Sapphire LX210 4x4 board
Well fix it! Can't be too hard.
brucee
On 14 May 2017 at 02:53, Charles Forsyth wrote:
>
> On 13 May 2017 at 15:21, trebol wrote:
>
>> No with hyphenation, my friend!
>
>
> ahh! that's a little more specific. I usually switch it off so I wouldn't
> have noticed.
>
I agree. Thank you Google translate.
brucee
On 6 May 2017 at 11:25, Skip Tavakkolian wrote:
> آقای Mark V. Shaney شما ما را خسته کردید.
>
> On Fri, May 5, 2017, 4:51 PM Jules Merit gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> May I suggest "pxemain"?
>> Grow the runtime. 'size /bin/false'
>>
>> On May 5, 2017 6:28
On Fri, 05 May 2017 15:23:39 +1000 Bruce Ellis
> wrote:
> >
> > I asked bwk - troff wizard, and to paraphrase him "there is no good
> > solution".
> >
> > There is the PSPIC macro in groff, but it generates huge files.
> >
> > For the latest
I asked bwk - troff wizard, and to paraphrase him "there is no good
solution".
There is the PSPIC macro in groff, but it generates huge files.
For the latest book they used \X to embed markers and a go programs to
postprocess troff output.
brucee
On 2 May 2017 at 19:37, Bruce El
Specifically html.
brucee
On 2 May 2017 at 19:29, Steve Simon wrote:
>
> If it's a diagram i would use the mpictures macros on plan9. if it is a
> group of pages, then i am at a loss, sorry.
>
> http://man.cat-v.org/plan_9/6/mpictures
>
> -Steve
>
>
> O
Is using \X what I'm looking for, with -Tpost (default)?
brucee
On 2 May 2017 at 13:44, Prof Brucee wrote:
> Any advice on including postscript in a troff document?
>
> brucee
>
baud modem?
brucee
On 27 April 2017 at 22:37, Rob Pike wrote:
> Total coincidence: I played on a 5620 yesterday, connected to a 3B2
> running System V. Used jim for the first time since 1985.
>
> -rob
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 10:23 PM, Bruce Ellis
> wrote:
>
>&
same guy has done some amazing restoration of old and exotic
> computers.
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 5:57 PM Bruce Ellis wrote:
>
>> For those interested in the Blit and other stuff from the labs,
>> particularly if you are in the Seattle area, you might like to
For those interested in the Blit and other stuff from the labs,
particularly if you are in the Seattle area, you might like to contact
s...@sdf.lonestar.org who is the Associated Curator of the Communications
Museum. He gave me a tour and I introduced him to games/crabs.
Big old telephone exchange
Doesn't help.
brucee
On 11 April 2017 at 17:21, Sergey Zhilkin wrote:
> Seems ps (shell script from hell) uses plan9port sort. And coreutils sort
> do not undarstand +1 parameter.
>
> Try to place plan9port path before any other.
>
> 2017-04-11 9:54 GMT+03:00 B
using plan9ports' "ps -e" does not print all processes. dirread /proc fun I
guess.
brucee
A shitshow is an apt description. I searched hard for an answer to my
question.
Regards,
brucee
On 1 April 2017 at 21:06, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 02:46:53AM -0700, Ori Bernstein wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 08:36:55PM +1100, Bruce Ellis wrote:
> >
It doesn't work if I ignore it. ip(2) doesn't mention '%'
Regards,
brucee
On 1 April 2017 at 20:46, Ori Bernstein wrote:
> On Sat, Apr 01, 2017 at 08:36:55PM +1100, Bruce Ellis wrote:
> > Does anyone know what IPV6 addresses like fec0:0:0:%1 mean and how to
Does anyone know what IPV6 addresses like fec0:0:0:%1 mean and how to
make a real (plan9) IPV6 address from them.
