I'm in the process of implementing CMU's Cyrus IMAP solution. Partner it with a PAM enabled backend, and something like IMP and you've got a webmail interface that does have LDAP abilities for shared address books.
Cyrus also has support for shared IMAP folders, NNTP->IMAP gateways, server-side filtering through sieve.. very cool stuff.
FreeBSD has something called dummynet(4) that is integrated with ipfw(8) to allow QoS. It may be something to look into. You basically say that you want IP block X (can be a/32 block, or a host) to have Y/{B,kB,mB}/ of bandwidth. Very good stuff, I can limit my roommate's leeching of MP3's with it. I want some of the bandwidth I'm paying for too =]
It's good to see an article that not only speaks of the GPL license but covers other licensing mechanisms as well. Don't get me wrong, the GPL is great, but there are other licensing schemes out there that also have their place. It's like the "Linux is Unix" argument -- it isn't the only unix, just like the GPL isn't the only free and redistributable software license.
if Bank of America will be going after users who have caching enabled. After all, we *are* copying their website to our hard drive when we peruse their website. Gee Gads!
What I want to know is why has this became a character defamation thread on Mr. Chaney? He did a random act of kindness over the holidays, and now he's tactfully written a letter stating how he feels the Kerberos thing should be handled. What a guy.
While we're on character (and I *know* I'll get flamed for this one) let's take a peek at Linus Torvalds. I think he's a cool guy, most of you think he's a cool guy. But hey, he wrote an OS back in the early 90's that's been installed on some corporate servers and they've been broken into. Man, Linus must be horrible.
Please people, use some common sense when you post.
Regarding the legalities of this, every news server administrator has the option of ignoring the cancel messages for particular domains and choosing not to cancel messages with the home.com header. It was found (and this is all out of the UDP FAQ, of which I can't remeber the URL) that no ISP/News Serving body is required to carry any article to which it doesn't want to, so in fact, the UDP is an "optional" thing of which no one has to really subscribe to.
I'm in the process of implementing CMU's Cyrus IMAP solution. Partner it with a PAM enabled backend, and something like IMP and you've got a webmail interface that does have LDAP abilities for shared address books.
Cyrus also has support for shared IMAP folders, NNTP->IMAP gateways, server-side filtering through sieve.. very cool stuff.
FreeBSD has something called dummynet(4) that is integrated with ipfw(8) to allow QoS. It may be something to look into. You basically say that you want IP block X (can be a /32 block, or a host) to have Y /{B,kB,mB}/ of bandwidth. Very good stuff, I can limit my roommate's leeching of MP3's with it. I want some of the bandwidth I'm paying for too =]
It's good to see an article that not only speaks of the GPL license but covers other licensing mechanisms as well. Don't get me wrong, the GPL is great, but there are other licensing schemes out there that also have their place. It's like the "Linux is Unix" argument -- it isn't the only unix, just like the GPL isn't the only free and redistributable software license.
Did Mark's firm write that using Wine? Or better yet, did Mark's firm write that in Staroffice under Linux emulation in FreeBSD? =]
if Bank of America will be going after users who have caching enabled. After all, we *are* copying their website to our hard drive when we peruse their website. Gee Gads!
What I want to know is why has this became a character defamation thread on Mr. Chaney? He did a random act of kindness over the holidays, and now he's tactfully written a letter stating how he feels the Kerberos thing should be handled. What a guy.
While we're on character (and I *know* I'll get flamed for this one) let's take a peek at Linus Torvalds. I think he's a cool guy, most of you think he's a cool guy. But hey, he wrote an OS back in the early 90's that's been installed on some corporate servers and they've been broken into. Man, Linus must be horrible.
Please people, use some common sense when you post.
Regarding the legalities of this, every news server administrator has the option of ignoring the cancel messages for particular domains and choosing not to cancel messages with the home.com header. It was found (and this is all out of the UDP FAQ, of which I can't remeber the URL) that no ISP/News Serving body is required to carry any article to which it doesn't want to, so in fact, the UDP is an "optional" thing of which no one has to really subscribe to.
Kudos to the UDP people. Keep up the good work.