Doofus wrote: > As a neutral reader I'd say "hostile" is way overstated. More hostile > would have been the more appropriate advice "learn to use the search > facilities", which it seems everyone in here is too friendly and helpful > to have given you.
Uhm, a few did. Point is as a regular reader and writer on this list it pretty much goes without saying that if the answer I am looking for exists in either apt, man or Google and takes less than a complex search to find I wouldn't be asking my question. I am well aware of what to do prior to asking questions and the verbosity of my post should be a huge hint that I have done some research. The reason I asked the question here is because searches, as good as they are, do not always turn up every gem out there. I find Google a pain in the butt most times not because it turns up too few matches but that it turns up too many; often 10-20 hits relating to the same effective page (IE, multiple related postings in a forum) so what I am looking fore is hidden dozens, if not hundreds, of pages back. So asking in an appropriate forum *after* said search is done is a backstop to where if someone is personally familiar with something and knows where it is they can chime up. > You're right, it was a very simple request. But if > such a simple request still runs to a dozen thread entries, with you at > every turn saying "that's not good enough", then "write your own tool" > would seem to be the only logical end point. The problem is none of the answers really addressed my request. In a sentence is there something like Netlimiter for Linux? Pointing me traffic shaping is not answering that question. Pointing me to a mod of Apache when Apache was an example is not answering that question. Pointing me to Google with search phrases that turn up the above is not answering that question. I mean, good god, at least when I pull the snarky "Did you do a Google search" *I* run a reasonable search (or two, sometimes three) to see what comes up with reasonable 3-5 word searches. If the answer for the *question asked* does not appear then maybe, just maybe, they ran those searches and the answer they're looking for isn't there. When I reference a specific tool to address a specific problem it behooves the individuals answering to look at what I am referencing first. I mean would you consider the following a reasonable answer to, "Does there exist a game like F.E.A.R. on Linux?" "Well, there's Tux Racer. It's 3-D!" Same ballpark. -- Steve C. Lamb | I'm your priest, I'm your shrink, I'm your PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | main connection to the switchboard of souls. -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature