sorry, i did realise. i'm afraid i just couldn't resist slightly
misquoting Flanders and Swann's `Song of Reproduction' (High Fidelity).
http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Flanders-Swann-Georges-Brassens/dp/B06T4S/ref=pd_sim_b_1--- Begin Message ---
Charles Forsyth wrote:
>> Hardware 24...@192khz.
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 3:58 AM, Roman V. Shaposhnik wrote:
> On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 11:55 -0600, Daniel Lyons wrote:
> > I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of Lisp
> > variant.
>
> Speaking of which (or may be not ;-)) is there anybody using Lua
> on Plan9?
>
> Thanks,
>
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 7:14 AM, Lyndon Nerenberg wrote:
> This is what we do at Sandia. We have one machine which serves
>> cpu/auth/file, but the actual Venti disks are in a Coraid connected
>> via GigE. The fossil disk is in the server, but if it dies we can just
>> build a new one.
>>
>
> Whi
> Speaking of which (or may be not ;-)) is there anybody using Lua
> on Plan9?
I am "playing" with Lua on my Plan9 computer...
BTW I have found a difference between Linux and Plan9 version:
- Linux version can handle "dividing by 0" without crash of Lua
interpretter,
- Plan9 version cannot. ;-)
P
fors...@terzarima.net (Charles Forsyth) writes:
>>Hardware 24...@192khz.
>
> the human ear can't hear as high as that
> still, it ought to please any passing bat!
> Hi-fi, hi-fi, ...
If you're recording doing it at 24-bit will pay off in the mixing
stage.
On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:58:39 -0400, Daniel Lyons
wrote:
I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of Lisp
variant.
Maybe that should be my next side project.
Aaron W. Hsu
--
Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its
victims may be th
Wonderful, yes, it would be to print papers
from my HP Officejet 5610 through my
Plan 9 computers. However, the printer
reads only HP's (proprietary?) PDL, called
PCL (Printer Command Language)[1][2].
Viz., it does not understand Postscript.
Any suggestions on getting Plan 9 to print
on this?
Bes
It seems the product specs page previously
mentioned is out-of-date. This[1][2] one
mentions LIDIL as the standard language, not
PCL 3. Which perhaps makes things even
more difficult.
dying hopes of young lads,
ak
P.S.: I don't know anything about LIDIL.
[1] http://ln-s.net/3uhn
"Print driver
> The venti archive starts at 2AM, and my cron job is at 4AM. So far, I've not
> yet had an archive take longer than 2 hours. But that's partly due to
> triggering one explicitly after a pull that's just replaced all my
> executables ;-)
that's surprising to me that it would take that long.
is tha
> Without them, your seperate venti server is JBOD :-P Well, not quite. You
> can eventually find the right vac score, but you have to manually mount
> each and every score in the venti until you find the right one. See
> /sys/src/cmd/venti/words/dumpvacroots. You could probably semi-automate
>
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 1:07 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
> > The venti archive starts at 2AM, and my cron job is at 4AM. So far, I've
> not
> > yet had an archive take longer than 2 hours. But that's partly due to
> > triggering one explicitly after a pull that's just replaced all my
> > executables
Charles Forsyth wrote:
Hardware 24...@192khz.
the human ear can't hear as high as that
still, it ought to please any passing bat!
Hi-fi, hi-fi, ...
Personally I can't hear over 9119 hz (audio), but I might want to record
1s of 192Khz (samples I presume) and stretch them by 100x to 96
I have not been able to convince coworkers that filesystem namespaces
are the way to go. I think they think it is too hard.
*shrug* you can lead a horse...
Funny, the problem I usually have is that people think file systems
are *too simple*, oh, no data types other than *byte stream*
> If you're recording doing it at 24-bit will pay off in the mixing
> stage.
Thanks. And there can be some other kinds of stages, too.
I think I can consider myself lucky, that my equipment doesn't know
how to do AC-3 or DTS :)
Although my soundcard does have some other interfaces i.e. for a
S/PDIF clock source.
