I don't think people really consider Oracle Unbreakable Linux when talking about the Linux Enterprise market since its mostly a respin of RHEL with Oracle logos and technical support. And while Ubuntu do have a server offering, and it could be considered enterprise, its not quite got the enterprise reputation that RHEL & SUSE have.
A lot of the good stuff from usenet has now migrated to mailing lists and online forums but it still isn't the same..
For reading a vast selection mailing lists in a news reader you should head over to gmane.org. Their selection of mailing lists is pretty good and if there's a list not there that you want, you can request that it gets subscribed.
I reckon ttylinux could be what you're after. It has no X Windows, boots in no time, is super-small (it uses 8MB of disk space) and barely needs any RAM (5MB according to the website for a hard disk install).
Atleast they did the right thing when they launched their shop though. They bought some bloody advertising instead of getting it posted to/. as "news".
IBM is NOT porting MS Office to Linux. They are currently using it in conjuction with WINE. The ultimate goal would be for them to use OpenOffice.org as well.
I hear you. Unless there's a skin for Mozilla that makes it look absolutely identical to IE, and it comes with a rendering plugin that makes it render pages in exactly the same way as IE, then I could never put it on my mom's computer.
Well here's the skin. Personally I find Mozilla renders pretty damn close to IE these days.
None of the mail systems that I see grasp this point.
The last time I used MS Exchange (1998) it could do this. It's called Public Folders. You can assign email addresses to the public folders, and create custom views for those folders for the users. I had public folders setup with mailing lists going to them, with email retention set. It was quite nice. I appeared in your Outlook/Exchange client in the Public Folders section, and you could create a nice hieracy, and even set permissions on it, etc.
The main reason I wouldn't use this would be spam.
They Planet Mirror It's run by the same people as aarnet.edu.au, but on a commercial tips (I think). They keep the mirrors up to date, it's also in the same location as mirror.aarnet, so you'll have that speed you've come to love out of mirror.aarnet.
I don't think people really consider Oracle Unbreakable Linux when talking about the Linux Enterprise market since its mostly a respin of RHEL with Oracle logos and technical support. And while Ubuntu do have a server offering, and it could be considered enterprise, its not quite got the enterprise reputation that RHEL & SUSE have.
A lot of the good stuff from usenet has now migrated to mailing lists and online forums but it still isn't the same..
For reading a vast selection mailing lists in a news reader you should head over to gmane.org. Their selection of mailing lists is pretty good and if there's a list not there that you want, you can request that it gets subscribed.
I reckon ttylinux could be what you're after. It has no X Windows, boots in no time, is super-small (it uses 8MB of disk space) and barely needs any RAM (5MB according to the website for a hard disk install).
There's actually 3 products on the market that does this. Final Scratch, Serato/RANE Scratch Live and MS Pinky's Interdimensional Wrecked System.
IBM will happily sell to any customer as long as the said customer can pay IBM. They don't discriminate! ;-)
I reckon .cum would be way better than .xxx or .porn
Atleast they did the right thing when they launched their shop though. They bought some bloody advertising instead of getting it posted to /. as "news".
Actually they've only been going since 1999
They're in Five Dock. Been there for years. Definitely one of my favourite shops in Sydney %-)
IBM is NOT porting MS Office to Linux. They are currently using it in conjuction with WINE. The ultimate goal would be for them to use OpenOffice.org as well.
Well here's the skin. Personally I find Mozilla renders pretty damn close to IE these days.
The last time I used MS Exchange (1998) it could do this. It's called Public Folders. You can assign email addresses to the public folders, and create custom views for those folders for the users. I had public folders setup with mailing lists going to them, with email retention set. It was quite nice. I appeared in your Outlook/Exchange client in the Public Folders section, and you could create a nice hieracy, and even set permissions on it, etc. The main reason I wouldn't use this would be spam.
I backup Tom on this one. In "Fire in the Valley" it's stated that Lisa was the name of his daughter (and first born child I believe)
ke-PHUNK!
They Planet Mirror It's run by the same people as aarnet.edu.au, but on a commercial tips (I think). They keep the mirrors up to date, it's also in the same location as mirror.aarnet, so you'll have that speed you've come to love out of mirror.aarnet.
I have some vague memory circa 96 of hypergopher being the next killer app *chuckle* Slow as all shit.
Does anybody now what happened to it.
out.
d.