This is one of AT&T's business offerings. My company uses it for all our mobile users, and we prefer them to use our mailserver for POP and SMTP.
Nifty enough (under windows) it comes with a not-dumbed-down dialer program that includes (and updates itself) with all of their access numbers. All of them, from Argentina to Venezuela. Including ISDN numbers.
The Netopia R-series routers will do what you want. They have NAT, and multi-NAT. Multi-NAT is the feature involving multiple public IP addresses mapped onto different internal machines, for a port, ports, or all ports. This is how you can get more than one webserver through the routers. I don't think most home routers will do that.
The Netopia R-9100 (ethernet to ethernet) is what we have at work. It has an 8-port hub. They work quite well, and run about $450. Netopia has other routers with ADSL or SDSL modules (or ISDN or T1 for that matter) instead of a second ethernet interface.
It's my understanding that defense lawyers are not allowed to mention jury nullification, for fear of contempt of court. From what I've read, judges really hate jury nullification.
I don't want to be down on your idea. You're right: jury nullification is exactly the cure to draconian laws, and the Framers agreed. Check out the Fully-Informed Jurors site.
This fairly well-reasoned article is about improving quality of service. The guy who was interviewed says he does not side with those people who want to blame the Internet on their business failure.
Now, I'm quite poorly-read on such things, but wouldn't better multicast support, on the backbone and for the end-user, take care of network congestion for planned webcasts? And other quality-of-service things? We're not talking about depending on VoIP for your 911 calls.
Re:Is the LA Times paying for his entertainment?
on
The Joys of HDTV
·
· Score: 4
Well, he's not a tech writer. So I doubt the Times dropped much money on that aspect of it. If you notice, at the end of the article, it says he covers medicine. Maybe he's got some medical background?
Not to jump to conclusions, but his name is Thomas H. Maugh II. Maybe he's got family money? Most people that are 'II' content themselves with 'Junior.'
This link tells us that he is a Ph.D. It also appears here that he's been writing for a while. See
Maugh, T. H., II. "LSD and the Drug Culture: New Evidence of Hazard." Science, 23 March 1973, p.
1221.
Well, they can't use TS if they are sitting at anything but another Windows box. (OR maybe a Macintosh, if Mac IE supports ActiveX.)
In fact, I haven't been able to install the TSAC (Terminal Services Advanced Client) on a Win98 box. It says I have the wrong version of Windows. I had to load the NT TS 4.0 client, which I haven't been able to find on MS' site.
The advantage to VNC is the multiplatform capability. The client can be a PalmPilot, a HP, a Mac. Also, not every application runs well under TS. If someone wanted to check the status of a legacy application, that application might not handle a non-console session well. I know that the Norton AV client gets confused by remote sessions, so there may be other apps that have similar difficulties.
The Gaggia Classic is what I'm going to be getting. It has most of the guts of their commercial machines: the group and portafilters, anyway. It's all electric pump for the espresso, and it comes with a sleeve on the wand for the amateurs, which is removable for anyone who knows what they're doing.
This link is for a blurb about how Robert Hanssen (the recently accused spy) wanted to work at Invicta when he retired.
Invicta doesn't appear to have a website. Maybe because they don't have an IP address for search engines to crawl? How would that work, anyway? If it switches addresses all the time, how do you keep a connection open?
If you already have Novell, why not use Novell's Single Sign-On?
It stores all the other auth credentials in NDS. All the user needs is their NDS password. To make it spiffier, you can add-on the Modular Authentication Services, which will work with smartcards or biometrics.
Alas, our universe has only 3 spatial dimensions, so even Acme's dedicated engineers can't make a true Klein Bottle.
A Klein Bottle cannot be embedded in 3 dimensions, but you can immerse it in 3-D. (An immersion may have self-intersections; Embeddings have no self-intersections. Neither an embedding nor an immersion has folds or cusps.)
