This source code is subject to the U.S. Export Administration Regulations and other U.S. law, and may not be exported or re-exported to certain countries (currently Afghanistan (Taliban controlled areas)
Bombing them is one thing, but not giving them access to Mozilla? That's just mean.
Macs have always been simple to cluster. Almost all macs have the ability to netboot, simply by booting while holding down the N key. This feature, used in conjunction with a dhcp/tftp server, you can boot a remote kernel with a ramdisk, which will automaticaly build the node. Terra Soft Solutions, makers of Yellow Dog Linux, offer a node management suite called Black Lab for Yellow Dog Linux which automates the entire procedure.
I think I know what I will be doing tonight...
"Hey, I'll bet you five bucks that Will Smith is gonna get it for Ali..."
"Your on!"
This source code is subject to the U.S. Export Administration Regulations and other U.S. law, and may not be exported or re-exported to certain countries (currently Afghanistan (Taliban controlled areas)
Bombing them is one thing, but not giving them access to Mozilla? That's just mean.
What about charging like any other utility does (gas, phone, electric, water, etc...) and have a pay-per-unit of bandwidth scheme.
I wonder how that would work out...
It does not take up any of your recording capacity - it is stored in a seperate reserved space.
Looks to me like Tivo has been planning this from the beginning. Why else would they allocate seperate 'reserved space'?
and I'm sure that's because Apple knows that most Unix admins are using 21" CRTs.
Or maybe it is because the person who scanned it from a magazine did so at a very high res...
Does Apple know that most Unix admins like are using standard size mags?
The only thing more cruel than linking to that image, is linking to it behind their load balancer... (www4.macnn.com)
Beep...Beep...Beep..............
Just one computer in a tool box? Check out this.
A good /.ing should show them how we feel about this, but for god sakes, remember to disable your cookies before you go there...
Macs have always been simple to cluster. Almost all macs have the ability to netboot, simply by booting while holding down the N key. This feature, used in conjunction with a dhcp/tftp server, you can boot a remote kernel with a ramdisk, which will automaticaly build the node. Terra Soft Solutions, makers of Yellow Dog Linux, offer a node management suite called Black Lab for Yellow Dog Linux which automates the entire procedure.
Anyone have a bunch of iMacs laying around?