Ummm, actually they do release the source, maybe not for beta code, but for the release versions. When my gentoo box upgraded to a new version of gcc, I had to recompile J2SE, took forever but when you ran java -version it would show my hostname. I actually just finished downloading and installing and they do include source (though i'm not sure that you could build with that alone)
1.)Install mySQL or any database for that matter 2.)Run SELECT * FROM google, user WHERE user.hasClue = 'TRUE' AND google.query = 'wireless network apartment'; 3.) ????? 4.) Profit
I really can't belive these questions get posted
on
Mapping a Wi-Fi Network?
·
· Score: -1, Troll
My suggestion to the poster:
1.)Install mySQL or any database for that matter 2.)Run SELECT * FROM google, user WHERE user.hasClue = 'TRUE' AND google.query = 'map wireless network'; 3.) ????? 4.) Profit
I guess s/he could have been more precise by saying "I don't need to factor broadband in to my decision because I have DSL and I'm not going to change that" so that unigeek would understand
Actually, I just installed Debian on the box sitting next to me at work a couple of days of ago. And X worked out of the box (this is only the 2nd time this has ever happened for me!)
The other point I would like to make is that people complain about how hard it is to install Linux, part of the problem stems from the fact the when they buy their computers Windows is already installed, if more companies would offer Linux installed from the start they can do it for F/free people would realize how hard Windows installs can be too. ( I realize you were comparing but the point is that if companies shipped with Debian installed this whole issue could dissapear)
I'm not an Enterprise but this is the setup I use on both of the servers I run at home and at a few of the clients I have worked for. Apache in the front Tomcat in the back. I like this setup because if something happens to the app server (or servlet container but the same idea) which is more likely b/c it has custom apps running I can always just put up some static page 'till I get it back online, plus it seems like a lot of the app servers ( I know WebSphere and Oracle do ) actually run a old version of apache. So you are basically doing what they do, but with a more current version of Apache on the front.
a link to what? Here are some wireless ISP that I know of http://geekspeed.net http://restonwireless.co m http://uslinux.net/ {- This guy actually covers several miles!
For a very long time a lot of people in Northern Virginia couldn't get highspeed, and we live 10 minutes from WorldCom and AOL headquarters! What several of the tech savvy did was get a T1 for ~$450 a month and resell via 802.11b to their neighbors.
Stop flying, eventually the airlines will figure out that people won't pay to have thier privacy invaded and they will lobby Congress to stop this nonsense. I'd say write your reps but that doesn't seem to do much anymore unless you have some big money behind it.
So who would you rather have spying on you. The FBI who has to deal with Tons of paper work to even start spying on you then needs to make a strong case that you are a criminal, worthy of prosecution
Apparently you are not aware of the civil rights oversite requirements removed in the "Post September 11th" world do a search on "sneek and peek"
You may want to consider something that caches the pages as they are displayed. This will add overhead and doesn't scale, but would allow you to keep a copy of the pages as they were dispayed. You could atleast use it for a subset. For example you use JSPs to serve up pages from a DB but the resulting page is different depending on parms to the page. wget isnt' going to capture all of this, so when the page is generated you write it out with a timestamp ( you build some intellegence so the page only gets written once a month or something) then you archive all of the written out pages and you have a copy of the site as it appeared. Another reseason this may be a good idea is because if you upgrade somesoftware* (in this case Java) You will be able to the as it was rendered under Java 1.3.1 and not how it renders under 1.4.2. Finally if you turn this feature on while debugging, you can really help the developers out, b/c now instead of hearing from the users "My page didn't work, it was weird somehow" You actually have a copy of what was sent to thier browser.
An apple system is more expensive when compared to an approximately equally performing AMD/Intel system. If they weren't Apple would have more than its current niche market. A dual AMD system is a much much faster system than a dual G5 system. So servers are rarely Apples. A $400 AMD/Intel system is equivalent to the $800 EMac, so they can't compete on the low end.
Please show me where I can buy a new $400 AMD/Intel system with a 17 inch monitor, 32MB ATI dedicated video card (not the onboard stuff), a modem, ethernet, firewire, usb, a 40GB drive and a CD burner/DVD player and a sound card. I run several linux boxes and would love to have an inexpensive but quality source for them.