Regards.
brucee
an alternative is just to have an exclude file listing files/directories
that cannot be read or walked to.
brucee
On 15 February 2016 at 12:05, arisawa wrote:
> Hello,
>
> > 2016/02/15 7:57、Charles Forsyth のメール:
> >
> >
> > On 14 February 2016 at 16:38, wrote:
> > i could imagine the filterin
Yes. But the midi version is utf-8.
brucee
On 7 February 2016 at 16:42, Skip Tavakkolian
wrote:
> but following that line of reasoning, aren't they all specialized versions
> of Huffman encoding?
>
>
> On Sat, Feb 6, 2016 at 6:04 PM Bruce Ellis wrote:
>
>> Not to
Not to burst a balloon but check out variable length ints in the Midi File
Format for utf-8 in the early 80s.
brucee
Simple data share in Inferno. Define a struct with a single byte in it.
Now with b == nil throw in a b.data = 42. Visible channel to every process.
This requires 0xF zillion to be writeable.
On 26 November 2015 at 22:22, Brantley Coile wrote:
> Hi Bakul. Long time since our Bay Area plan 9 ha
As an historical note the space character was once a frog. Rob told me that
he removed it from isfrog just to see if this broke anything. It didn't.
brucee
On 7 October 2015 at 02:25, Kare Nuorteva wrote:
>
> Thanks to all for very informative replies! :)
>
>
> Cheers,
> Kare
>
>
https://bitbucket.org/mtrS/pf9
On 10 June 2015 at 01:57, David Pick wrote:
> On 09/06/15 16:52, Steve Simon wrote:
>
> > Its looking like I may be sintting in fronto of windows for a while
> >
> > Anyone suggest a version of sam, B, and 9term which works on win64?
> >
> > I don't think I need an
As in "I have ties older than your /tmp".
On 7 December 2014 at 05:29, Charles Forsyth
wrote:
>
> On Sat, Dec 6, 2014 at 5:22 AM, wrote:
>
>> 40 years on, you'd think someone would deal with it.
>
>
> The point I was trying to make is that it was realised early on (eg, when
> time-sharing at un
Well I hope he has fun fixing a sandwich. Your words ... "because Debian
people are not very good at doing things correctly".
On 5 December 2014 at 15:14, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> Quoting Bruce Ellis :
>
> Don't these people have better things to do than finding non-bugs
Don't these people have better things to do than finding non-bugs in
systems they don't understand?
brucee
On 5 December 2014 at 13:33, Charles Forsyth
wrote:
>
> On Wed, Dec 3, 2014 at 11:49 PM, Stéphane Aulery wrote:
>
>> discovered that rc
>>creates temporary files in an insecure way:
>
I agree. I have never seen Inferno built with ming.
brucee
On 30 November 2014 at 12:31, Charles Forsyth
wrote:
>
> On 29 November 2014 at 03:31, Ryan wrote:
>
>>
>> Of course; VS can barely compile anything useful.
>
>
> The version of lib9 and libbio in Inferno will compile with the free MS
Then again if I'm writing a multi-threaded program then go blows gcc out of
the water.
brucee
On 18/10/2014 8:18 AM, "Anthony Sorace" wrote:
> There have been many over the years (I think the original papers present
> something), but I've not seen anything current enough to be useful. The
> very
To be honest I've wondered about this for a while.
Here's my quandry...
I use Vmware for Ubuntu 14 LTS.
First I start a dumbarse terminal and do:
factotum&
plumber&
sam&9term&
This gives me something I can work with.
But when I run venti, then fossil - I get no fossilcons in $ns. Fossil
works
I started with the linux kit and had Inferno working in two days.
The linux kit is funny. Its is so slow and stupid. But handy for putting an
Inferno image on a cartridge.
brucee
On 7 September 2014 04:11, Shane Morris wrote:
> Very true!
>
>
> On Sun, Sep 7, 2014 at 3:49 AM, wrote:
>
>> > I
I stand corrected.
brucee
On 6 September 2014 17:20, Shane Morris wrote:
> Last millennia, don't you mean? ^.^
>
> Sorry, couldn't resist. If I had known about Inferno when I still had my
> PS2 Linux Kit working... =(
>
>
> On Sat, Sep 6, 2014 at 3:24 PM, Bruce
Interesting. I did 4c last century (for the Inferno PS2 port). Must have
not made it into the distrib.
brucee
On 06/09/2014 2:57 PM, "cherry" wrote:
> Hello 9Fans,
>
> I would like to share that mips64 support of Plan 9 is currently
> available. The compiler and the libraries are at
> https://bi
Could this solve the 'why is swap so crappy?'