We represent a Klein Bottle in glass by stretching the neck of a bottle through its side and joining its end to a hole in the base. Except at the side-connection (the nexus), this properly shows the shape of a 4-D Klein Bottle.
taken from
http://www.kleinbottle.com/whats_a_klein_bottle.ht m
Damn straight he's on the level. I just bought one for a friend. It's also Cliff Stoll, of The Cuckoo's Egg
[1] BTW, Crystal Reports works great with MySQL through the ODBC connector. Although not the best, it is in common usage (i.e., people in sales/marketing often know how to use it themselves).
I've used Crystal a lot myself, mostly from Btrieve (blech) and Access databases. You say Crystal isn't the best. What other tools have you worked with? I'm asking because I'd like to see the alternatives.
CR is probably just barely usable for a small company, provide you put ALL of your user-defined/calculated fields in the DB itself.
Well, he said he's just using it to make mailing lists labels and lists. Sounds pretty simple. Plus, he mentions LaTeX, so I don't think he's trying to get his stuff onto the web. I still think Crystal might do well. I've been using it off and on for three years, only for Btrieve, Access, and a little bit of other stuff. No problems with those drivers at all. Trying it with Novell's (very beta) ODBC for NDS driver sucks butt, though, so it probably is up to the quality of the driver.
Crystal is great for small companies: the only kind I've worked for that used Crystal. This is his own DB. Why would he need to worry too much about user-defined fields? As far as calculated ones go, I've had no problems building calculated fields in Crystal. Does using Crystal Data Dictionaries take care of some of those details, as far as user-defined fields go?
He's not really a troll. To my understanding, a directory (like AD, not that I'd want to use it) is the perfect framework for the sort of granularity this guy is asking for. We have Novell here, and the sort of stuff he's asking for is the heart of simplicity.
The OpenBSD changes
page lists KBus work as being added, but i see nothing else.
OpenBSD 2.2 released (Dec 4, 1997)
Addition of 'kbus' port for the Solbourne Series5 sparc-based machines.
, 1997)
Addition of 'kbus' port for the Solbourne Series5 sparc-based machines.
No, I've read a lot of things relating to how crappy things are for employees at Intel. I don't fell like digging up links, but do a Slashdot search on things that intel's current and ex employees say about the place.
Nifty enough (under windows) it comes with a not-dumbed-down dialer program that includes (and updates itself) with all of their access numbers. All of them, from Argentina to Venezuela. Including ISDN numbers.
Amusingly enough, we went to them from Earthlink.
They bought this from IBM. We use it.
The Netopia R-series routers will do what you want. They have NAT, and multi-NAT. Multi-NAT is the feature involving multiple public IP addresses mapped onto different internal machines, for a port, ports, or all ports. This is how you can get more than one webserver through the routers. I don't think most home routers will do that. The Netopia R-9100 (ethernet to ethernet) is what we have at work. It has an 8-port hub. They work quite well, and run about $450. Netopia has other routers with ADSL or SDSL modules (or ISDN or T1 for that matter) instead of a second ethernet interface.
I don't want to be down on your idea. You're right: jury nullification is exactly the cure to draconian laws, and the Framers agreed. Check out the Fully-Informed Jurors site.
Now, I'm quite poorly-read on such things, but wouldn't better multicast support, on the backbone and for the end-user, take care of network congestion for planned webcasts? And other quality-of-service things? We're not talking about depending on VoIP for your 911 calls.
Not to jump to conclusions, but his name is Thomas H. Maugh II. Maybe he's got family money? Most people that are 'II' content themselves with 'Junior.'
This link tells us that he is a Ph.D. It also appears here that he's been writing for a while. See
Well, they can't use TS if they are sitting at anything but another Windows box. (OR maybe a Macintosh, if Mac IE supports ActiveX.) In fact, I haven't been able to install the TSAC (Terminal Services Advanced Client) on a Win98 box. It says I have the wrong version of Windows. I had to load the NT TS 4.0 client, which I haven't been able to find on MS' site. The advantage to VNC is the multiplatform capability. The client can be a PalmPilot, a HP, a Mac. Also, not every application runs well under TS. If someone wanted to check the status of a legacy application, that application might not handle a non-console session well. I know that the Norton AV client gets confused by remote sessions, so there may be other apps that have similar difficulties.
