keybinding for tab switching in mozilla/NS7?
on
Hyatt Discusses Tabs
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
Does anyone know if you can easily (without spending tons of time parsing XUL) assign a keybinding to switch between tabs in mozilla or mozilla-based (NS7) browsers? I'd love to be able to do the alt-tab like thing to switch between my tabs (ok, that just looks weird) but there doesn't seem to be a default way to do this.
You're forgetting one important thing... The ship in "All Good Things" is the Enterprise D, which gets destroyed in Generations, so obviously this future timeline has already been mangled and won't happen.
Damn, I can't believe I've actually sunk to debating Trek Timelines on/. I'll never get laid again!
I've been working in the engineering world for just shy of 14 years now, and here's what little advice I can give. Those folks who have a good foundation and spend their time learning more than they have to on the job are still working. Those folks who specialized in one area are unemployed. Yeah, it's not a hard and fast rule, I was out of work for a few months between end of last year and early 02, but now I've been working steady since February. I'm in a completely different space than I was last year (moved from finance to GIS) but I proved to my potential employer that I could adapt and that what skills I brought to the table were useful.
Of the folks I've worked with recently, about half of them are out of work, but the ones who really know their stuff have done alright, even if it means changing companies or changing industries. If you can design a good circuit, there's work for you. Same if you can write good code, or take care of a network.
I was there for this. It was 1999, the film was called Star Wars: Dark Redemption. Shortly after we saw it at D*C, Lucas pulled his "blessing" of the film, sadly.
Sadly, no. It means "I installed the flash upgrade and now my $400 drive won't even open the door anymore and Pioneer's answer is 'We'll give you an RMA and have a new drive to you in 3-4 weeks.'"
Gotta second that. I love my SP250. Just make sure to do 2 things. 1) Upgrade to the latest firmware. 2) If you're going jogging with it, be sure to turn it on and wait 15 seconds or so for the buffer to fill up before you stop running. Otherwise it will skip.
Oh, and if the batteries are starting to get weak (sadly, you can't believe the battery gauge) you'll find that the skip protection sucks. So put in a fresh set of batteries if you haven't charged it in a while. Those Energizer Titanium thingies will power the thing for AGES! I've gotten over 15 hours off one set.
I always knew there was something odd about that side of my family...
Re:Sweet! A linux handheld...
on
Terapin Mine Review
·
· Score: 5, Informative
It's not a linux handheld... It's a file store that happens to run Linux on the backend... But you're completely isolated from any of the OS by their software... Thinkgeek has been carrying these for a while now, but they're expensive.
Here is the user's manual, which has some good screen shots...
In the US, as long as there is a licensed operator at both stations to come on and give a callsign id every 10 minutes (time may be off, don't have a manual in front of me) then it's all good. My club used to run 3rd party traffic calls to the "North Pole" for the local children's hospital at Xmas time every year. Perfectly legal under FCC rules. There used to be a bunch of questions specifically about this on the old Technician exam (or tech + now)
Umm... Given how well Sun is entrenched in the financial world, I think you saying the platform is dead is just plain FUD. Check with the IT department at any major financial company and ask them how many 4500 or better systems they have. (I know, I used to work for one) And yes, a lot of them are upgrading to the new UltraSparc III machines.
And for those folks doing hard research (or special effects companies with lots o' money) SGI is still king. Despite what nvidia would like us to believe, SGI's not going anywhere anytime soon for big 3d rendering projects.
I was doing an IP address switch over a couple weeks ago, and bonehead me forgets to do a "clear arp;clear xlate" on the firewall. None of my translations are working, I can't figure out why. Access lists look good, static commands all check out, why the hell can't I ping things properly? I reboot the firewall and everything starts working. Rebooting the firewall cleared the xlate and arp tables. This was not a "symptom" that would come back (unless my fsck-ing ISP changes our IP block on us without warning *AGAIN*), it was me being a bonehead after a long day and forgetting to clear a table. The reboot fixed this nicely.
Granted when I figured out what the problem was, I felt like a total idiot for having to take down the firewall, but at least the network started working again.
I'm not sure I understand that. Why does the router purge its logs when you reboot it?
Unless you have syslog logging setup on the Cisco, and it can talk to your Syslog server to offload the data, the logs are stored in RAM. Reboot and the logs go bye bye. Since the router was acting toasty and the vlans were disappearing, the router probably couldn't access whatever box was setup to receive the logs (assuming that syslog was turned on to begin with).
CDDB started out as part of a (IIRC) GPLed unix cd player program. The entire database was originally distributed with the program. Gracenote bought the database up a few years ago, revoked the GPL, and started charging for this data. *THAT* is why everyone is so pissed, and why Roxio has a damned convincing case.
