WTF; That is not what was said at all... Now, certainly you could IMPLY that the person was the only Russian on an Irish block and therefore wouldn't be involved in mischief?
I can't say what version of the DSM we are using, however, these were synology boxes purchased in the past 6 months.
As far as the email feature, it is consistent across versions. We opened a case with synology and they said that this is the expected behavior at this time. There are unsupported hacks that involve logging in to console and modifying it. But in the future they plan to correct this.
Am I the only one that finds the Synology GUI the worst piece of crap ever? Maybe the experience is tainted by the fact that I always work with them over an RDP connection, but it loads a huge freakin image, I have to drag and click stuff with terrible responsiveness. Sometimes I have to click twice, its always laggy and the UI never fits the resolution I'm working with.
That being said, it has a ridiculous flaw in its email implementation that conflicts with the CRM software my company uses, it always sends the email FROM the same address it is sending TO, really... how hard is that to be user configurable and why would you make your TO your FROM, isn't that just a red flag for spam
Your mistaken, it is only in the person's interest to drive up the stock in the short term as high as possible to cash in, if it screws the company, oh well, he got his money.
For the world's largest and most complex computing environments, the Lustre file system redefines high performance, scaling to tens of thousands of nodes and petabytes of storage with groundbreaking I/O and metadata throughput.
Isn't this something that people that setup QoS on their home router's know about? Isn't this what the program Wondershaper fixes when run on your home linux router. I think we have known about this for years.
http://www.lannerinc.com/ ; I've been searching for a new router/server combo for the last few weeks online and have been looking for various SBC devices. I haven't purchased one of their products yet but I'm looking at getting something like http://www.lannerinc.com/Network_Application_Platforms/Network_Processor_Platforms/MR-301 to get going on, with 512MB of RAM and a 1.2 Ghz processor and the ability to add a laptop harddrive and a mini-pci slot for wireless. I expect it to do all the normal things a home server should mail, voip, dns, dhcp, dlna, nfs and torrents. If anyone has a better idea about this let me know but this is about as good as it gets with 5GBE ports so I can use the NFS at full speed internally and as someone said way above this if my 3MBs DSL ever suddenly grows to 500MBps I will totally be prepared
You don't have to like them, but you should consider that they want to steal the market everywhere enough to give away decent software to get their foot in the door.
If your using Exchange 2007 with 4 gigs of RAM I recommend at least 4 times that for swap, maybe 5, even if you only have a 1GB information store. Other than that (to get it off my chest) I just make it some remainder of the disks I use for a RAID array so for 4 GB on a desktop it comes out to 2GB.
BTW, exchanges 2007 admins I'd love to get information on what I f*ed up if you don't get that kind of RAM usage because I've done multiple installs that consume these kinds of resources and crash the Information Store.
According to the summary 21 or so people have consolidated their cases into one. So, given that 21 people are all saying not guilty (innocent until proven guilty) that means that there are 21 currently pending cases that say the device is broken.
yea, no room for interpretation, everyone must use 800x600 at 256 colors then there is no need to determine how to render it... oh crap modern pdas cant do that resolution, we will just scroll though you say, but that isn't exactly the same as everyone else.. lets just change the design to meet the 800x480 crowd, but then fuk what about all those people that will have 120 white pixels at the bottom of the screen... oh well they should have thought of that before they bought a computer.
I agree with mollymoo, this isn't a piece of paper that you are printing out a thousand times for a thousand people this is a sheet of paper that some people have stretched to 1600x1200 and some people have set at 800x600 and lets not forget all of the in-between resolutions to take care of.
and OH btw there are people using 3 different browser programs imposing 3 different height penalties on the top and bottom of the browser and oh goodness i'm using another program that embeds the renderer to impose yet another height requirement and a third of the left hand side of my screen. Oh yea, maybe i didn't max out the browser this time and maybe i had different requirements for resizing the browser this time and oh yea I want to view it on my PDA today.
"Lack of threaded tabs is shameful" - Why? Is it really that big of a deal? Don't open a tab that's going to lock up your browser.