The Gaggia Classic is what I'm going to be getting. It has most of the guts of their commercial machines: the group and portafilters, anyway. It's all electric pump for the espresso, and it comes with a sleeve on the wand for the amateurs, which is removable for anyone who knows what they're doing.
Invicta doesn't appear to have a website. Maybe because they don't have an IP address for search engines to crawl? How would that work, anyway? If it switches addresses all the time, how do you keep a connection open?
These are really for cubedrones who don't need anything not given to them by IT. As far as IT is concerned, anyway.
This article from Salon in 1998 talks about the Tampax site doing exactly what the poster was talking about.
Their overview shows the original scenario he asked about, but with a SCSI bus or FC. All their downloads are for IA-32 Linux.
If you already have Novell, why not use Novell's Single Sign-On? It stores all the other auth credentials in NDS. All the user needs is their NDS password. To make it spiffier, you can add-on the Modular Authentication Services, which will work with smartcards or biometrics.
They're taking all the rock-hound burly-man drama right out of Armageddon!
This isn't quite what you asked for, but I thought it was interesting. PilotCE, PalmOS Emulator for WinCE.
Um, parody?
Alas, our universe has only 3 spatial dimensions, so even Acme's dedicated engineers can't make a true Klein Bottle.
A Klein Bottle cannot be embedded in 3 dimensions, but you can immerse it in 3-D. (An immersion may have self-intersections; Embeddings have no self-intersections. Neither an embedding nor an immersion has folds or cusps.)
We represent a Klein Bottle in glass by stretching the neck of a bottle through its side and joining its end to a hole in the base. Except at the side-connection (the nexus), this properly shows the shape of a 4-D Klein Bottle.
taken from
http://www.kleinbottle.com/whats_a_klein_bottle.ht m
Damn straight he's on the level. I just bought one for a friend. It's also Cliff Stoll, of The Cuckoo's Egg
I've used Crystal a lot myself, mostly from Btrieve (blech) and Access databases. You say Crystal isn't the best. What other tools have you worked with? I'm asking because I'd like to see the alternatives.
right here
Well, he said he's just using it to make mailing lists labels and lists. Sounds pretty simple. Plus, he mentions LaTeX, so I don't think he's trying to get his stuff onto the web. I still think Crystal might do well. I've been using it off and on for three years, only for Btrieve, Access, and a little bit of other stuff. No problems with those drivers at all. Trying it with Novell's (very beta) ODBC for NDS driver sucks butt, though, so it probably is up to the quality of the driver.
Crystal is great for small companies: the only kind I've worked for that used Crystal. This is his own DB. Why would he need to worry too much about user-defined fields? As far as calculated ones go, I've had no problems building calculated fields in Crystal. Does using Crystal Data Dictionaries take care of some of those details, as far as user-defined fields go?
As long as you have an ODBC driver for MySQL on a Windows machine, just go ahead and buy Crystal Reports. Far, far better than Access.
He's not really a troll. To my understanding, a directory (like AD, not that I'd want to use it) is the perfect framework for the sort of granularity this guy is asking for. We have Novell here, and the sort of stuff he's asking for is the heart of simplicity.
Operating systems.
The relevant snipping :
What about Other Operating Systems?
Issues
There's some issues that need to be addressed.
KBus
Obviously, this is ground-level work.
KAP Processor
The IDT's KAP processor is a derivative processor that has a lot of Mask Level bug workarounds in OS/MP.
Linux
No Support that i know of. You can obtain more information from the S/Linux FAQ
OpenBSD
No Support that i know of. You can obtain more information from the OpenBSD SPARC support list
The OpenBSD changes page lists KBus work as being added, but i see nothing else.
OpenBSD 2.2 released (Dec 4, 1997) Addition of 'kbus' port for the Solbourne Series5 sparc-based machines. , 1997) Addition of 'kbus' port for the Solbourne Series5 sparc-based machines.
No, I've read a lot of things relating to how crappy things are for employees at Intel. I don't fell like digging up links, but do a Slashdot search on things that intel's current and ex employees say about the place.
Hemos posted the same thing on Nov 4, 1999. link. At least they didn't post it twice over the course of a week.