I also used to think that Apples were overpriced until I stopped comparing apples to oranges (pun intendend).
For example spec out a dual AMD system from penguin computing and a dual G5 system from Apple and you'll realize that the Apple is cheaper. On the notebook side I recently bought a Powerbook G4 (12 inch) when compared to a similar Dell (don't forget to throw in the cost of a DVD-Burner and Bluetooth) The Powerbook is also less expensive.
I'm not sure about the low end pricing (you are probably able to find less expensive AMD systems, but remember the "EMac" is $799 with monitor included.)
Nice application, but why do these programmers keep wanting to use ports higher than 1024? Most firewalls will block it. Now what I want to see is an application like this or BitTorrent to use port 80. This way it will get thru proxies and firewalls without having to pull your hair trying to get it to work... uh, at work;)
Not always true I worked on a client site that would sniff the traffic over port 80 and if it wasn't http it would drop the packets!
Unfortunately what the industry will probably say is "Look using the RIAA to sue everyone because we don't know how to adjust our business model, has really paid off!"
Where I used to live in Northern Virgina (DC Suburbs) there weren't cable modems or DSL, so a few people did get T1 and resell them to their neighbors and everytime when asked doesn't the T1 get saturated sharing it with several people the answer was always NO and they had the MRTG graphs to prove it. Instead of cutting off the "overage users" perhaps they should invest adaptive bandwith limiting hardware or software
This assumes a "free and open market" the two current methods for people get broadband are from cable companies and telephone companies both of which have a near monopoly on the market. The reason you don't often hear about this from the telcos is because they have to give fair access to thier lines where as the cable companies don't. And many people don't have the ability to choose between cable and telco.
The reason they give you the receipt for the doughnut, is theft prevention from the employees. If the employee has to give you the receipt it makes it harder for them to just pocket the $1 for the doughnut. Now perhaps if they paid the employees there enough to be trusted... I'd better stop before I get modded off topic.
uuh plus since number portability from land line to mobile is in place there isn't a way for people to tell what kind of number it.
Ummm, actually they do release the source, maybe not for beta code, but for the release versions. When my gentoo box upgraded to a new version of gcc, I had to recompile J2SE, took forever but when you ran java -version it would show my hostname. I actually just finished downloading and installing and they do include source (though i'm not sure that you could build with that alone)
My suggestion to the poster:
1.)Install mySQL or any database for that matter
2.)Run SELECT * FROM google, user WHERE user.hasClue = 'TRUE' AND google.query = 'wireless network apartment';
3.) ?????
4.) Profit
My suggestion to the poster:
1.)Install mySQL or any database for that matter
2.)Run SELECT * FROM google, user WHERE user.hasClue = 'TRUE' AND google.query = 'map wireless network';
3.) ?????
4.) Profit
some of the hardware they discussed to run their own site to keep up with the slashdotting.
I guess s/he could have been more precise by saying "I don't need to factor broadband in to my decision because I have DSL and I'm not going to change that" so that unigeek would understand
Actually, I just installed Debian on the box sitting next to me at work a couple of days of ago. And X worked out of the box (this is only the 2nd time this has ever happened for me!)
The other point I would like to make is that people complain about how hard it is to install Linux, part of the problem stems from the fact the when they buy their computers Windows is already installed, if more companies would offer Linux installed from the start they can do it for F/free people would realize how hard Windows installs can be too. ( I realize you were comparing but the point is that if companies shipped with Debian installed this whole issue could dissapear)
I'm not an Enterprise but this is the setup I use on both of the servers I run at home and at a few of the clients I have worked for. Apache in the front Tomcat in the back. I like this setup because if something happens to the app server (or servlet container but the same idea) which is more likely b/c it has custom apps running I can always just put up some static page 'till I get it back online, plus it seems like a lot of the app servers ( I know WebSphere and Oracle do ) actually run a old version of apache. So you are basically doing what they do, but with a more current version of Apache on the front.
or worse yet Tom Ridge
look at the ad surrounding the article
a link to what?o m
Here are some wireless ISP that I know of
http://geekspeed.net
http://restonwireless.c
http://uslinux.net/ {- This guy actually covers several miles!