On 05/06/2014 11:58 AM, wrote:
> correct.
>
> --
> cinap
>
>
Fixed!
On 09/04/2014 1:13 PM, wrote:
> > so basically the timing loop is messed up. if you could run the amd64
> > kernel on this machine, this will not happen.
>
> Before I do this, I tried the 'sources' pc kernel for 2 cpu.
> It recognizes 2 cpus and has no problem.
>
> Kenji
>
>
>
disk/prep (and it's mates) are what you need for sdC0. man 8 prep.
brucee
On 18 January 2014 17:57, Yoann Padioleau wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Can someone explain how the partitions in /dev/sdC0/xxx are populated? Who
> create those device files? I have a small plan9 kernel running a small
> shell (sh.Z
/n was introduced (i believe) in 8th edition for weinberger's neta (and
later netb) remote filesystem.
there was a directory in /n for each remote machine. the gmount() system
call was used to mount a stream, usually a datakit connection, to the
remote machine. it was great.
brucee
On 13 Januar
Boyd thought Sudoko sucked, I wrote a limbo program that serves a webpage.
brucee
On 13 January 2014 15:28, andrey mirtchovski wrote:
> you can borrow the ui from here:
>
> http://mirtchovski.com/p9/sudoku/
>
> On Sun, Jan 12, 2014 at 9:20 PM, wrote:
> >> I was thinking of doing a Sudoku sol
Good work. As my good friend Boyd once said "Don't give me bullshit
speculation. Measure something!".
brucee
On 10 January 2014 20:15, Charles Forsyth wrote:
>
> On 10 January 2014 09:11, Charles Forsyth wrote:
>
>> At that point I decided to quite while I was still ahead.
>
>
> 20,000 did not
suck it and see, the answerers didn't understand the question. add
nproc=XXX to plan9.ini and use the environment, or hard code code it. i'd
like to see your results for nproc=50 and nproc=5000.
brucee
On 9 January 2014 19:08, Pavel Klinkovský wrote:
> Hi Steven,
>
>
> conf.nproc = 100 + ((
Welcome to what is becoming something indistinguishable from the thousands
of "linux blame-game mailing lists. Grow up. Read a good book. Go to the
beach.
brucee
On 6 January 2014 16:01, Steven Stallion wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 5, 2014 at 10:53 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg
> wrote:
>
> > "... what works
Vita got the good gear. Ken said something about no need for them to find
the bugs again. Halcyon days.
We used 0? for RM4700 and later the QED7000.
brucee
On 28 Dec 2013 12:24, "cherry" wrote:
>
>
>
> On Thu, Dec 26, 2013 at 11:32 PM, Bruce Ellis wrote:
>
>>
I don't recall 0c ever being a script. That was done this century. Looks
like things got broke.
brucee
On 27 December 2013 15:41, wrote:
> > You might be able to blame the play station 2 and the two different MIPS
> > chips it had. I did two compilers. The FP was very unusual and one was LE
>
You might be able to blame the play station 2 and the two different MIPS
chips it had. I did two compilers. The FP was very unusual and one was LE
and the other BE. Inferno port worked well.
brucee
On 27 December 2013 14:41, cherry wrote:
>
>
>
> On Thu, Dec 26, 2013 at 6:46 PM, cherry wrote:
A quote I like from the 80s at the Labs - "netnews is like standing up in a
crowded theater and shouting 'anyone wanna buy a used car?'".
Please consider when posting to his list that you might be doing the same.
(Not directed at anyone specifically).
brucee
On 24 December 2013 13:49, Skip Ta
GreenArrays rocks. I still have no idea what to with all the cores. I've
found that writing a go package that generates fun forth is fun.
brucee
On 17/12/2013 11:32 AM, "Jeff Sickel" wrote:
>
> On Dec 15, 2013, at 4:48 PM, Tristan <9p...@imu.li> wrote:
>
> > and then there's chuck moore.
