
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2008 at 5:45 PM, Antoine Jacoutot [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Mon, 25 Feb 2008, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
I
On Sat, Feb 23, 2008 at 1:14 PM, Richard Toohey
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 23/02/2008, at 8:29 PM, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
Hi,
I've got a ThinkPad R61i (dmesg at the bottom of mail).
I configured X using 'X -configure', it showed a nice 1024x768 X
startup screen, but when I did
Golly, what language is that? is it the native language of NL?
I tried running it through 'rot13', but that complicated it even more.
2008/2/22 Han Boetes [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Ik zal er niet bij zijn dit jaar, maar ik wens je wel veel
plezier. :-)
Groetjes aan Tilly. ;-)
Wim Vandeputte
Hi,
I've got a ThinkPad R61i (dmesg at the bottom of mail).
I configured X using 'X -configure', it showed a nice 1024x768 X
startup screen, but when I did 'Ctrl+Alt+Backspace' to get back to my
console X just froze.
The only way to get out was to do a hard reboot.
Is there anyway to solve this
What is it about OpenBSD that I can't resist it?
After the past long exchange about our ultimate goal and a lot of
people advising me to go over to Solaris 10, I did, I removed OpenBSD
from one of my machines and installed Solaris Express Developers
Edition.
It was slick looking, very graphical
Sorry for my dumbness, to all developers :)
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 10:56 PM, raven [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
And...you forgot to say: Sorry for my dumbness to all developers that
give you an answer.
Now, you have to kiss all their ass.
Francesco
Mayuresh Kathe ha scritto:
What
On Feb 20, 2008 12:52 PM, Duncan Patton a Campbell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 20 Feb 2008 08:47:54 +0530
Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 20, 2008 2:59 AM, Ted Unangst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 19, 2008 4:50 AM, Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's
On Feb 20, 2008 4:58 PM, Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-02-17 13:38]:
Wouldn't it be nice to have a high performance networking stack?
yeah.
guess what we have?
exactly that.
(which doesn't mean it could be even faster)
Pardon if I sound
On Feb 20, 2008 5:52 PM, Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-02-20 13:12]:
On Feb 20, 2008 4:58 PM, Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-02-17 13:38]:
Wouldn't it be nice to have a high performance
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 1:05 PM, ropers [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 20/02/2008, Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 20, 2008 4:58 PM, Henning Brauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
* Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2008-02-17 13:38]:
Wouldn't it be nice to have a high
On Feb 19, 2008 5:16 PM, Duncan Patton a Campbell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 17:33:12 +0530
Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It just led me to ponder, what is OpenBSD's ultimate goal?
What, exactly, is yours?
My ultimate goal is to have an OS which would give me
On Feb 20, 2008 2:59 AM, Ted Unangst [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 19, 2008 4:50 AM, Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
That's the reason I've been gathering good C developers, so that they
could either;
1. take up complex projects like FireEngine/DTrace,
2. write replacements
What shit are you talking about?
On Feb 18, 2008 2:01 PM, System Administrator [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 18 Feb 2008 at 10:16, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
On Feb 18, 2008 7:57 AM, Leonardo Rodrigues [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Actually what Ted has done was utterly disastrous, he knows his
On Feb 17, 2008 11:23 PM, Marco Peereboom [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Let me take a stab of responding to this...
Thanks for responding...
On Sun, Feb 17, 2008 at 05:33:12PM +0530, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
Hi,
NOTE: No intention to behave like a troll.
I've been following the multi
On Feb 18, 2008 1:52 AM, Jason Dixon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 17, 2008, at 2:58 PM, Mayuresh Kathe wrote:
On Feb 18, 2008 1:16 AM, David Higgs [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Feb 17, 2008 1:53 PM, Mayuresh Kathe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Its good to know that Ted did indeed try
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