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 4:45 AM, Roman V. Shaposhnik wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-08-12 at 17:36 +0200, hiro wrote:
>> > This
2009/8/14 James Tomaschke :
> Devon H. O'Dell wrote:
>> If hardware is 2...@192, #A is 2...@192
>
> I am not aware that #A allows for 24bit samples, I only see an option
> "speed" to set sampling rates. The man page says: "Each sample is a 16
> bit little-endian two's complement integer".
>
> I wa
On Aug 14, 2009, at 3:15 AM, Aaron W. Hsu wrote:
On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:58:39 -0400, Daniel Lyons > wrote:
I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of
Lisp variant.
Maybe that should be my next side project.
If that's something you're thinking about doing, let me sug
If there is a Ghostscript output device for a printer,
then you just need to edit /sys/lib/lp/devices to add
an appropriate line giving the output device name and
the file where the output goes.
; grep 'gs!' devices
hpdeskjet - - /dev/lpt1data - gs!cdj670+nohead generic nospool - - - -
canon
2009/8/12 <6o205z...@sneakemail.com>:
> Given how useful and important it is to have Edit in the tag of text
> windows, is there some reason that it isn't there automatically?
After this discussion, I wrote a little patch, which somebody else
might find useful:
; diff /sys/src/cmd/acme/exec.c sr
On Fri, 2009-08-14 at 09:16 +, Pavel Klinkovsky wrote:
> > Speaking of which (or may be not ;-)) is there anybody using Lua
> > on Plan9?
> I am "playing" with Lua on my Plan9 computer...
What do you use it for? Any kind of fun projects? My idea is to try
and see whether Plan9+Lua would be a m
On Fri, 2009-08-14 at 09:27 +0100, Robert Raschke wrote:
> Last time I tried, the standard Lua compiled out of the box under the
> APE.
That is good to know. Still, I'd rather see it run without APE.
> Great little language. I use it in my day job (together with Erlang).
*together* with Erlang?
On Fri, 2009-08-14 at 10:49 -0600, Daniel Lyons wrote:
> On Aug 14, 2009, at 3:15 AM, Aaron W. Hsu wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 13 Aug 2009 13:58:39 -0400, Daniel Lyons > > wrote:
> >
> >> I'd love it if Acme or Plan 9 had good support for some kind of
> >> Lisp variant.
> >
> > Maybe that should be my
On Thu, 2009-08-13 at 09:42 +0100, roger peppe wrote:
> 2009/8/13 Roman Shaposhnik :
> > Am I totally missing something or hasn't been the binary RPC
> > of that style been dead ever since SUNRPC? Hasn't the eulogy
> > been delivered by CORBA? Haven't folks realized that S-exprs
> > are really quit
By this logic, I need to have my application to convert CDROM-XA ADPCM
audio from a device into PCM just to talk to an interface, which in turn
must convert it back into ADPCM to play it back because the DMA
transfers to the audio hardware buffer require ADPCM.
the problem with supporting everyt
Charles Forsyth wrote:
> sorry, i did realise. i'm afraid i just couldn't resist slightly
> misquoting Flanders and Swann's `Song of Reproduction' (High Fidelity).
> http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Flanders-Swann-Georges-Brassens/dp/B06T4S/ref=pd_sim_b_1
Yes, marketing in general feeds on "more
On 12/08/2009, Tim Newsham wrote:
> Draw the line at what the hardware can be told to decode
> with a flip of a register? The driver interface can easily
> accomodate arbitrary encoding names (see inferno's driver
> for an example).
One thing I haven't seen mentioned (perhaps because I misunder
> Speaking of which (or may be not ;-)) is there anybody using Lua
> on Plan9?
> Roman.
Kenji has written a webdav server for pegasus (Kenji's httpd branch)
using lua.
> What do you use it for? Any kind of fun projects? My idea is to try
> and see whether Plan9+Lua would be a more useful combination for
> building Web service environment than werc.
>
> Thanks,
> Roman.
Kenji has written a webdav server for pegasus (Kenji's httpd branch)
using lua.
