Yes, these guys are awesome. We just got one of their switches for our cluster. All ports are line speed, no over subscription. They are also soon to announce some higher density line cards for their existing chassis in the upcoming months. Definitely give them a look.
A packet filter should be considered part of the OS. In Linux it's part of the kernel, I'm not sure if it's userland or not in BSD, but regardless, a packet filter is much more a core OS component than a browser...
How about the health nuts who don't like all these radio waves in the air causing them cancer? they could line their houses with it. maybe make a domed city or something. isn't there a city in the desert in california with the same goal?
That's why you don't overwrite your kernel and the module directory tree changes, and you add an additional entry in lilo. So if something is fucked you go reboot and use the old setup. This is something you can do when you patch your system manually and not let windowsupdate do it for you. Big brother knows best eh??
This is very much like the concept of Internet2 that a whole slew of universities, and i believe some non-profit organizations take part in. They have their own private backbone, "abeline", and they have a priority scheme implemented. And what if someone breaks the rules? If they get caught they are kicked off. Which is a great detterant since this network is much more efficient than the standard internet, and cheaper.
Kernel Compilation for Performance
on
Kernel Benchmarks
·
· Score: 2
I've read that the Kernel Team has recomended use of egcs 1.1.2 as an alternative to gcc 2.95.2 for compiling the 2.4.0 kernel. How much affect does that have on the performance of an OS?
Slackware has a port to SPARC. I've never used it, but I've heard good things about it. I intend to see it in action soon, as a co-worker with a SPARC plans on putting it on his new machine, an Ultra 10. He is a slack fanatic.
So my O/S gets to influence what sites my browser can and can't see?
No. Actually some router out there decided that. Since you set bit's it's not even supposed to be concerned with. It should ignore the reserved bits, or at least throw an error. It should not silently drop packets...the OS in this case is merely doing the right thing. So it's the routers fault you can't see a web page.
It is also made very clear in the kernel config that you don't have to do this, and isn't set by default. So you'd have to go out of your way to make it happen.
How about we just do an old fashioned slashdotting of aol.com? Sure, they probably have a farm of servers, and can handle this load. Sure they'll probably get paid for every hit by their ads. but it'll be great for getting our frustrations out! Come on everyone, click here!!!!
Are you able to SSH or telnet into your network from the outside? The problem I have run into is that the DSL modem itself gets the ip, and it has no services running. If I had a DSL modem that would pass stuff right through, and i had the actual IP. That'd be great. I'm not to familiar with the DSL modem options, does something like this exist for a reasonable price?
Super Bomber Man!!!
That's a good episode. I was hoping someone on here would bring that up cause I couldn't remember exactly where I had seen that.
Porn? I mean, isn't that what this whole crazy internet thing is for?
Yes, these guys are awesome. We just got one of their switches for our cluster. All ports are line speed, no over subscription. They are also soon to announce some higher density line cards for their existing chassis in the upcoming months. Definitely give them a look.
x ^= y
y ^= x
x ^= y
bitwise, no overflow worries...
No, probably more like "3...2...1...Kontact!"
Penn State is actually just down the road from the State Penn...
Here is a link to a non-Apple PPC 970 system.
Personally, I got toothpaste, tic-tacs, deodorant, and a McDonalds coupon book in the same package.
Think they are trying to tell you something?
Didn't you drop this in a 400 degree oven and get it fixed under it's lifetime warranty? Only thing that was damaged was the plastic ink refil?
But, isn't one of those situations he mentions in the interview (namely, running a large database server) what this chip is designed to be doing?
He was comparing it to a P4 though, not any 64 bit chips.
http://www.nvidia.com/view.asp?IO=linux_amd64_disp lay_archive
A packet filter should be considered part of the OS. In Linux it's part of the kernel, I'm not sure if it's userland or not in BSD, but regardless, a packet filter is much more a core OS component than a browser...
They can even steal BSD's if they wish!
> if you had a roomfull of this
:)
Mmmmm, or a movie theater full of this
How about the health nuts who don't like all these radio waves in the air causing them cancer? they could line their houses with it. maybe make a domed city or something. isn't there a city in the desert in california with the same goal?
That's why you don't overwrite your kernel and the module directory tree changes, and you add an additional entry in lilo. So if something is fucked you go reboot and use the old setup. This is something you can do when you patch your system manually and not let windowsupdate do it for you. Big brother knows best eh??
This is very much like the concept of Internet2 that a whole slew of universities, and i believe some non-profit organizations take part in. They have their own private backbone, "abeline", and they have a priority scheme implemented. And what if someone breaks the rules? If they get caught they are kicked off. Which is a great detterant since this network is much more efficient than the standard internet, and cheaper.
I've read that the Kernel Team has recomended use of egcs 1.1.2 as an alternative to gcc 2.95.2 for compiling the 2.4.0 kernel. How much affect does that have on the performance of an OS?
Is it worth the trouble?
Slackware has a port to SPARC. I've never used it, but I've heard good things about it. I intend to see it in action soon, as a co-worker with a SPARC plans on putting it on his new machine, an Ultra 10. He is a slack fanatic.
So my O/S gets to influence what sites my browser can and can't see?
No. Actually some router out there decided that. Since you set bit's it's not even supposed to be concerned with. It should ignore the reserved bits, or at least throw an error. It should not silently drop packets...the OS in this case is merely doing the right thing. So it's the routers fault you can't see a web page.
It is also made very clear in the kernel config that you don't have to do this, and isn't set by default. So you'd have to go out of your way to make it happen.
How about Windows XP Beta 2, cause of that damned cool nickelodeon interface!
How about we just do an old fashioned slashdotting of aol.com? Sure, they probably have a farm of servers, and can handle this load. Sure they'll probably get paid for every hit by their ads. but it'll be great for getting our frustrations out! Come on everyone, click here!!!!
Are you able to SSH or telnet into your network from the outside? The problem I have run into is that the DSL modem itself gets the ip, and it has no services running. If I had a DSL modem that would pass stuff right through, and i had the actual IP. That'd be great. I'm not to familiar with the DSL modem options, does something like this exist for a reasonable price?
Can you please explain how it conserves ip's? this is a serious question, not a flame.