It's _not_ just ext2 with a journal bolted onto the side. It's an excellent journalling filesystem in it own right. Judge it as such.
And ext3 is unique in that it journals data, not just metadata.
It is also by a decent margin the cleverest and most complex piece of the kernel which I've seen, and I've seen a lot of the kernel, not to mention quite a bit of ext3.
Much credit and congratulations to Stephen Tweedie
for this great software.
Re:You really cannot do this with the current TCP/
on
Geographic Screening
·
· Score: 1
...which is why each hop on the traceroute would be looked up. It sees "Okay; there's a Canada->US hop" and then later on, "Okay; there's a US->Canada hop"... and so on and so on. At the end of its analysis, no matter how many borders it crosses, it will know the start and end points.
Anyone who says this hasn't seen the Interlog fiasco. Interlog used to be one of the best ISP's in Toronto until about a year after being acquired by PSI. About 4 months ago things started going downhill so quickly that...
People dialing in from Toronto actually get an IP address down in the US.
Now how would they actually know these people are in Canada?!
If you use mgetty+sendfax, there is a "Respond" package that you can use. It isn't a very elegant solution Windows-wise, but it basically works. It requires the Windows client to run a daemon (the "Respond" program).
So the Universal people obviously don't like contents of their site to be published in academic journals which lists accurate URL's, obviously? Idiots.
$1000 is one day's work for a development team. if over a project, using NT's superior tools saves 2 days, the choice of NT has paid for itself. (before anyone flames me over "superior tools", please tell me the linux equivalents of MTS, MSMQ and DCOM)
How large is your development team? Do you realize that small sites exist?
ASP has complete integration with COM and can do anything a COM object can do. This approach is markedly superior to text processing languages. This same advantage is shared by CORBA an EJB tools, which again, linux doesn't have.
That's because you are accustomed to using the Microsoft tools. Some people find the text-based tools much much easier to use.
see above. the tools rapidly pay for themselves, then save significant cash. also, the cost of OS and tools is a very small part of the budget on major projects.
Do you work for a company where budgets are very easy to get? Lucky you. Not all companies are like that. $1000 for the base system and more for the tools? You are daydreaming.
lynx read it fine. Upgrade your browser to lynx:-)
But wait till you tell W3C's HTML validating service to read the page; it spews out 82 syntax errors. Apparently, Microsoft doesn't even know how the "ALT" attribute works.
As far as journalling file systems go, neither SCO ODT nor NT have it. Ok, the newer Unixware has it, and NT 5 *will* have it; but NT in its current forms doesn't.
As far as SMP goes, the company I work for recently took down an SMP NT RIP (2 processors) and replaced it with a uniprocessor machine because the technician told us that performancewise adding a processor to NT does *nothing*.
if your provider doesn't give you reliability. For the past few days my cable link's connectivity uptime can be estimated to be 0% for all practical purposes.
Netscape on Windows platforms (and apparently on the Mac as well) are also following Windows 1250 (?) character set instead of ISO-8859-1. Therefore it is not just Microsoft products; Netscape is not following the standard either.
This will increase our effort to educate the public:-(
Whenever I see "Web Tips" columns saying you can put in quotes and dashes in a web page without resorting to Unicode or GIF, I write a letter to the author. Unfortunately, last time I did this the author replied, promised a correction, but the correction never showed up in print.
How is this different from the "Payment required" status of the HTTP protocol? While the HTTP 0.9 spec didn't say how it is to be implemented, the concept was clearly there years ago.
I'm a Mac person; unfortunately I'm not a Mac programmer.
While Windows programs generally has no visual order, it seems that Mac programs are also slacking in their visual design, perhaps because of Windows influence:-(
I actually agree with Canada Post on one thing: email is less personal.
However, the service level of Canada Post is really dismal, despite the use of such high-tech techniques as postal codes and scan codes. Such is a big disappointment to people used to good postal service such as that found in Hong Kong...
Well, not the big three, but four. There is sign that.edu can be had.
But that's beside the point: the point is, these lawyers seem to have absolutely no common sense. IMHO they should all be sent back to school to learn some of this basic knowledge. Or else they should all be fired. Gee. Take a case they have absolutely no background knowledge about.
Have you seen a Netwinder before? I don't see any proprietary code on my NW except Acorn's FP emulator, and Corel is working hard to replace that with an open source one.
Is its ext2 compatibility.