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 11:27 AM, Roman V. Shaposhnik wrote:
> On Fri, 2009-08-14 at 09:27 +0100, Robert Raschke wrote:
>
>> Last time I tried, the standard Lua compiled out of the box under the
>> APE.
Just fetched the tarball for lua-5.1.4, changed the CC=gcc to CC=cc
and tried "make posix". Aft
Just fetched the tarball for lua-5.1.4, changed the CC=gcc to CC=cc
and tried "make posix". After lots of complaining about the -O2
option, I see:
/usr/john/lua-5.1.4/src/liolib.c:178[stdin:2686] incompatible types:
"IND STRUCT _1_" and "INT" for op "AS"
I'm going to poke around and look into
an old interview with some relevance
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.08/thompson.html
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 2:52 PM, Josh Wood wrote:
>
>> Just fetched the tarball for lua-5.1.4, changed the CC=gcc to CC=cc
>> and tried "make posix". After lots of complaining about the -O2
>> option, I see:
>>
>> /usr/john/lua-5.1.4/src/liolib.c:178[stdin:2686] incompatible types:
>> "IND STRUCT _
On Sat, 15 Aug 2009 05:24:01 +0800 sqweek wrote:
> On 12/08/2009, Tim Newsham wrote:
> > Draw the line at what the hardware can be told to decode
> > with a flip of a register? The driver interface can easily
> > accomodate arbitrary encoding names (see inferno's driver
> > for an example).
>
For Lisp variants ask Alex Shinn(alexsh...@gmail.com), he's got an
interesting scheme implementation mostly working. It's a summer of
code project this year.
On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 7:55 PM, Daniel Lyons wrote:
>
> On Aug 13, 2009, at 3:14 AM, Aaron W. Hsu wrote:
>
>> So, I was browsing around the
> Personally I can't hear over 9119 hz (audio), but I might want to record
> 1s of 192Khz (samples I presume) and stretch them by 100x to 9600 hz
> (audio) and have a (possibly) interesting time listening to the results
> without interpolating.
perfect customer for the Phone Company! ☺
- erik
IJS is probably it; that's the PCL driver for the home-office class printers.
Akshat: PCL is proprietary but not closed; you can find references to
it online. I would highly recommend never looking at PCL since it will
make your eyes bleed. Hopefully the Ghostscript drivers will work for
you.
On
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 5:37 PM, J.R. Mauro wrote:
> IJS is probably it; that's the PCL driver for the home-office class printers.
IJS is not PCL.
IJS is a custom protocol that is spoken between a bitmap-producing
program like Ghostscript and a bitmap-printing program like /usr/bin/hpijs
http://s
On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 9:06 PM, Russ Cox wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 14, 2009 at 5:37 PM, J.R. Mauro wrote:
>> IJS is probably it; that's the PCL driver for the home-office class printers.
>
> IJS is not PCL.
>
> IJS is a custom protocol that is spoken between a bitmap-producing
> program like Ghostscrip
> I thought IJS was also used to turn a raster into PCL, since IIRC some
> non-business-class HP printers come with a stripped-down PCL 5e or
> some such.
>
> I'm probably wrong again, though. I try to not think about the HP PDLs
> too much. Probably it's not IJS I'm thinking of and some other cru
gs(1) compiled fine with ijs driver - I hope it doesn't
need to be updated as well. Thanks for the information,
Russ.
I found Prof. Okamoto's page on HPIJS 1.5
port: http://basalt.cias.osakafu-u.ac.jp/plan9/s54.html
(binaries linked).
I'll look into the degree of changes made for the port.
If it'
> For Lisp variants ask Alex Shinn(alexsh...@gmail.com), he's got an
> interesting scheme implementation mostly working. It's a summer of
> code project this year.
See also my post: http://ninetimes.cat-v.org/news/2009/07/19/0/
and the included link to setting it up on Plan 9.
Best,
ak
> Suggestions (model, company, etc.) welcome.
> Although, this thing can do photoscanning, copying,
> and faxing. I make great use of the former two,
> along with printing (of course).
this isn't a recommendation. i don't have one.
but i was thinking about getting something
along the lines of thi
42 matches
Mail list logo