Domain: darkside.no
Stories and comments across the archive that link to darkside.no.
Comments · 13
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Re:Ummm ... BMP, GIF, PNG, and TIFF?
Really? I can't wait to rawk to my
.bmp files. I wonder what my desktop wallpaper sounds like.Then I have the perfect program for you!
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Screenshot
Here is a photo of the screen of the C700 model running ssh (to a computer running irssi).
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Re:Its small for a laptop, but HUGE for a PDA
Look at the size of that thing!
Check here for a picture of the Zaurus in use (big thanks to Tom for letting me use his Zaurus while on vacation in Japan). I'm not sure which model it is.
(Notice the Air-H CF card on the side of the Zaurus, I was SSH'ing to my machine in Norway.
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Re:AAlib :)
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My room
Almost all my computers are stuffed into one room, where I only am when burning DVDs. Check it out here and here. One Sun Sparcstation 5, one SGI Indigo 2, one Celeron 433, one Pentium 233 MMX, one Pentium 150 (not visible on the pictures), two SGI Indigo O2s (on the floor, not in use at the moment), one Amiga 1200 (not visible, not in use
:). In the basement I've got two SGI Challenge S servers (not in use) and in the living room I got my laptop and a GameCube, PS2 and an XBox. :) -
My room
Almost all my computers are stuffed into one room, where I only am when burning DVDs. Check it out here and here. One Sun Sparcstation 5, one SGI Indigo 2, one Celeron 433, one Pentium 233 MMX, one Pentium 150 (not visible on the pictures), two SGI Indigo O2s (on the floor, not in use at the moment), one Amiga 1200 (not visible, not in use
:). In the basement I've got two SGI Challenge S servers (not in use) and in the living room I got my laptop and a GameCube, PS2 and an XBox. :) -
Old news
The link in the article refers to the MacOS X port. Check out this for the "original" Unofficial Gameboy Advance SDK. It has been available for about a year or so. It has always worked on Win32 platforms too, so the submitter did a really bad job. The compiler in the SDK is actually GCC.
Check out www.gbadev.org and www.devrs.com/gba/ for some other GBA development stuff. (And while you're at it, check out my own GBA-page for some of the demos i've written for the GBA
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Re:The Indigo was a nice machine...
Still it _IS_ dman sexy to have an SGI on your desktop!
:-)It's even more sexier with multiple SGIs on the desktop.
:)Seriously, I use my Indigo2 as primary workstation at home, ircing and writing software. It also runs the webserver. When I get myself a larger harddrive for the Challenge S I'll move the webserver to that one and maybe use the O2 as main workstation instead.
The SGIs are rock solid (and noisy) machines. But I like really them.
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Re:The Indigo was a nice machine...
Still it _IS_ dman sexy to have an SGI on your desktop!
:-)It's even more sexier with multiple SGIs on the desktop.
:)Seriously, I use my Indigo2 as primary workstation at home, ircing and writing software. It also runs the webserver. When I get myself a larger harddrive for the Challenge S I'll move the webserver to that one and maybe use the O2 as main workstation instead.
The SGIs are rock solid (and noisy) machines. But I like really them.
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Re:Whose desktop are we talking about?
The software manager on IRIX does exactly this. It also displays a list of conflicts (if any) which gives the user an option to either install the requried packages or not install the "offending" package. The software manager is also used to manage installed packages. If you start the software manager from the toolchest menu as non-root you're prompted with a box asking for the root password.
On freeware.sgi.com you can download precompiled binaries for a lot of popular freeware tools, like Apache and GCC. Just press the install-button for the application you want to install (using netscape), and the package is downloaded and software manager is started when the download is done.
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Re:Am I the only one...?
I haven't got a single one neither, but my webserver log is full of Codered, Codered II and Nimda attacks. I think the reason is that most of my friends who got my email in their address books don't use Outlook (or are too smart to get these virii).
We've been having some attacks at work though, but since I'm one of the lucky ones reading my mail on a Sun I wasn't directly affected (but the mail server (Exchange of course
:( )) was shut down though. The problem is that the it staff are planning to move all mail-stuff over to Windows and Outlook. I have absolutely no idea why they're doing this considering the vulnerability.Another thing about Exchange. After we moved from some unix mail-server to Exchange we get mail maybe every other week telling us that the mail server has to be shut down because of a reboot or maintenance. I'm not sure if it really is a problem, but are all mail servers like this?
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Re:Am I the only one...?
I haven't got a single one neither, but my webserver log is full of Codered, Codered II and Nimda attacks. I think the reason is that most of my friends who got my email in their address books don't use Outlook (or are too smart to get these virii).
We've been having some attacks at work though, but since I'm one of the lucky ones reading my mail on a Sun I wasn't directly affected (but the mail server (Exchange of course
:( )) was shut down though. The problem is that the it staff are planning to move all mail-stuff over to Windows and Outlook. I have absolutely no idea why they're doing this considering the vulnerability.Another thing about Exchange. After we moved from some unix mail-server to Exchange we get mail maybe every other week telling us that the mail server has to be shut down because of a reboot or maintenance. I'm not sure if it really is a problem, but are all mail servers like this?
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Re:Am I the only one...?
I haven't got a single one neither, but my webserver log is full of Codered, Codered II and Nimda attacks. I think the reason is that most of my friends who got my email in their address books don't use Outlook (or are too smart to get these virii).
We've been having some attacks at work though, but since I'm one of the lucky ones reading my mail on a Sun I wasn't directly affected (but the mail server (Exchange of course
:( )) was shut down though. The problem is that the it staff are planning to move all mail-stuff over to Windows and Outlook. I have absolutely no idea why they're doing this considering the vulnerability.Another thing about Exchange. After we moved from some unix mail-server to Exchange we get mail maybe every other week telling us that the mail server has to be shut down because of a reboot or maintenance. I'm not sure if it really is a problem, but are all mail servers like this?