It's _not_ just ext2 with a journal bolted onto the side. It's an excellent journalling filesystem in it own right. Judge it as such.
And ext3 is unique in that it journals data, not just metadata.
It is also by a decent margin the cleverest and most complex piece of the kernel which I've seen, and I've seen a lot of the kernel, not to mention quite a bit of ext3.
Much credit and congratulations to Stephen Tweedie
for this great software.
- akpm
http://www.uow.edu.au/~andrewm/linux/schedlat.html
http://www.opengfs.org/
http://www.fokus.gmd.de/ovma/freeware/snacc/
Anyone who says this hasn't seen the Interlog fiasco. Interlog used to be one of the best ISP's in Toronto until about a year after being acquired by PSI. About 4 months ago things started going downhill so quickly that...
People dialing in from Toronto actually get an IP address down in the US.
Now how would they actually know these people are in Canada?!
test
If you use mgetty+sendfax, there is a "Respond" package that you can use. It isn't a very elegant solution Windows-wise, but it basically works. It requires the Windows client to run a daemon (the "Respond" program).
So the Universal people obviously don't like contents of their site to be published in academic journals which lists accurate URL's, obviously? Idiots.
$1000 is one day's work for a development team. if over a project, using NT's superior
tools saves 2 days, the choice of NT has paid for itself. (before anyone flames me over
"superior tools", please tell me the linux equivalents of MTS, MSMQ and DCOM)
How large is your development team? Do you realize that small sites exist?
ASP has complete integration with COM and can do anything a COM object can do.
This approach is markedly superior to text processing languages. This same advantage
is shared by CORBA an EJB tools, which again, linux doesn't have.
That's because you are accustomed to using the Microsoft tools. Some people find the text-based tools much much easier to use.
see above. the tools rapidly pay for themselves, then save significant cash. also, the
cost of OS and tools is a very small part of the budget on major projects.
Do you work for a company where budgets are very easy to get? Lucky you. Not all companies are like that. $1000 for the base system and more for the tools? You are daydreaming.
lynx read it fine. Upgrade your browser to lynx :-)
But wait till you tell W3C's HTML validating service to read the page; it spews out 82 syntax errors. Apparently, Microsoft doesn't even know how the "ALT" attribute works.
As far as journalling file systems go, neither SCO ODT nor NT have it. Ok, the newer Unixware has it, and NT 5 *will* have it; but NT in its current forms doesn't.
As far as SMP goes, the company I work for recently took down an SMP NT RIP (2 processors) and replaced it with a uniprocessor machine because the technician told us that performancewise adding a processor to NT does *nothing*.
if your provider doesn't give you reliability. For the past few days my cable link's connectivity uptime can be estimated to be 0% for all practical purposes.
Netscape on Windows platforms (and apparently on the Mac as well) are also following Windows 1250 (?) character set instead of ISO-8859-1. Therefore it is not just Microsoft products; Netscape is not following the standard either.
:-(
This will increase our effort to educate the public
Whenever I see "Web Tips" columns saying you can put in quotes and dashes in a web page without resorting to Unicode or GIF, I write a letter to the author. Unfortunately, last time I did this the author replied, promised a correction, but the correction never showed up in print.
How is this different from the "Payment required" status of the HTTP protocol? While the HTTP 0.9 spec didn't say how it is to be implemented, the concept was clearly there years ago.
I'm a Mac person; unfortunately I'm not a Mac programmer.
:-(
While Windows programs generally has no visual order, it seems that Mac programs are also slacking in their visual design, perhaps because of Windows influence
I actually agree with Canada Post on one thing: email is less personal.
However, the service level of Canada Post is really dismal, despite the use of such high-tech techniques as postal codes and scan codes. Such is a big disappointment to people used to good postal service such as that found in Hong Kong...
If not embarassing, it sounds at least too bullying. At least I am embarrassed when I read it.
Well, not the big three, but four. There is sign that .edu can be had.
But that's beside the point: the point is, these lawyers seem to have absolutely no common sense. IMHO they should all be sent back to school to learn some of this basic knowledge. Or else they should all be fired. Gee. Take a case they have absolutely no background knowledge about.
Have you seen a Netwinder before? I don't see any proprietary code on my NW except Acorn's FP emulator, and Corel is working hard to replace that with an open source one.
So what's the beef about being proprietary??
Back in good old 1986, there were already red and yellow boxes in Japan. The keys on Japanese keyboards had always been rainbow-coloured.
Good old American-centric ignorance...