Some people have used the Immersive holo3graph II. It isn't marketed as a PVR-capable card, but it is rumored to work with certain Windows capture software - and it does support DVI input. They are a bit hard to come by, but you'll see them on ebay from time to time.
That ICMP packet is not indicative of a ping flood, that's an ICMP unreachable message from the host saying it can't get to 150.140.142.17 on UDP 1434.
Since its UDP, which is not stateful, you probably have some sort of access control preventing your host from making outbound UDP connections on 1434.
The proposed access point is at base camp, not the summit. Still an impressive feat, but not quite as ridiculous and unrealistic as attempting to provide access at the summit.
Have you ever used one of these Marantz remotes?? Once the novelty wears off (which is about 20 minutes after first use) the thing becomes a nuisance at best. Its big, unresponsive, has terrible battery life, etc. etc. I was highly disappointed. The touch screen gradually became more and more unresponsive until the point where it didn't work at all. A remote with no real buttons is pretty useless once the touch screen dies.
google search on "starband linux hack" revealed the following:
"No, I never did, because it turns out it's a lot easier to just remove the USB daughter board in the satmodem, and just use it with a straight 10BaseT ethernet connection instead of the stupid USB connection.
We are using the Starband service with the external Gilat Satmodem 180, which has both a USB jack and an RJ-45 ethernet jack on the back of the case.
The USB daughterboard is easily identified and is clearly labeled with a "Warning: this card is not removable" marking. All you do is unscrew
the screws holding the USB card to the back of the case, pry up the double-sided tape that's holding it down, and slide the USB card out the
back of the satmodem case. I recommend installing some duct tape over the hole left by the absence of the USB daughterboard.:)
The satmodem becomes a 10BaseT ethernet DHCP server and router after that procedure is done, just like a cable modem or DSL modem.
That way you don't have to use any special drivers or kernel modifi-cations to use the Starband system. You can use a standard ethernet
card which is properly supported in the Linux kernel."
Some people have used the Immersive holo3graph II. It isn't marketed as a PVR-capable card, but it is rumored to work with certain Windows capture software - and it does support DVI input. They are a bit hard to come by, but you'll see them on ebay from time to time.
looks a lot like this
wow, this is the first time I've seen the dupe post on the front page with the original. Nice job.
That ICMP packet is not indicative of a ping flood, that's an ICMP unreachable message from the host saying it can't get to 150.140.142.17 on UDP 1434. Since its UDP, which is not stateful, you probably have some sort of access control preventing your host from making outbound UDP connections on 1434.
The proposed access point is at base camp, not the summit. Still an impressive feat, but not quite as ridiculous and unrealistic as attempting to provide access at the summit.
How bout I buy nothing and they lose $200 on me?
In some cases, when a site is /.'ed its not the bandwidth that kills the site, its the load on the server.
Have you ever used one of these Marantz remotes?? Once the novelty wears off (which is about 20 minutes after first use) the thing becomes a nuisance at best. Its big, unresponsive, has terrible battery life, etc. etc. I was highly disappointed. The touch screen gradually became more and more unresponsive until the point where it didn't work at all. A remote with no real buttons is pretty useless once the touch screen dies.
Not to beat a dead horse, but Phoenix 0.3 was released over a week ago.
It was mentioned in this post - Phoenix 0.2 Web Browser: Lean, Mean Mozilla.
Even though the original post on 10/7/02 (when 0.3 was released) was an announcement for 0.2. Come on now... news?
apache 2.0 still isn't production ready.
for me production ready means solid PHP support.
google search on "starband linux hack" revealed the following: "No, I never did, because it turns out it's a lot easier to just remove the USB daughter board in the satmodem, and just use it with a straight 10BaseT ethernet connection instead of the stupid USB connection. We are using the Starband service with the external Gilat Satmodem 180, which has both a USB jack and an RJ-45 ethernet jack on the back of the case. The USB daughterboard is easily identified and is clearly labeled with a "Warning: this card is not removable" marking. All you do is unscrew the screws holding the USB card to the back of the case, pry up the double-sided tape that's holding it down, and slide the USB card out the back of the satmodem case. I recommend installing some duct tape over the hole left by the absence of the USB daughterboard. :)
The satmodem becomes a 10BaseT ethernet DHCP server and router after that procedure is done, just like a cable modem or DSL modem.
That way you don't have to use any special drivers or kernel modifi-cations to use the Starband system. You can use a standard ethernet
card which is properly supported in the Linux kernel."