PSO has about as much to do with the rest of the PS series as any first person shooter with real time combat. Granted PSI did have first person dungeons, but the simularities end there. If you are basing your desire to play the rest of the PS series on your experiences with PSO, you might be in for a bit of a surprise (as were the rest of the fans the first time they played PSO).
The macros didn't show up until III, and were not very flexible. IV had full control, including combo attacks. The combo attacks could be triggered without a macro, but the order had to be correct for some of the more powerful attacks. A macro assured that the combo would go off every time (provided that all the needed charaters were alive).
From the bottom of the (file manager) project's home page:
Gentoo the Linux distribution has nothing to do with gentoo the file manager, except the latter runs on the former. I actually used the name first of the two, way back in September 1998. I've been in touch with the Gentoo folks, and we're cool.
That pretty much is true, along with the fact that GNU/Linux has been running on other 64-bit platforms for many years now.
The biggest problem I'm having building a custom install for my AMD64 machines is the fact they have 32-bit compatiblity. On the Alpha is was easy, the lib directories contained 64-bit libaries, because the machines were 64-bit, period. But with the AMD64 the lib dirs are still supposed to contain the 32-bit libs, with the 64-bit versions installed in a lib64 variant. This causes problems because almost no libary packages are setup to compile twice once in 32-bit and then over again in 64-bit mode with a simple./configure.
I saw someone asking before how others can get the disc if they already have a GCN, or just bought one not long ago. Nintendo has details on their web site under Zelda Classic.
Basically you can buy a subscription to Nintendo Power, or if you haven't registered your system yet, you can do that along with two other holiday release games.
Haven't you seen "Frequency". No? Good, you are lucky. Otherwise, I'm going to contact timothy on my HAM, and tell him to stop smoking. Chick-flic sci-fi at its best.
My Tyan board has a short heatsink on main motherboard chipset (is it really a Northbridge?). It barely gets warm to the touch. The AMD64 moves most of the Northbridge features into the CPU, cooling isn't much of an issue now.
Actually I mean the pedestal sized machines. There are blue and white box varients. The blue box could run NT, VMS, and Digital Unix, but the white box versions of the same machine were only licensed to run NT. The internal system ID was just set to negitive of the blue box version. The patch I'm speaking of, detects the negitive ID and inverts it.
Have you tried getting Linux to install on it? I'd have a look at the Redhat Fedora Linux port to the Alpha. It may not be that far along now, but 2.6 did add support for a few more machines, you might just luck out.
Also can't hurt to Google around, someone has probably tried to get it running on the exact same machine.
The most "extreme" change is the modutils to module-init-tools. But the module-init-tools provide wrapper support and call the old modutils when booting back to a 2.4 kernel.
It doesn't build for the x86-64 platform, and doesn't boot on "white box" Alphas (ones only intended to run NT). So my 64-bit machines are feeling a bit left out.
At least patches for both problems are available, but need to be merged.
I've used GoDaddy since I found them to be the cheapest, not expecting much support, but I don't need help, so it wasn't a big deal.
Finally the three domains I had registed with Network Solutions (when there was no other option), came up for renewal. I figured I'd transfer them to GoDaddy since that is where my other domains were. The first two transfered over fine, but the.org didn't show up.
I waited a day, still no.org. There was a phone number in the e-mail I got confirming the transfer. So I figured rather than try a back-and-forth in e-mail, I'd just see if I could get a hold of someone on the phone. I was so surprized to get a live human with no hold time. He pulled up my account quicking, saw the.org had gotten stuck somehow in the transfer process, moved it on manually, and I had my transfer complete.
Sure things don't always go right with any company. I think one of the measures of a good company is how they handle things when they doesn't work the first time. I'd still probably be e-mailing Verisign today, if the transfer was going the other way.
Wow, that's broken. So you have to check one account's mail on two different machines?
The whole purpose of a back-up MX is to collect mail while the primary is down. But just to hold it in queue. When the primary comes back on-line, it then delivers the mail there.
So the back-up(s) should be configured to accept mail for the domain name, but not for local delivery. This is a basic function of all SMTP servers.
I noticed the same thing. While both of the main servers had the same level of spam filtering, I found it odd that the secondary was seeing a lot more spam. So as an experiment I added a thrid MX, the first two are of priority 0 and 10. The third I made 100 (not that it really matters). On this third server I set up even stricter anti-spam rules. The amount of spam fell of very quickly after that. The spammers would go for the trap. I would say that over 90% of the e-mail to that server is spam. I have almost considered just making it a black hole. But it does see a little valid traffic, and there is a chance that both of our main servers could be offline at the same time.
I always hated pencils as a left hander, because they'd leave the side my hand silver colored. Never had a problem with the cartridge based fountain pens. Erasable pens were nasty though.
PSO has about as much to do with the rest of the PS series as any first person shooter with real time combat. Granted PSI did have first person dungeons, but the simularities end there. If you are basing your desire to play the rest of the PS series on your experiences with PSO, you might be in for a bit of a surprise (as were the rest of the fans the first time they played PSO).
The macros didn't show up until III, and were not very flexible. IV had full control, including combo attacks. The combo attacks could be triggered without a macro, but the order had to be correct for some of the more powerful attacks. A macro assured that the combo would go off every time (provided that all the needed charaters were alive).