Man your pretty good, do you pre-download every page you are about to view in a web-browser with curl and then parse everything in your head to make sure it won't lock up your browser?
PS: your pretty brave, trusting your brain not to lock up over your web-browser, at least you can kill the browser, i'm sure you'd be unhappy about killing yourself to get running again, i hear re-incarnation takes a while to get back to where you used to be.~
Yea! I remember the last time I used windows and I was all like... F*** the way these home and end keys work. I want them just like a Macintosh. "It pisses me off that "Gates "locks down "XP" so much and doesn't allow anywhere near as much customization" so I can't go get my jollies about flipping around the default keymaps~
Microsoft offers a iso burner for CDs and one for DVDs. It is in the Windows Server 2003 (Resource Kit|Support Tools) which can be downloaded from microsoft's website. the program names are... inventively enough cdburn.exe dvdburn.exe
I've been searching now for the past few days for some hardware like this. Basically, I have two designs in mind. One being a SBC with PoE and Bluetooth, the other being an SBC with at least 2 ethernet ports a mini-pci (for wireless) and 1 pci-e slot for an the new asterisk boards. If anybody knows of anything like this please let me know.
Personally my company resells a service called Appriver. This company is great. You point your MX records to them then they do all the filtering $50 a month for 20 users. They can do Open or Closed domain mode (Open means they filter all mail and deliver it to your server, closed means you give them a list of valid accounts and they/dev/null everything else. Also, the best thing is you have the option to receive an email every day of all the email that was destined for your inbox that got held up so you can release it from the spamfilter to your mailbox. Also they do statistics, we had one company that was a dance club in NYC. All that they did was send mailings to anybody that signed their guest book with an email address. On average they had 10,000 spams a day for 10 users and this was phenomenal for them.
Non-profit = being more productive does not make more money = no matter what you do there will be no bonus.
Tell that to The Mozilla Foundation. They are a non profit that made quite a bit of money last year for having google as the default search engine. Non-Profit != no money
The reason that it doesn't implement the Archive bit correctly is because it isn't running a windows filesystem. The Archive bit cannot be set on linux filesystems because it is a windows flag. Also, try and set NTFS permissions on those files and you will experience something along the same lines. ( It will either succeed and then not do that, or it will fail saying it can't do that)
They circumvented this already. (and reported it on slashdot I believe.) You install Vista business edition and then virtualize another machine that runs the licensing server. You can use any business VLK indefinitely and every 180 days when you have to activate again you just turn on the licensing server and do so.
COME ON! Even for people who normally let some "editing" go by uncommented upon. DOWNIDE? I had to read the topic 6 times before I knew that it was downside. (it is downside right?)
I've had this thought on my mind for a couple of days now. While it is apparent that backwards compatibility is extremely important to encourage people to upgrade to your latest and greatest (and therefore gain the licensing monies that come from that.) You also need to continue to evolve the software and make it more capable. Look at the benefits of not having a 100% stable ABI the Linux kernel improves at an astonishing rate and stuff like KDE and Gnome andvance by leaps and bounds with every release. On the other hand you have an untold number of machines that have been using Microsoft's HTML dlls and now that IE7 is out programs are breaking by the scores. Personally I don't know why they couldn't install IE7 into different files(for example if IE6 dlls are MSHTML.dll, make IE7 MSHTML7.dll (versioning, hilarious thought right?) and just remove the shortcuts to the old IE6 crap so people can move forward with a new browser and corporations can continue to upgrade without breaking all of their legacy crap. I agree that IE6 (and still IE in general, though getting better) NEEDS TO GO. Dropping a product and all of its capabilities without going through a deprecation cycle (Like GLIBC and such) is completely batshit insane.
amusingly enough your camera, if it has act as disk mode (which my HP Photosmart 735 does) the correct device would be/dev/sda1 (assuming it is the only USB / SATA drive in the system. Yep, USB or SATA drive...
WTF; That is not what was said at all... Now, certainly you could IMPLY that the person was the only Russian on an Irish block and therefore wouldn't be involved in mischief?
I can't say what version of the DSM we are using, however, these were synology boxes purchased in the past 6 months.
