hi,
Thursday, June 1, 2006, 10:34:22 PM, you wrote:
vv>> another way to make a living upon graduation.
> I've already graduated - I teach there! ;-)
even better. as a customer you'll provide ROI for their education. ;)
--
regards,
vitaliemailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello vitalie,
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 22:17:18 +0300 GMT (02/06/2006, 02:17 +0700 GMT),
vitalie vrabie wrote:
vv> another way to make a living upon graduation.
I've already graduated - I teach there! ;-)
--
Cheers,
Thomas.
Subway: "We Are Not Public Transportation, Dammit"
http://thomas.fernande
hi,
Thursday, June 1, 2006, 9:57:14 PM, you wrote:
> They also just blocked port 25. I cannot send with TB from my home
> computer anymore when I'm connected via the university. Probably
> another security measure, but it makes the free dial-up pretty
> useless.
start some ISP business and this
Hello vitalie,
On Thu, 1 Jun 2006 21:01:08 +0300 GMT (02/06/2006, 01:01 +0700 GMT),
vitalie vrabie wrote:
vv> sure, many universities do have this for at least a decade. but
vv> not so many graduates do indeed figure out how to provide this
vv> *commercially* and be able to make a living. :)
Tru
hi,
Thursday, June 1, 2006, 8:09:22 PM, you wrote:
> We have something that sounds similar to this at our university. You
> can run any file you want on the user PCs, and you can save your work,
> which many people do on the desktop. Once the computer is shut down
> and rebooted, it is the origin
Hello vitalie,
On Wed, 31 May 2006 22:55:30 +0300 GMT (01/06/2006, 02:55 +0700 GMT),
vitalie vrabie wrote:
vv> by the way. the experience i've had in Romania was the best one
vv> with public computers. as a matter of rule, all of the public
vv> computers there did boot from the LAN, then filled t
hi,
Friday, May 26, 2006, 5:54:34 PM, you wrote:
> Interesting. So this drive has it's own spec'ed-down OS, or am I
> understanding this wrong?
basically, you get it right. they suggest their own api that replaces registry
access, plus some means of authenticating the program for accessing its
Hello Claude,
Friday, May 26, 2006, 7:31:17 AM, you wrote:
CR> U3 it's a new USB platform. For more infos take a look at
CR> http://u3.Com.
Voyager works fine on a USB drive as is. AFAIK it is designed to be
run like that. I have run it on a 128Mb USB stick as well as a 20Mb
portable hard drive.
Hello Claude,
On Fri, 26 May 2006 14:31:17 + (UTC) GMT (26/05/2006, 21:31 +0700 GMT),
Claude Renaud wrote:
CR> U3 it's a new USB platform. For more infos take a look at http://u3.Com.
Interesting. So this drive has it's own spec'ed-down OS, or am I
understanding this wrong? So what you are e
Thomas Fernandez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> Hello Claude,
>
> On Wed, 24 May 2006 19:33:03 + (UTC) GMT (25/05/2006, 02:33 +0700 GMT),
> Claude Renaud wrote:
>
> CR> I would like to know if Ritlabs has plans to release an U3 version of the
TB
> CR> Voyager Edition ?
>
> U3?
>
U3 it
Hello Thomas,
Friday, May 26, 2006, 2:52:03 PM, you wrote:
TF> U3?
Bono's new band! :-)
--
Best Wishes,
Mark
using The Bat! 3.80.06
Current version is 3.80.06 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones
Hello Claude,
On Wed, 24 May 2006 19:33:03 + (UTC) GMT (25/05/2006, 02:33 +0700 GMT),
Claude Renaud wrote:
CR> I would like to know if Ritlabs has plans to release an U3 version of the TB
CR> Voyager Edition ?
U3?
--
Cheers,
Thomas.
Things You Would Never Know Without the Movies: Every t
Hi,
I would like to know if Ritlabs has plans to release an U3 version of the TB
Voyager Edition ?
Greetings,
--
Claude Renaud
Current version is 3.80.06 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html
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