>
> I’m
no simple answer. unusual compilations are obvious. a lot of classic rock
CDs aren't real. i have a handel messiah that swaers its real but it's
about 128kbs at best and statistically 14 bit.
brucee
On 10 December 2013 14:39, erik quanstrom wrote:
> On Mon Dec 9 22:15:18 EST 2013, bruce.el...
Maybe he's lucky. I have a swag of such disks and 80% are very fine pirates.
brucee
On 10 December 2013 14:26, andrey mirtchovski wrote:
> offtopic at this point, but anyways: I'm willing to bet that at least
> a few pre-1998 cds from your collection were pirated copies from the
> factory in S
good to hear. all of the major brands had holograms in 1998.
so the answer is?
brucee
On 10 December 2013 13:42, erik quanstrom wrote:
> On Mon Dec 9 21:23:18 EST 2013, bruce.el...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> > Well there is some truth in all these emails. First let me say that no
> > recording stu
Well there is some truth in all these emails. First let me say that no
recording studio records in mp3 and no studio software does unless you
really force it. Not even Garage Band - the baseline. (Note that I will
usually make a mp3 for my phone after a mix.)
That said the dudes compiling and sell
um. it was a joke...
On 10 December 2013 10:19, Conor Williams wrote:
> 10,000 Maniac
> + Ozzy Ozbourne
>
> 10,001 Maniacs
>
> Blind Man's Zoo-MB
> 01 Eat for Two.mp34.3MB
> 02 Please Forgive Us.mp3--3.9MB
> 03 The Big Parade.mp3-4.8MB
> 04 T
depends what you use to compressed them! i've seen megamachines...
On 10 December 2013 09:55, Skip Tavakkolian wrote:
> how much storage do 10,000 Maniacs take?
>
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 9, 2013 at 2:51 PM, Conor Williams
> wrote:
>
>> just got 10,000 Maniacs from the library "Blind man's zoo" for fr
Let's start a fun thread. I wanna know about experience with SSDs and the
bunny.
Perhaps focusing on a) does it work b) is it worth it.
brucee
The diagnostic on the last line should be:
Unexpected End of File at EOF
That's the memorable diagnostic from a CDC compiler.
brucee
On 6 November 2013 17:42, <6o205z...@sneakemail.com> wrote:
> I'm trying to create a plumbing rule so that I can right-click (in acme)
> on the diagnostic messa
you are missing the reason. read the paper.
brucee
On 22 September 2013 12:55, erik quanstrom wrote:
> when i measure chan send performance with the attached program with
> the semaphore locks that have been made the default for sources and
> with the old locks, the old locks surprisingly outp
spot on. that's why:
printf "%c", 0
works, move on now.
On 18 September 2013 17:24, Florian Limberger
wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Sep 2013 15:47:17 +0200
> dexen deVries wrote:
>
> > awk(1) says, ``[s]tring constants are quoted " ", with the usual C
> > escapes recognized within.'', but \0 seems to t
Why?
Why the angst? Nix is cool. And the nonexistent demons will release
something cool.
Now getting back to the lost v10 - which I think is a much more interesting
topic. (There work is much more interesting, I guess mine is challenging).
I have to go to Canberra to sort this out. Got the micro
Perhaps by being qualified and having a substantial body of published
research and teaching under your belt.
Or out-source it.
brucee
On 8 September 2013 00:58, Anthony Sorace wrote:
> >> I believe the rules are different when the work is research, sponsored
> >> by public money. People are g
5620s.
brucee
On 7 September 2013 23:33, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> Quoting Bruce Ellis :
>
> I'm not sure how to negotiate this. Tiger says:
>>
>> 1) Go back to 1988.
>> 2) Apply for a license.
>> 3) Run it/enjoy it.
>> 4) Stop being a dick
>>
>&g
I'm not sure how to negotiate this. Tiger says:
1) Go back to 1988.
2) Apply for a license.
3) Run it/enjoy it.
