Hi,
James (Jay) Treacy wrote:
> If we do this, we should add some information on sources for fonts
> and how to get a browser to recognize them. Any pointers? Even
> better would be if you could write up something for us.
No, we don't need.
IMHO, "numeric character reference" will help (for examp
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 03:58:10PM +0900, Tomohiro KUBOTA wrote:
>
> I think ASCII is the universal and safe character set.
> I suggest to write
>
> *** -> ###(NIHONGO)
> @@@ -> &&&(RUSSKII)
> Espa$ol -> Espa+ol
>
> and so on, where
>
> *** is 'Japanese' in Japanese letters in Japanese l
Hi,
From: "James A. Treacy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: language names
Date: Tue, 11 Jan 2000 02:39:29 -0500
> > 'NIHONGO' and 'RUSSKII' are 'Japanese' and 'Russian' in their language
> > in ASCII characters.
> >
> Since the language is already represented in the native charset, should
> th
Can someone tell me what I missed in order to get the security/2000/
directory to build?
--
Mike Stone
> Can someone tell me what I missed in order to get the security/2000/
> directory to build?
To add the 2000 directory to the SUBS variable of the Makefile in the
security directory, and make it depend on the 2000 files instead of the 1999
ones. I have now done that.
Idea; perhaps we should set
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 01:10:23PM +0100, peter karlsson wrote:
> > Can someone tell me what I missed in order to get the security/2000/
> > directory to build?
>
> To add the 2000 directory to the SUBS variable of the Makefile in the
> security directory, and make it depend on the 2000 files inst
> Yup. I just updated the Makefile in /, which also depends on the
> security dir/year. Anyone know of any others? The only problem I see
> with updating the year automatically is making sure that we properly
> handle the case where nothing's been done that year. (E.g., there is no
> news/2000 at t
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 02:39:29AM -0500, James A. Treacy wrote:
> What do others think about having all the languages that appear as
> jibberish in ascii append the language name in ascii (in parentheses)?
I do not know how others feel toward this, in the world of Russian language
this (using asci
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 03:16:36PM +0100, peter karlsson wrote:
> > Yup. I just updated the Makefile in /, which also depends on the
> > security dir/year. Anyone know of any others? The only problem I see
> > with updating the year automatically is making sure that we properly
> > handle the case
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 02:39:29AM -0500, James A. Treacy wrote:
|On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 03:58:10PM +0900, Tomohiro KUBOTA wrote:
|>
|> I think ASCII is the universal and safe character set.
|> I suggest to write
|>
|> *** -> ###(NIHONGO)
|> @@@ -> &&&(RUSSKII)
|> Espa$ol -> Espa+ol
|>
|>
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 12:18:11PM -0500, James A. Treacy wrote:
> There are a number of things that could be done here.
>
> get_recent_list will go back to the previous year if the current year does
> not provide enough entries. This should be fixed to not depend on the dir
> for the current year
On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 01:30:35PM -0500, James A. Treacy wrote:
>
> > The calls to get_recent_list should have the current year inserted
> > automatically. This should be done in the call to get_recent_list, not
> > in the function itself as the function may be called on a directory
> > that is n
[] said:
> Hi,Webmaster
>
> Can you tell me where have Debian Linux ISO image file? Because I cann't
> find it on all mirror sites. So I need your help! Thanks you!
Read http://www.debian.org/distrib/cdinfo for all you need to know about
this.
- Craig
--
Craig Small VK2XLZ, PGP: AD
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