"NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has measured the largest object in the solar system ever seen since the discovery of Pluto 72 years ago. Approximately half the size of Pluto, the icy world is called "Quaoar" (pronounced kwa-whar). Quaoar is about 4 billion miles away, more than a billion miles farther than Pluto. Like Pluto, Quaoar dwells in the Kuiper belt, an icy belt of comet-like bodies extending 7 billion miles beyond Neptune's orbit."
I work at Sun and can honestly say that most of us
are using workstation class machines (U1, U2, U10, U60). I think GNOME is a great enhancement for those of us using a Sun box each day for "normal" activities.
I used to run a Remote Access BBS back in 92-93. I miss the days of getting up late at night to see who was on, or responding to a chat request, etc.
I don't suppose anyone would happen to know where I could pull the RA software from these days?
"NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has measured the largest object in the solar system ever seen since the discovery of Pluto 72 years ago. Approximately half the size of Pluto, the icy world is called "Quaoar" (pronounced kwa-whar). Quaoar is about 4 billion miles away, more than a billion miles farther than Pluto. Like Pluto, Quaoar dwells in the Kuiper belt, an icy belt of comet-like bodies extending 7 billion miles beyond Neptune's orbit."
2 +17
http://hubblesite.org/news_.and._views/pr.cgi.200
Catch tune... Maybe it's me, but I can't stop chuckling.
I work at Sun and can honestly say that most of us
are using workstation class machines (U1, U2, U10, U60). I think GNOME is a great enhancement for those of us using a Sun box each day for "normal" activities.
I used to run a Remote Access BBS back in 92-93. I miss the days of getting up late at night to see who was on, or responding to a chat request, etc. I don't suppose anyone would happen to know where I could pull the RA software from these days?