I read through this PDF, and guess what, I still have no clue at all what this things does. I really don't need another shell to run talk on. And heck, this introduction might as well be introduction to <your-fav-shell-here>. This PDF teaches me how to use the following:
man
w or who
rusers
id
talk
cat
find or locate
and a few other intuitive commands which is only available in JXTA. Maybe they should put some sample code that allows me to compute 1 to 1e+100 in a distributed manner (not that I would want to do it, but at least gives me a better sense of JXTA). Or am I totally not understanding this JXTA thing? Oh wait, I didn't know it to begin with....
I dont really need another intro to UNIX... (nor I guess most people who read this)
apache jserv is now more or less handled by the mod_jk. the beauty of it all is that you can still have apache to do the usual stuff, and then use tomcat to handle JSP files. mod_jk looks at the request coming into the webserver, and if it qualifies (e.g. index.jsp), it will redirect the request to the tomcat running, independent of the apache server. AFAIK, that's what apache-jserv does. it's not great, but it makes everyone happy..
and no, it's quite alive and well.. and rewritten from scratch.
Just when you think emulating something as "advanced" as N64 or PSX is difficult. I sometimes fail to see why buy them in the first place.. we have a N64 and PSX and I am playing them on my desktop!!
I read through this PDF, and guess what, I still have no clue at all what this things does. I really don't need another shell to run talk on. And heck, this introduction might as well be introduction to <your-fav-shell-here>. This PDF teaches me how to use the following:
and a few other intuitive commands which is only available in JXTA. Maybe they should put some sample code that allows me to compute 1 to 1e+100 in a distributed manner (not that I would want to do it, but at least gives me a better sense of JXTA). Or am I totally not understanding this JXTA thing? Oh wait, I didn't know it to begin with....
I dont really need another intro to UNIX... (nor I guess most people who read this)
apache jserv is now more or less handled by the mod_jk. the beauty of it all is that you can still have apache to do the usual stuff, and then use tomcat to handle JSP files. mod_jk looks at the request coming into the webserver, and if it qualifies (e.g. index.jsp), it will redirect the request to the tomcat running, independent of the apache server. AFAIK, that's what apache-jserv does. it's not great, but it makes everyone happy..
and no, it's quite alive and well.. and rewritten from scratch.
Just when you think emulating something as "advanced" as N64 or PSX is difficult. I sometimes fail to see why buy them in the first place.. we have a N64 and PSX and I am playing them on my desktop!!
Legalities aside..