As far as the email feature, it is consistent across versions. We opened a case with synology and they said that this is the expected behavior at this time. There are unsupported hacks that involve logging in to console and modifying it. But in the future they plan to correct this.
Am I the only one that finds the Synology GUI the worst piece of crap ever? Maybe the experience is tainted by the fact that I always work with them over an RDP connection, but it loads a huge freakin image, I have to drag and click stuff with terrible responsiveness. Sometimes I have to click twice, its always laggy and the UI never fits the resolution I'm working with.
That being said, it has a ridiculous flaw in its email implementation that conflicts with the CRM software my company uses, it always sends the email FROM the same address it is sending TO, really... how hard is that to be user configurable and why would you make your TO your FROM, isn't that just a red flag for spam
Your mistaken, it is only in the person's interest to drive up the stock in the short term as high as possible to cash in, if it screws the company, oh well, he got his money.
From their website:
http://wiki.lustre.org/index.php/Main_Page
High Performance and Scalability
For the world's largest and most complex computing environments, the Lustre file system redefines high performance, scaling to tens of thousands of nodes and petabytes of storage with groundbreaking I/O and metadata throughput.
Isn't this something that people that setup QoS on their home router's know about? Isn't this what the program Wondershaper fixes when run on your home linux router. I think we have known about this for years.
http://www.lannerinc.com/ ; I've been searching for a new router/server combo for the last few weeks online and have been looking for various SBC devices. I haven't purchased one of their products yet but I'm looking at getting something like http://www.lannerinc.com/Network_Application_Platforms/Network_Processor_Platforms/MR-301 to get going on, with 512MB of RAM and a 1.2 Ghz processor and the ability to add a laptop harddrive and a mini-pci slot for wireless. I expect it to do all the normal things a home server should mail, voip, dns, dhcp, dlna, nfs and torrents. If anyone has a better idea about this let me know but this is about as good as it gets with 5GBE ports so I can use the NFS at full speed internally and as someone said way above this if my 3MBs DSL ever suddenly grows to 500MBps I will totally be prepared
Seriously? Microsoft offers a free piece of software that runs on the server that does "exactly" what he needs and we are suggesting Sharepoint/Alfresco, grep/locate and Google Search Server?
http://www.microsoft.com/enterprisesearch/en/us/search-server-express.aspx
You don't have to like them, but you should consider that they want to steal the market everywhere enough to give away decent software to get their foot in the door.
If your using Exchange 2007 with 4 gigs of RAM I recommend at least 4 times that for swap, maybe 5, even if you only have a 1GB information store. Other than that (to get it off my chest) I just make it some remainder of the disks I use for a RAID array so for 4 GB on a desktop it comes out to 2GB.
BTW, exchanges 2007 admins I'd love to get information on what I f*ed up if you don't get that kind of RAM usage because I've done multiple installs that consume these kinds of resources and crash the Information Store.
According to the summary 21 or so people have consolidated their cases into one. So, given that 21 people are all saying not guilty (innocent until proven guilty) that means that there are 21 currently pending cases that say the device is broken.
yea, no room for interpretation, everyone must use 800x600 at 256 colors then there is no need to determine how to render it... oh crap modern pdas cant do that resolution, we will just scroll though you say, but that isn't exactly the same as everyone else.. lets just change the design to meet the 800x480 crowd, but then fuk what about all those people that will have 120 white pixels at the bottom of the screen... oh well they should have thought of that before they bought a computer.
I agree with mollymoo, this isn't a piece of paper that you are printing out a thousand times for a thousand people this is a sheet of paper that some people have stretched to 1600x1200 and some people have set at 800x600 and lets not forget all of the in-between resolutions to take care of.
and OH btw there are people using 3 different browser programs imposing 3 different height penalties on the top and bottom of the browser and oh goodness i'm using another program that embeds the renderer to impose yet another height requirement and a third of the left hand side of my screen. Oh yea, maybe i didn't max out the browser this time and maybe i had different requirements for resizing the browser this time and oh yea I want to view it on my PDA today.
and this fits into pixel perfect layout how?
"Lack of threaded tabs is shameful" - Why? Is it really that big of a deal? Don't open a tab that's going to lock up your browser.
