i would count csh/tcsh as the same, possibly unfairly. Irix lists csh, ksh, sh, and tcsh, in that order, when adding a new account. I'm curious why tcsh is your first choice on Irix.
What's preventing the restored DNS records from propagating from the root server down to all of the requesters?
your isp cached the fatal response. you have to wait for the fatal response to expire from their cache before they query the root servers again. Or run your own dns server.
The alternative seems to be playing with war-driving tools to initiate an action when it sees the right WiFi network...
why? rsync over ssh (or scp) verifies that you're talking to the right server. who cares about determining if you're on the right wifi network? find out if your server is there, start syncing. If the ssh keys don't match, it just won't go.
#!/usr/local/bin/ksh while true do if [[ -x/CFmountpoint/imagedir ]];then server=$(nslookup <serverName>) if [[ $server = *<serverIP>* ]];then rsync -e ssh -az/CFmountpoint/imagedir/ <server>:imagedir/ fi fi sleep 60 done
If what you say about getting a credential is true,
that is very good news indeed. I looked into it
a little bit for Ohio because my girlfriend wants to
become a teacher. From what I can see, to get a teaching certification requires
a degree from a qualified teacher education program, i.e.
a bachelor's degree from one of the certified
colleges. Some colleges have a teacher certification program that qualifies
you with a bachelor's, but some of the rules were changed
recently, so most schools now require a master's before they grant the state certification. True, you can teach for up to 5
years before getting certified, but I don't think it resets when you change school districts (unless you chagne states).
Which clone. Just FYI? OS X does run on some clones,
and on those it will work with G3 upgrades. It's just not supported. But then neither is your linux box, I'm assuming.
without much knowledge on the subject, I'm going to disagree
with you on the thing about letting teachers teach
without certification. In most states, or at least
in mine and the surrounding 4, to become a teacher
you need a degree in *education.* to get certified.
It's not something sensical, like you take a proficiency
test to show you know the subject. No, you must have
a bachelor's degree in Education + be working towards your
masters in education.
One consequence of this is that if I'm, say, Stephen Hawking,
and I decide I want to teach high school physics,
it's very very difficult to do that without either: 1) goign back to school to get that degree in education,
or b) who knows, because the only clear way to become a teacher is to be enrolled in a program of teacher certification.
Actually, I believe there are some ways around this, but they really
don't make it easy.
Maybe you are correct, and the bill in your state
is more about getting cheap teachers than about
getting qualified people. But that stupid education
degree really bothers me.
Of course, it's the same sort of thing for doctors. But somehow I think
a doctor requires more specialized medical knowledge
than a teacher requires knowledge about how to educate.
Or more specifically, I would hate to see a doctor without med school,
but I've had some of those teachers from education
school, and their knowledge of the subject matter was...
underwhelming.
I have a SS5 and a SS20. The 20 has dual supersparc II 75's. It's very useable. The SS5 is an 83Mhz, and it's not so useable... but gcc does work on it fairly well, which is more than I can say for HP-UX.
The sparc 5 and the HP are probably about the same speed. I can't benchmark it now because I took the SS5 down until I can think of something to use it for that I wouldn't rather put on the 20.
I have already owned several PPC Macs running MacOS X and many PCs but they still leave me wanting more.
What leaves you wanting? The OS choices? The processor architectures? Gui's available? Ability to talk to the BIOS via serial console? The coolness factor (hey, look at me, I run an AS/400 in my basement!)...
Do you just want to be different?
It's impossible to even begin answering your question without knowing why you're dissatisfied with x86/PPC...
I'm writing this from a Mac running OS X, which is sitting next to my OS 9 box for photoshop, which is next to my 2 x86 linux boxes for playing quake. My home directory is shared to all via NFS from my x86 freebsd box, which sits on the rack next to an *old* HP-PA box running HP-UX since that's what we run at work, and 2 sparcs running Solaris serving up web pages for no reason other than that Solaris is kewl. Any one of these can do pretty much everything any of the others can do (except for the HP. 80Mhz PA-Risc just don't cut it...)
Now what, exactly, did you want your workstation to do that it doesn't do now?
Solaris is heavily multi-threaded. Ultra Sparc's are fast. Most of all, CDE and XSun are fast. Really fast. If your OS X machine approaches the speed of your Ultra5, I for one, would be satisfied.
Solaris may be have a lot of overhead that makes it slow(er) on single processor machines for many things, but the UI is very snappy.
Did I mention CDE and XSun are fast?
Not that it matters when you're trying to recover Windows, but you can get a decent CLI for Windows with UWin. Puts korn shell on there. Free license for educational use.
Driving on the roads IS NOT RIGHT, it is a PRIVELIGE you pay for...through the nose.