Now I won't be able to find new and exciting pr0n every time I mispell major company names. I'll be reduced to reading/. and finding the hidden goatse links!
Do you know of any accounting firms who support this system? I used to consult for a few companies, and one of the most frequent complaints I'd hear around the office was that their accountants were forcing them to use Quickbooks/Great Plains/Peachtree/whatever and they didn't like it/it didn't have flexibility to work with their business model/etc. From the quick glance I've given GnuCash, it seems to be a dream to setup for most small to mid-size businesses, but if their accountants are stuck in the closed-minded "use my software or I won't help you" mentality, this would keep a substantial user-base down.
While not an open-source solution, here's what we do where I work. We use Norton Anti-Virus Corporate Edition (The corp-ed is important). This lets us build a NAV server which will go out and grab the updates auto-magically on a schedule (we do it once a day early in the morning). It will then push the updates out to all running clients! And if a client is not online, as soon as it is turned on, it contacts the NAV server and queries if there is a new signature update.
This package is a dream to administer. Once a quarter, Symmantec sends me a CD pack with any updates to the scanning program, and I install this on the server. Because I run Win2K on all the desktops, I can remote-install the software on all the workstations in the building without having to go over and do the usual "Let me know when I can schedule 30 minutes to install this software." crap across a few hundred machines. Plus I never have to worry that someone didn't bother to keep up with the virus updates. I can also schedule scans of any computer whenever I want, and get notified if problems crop up.
As pointed out by someone else, if you're uber-paranoid, just map a network drive to the samba shares and schedule a scan from your NAV server. You can use any system running either NT or 2K for your NAV server. You don't have to dedicate the machine, and the box can even be running the "workstation" flavor of Windows and still be a NAV "server".
Now if you could do all this under Linux that would be super-cool, but until then, I think this will be your best bet. The Server license is a bit more than the usual copy of NAV, but the client licenses are dirt cheap ($10 apiece if I remember correctly) so if you have more than 25 workstations to adminsiter, you're going to be saving TONS of money and time.
Does anyone know if you can easily (without spending tons of time parsing XUL) assign a keybinding to switch between tabs in mozilla or mozilla-based (NS7) browsers? I'd love to be able to do the alt-tab like thing to switch between my tabs (ok, that just looks weird) but there doesn't seem to be a default way to do this.
You're forgetting one important thing... The ship in "All Good Things" is the Enterprise D, which gets destroyed in Generations, so obviously this future timeline has already been mangled and won't happen.
/. I'll never get laid again!
Damn, I can't believe I've actually sunk to debating Trek Timelines on
These APs go to 11...
Nonono! This is UNIX, it needs Vigor!!
"I see you have placed your cup in insert mode. Remember, you need to press escape to enter more Vigor commands!"
I've been working in the engineering world for just shy of 14 years now, and here's what little advice I can give. Those folks who have a good foundation and spend their time learning more than they have to on the job are still working. Those folks who specialized in one area are unemployed. Yeah, it's not a hard and fast rule, I was out of work for a few months between end of last year and early 02, but now I've been working steady since February. I'm in a completely different space than I was last year (moved from finance to GIS) but I proved to my potential employer that I could adapt and that what skills I brought to the table were useful.
Of the folks I've worked with recently, about half of them are out of work, but the ones who really know their stuff have done alright, even if it means changing companies or changing industries. If you can design a good circuit, there's work for you. Same if you can write good code, or take care of a network.
I was there for this. It was 1999, the film was called Star Wars: Dark Redemption. Shortly after we saw it at D*C, Lucas pulled his "blessing" of the film, sadly.
Nothing, since Jon isn't being tried in the US.
D'oh! I guess that means I'll just have to keep sharing my DNA the old fashioned way...
Woo Hoo!! That worked! Someone give this guy a million mod points!
Sadly, no. It means "I installed the flash upgrade and now my $400 drive won't even open the door anymore and Pioneer's answer is 'We'll give you an RMA and have a new drive to you in 3-4 weeks.'"
Not that I'm bitter or anything...
Gotta second that. I love my SP250. Just make sure to do 2 things. 1) Upgrade to the latest firmware. 2) If you're going jogging with it, be sure to turn it on and wait 15 seconds or so for the buffer to fill up before you stop running. Otherwise it will skip.
Oh, and if the batteries are starting to get weak (sadly, you can't believe the battery gauge) you'll find that the skip protection sucks. So put in a fresh set of batteries if you haven't charged it in a while. Those Energizer Titanium thingies will power the thing for AGES! I've gotten over 15 hours off one set.
I always knew there was something odd about that side of my family...
It's not a linux handheld... It's a file store that happens to run Linux on the backend... But you're completely isolated from any of the OS by their software... Thinkgeek has been carrying these for a while now, but they're expensive.