Man your pretty good, do you pre-download every page you are about to view in a web-browser with curl and then parse everything in your head to make sure it won't lock up your browser?
PS: your pretty brave, trusting your brain not to lock up over your web-browser, at least you can kill the browser, i'm sure you'd be unhappy about killing yourself to get running again, i hear re-incarnation takes a while to get back to where you used to be.~
Everyone else using P2P isn't representing itself in court... or is this a logical leap lost on them?
Yea! I remember the last time I used windows and I was all like... F*** the way these home and end keys work. I want them just like a Macintosh. "It pisses me off that "Gates "locks down "XP" so much and doesn't allow anywhere near as much customization" so I can't go get my jollies about flipping around the default keymaps~
Microsoft offers a iso burner for CDs and one for DVDs. It is in the Windows Server 2003 (Resource Kit|Support Tools) which can be downloaded from microsoft's website. the program names are ... inventively enough cdburn.exe dvdburn.exe
I've been searching now for the past few days for some hardware like this. Basically, I have two designs in mind. One being a SBC with PoE and Bluetooth, the other being an SBC with at least 2 ethernet ports a mini-pci (for wireless) and 1 pci-e slot for an the new asterisk boards. If anybody knows of anything like this please let me know.
Personally my company resells a service called Appriver. This company is great. You point your MX records to them then they do all the filtering $50 a month for 20 users. They can do Open or Closed domain mode (Open means they filter all mail and deliver it to your server, closed means you give them a list of valid accounts and they /dev/null everything else. Also, the best thing is you have the option to receive an email every day of all the email that was destined for your inbox that got held up so you can release it from the spamfilter to your mailbox. Also they do statistics, we had one company that was a dance club in NYC. All that they did was send mailings to anybody that signed their guest book with an email address. On average they had 10,000 spams a day for 10 users and this was phenomenal for them.
Non-profit = being more productive does not make more money = no matter what you do there will be no bonus.
Tell that to The Mozilla Foundation. They are a non profit that made quite a bit of money last year for having google as the default search engine. Non-Profit != no money
The reason that it doesn't implement the Archive bit correctly is because it isn't running a windows filesystem. The Archive bit cannot be set on linux filesystems because it is a windows flag. Also, try and set NTFS permissions on those files and you will experience something along the same lines. ( It will either succeed and then not do that, or it will fail saying it can't do that)
They used computers? On the internet? Slap a patent on that baby it's bound to be a money maker!
They circumvented this already. (and reported it on slashdot I believe.) You install Vista business edition and then virtualize another machine that runs the licensing server. You can use any business VLK indefinitely and every 180 days when you have to activate again you just turn on the licensing server and do so.
COME ON! Even for people who normally let some "editing" go by uncommented upon. DOWNIDE? I had to read the topic 6 times before I knew that it was downside. (it is downside right?)
I've had this thought on my mind for a couple of days now. While it is apparent that backwards compatibility is extremely important to encourage people to upgrade to your latest and greatest (and therefore gain the licensing monies that come from that.) You also need to continue to evolve the software and make it more capable. Look at the benefits of not having a 100% stable ABI the Linux kernel improves at an astonishing rate and stuff like KDE and Gnome andvance by leaps and bounds with every release. On the other hand you have an untold number of machines that have been using Microsoft's HTML dlls and now that IE7 is out programs are breaking by the scores. Personally I don't know why they couldn't install IE7 into different files(for example if IE6 dlls are MSHTML.dll, make IE7 MSHTML7.dll (versioning, hilarious thought right?) and just remove the shortcuts to the old IE6 crap so people can move forward with a new browser and corporations can continue to upgrade without breaking all of their legacy crap. I agree that IE6 (and still IE in general, though getting better) NEEDS TO GO. Dropping a product and all of its capabilities without going through a deprecation cycle (Like GLIBC and such) is completely batshit insane.
amusingly enough your camera, if it has act as disk mode (which my HP Photosmart 735 does) the correct device would be /dev/sda1 (assuming it is the only USB / SATA drive in the system. Yep, USB or SATA drive...