From the bottom of the (file manager) project's home page:
Gentoo the Linux distribution has nothing to do with gentoo the file manager, except the latter runs on the former. I actually used the name first of the two, way back in September 1998. I've been in touch with the Gentoo folks, and we're cool.
That pretty much is true, along with the fact that GNU/Linux has been running on other 64-bit platforms for many years now.
./configure.
The biggest problem I'm having building a custom install for my AMD64 machines is the fact they have 32-bit compatiblity. On the Alpha is was easy, the lib directories contained 64-bit libaries, because the machines were 64-bit, period. But with the AMD64 the lib dirs are still supposed to contain the 32-bit libs, with the 64-bit versions installed in a lib64 variant. This causes problems because almost no libary packages are setup to compile twice once in 32-bit and then over again in 64-bit mode with a simple
I saw someone asking before how others can get the disc if they already have a GCN, or just bought one not long ago. Nintendo has details on their web site under Zelda Classic.
Basically you can buy a subscription to Nintendo Power, or if you haven't registered your system yet, you can do that along with two other holiday release games.
Maybe they should just get an increase in funding, so they can pay for a bit more bandwidth.
Haven't you seen "Frequency". No? Good, you are lucky. Otherwise, I'm going to contact timothy on my HAM, and tell him to stop smoking. Chick-flic sci-fi at its best.
Or at least one that isn't so enthusastic about finding hosts to clean.
I'm still waiting for Jan. 1st, 2004.
Don't forget the AMD Athlon 64 FX.
My Tyan board has a short heatsink on main motherboard chipset (is it really a Northbridge?). It barely gets warm to the touch. The AMD64 moves most of the Northbridge features into the CPU, cooling isn't much of an issue now.
Actually I mean the pedestal sized machines. There are blue and white box varients. The blue box could run NT, VMS, and Digital Unix, but the white box versions of the same machine were only licensed to run NT. The internal system ID was just set to negitive of the blue box version. The patch I'm speaking of, detects the negitive ID and inverts it.
Have you tried getting Linux to install on it? I'd have a look at the Redhat Fedora Linux port to the Alpha. It may not be that far along now, but 2.6 did add support for a few more machines, you might just luck out.
Also can't hurt to Google around, someone has probably tried to get it running on the exact same machine.
The most "extreme" change is the modutils to module-init-tools. But the module-init-tools provide wrapper support and call the old modutils when booting back to a 2.4 kernel.
The Alpha patch is just to the arch specific setup.c file, adds one conditional, and three lines of varible twidling. That should probably go in.
But yes, the x86-64 stuff is a pretty big patch.
It doesn't build for the x86-64 platform, and doesn't boot on "white box" Alphas (ones only intended to run NT). So my 64-bit machines are feeling a bit left out.
At least patches for both problems are available, but need to be merged.
I've used GoDaddy since I found them to be the cheapest, not expecting much support, but I don't need help, so it wasn't a big deal.
.org didn't show up.
.org. There was a phone number in the e-mail I got confirming the transfer. So I figured rather than try a back-and-forth in e-mail, I'd just see if I could get a hold of someone on the phone. I was so surprized to get a live human with no hold time. He pulled up my account quicking, saw the .org had gotten stuck somehow in the transfer process, moved it on manually, and I had my transfer complete.
Finally the three domains I had registed with Network Solutions (when there was no other option), came up for renewal. I figured I'd transfer them to GoDaddy since that is where my other domains were. The first two transfered over fine, but the
I waited a day, still no
Sure things don't always go right with any company. I think one of the measures of a good company is how they handle things when they doesn't work the first time. I'd still probably be e-mailing Verisign today, if the transfer was going the other way.
Yes. .io and .sz.
If you look at the site debunking the Liebermann product list, you'll see that 9XMedia is linked to as one of the real links for their monitors.
Wow, that's broken. So you have to check one account's mail on two different machines?
The whole purpose of a back-up MX is to collect mail while the primary is down. But just to hold it in queue. When the primary comes back on-line, it then delivers the mail there.
So the back-up(s) should be configured to accept mail for the domain name, but not for local delivery. This is a basic function of all SMTP servers.
I noticed the same thing. While both of the main servers had the same level of spam filtering, I found it odd that the secondary was seeing a lot more spam. So as an experiment I added a thrid MX, the first two are of priority 0 and 10. The third I made 100 (not that it really matters). On this third server I set up even stricter anti-spam rules. The amount of spam fell of very quickly after that. The spammers would go for the trap. I would say that over 90% of the e-mail to that server is spam. I have almost considered just making it a black hole. But it does see a little valid traffic, and there is a chance that both of our main servers could be offline at the same time.
I always hated pencils as a left hander, because they'd leave the side my hand silver colored. Never had a problem with the cartridge based fountain pens. Erasable pens were nasty though.
I use Evolution with Courier IMAP, it "expunges" the deleted messages just fine (at exit or when I push Ctrl-E). Maybe just an Exchange thing?
How about a lighter engine that can still make 700 HP? (I'm only tuning mine for around 450.) ((And it is going in the heavier convertible body.))
See my sig (haven't updated the site for a while).
All of mine are wide, ultra wide in fact, and hot swappable to boot.
You mean: // yes it it, as of C99
The bruteforce method:
include "named.delegation-only";