For a very long time a lot of people in Northern Virginia couldn't get highspeed, and we live 10 minutes from WorldCom and AOL headquarters! What several of the tech savvy did was get a T1 for ~$450 a month and resell via 802.11b to their neighbors.
actually they donate to boths horgor e/analysis/
http://www.wanderbody.com/billionairesforbu
My Dad has his DVD player hooked up to a Commodore 64 Monitor that I used in high school with my sega
Stop flying, eventually the airlines will figure out that people won't pay to have thier privacy invaded and they will lobby Congress to stop this nonsense. I'd say write your reps but that doesn't seem to do much anymore unless you have some big money behind it.
So who would you rather have spying on you. The FBI who has to deal with Tons of paper work to even start spying on you then needs to make a strong case that you are a criminal, worthy of prosecution
Apparently you are not aware of the civil rights oversite requirements removed in the "Post September 11th" world do a search on "sneek and peek"
You may want to consider something that caches the pages as they are displayed. This will add overhead and doesn't scale, but would allow you to keep a copy of the pages as they were dispayed. You could atleast use it for a subset. For example you use JSPs to serve up pages from a DB but the resulting page is different depending on parms to the page. wget isnt' going to capture all of this, so when the page is generated you write it out with a timestamp ( you build some intellegence so the page only gets written once a month or something) then you archive all of the written out pages and you have a copy of the site as it appeared. Another reseason this may be a good idea is because if you upgrade somesoftware* (in this case Java) You will be able to the as it was rendered under Java 1.3.1 and not how it renders under 1.4.2. Finally if you turn this feature on while debugging, you can really help the developers out, b/c now instead of hearing from the users "My page didn't work, it was weird somehow" You actually have a copy of what was sent to thier browser.
An apple system is more expensive when compared to an approximately equally performing AMD/Intel system. If they weren't Apple would have more than its current niche market. A dual AMD system is a much much faster system than a dual G5 system. So servers are rarely Apples. A $400 AMD/Intel system is equivalent to the $800 EMac, so they can't compete on the low end.
Please show me where I can buy a new $400 AMD/Intel system with a 17 inch monitor, 32MB ATI dedicated video card (not the onboard stuff), a modem, ethernet, firewire, usb, a 40GB drive and a CD burner/DVD player and a sound card. I run several linux boxes and would love to have an inexpensive but quality source for them.
I also used to think that Apples were overpriced until I stopped comparing apples to oranges (pun intendend).
For example spec out a dual AMD system from penguin computing and a dual G5 system from Apple and you'll realize that the Apple is cheaper.
On the notebook side I recently bought a Powerbook G4 (12 inch) when compared to a similar Dell (don't forget to throw in the cost of a DVD-Burner and Bluetooth) The Powerbook is also less expensive.
I'm not sure about the low end pricing (you are probably able to find less expensive AMD systems, but remember the "EMac" is $799 with monitor included.)
You also need to be aware that the Powerbooks don't have IR and only have USB and Firewire connectors (no serial)
Nice application, but why do these programmers keep wanting to use ports higher than 1024? Most firewalls will block it. Now what I want to see is an application like this or BitTorrent to use port 80. This way it will get thru proxies and firewalls without having to pull your hair trying to get it to work... uh, at work ;)
Not always true I worked on a client site that would sniff the traffic over port 80 and if it wasn't http it would drop the packets!
Unfortunately what the industry will probably say is "Look using the RIAA to sue everyone because we don't know how to adjust our business model, has really paid off!"
Where I used to live in Northern Virgina (DC Suburbs) there weren't cable modems or DSL, so a few people did get T1 and resell them to their neighbors and everytime when asked doesn't the T1 get saturated sharing it with several people the answer was always NO and they had the MRTG graphs to prove it. Instead of cutting off the "overage users" perhaps they should invest adaptive bandwith limiting hardware or software
This assumes a "free and open market" the two current methods for people get broadband are from cable companies and telephone companies both of which have a near monopoly on the market. The reason you don't often hear about this from the telcos is because they have to give fair access to thier lines where as the cable companies don't. And many people don't have the ability to choose between cable and telco.
The reason they give you the receipt for the doughnut, is theft prevention from the employees. If the employee has to give you the receipt it makes it harder for them to just pocket the $1 for the doughnut. Now perhaps if they paid the employees there enough to be trusted... I'd better stop before I get modded off topic.