After having upgraded remotely four systems from RH9 to Fedora Core 3 during last week, using only apt-get, I am really wondering what are you talking about.
So is there a menu editor? I've never spotted one anywhere.
Well, it's disabled in fedora, but in a default Gnome install, like on slackware, you simply open Nautilus, go to Applications://, and edit it's subfolders. Really, it couldn't be simpler.
There must be an feature similar to the 'Explore' context menu item in Windows, since, there are a lot of times a hierarchical view where new windows dont pop up for each opened directory be good.
Like the "Open in Browser" option in the context menu of any folder? Why it seems that every moron that rants about spatial nautilus has never used it?
Does PostgreSQL support triggers and stored procedures?
Of course it does, It supports triggers, rules, referential integrity, multiversion concurrency control, and you can write stored procedures in a number of languages, including Perl, C, and pl/pgSQL, which is fairly similar to Oracle's pl/SQL.
Really, from a technical standpoint Postgres compares well with Oracle, Informix, DB2, etc., but there are many other aspects you have to consider when planning a migration from a RDBMS to another, wich make a purely technical comparison moot.
And are you American by any chance? If you lived in Europe you'd realise the Romans left a LOT of stuff behind. And of course Roman civilisation goes back a couple of thousand years BC.
Sorry pal, Rome was founded between 700 and 800 years before Christ, the legend says it was on 759 BC.
The company is also expected to explore the following areas:
Building the Linux clustering capacity to be in line with SCO's NonStop Clusters technology, which scales to 12 or more boxes with advanced reliability for data and applications. Current Linux clustering technology is generally limited to two or four nodes.
Beowulf anyone?
Beefing up Linux's symmetric multiprocessing capabilities. Currently the number of CPUs per Linux server is usually limited to eight; UnixWare can run on servers with up to 32 CPUs.
Cool, if you can find such a beast
Managing multiple Linux servers as well as applications from a single console as if they were a single system.
Oh my god! It sounds like...XWindow!
Improving security and the ability of Linux to handle applications such as e-mail, including instant messaging.
Ooooh, e-mail on linux... Now, I'll only have to wait for SCO porting a full TCP/IP stack to linux so I can use it to surf the net!
...is a butt-ugly babelfish traslation, barely understandable in Italian. The English original must be something like that: Ellen Spertus writes, the Computer Museum History Center, situated at the Moffet Campus of Mountain View, is to sponsor a Lecture series denominated: Beowulf-Class PC Clusters:An Historical Perpective, given by Thomas Sterling, who led the team that developed the first Beowulf cluster at NASA, and is co-author of the Beowulf HOWTO. The Lecture is on Tuesday April 13. RSVP whithin April 10. All the Computer Museum History Center comunicates it has to be big [!!!!??? It says so in Italian!]
Well... you could use one of those ATX cases with no power switch, just a big suspend button. When grandpa hits the suspend button again, Voilá! in 10 seconds the system starts as he left it yesterday.
Slashdot needs urgently a "Crackpot" moderation option
Just like only infidels, heretics and witches had to fear the Spanish Inquisition
Hey this guy is a genius, he'll get free advice on how to properly redesign his infrastructure all while saying everybody else is wrong
Could you be more specific?
After having upgraded remotely four systems from RH9 to Fedora Core 3 during last week, using only apt-get, I am really wondering what are you talking about.
ASL? R U HORNY?
Well, it's disabled in fedora, but in a default Gnome install, like on slackware, you simply open Nautilus, go to Applications://, and edit it's subfolders. Really, it couldn't be simpler.
Like the "Open in Browser" option in the context menu of any folder? Why it seems that every moron that rants about spatial nautilus has never used it?
Then why I do have this "browse filesystem" entry in the main menu and a similar icon of the desktop of this Fedora Core 2 thingy???
Please, please, do TRY the damn thing before spouting off...
Well, that would be better:
for image in *.tif; do convert $image -border 50 -bordercolor \#FFFFFF -quality 100 -scale 25% -resolution 96 ${image%.tif}.jpg; done
no need to do `ls *.tif`, and the bash specific construct ${image%.tif} removes a trailing occurence of the word '.tif' from the string $image
Well, try with xrandr or gnome-display-properties then
Of course it does, It supports triggers, rules, referential integrity, multiversion concurrency control, and you can write stored procedures in a number of languages, including Perl, C, and pl/pgSQL, which is fairly similar to Oracle's pl/SQL.
Really, from a technical standpoint Postgres compares well with Oracle, Informix, DB2, etc., but there are many other aspects you have to consider when planning a migration from a RDBMS to another, wich make a purely technical comparison moot.
Sorry pal, Rome was founded between 700 and 800 years before Christ, the legend says it was on 759 BC.
Beowulf anyone?
Cool, if you can find such a beast
Oh my god! It sounds like...XWindow!
Ooooh, e-mail on linux... Now, I'll only have to wait for SCO porting a full TCP/IP stack to linux so I can use it to surf the net!
Gosh, my mouth is wathering, I really can't wait!
...is a butt-ugly babelfish traslation, barely understandable in Italian. The English original must be something like that: Ellen Spertus writes, the Computer Museum History Center, situated at the Moffet Campus of Mountain View, is to sponsor a Lecture series denominated: Beowulf-Class PC Clusters:An Historical Perpective, given by Thomas Sterling, who led the team that developed the first Beowulf cluster at NASA, and is co-author of the Beowulf HOWTO. The Lecture is on Tuesday April 13. RSVP whithin April 10. All the Computer Museum History Center comunicates it has to be big [!!!!??? It says so in Italian!]
Well... you could use one of those ATX cases with no power switch, just a big suspend button. When grandpa hits the suspend button again, Voilá! in 10 seconds the system starts as he left it yesterday.