On Tue, May 07, 2002 at 11:40:09AM -0400, Robert_L wrote: > On Tuesday 07 May 2002 8:37 am, will trillich wrote: > <snip> > > but the debian box, and i swear the cpu fan was under water > > acting as a mini boat-prop, was STILL OPERATING when saturated > > with H2O. > > > > we unplugged it unceremoniously, of course, as we were standing > > in six inches of water with electrons running about. > > > > but it's back up and serving quite nicely. both nic's are fine, > > as well. > > > > how about THEM apples? :) > > Amazing story ! But not scientific. Please use 2 indentical towers,hardware > etc and reflood.
i never thought of that. good idea! my first impression was to wipe windo~1 on the e-machines box and see how it goes (i'm a software guy, see -- i never consider the hardware aspect of a situation, because i hardly ever understand it). but to identicalize the hardware first... cool... and wet... :) -- I use Debian/GNU Linux version 2.2; Linux server 2.2.17 #1 Sun Jun 25 09:24:41 EST 2000 i586 unknown DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #126 from Sean Quinlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : How to SUSPEND A SCREEN SESSION -- two keys: control-a control-d (hold down control, and press "a" then "d") to detach the session (and return you to your shell). You can then reattach with "screen -r". You can also use "screen -ls" to list all screen sessions and their pids, in order to connect to a specific screen session. And you can use "screen -x" to connect to an already connected screen session (I generally use -x instead of -r, since it does more :). Of course, "man screen" will give you more options. Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]