4) Stop being a dick
brucee
On 7 September 2013 23:21, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> Quoting Bruce Ellis :
>
> I was disturbed by the claim that v10 had been lost becau
I don't really understand this thread. I thought it was a stupid flame war,
in which case I can only say that I miss Boyd calling a spade a fucking
shovel.
I was disturbed by the claim that v10 had been lost because of bullshit,
but said nothing.
If indeed someone has lost their v10 I can replace
just don't forget to unset nonomatch
On 6 September 2013 14:10, Rob Pike wrote:
> You give a shell command the flag -X to turn on X, so +X to turn off X
> makes sense in a negative true kinda way.
>
> -rob
>
>
do it
On 2 September 2013 15:24, wrote:
> The Go distribution has these new functions which are not present in
> the Plan 9 library. They seem to fit in libbio harmlessly, so I just
> added them in, but in the past an analogous change was rejected (the
> details escape me, but it was a long ti
when this thread calms down a bit i'll post some suggestions and hopefully
helpful hints - one of which is that there will be tears.
i'll respond to off list technical questions.
brucee
On 29 April 2013 18:07, Sergey Zhilkin wrote:
> There is http://www.vitanuova.com/dist/java.tgz - old java
I had to get an import license for my Blit. It's very nice. I'm still not
sure if I can dispose of it. It only lasted 15 years in Bondi heat/salt.
Gsoc project: fix it - connect it to the bunny. Extra credit: find out if I
can give it to you.
brucee
On 24 April 2013 20:20, Antonio Barrones wrot
that's a quorum.
On 22 April 2013 18:58, Nick Owens wrote:
> On Saturday, April 20, 2013 9:16:28 PM UTC-7, Bruce Ellis wrote:
> > Any 9 dudes going to IO in SFO real soon? I will be around abouts so may
> be good for an informal IWP9 beer and loud loud music.
> >
&g
Any 9 dudes going to IO in SFO real soon? I will be around abouts so may be
good for an informal IWP9 beer and loud loud music.
brucee
I recall one guy at the labs(!) who would ruthlessly avoid printf because
it dragged in too much stuff. I think he ran out of people to argue with 30
years ago.
On 24 Mar 2013 10:47, "andrey mirtchovski" wrote:
> > If you want real programs which are bigger that I (we) actually use that
> will
>
if you can't trust a cpu server don't use it. applies to carbon based
life-forms too.
On 25 February 2013 00:29, wrote:
> Cinap mostly covered this, but yeah: if you don't trust the
> system you're connecting to, cpu isn't really safe[1]. But
> then, neither is anything else: even the simplest
i was thinkimg more of combating lack of sleep by using strongdrink(3) -
which eventually calls sleep(2). its on the strchr(3) page just before
strumpet.
drink
On 24 February 2013 16:20, Stuart Morrow wrote:
> So I read in New Scientist one time that being awake for more than a
> certain amount of hours is the same as being lightly drunk.
>
> I shouldn't be on the Internet at all really right now.
>
>
i could only presume that the #includes are expected to be in the first
block.
On 19 February 2013 20:32, Charles Forsyth wrote:
>
> On 18 February 2013 19:23, andrey mirtchovski wrote:
>
>> sorry, not all source files, just the 'import' section.
>
>
> I could see the relevance of reading the co
a simple web search, or the wiki, has more than enough.
On 18 February 2013 20:59, wrote:
> And if so have they analysed WHY they like it?
>
> How mature [not too problematic for a plan9 beginner] is the rPi
> installation?
>
> ==TIA
>
>
10 years ago the gcc manual was bigger than kenc source.
take your pick. learn about a neat compiler or read the gcc manual.
brucee
On 1 February 2013 06:19, Rox 64 wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 31, 2013 at 6:39 PM, wrote:
>
>> Ah! I think I know why compile binaries with gcc are so slow. Because
>>
I resemble that comment!