Here is the user's manual, which has some good screen shots...
wizzy
In the US, as long as there is a licensed operator at both stations to come on and give a callsign id every 10 minutes (time may be off, don't have a manual in front of me) then it's all good. My club used to run 3rd party traffic calls to the "North Pole" for the local children's hospital at Xmas time every year. Perfectly legal under FCC rules. There used to be a bunch of questions specifically about this on the old Technician exam (or tech + now)
Umm... Given how well Sun is entrenched in the financial world, I think you saying the platform is dead is just plain FUD. Check with the IT department at any major financial company and ask them how many 4500 or better systems they have. (I know, I used to work for one) And yes, a lot of them are upgrading to the new UltraSparc III machines.
And for those folks doing hard research (or special effects companies with lots o' money) SGI is still king. Despite what nvidia would like us to believe, SGI's not going anywhere anytime soon for big 3d rendering projects.
Poor Lisa... The slashdot effect has taken out server arrays in the past, what chance did it have?
No, no, no, it's BEYOND the Thunderdome
IDG has a good writeup including info from the Boston protests here.
http://www.idg.net/ic_660027_1794_9-10000.html for the link paranoid.
No silly reg required, so I won't bother to quote the whole article here.
Not completely true...
I was doing an IP address switch over a couple weeks ago, and bonehead me forgets to do a "clear arp;clear xlate" on the firewall. None of my translations are working, I can't figure out why. Access lists look good, static commands all check out, why the hell can't I ping things properly? I reboot the firewall and everything starts working. Rebooting the firewall cleared the xlate and arp tables. This was not a "symptom" that would come back (unless my fsck-ing ISP changes our IP block on us without warning *AGAIN*), it was me being a bonehead after a long day and forgetting to clear a table. The reboot fixed this nicely.
Granted when I figured out what the problem was, I felt like a total idiot for having to take down the firewall, but at least the network started working again.
I'm not sure I understand that. Why does the router purge its logs when you reboot it?
Unless you have syslog logging setup on the Cisco, and it can talk to your Syslog server to offload the data, the logs are stored in RAM. Reboot and the logs go bye bye. Since the router was acting toasty and the vlans were disappearing, the router probably couldn't access whatever box was setup to receive the logs (assuming that syslog was turned on to begin with).
CDDB started out as part of a (IIRC) GPLed unix cd player program. The entire database was originally distributed with the program. Gracenote bought the database up a few years ago, revoked the GPL, and started charging for this data. *THAT* is why everyone is so pissed, and why Roxio has a damned convincing case.
Now I won't be able to find new and exciting pr0n every time I mispell major company names. I'll be reduced to reading /. and finding the hidden goatse links!
Do you know of any accounting firms who support this system? I used to consult for a few companies, and one of the most frequent complaints I'd hear around the office was that their accountants were forcing them to use Quickbooks/Great Plains/Peachtree/whatever and they didn't like it/it didn't have flexibility to work with their business model/etc. From the quick glance I've given GnuCash, it seems to be a dream to setup for most small to mid-size businesses, but if their accountants are stuck in the closed-minded "use my software or I won't help you" mentality, this would keep a substantial user-base down.
While not an open-source solution, here's what we do where I work. We use Norton Anti-Virus Corporate Edition (The corp-ed is important). This lets us build a NAV server which will go out and grab the updates auto-magically on a schedule (we do it once a day early in the morning). It will then push the updates out to all running clients! And if a client is not online, as soon as it is turned on, it contacts the NAV server and queries if there is a new signature update.
This package is a dream to administer. Once a quarter, Symmantec sends me a CD pack with any updates to the scanning program, and I install this on the server. Because I run Win2K on all the desktops, I can remote-install the software on all the workstations in the building without having to go over and do the usual "Let me know when I can schedule 30 minutes to install this software." crap across a few hundred machines. Plus I never have to worry that someone didn't bother to keep up with the virus updates. I can also schedule scans of any computer whenever I want, and get notified if problems crop up.
As pointed out by someone else, if you're uber-paranoid, just map a network drive to the samba shares and schedule a scan from your NAV server. You can use any system running either NT or 2K for your NAV server. You don't have to dedicate the machine, and the box can even be running the "workstation" flavor of Windows and still be a NAV "server".
Now if you could do all this under Linux that would be super-cool, but until then, I think this will be your best bet. The Server license is a bit more than the usual copy of NAV, but the client licenses are dirt cheap ($10 apiece if I remember correctly) so if you have more than 25 workstations to adminsiter, you're going to be saving TONS of money and time.
I did the same thing the day after you:
2001-05-23 18:31:39 Apache 1.3.20 is available (articles,apache) (rejected)
I'm guessing that someone was asleep at the switch and thought it had already been posted. *shrug*