On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 6:13 PM, Uriel wrote:
> Always get p9p from hg, the tarballs have been partially broken for
> ages and
Excuse me?
Instead of keeping that to yourself why not tell me so I can fix it?
I know many people who install from the tar file, though,
so I expect you're just whining in
I haven't used the tarball in years because I simply find hg more
convenient, but a few times when I have recommended somebody to
install p9p they have complained about problems unpacking the tarball,
I just tell them to do a fresh hg checkout instead, and that usually
works for them. Maybe they ar
Perhaps a way to solve this problems and save you work and trouble
would be to simply link to: http://code.swtch.com/plan9port/get/tip.gz
and let mercurial do the job of building a tarball for the latest
repo.
uriel
On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 9:35 AM, Uriel wrote:
> I haven't used the tarball in year
On Aug 7, 2009, at 10:08 PM, lu...@proxima.alt.za wrote:
Story time. :)
You're also falling into the trap of believing that because it _can_
happen, it has to happen (Murphy's Law). It punishes the many for the
sins of the few and is a very poor foundation for progress.
It wasn't a positio
Thanks, but I'm happy with the current tar files.
They are a working CVS checkout, so that
people who use them can then use the recipes
in cvs(1) [9 man cvs] to update their trees.
The one you linked to is not a working anything checkout.
I haven't touched the tar file generation in over a year
so
- usb/usbd is up and running
- the only option in my BIOS is to turn USB off
- I am sorry, i dont understand the part about the old and new USB
devices and tools. can you explain a bit?
Thanks: Béla
2009/8/7 erik quanstrom :
> On Fri Aug 7 02:53:14 EDT 2009, bval...@gmail.com wrote:
>> There is
On Sat Aug 8 00:47:40 EDT 2009, davide...@cs.cmu.edu wrote:
> > would you expect to have a bad spot in 2,000 fujitsu eagles?
>
> If you do, I have a repair manual.
i prefer two strong oxen.
- erik
On Sat, 8 Aug 2009 01:39:00 -0700
Russ Cox wrote:
> Thanks, but I'm happy with the current tar files.
> They are a working CVS checkout, so that
> people who use them can then use the recipes
> in cvs(1) [9 man cvs] to update their trees.
> The one you linked to is not a working anything checkout
On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 10:34 AM, Daniel Lyons wrote:
>
> On Aug 7, 2009, at 7:06 AM, Ethan Grammatikidis wrote:
>
> X11 isn't a desktop, it tries very hard not to define a look and feel, but
>> it has to include inter-app communications to support the supposedly
>> desirable drag & drop as well a
the CD includes sources to the kernel on platforms which required NDAs
to get the information to do the port. part of the NDA, as i
understand it, required the sorts of restrictions on redistribution in
the commercial license. people have tried to get at least some bits of
that opened up, and at le
On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 7:48 AM, Anthony Sorace wrote:
> the CD includes sources to the kernel on platforms which required NDAs
> to get the information to do the port. part of the NDA, as i
> understand it, required the sorts of restrictions on redistribution in
> the commercial license. people hav
On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 6:49 AM, John Floren wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 2:15 AM, Steve Simon wrote:
>> As Anthony says it is very very old, but I might
>> be fun if you had the time on your hands. The 2nd edition
>> books/cdrom are nolonger available but you might find
>> a set seccond hand (ab
On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 11:45, ron minnich wrote:
> I wonder how many of the companies involved still exist :-)
i suspect ron knows all this already; this is intended for anyone else
who comes along and thinks this might make getting 2e CDs out easier
(instead of harder). again, this is all from m
On Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 4:44 PM, David Leimbach wrote:
> Yeah they were hot on CORBA, and KDE folks were doing DCOP, which was
> derived from some X11 ICE thing... Neither of them was that great, and
> somehow they've both come back to DBUS.
> I don't honestly know the rhyme or reason for any of it.
> i was going to say that having Plan 9 ported to your platform seemed
> like a bad omen for your company, but equally valid is the observation
> that being a platform vender (other than Apple) is bad for your
> company.
ibm seems to be doing ok. but sequent, the original
home of ken's fs kernel
some interesting talks in here, esp. the boot time reduction one.
ron
-- Forwarded message --
From: Peter Stuge
Date: Sat, Aug 8, 2009 at 7:28 AM
Subject: [coreboot] ELC 2009 videos and slides
To: coreb...@coreboot.org
http://free-electrons.com/blog/elc-2009-videos/
Some I f
>anyway, to ron's question, for those keeping score:
>Sun: released their stuff; recently acquired by Oracle.
>NeXT: acquired by Apple, ate it from within.
>MIPS: acquired by SGI. a smaller MIPS was then spit out when SGI
>realized Itanium was their future (oops).
>SGI: went backrupt, twice, then a
probably the easiest of the three to deal with, if someone were
really, really inclined.
but really: don't be. these are kernels for very, very outdated
platforms, some of which even eBay has trouble turning up. cobbling
That's besides the point. This stuff should be saved for
posterity, and h
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