If you meant this as sarcasm, you aimed it at the wrong state. Massachusetts is land of the toll roads. Yes, it is a privilege you pay for... and pay for... and keep paying. Then they raise the tolls because some morons couldn't figure out to the nearest billion dollars how much it would cost to run a freeway underneath downtown boston.
there's also the real kornshell for linux. Not too many people seem to know it, though.
i would count csh/tcsh as the same, possibly unfairly. Irix lists csh, ksh, sh, and tcsh, in that order, when adding a new account. I'm curious why tcsh is your first choice on Irix.
your isp cached the fatal response. you have to wait for the fatal response to expire from their cache before they query the root servers again. Or run your own dns server.
sounds like a familiar story. what kind of beer would you need to write a wyse60 emulator by next tuesday?
why? rsync over ssh (or scp) verifies that you're talking to the right server. who cares about determining if you're on the right wifi network? find out if your server is there, start syncing. If the ssh keys don't match, it just won't go.
#!/usr/local/bin/ksh /CFmountpoint/imagedir ]];then /CFmountpoint/imagedir/ <server>:imagedir/
while true
do
if [[ -x
server=$(nslookup <serverName>)
if [[ $server = *<serverIP>* ]];then
rsync -e ssh -az
fi
fi
sleep 60
done
anything else?
No, it doesn't. Also, Messenger doesn't have a calendar.
http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar/
Looks like a calendar to me.
solaris. runs in 32bit or 64bit mode on my ultra1.
Supports
c ka ges.html.
Darwin 6.6/powerpc
Debian Linux/i386
FreeBSD 3.5/i386
FreeBSD 5.1/i386
IRIX 6.5/mips
IRIX64 6.5/mips
OpenBSD 3.2/i386
Slackware 8.1/i386
Solaris 8/sparc
Solaris 9/sparc
Solaris 9/i386
http://www.netbsd.org/Documentation/software/pa
Of course, you have to compile the packages using the framework they provide, but where will you find 3000 precompiled Irix binaries anyway?
Apple's QT streaming server only streams the video. It creating the stream can be quite expensive. try ffmpeg
Should work under linux. FPS will be low since it's one chip for 4 inputs. $179 AU.
He probably meant that the stability argument went out the window when WinME went out the Window (i.e. they stopped selling it)
i.e. meant to say: Which clone? Just FYI.
One consequence of this is that if I'm, say, Stephen Hawking, and I decide I want to teach high school physics, it's very very difficult to do that without either: 1) goign back to school to get that degree in education, or b) who knows, because the only clear way to become a teacher is to be enrolled in a program of teacher certification.
Actually, I believe there are some ways around this, but they really don't make it easy.
Maybe you are correct, and the bill in your state is more about getting cheap teachers than about getting qualified people. But that stupid education degree really bothers me.
Of course, it's the same sort of thing for doctors. But somehow I think a doctor requires more specialized medical knowledge than a teacher requires knowledge about how to educate. Or more specifically, I would hate to see a doctor without med school, but I've had some of those teachers from education school, and their knowledge of the subject matter was... underwhelming.
Hi.
The sparc 5 and the HP are probably about the same speed. I can't benchmark it now because I took the SS5 down until I can think of something to use it for that I wouldn't rather put on the 20.
What leaves you wanting? The OS choices? The processor architectures? Gui's available? Ability to talk to the BIOS via serial console? The coolness factor (hey, look at me, I run an AS/400 in my basement!)...
Do you just want to be different?
It's impossible to even begin answering your question without knowing why you're dissatisfied with x86/PPC...
I'm writing this from a Mac running OS X, which is sitting next to my OS 9 box for photoshop, which is next to my 2 x86 linux boxes for playing quake. My home directory is shared to all via NFS from my x86 freebsd box, which sits on the rack next to an *old* HP-PA box running HP-UX since that's what we run at work, and 2 sparcs running Solaris serving up web pages for no reason other than that Solaris is kewl. Any one of these can do pretty much everything any of the others can do (except for the HP. 80Mhz PA-Risc just don't cut it...)
Now what, exactly, did you want your workstation to do that it doesn't do now?
Solaris may be have a lot of overhead that makes it slow(er) on single processor machines for many things, but the UI is very snappy. Did I mention CDE and XSun are fast?
http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin/
Very nice sig.
He said forgive him for feeling superior to an MCSE.
Or perhaps this would make it clearer.
#include stdio.h
main(){
printf("superior to an MCSE");
}
Did my butchered C make it any clearer? Or do you need it in VBScript?
Yes. It's not. nice try though.
If you meant this as sarcasm, you aimed it at the wrong state. Massachusetts is land of the toll roads. Yes, it is a privilege you pay for... and pay for... and keep paying. Then they raise the tolls because some morons couldn't figure out to the nearest billion dollars how much it would cost to run a freeway underneath downtown boston.