On 10/28/2010 06:42 AM, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
On Thu, 28 Oct 2010 10:30:25 +0200
Henning Brauer<lists-open...@bsws.de>  wrote:

* Claudio Jeker<cje...@diehard.n-r-g.com>  [2010-10-28 10:01]:
i have theorized in the past that the problem we face is
that an insufficient number of axe murderers are attending those kinds
of research meetings.
Why not taking part of intl. engineering ? Thus you could act upon worldwide
decisions.
Taking part of intl. engineering brings you either into a lunatic asylum
or into prison. We're not that dumb to go down that road.
we can't even. no way without being backed by a multinational
corparate money sink.

--
Henning Brauer, h...@bsws.de, henn...@openbsd.org
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de
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It's exponential, I don't see why they didn't just add more dots. It
wasted most of a day of my life deciding I'll stick to ipv4, for as
long as possible. ipv6 has drawbacks and the only benefits I saw are
doable and with more choice on ipv4.

I've always tried to steer clear of nfs,rpc, samba too. I did see some
software recently for windows that was supposed to enable sftp to act
like a windows share. I haven't had time or the need to see what sort
of filesystem integration exists for sftp on multiple platforms.


I've put off learning anything really about IPv6 in hopes that after most organizations ignore it, it withers and dies (at least in its current form). I may be deluding myself, what with the US government seemingly mandating it in the near future. But as long as my ISP doesn't, and most others don't, I guess I'm OK.

Corey

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