On 29 January 2013 02:12, Federico G. Benavento wrote:
> I thought it was an MVS reincarnation…
>
> On Jan 28, 2013, at 11:24 AM, Kurt H Maier wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 10:13:28AM +, Unknown wrote:
> >> My route here was: when my ISP said I'd have to buy
I noticed the other day that I was offered exFAT when formatting a 2T drive
on windows 7. I know nothing about it except the sample space of reading
one page on the web. Any insights? Is this FAT48 or something newish and
compatible in some transfinite sense.
brucee
On 12 January 2013 10:58, Joh
heads up! uintptr in all over the go packages because it is right. i'd like
an example of where usize wins, as it has to be same as uintptr. what is
sizeof(x)?
struct {
char stuff[8 * GB];
} x;
quite a reasonable but rookie decl in 64 bit land.
brucee
On 22 November 2012 13:35, Charles For
_t being unsigned (even experienced ones at times); this makes it clear.
>
>
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 8:35 PM, Bruce Ellis wrote:
>
>> i think that go's scalar types would work better. also usize is a bit
>> dicky.
>>
>> brucee
>> On Nov 22, 2012
i think that go's scalar types would work better. also usize is a bit
dicky.
brucee
On Nov 22, 2012 12:23 PM, "erik quanstrom" wrote:
> On Wed Nov 21 19:19:21 EST 2012, benave...@gmail.com wrote:
> > hola,
> >
> > usize, really?
> >
> > any reason not use this opportunity to join the world and
"hit with brick - fixed!" - unknown source
On 25 September 2012 21:04, Kurt H Maier wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 25, 2012 at 08:52:40AM +, Christopher Hobbs wrote:
>> Being that macs don't have a proper delete key, how can I get delete
>> behavior to kill a program in rc short of slapping a real keyb
> without a LF how will the sprockets pulling the screen up vt(1) get
>> activated?
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 12, 2012 at 5:07 PM, Bruce Ellis wrote:
>> > Indeed. Though I'm waiting for the trivial implementation that does
>> > something imaginative with the bats
Indeed. Though I'm waiting for the trivial implementation that does
something imaginative with the batshit practice of overwriting lines
using CR without LF.
brucee
On 13 September 2012 10:02, Charles Forsyth wrote:
> That's a bit elaborate. vt(1) might be easier.
>
>
> On 12 September 2012 15:3
Brilliant! Write a program because the router is stupid. Anything else
you would like me to write while I'm at it?
brucee
On 13 September 2012 00:30, Matthew Veety wrote:
>
> On Sep 12, 2012 12:48 AM, "Bruce Ellis" wrote:
>>
>> my adsl router has a telnet in
my adsl router has a telnet interface that won't dumb down (i.e. be
sensible). it is more than tedious watching it try to backspace over
stuff and move the cursor about. hey guys, don't do that crap!
On 12 September 2012 14:06, wrote:
> no. changing the font also wont get rid of the ansi escape
beware... they came in flavours, some of which designed to stop fun.
mine still spims fine after a decade. not sure why i have an unopened spare.
bucee
On 6 September 2012 21:33, Aram Hăvărneanu wrote:
>> Sorry, typo - should be WRT54G
>
> Interesting, I have that router but wanted for some tim
is that machine 20 years old yet?
On 29 August 2012 11:26, erik quanstrom wrote:
> On Tue Aug 28 19:03:05 EDT 2012, cinap_len...@gmx.de wrote:
>> this machine works now in mp mode (after 4 years) with
>> 9front's acpi implementation.
>>
>> http://9fans.net/archive/2008/02/671
>
> if there is one,
Watch out for the bunnies!
On 25 July 2012 15:09, John Floren wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 24, 2012 at 9:58 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
>> On Wed Jul 25 00:45:01 EDT 2012, j...@jfloren.net wrote:
>>> We've got some budget left for hardware, so I'm looking for a server
>>> suitable for running Plan 9, pref
shut up and back to work. nothing to see here.
On 3 June 2012 11:53, Connor Lane Smith wrote:
> On 3 June 2012 02:40, Stephen Wiley wrote:
>> One thing that I can see is that the 40 billion windows you open are all
>> grouped together and don't get in your way when using other apps. (One of
>> t
out of interest does gmail do something useful when presenting mail
that is labeled?
brucee
On 20 May 2012 23:02, erik quanstrom wrote:
>> Mailboxes are complicated. I only have three: Inbox, Sent, and Trash.
>
> [citation needed].
>
> i didn't say the mailbox was owned by me. our system has
>
a friend gave me a T61 and the bell-labs iso installed just fine. i
can't recall using any tricks, pretty much however the bios was
configured - i did it in the pub.
brucee
On 16 May 2012 22:24, Burton Samograd wrote:
> I got my Thinkpad T61 last night and installation was somewhat
> successful
Ah - Bund Deutscher Fußball-Lehrer - of course!
Good taste is its own reward.
On 14 May 2012 20:32, Francisco J Ballesteros wrote:
>
> On May 14, 2012, at 12:14 PM, IainWS wrote:
>
>> Would
>> I be wrong in saying there are four dictators?
>
> Yes, there's just good taste :)
the consensus at the sunshine club is that to take advantage of the
wasted bits in a 64 bit pointer you should RENT THEM OUT!
brucee
--
Don't meddle in the mouth -- MVS (0416935147, +1-513-3BRUCEE)
"John Connor uses his 26th century technology to travel back in time,
insisting that Sarah's destiny will be thwarted if she does not take
the errata to the desert. They blow things up - not many dead. Sarah
latches onto a Cyborg open wifi and summons - a sequel."
On 23 April 2012 09:53, Joseph St
"dinner time, hold on while i grep my desk for my car keys" - ken anon
On 31 March 2012 00:13, erik quanstrom wrote:
>> btw., the POSIX -q option to grep is needed only on non-POSIX systems, that
>> do
>> not provide /dev/null, right?
>
> grep(1) has a -s option. this is obviously useful becaus
ha ha, the bunny shakes his tail. i don't want daily updates - like
openssl or NO SALE.
seriously, someone had to do it and not a gsoc kid thank dog.
brucee
On 30 March 2012 12:26, wrote:
> congratulations! :)
>
> --
> cinap
>
--
Don't meddle in the mouth -- MVS (0416935147, +1-513-3BRUCEE)
"7th Edition Unix grep did not conform to POSIX" -- somewhere in gnudoc.
--
Don't meddle in the mouth -- MVS (0416935147, +1-513-3BRUCEE)
ak about Mini-X so much in Plan 9 forum? I got lost a little
> bit in thoughts about it because of the GSoC and EU support for it. So, in
> real we speak about Plan 9 here, I know! Therefore last part from me about
> that comparative issue. Nobody knows how things will come. If people w
Even Shaney is having trouble with these fish of the trees, tho he
would like to borrow "Most cases EU does central shit".
brucee
On 20 March 2012 10:07, Charles Forsyth wrote:
> http://crave.cnet.co.uk/gadgets/plug-versus-plug-49303764/
>
>
> On 19 March 2012 22:22, andrey mirtchovski wrote:
>
for the example you gave the diagnostic is correct.
On 28 February 2012 18:20, erik quanstrom wrote:
> On Tue Feb 28 02:16:04 EST 2012, bruce.el...@gmail.com wrote:
>> what values of p[1] do you expect the test to be of use?
>>
>> On 28 February 2012 15:40, erik quanstrom wrote:
>> > for p = uch
what values of p[1] do you expect the test to be of use?
On 28 February 2012 15:40, erik quanstrom wrote:
> for p = uchar*, Nbus==256,
>
> if((uint)p[1] >= Nbus){
>
> generates
>
> warning: ./mp.c:212 useless or misleading comparison: UCHAR >= 0x100
>
> i'm pretty sure that
a friend gave me a thinkpad T61 today and the mighty bunny installed
no problems (at the mighty sunshine club - beautiful day today).
i might need a T61 friend for cardbus help (my stuff from india is on
a drive). i believe such or similar machines abound in bunny land.
anyone wanna virtually hol
Don't worry cuzz, he's a Bwit.
On 16 January 2012 14:07, Winston Kodogo wrote:
> "It's not public?" read with rising intonation?
>
> Charles? I'd never have picked you as as a Kiwi?? But your rising
> intonation has given you away???
>
--
Don't meddle in the mouth -- MVS (0416935147, +1-513-
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