Quoth Eran Tromer:
> Meir Michanie wrote:
> > The problem with using nfs today is authentication (don't read
> > authorization, it may be another problem)
>
> The alternative filesystems included AFS, SFS, CODA and InterMezzo.
Hmmm... I suspect that TCFS (Transparent Cryptographic FS) is the bet
I see that Coda is now in the stock Linux kernel, so maybe things have
indeed improved.
Eran
Eran Tromer wrote:
> The alternative filesystems included AFS, SFS, CODA and InterMezzo.
> Theoretically all are up to the task, but the last three were immature
> (at least at that time) and AFS lacks
Quoting Amir Tal, from the post of Fri, 15 Nov:
> why trash you say ? because i saw some lines there that almost caused
> me to throw my laptop out the window...and i am on the 5th floor, so
> imagine how that almost ended.
it's the old MS FUD rehashed. funny, just this week they said they are
bac
dear Mr. scoop had some things to say, and for some reason they decided to
quote that trash on YNET.
why trash you say ? because i saw some lines there that almost caused me to
throw my laptop out the window...and i am on the 5th floor, so imagine how
that almost ended.
anyway :
http://www.ynet.
Meir Michanie wrote:
> The problem with using nfs today is authentication (don't read
> authorization, it may be another problem)
[...]
> 3. get the private key from one compromised client and you have root
> control over the net, next step would be ssh root@server -i
> compromised-key
[...]
Yup,
The problem with using nfs today is authentication (don't read
authorization, it may be another problem).
NFS and PORTMAP relay on trusted hosts, you could use ips or dns names,
or * (wilcards?)
spoffing this is as simple mounting the nfs share using edited local
/etc/passwd.
You may say that h
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 09:59:17PM +0200, Eran Tromer wrote:
> Ehud Karni wrote:
>
> > I can put 7 disks and an additional ventilator inside the computer box
> > (all I need is supporting frames).
>
> Disk drives draw a lot of power when they spin up (e.g., the Maxtor 80GB
> can reach 22W on the
I know that it is not a option for everyone, but on my
laptop(440MHZ-128MG) I use blackbox and fills my needs.
On Wed, 2002-11-13 at 11:12, Dvir Volk wrote:
> AFAIK, this is the main goal of KDE 3.2 - increasing interface
> responsiveness and launch speed, rather than bloating KDE with more
> fea
Ehud Karni wrote:
> I can put 7 disks and an additional ventilator inside the computer box
> (all I need is supporting frames).
Disk drives draw a lot of power when they spin up (e.g., the Maxtor 80GB
can reach 22W on the 12V line plus 2W on the 5V line). I doubt a
standard power supply can handl
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 19:14:19 +0200, Nadav Har'El <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 14, 2002, Ira Abramov wrote about "Re: 2 IDE cards ?":
> > umm, the idea of calling ourselves IGUL dropped long ago, my man :)
>
> the "Israeli Group of Unix Lusers"? :)
I liked that (but then there is no
Title: Microsoft freebies turn India gov. against open-source
http://www.salon.com/tech/wire/2002/11/14/india/index.html
Daniel Paikov
TIG, QA
CP, IL
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 18:52:40 +0200, Ira Abramov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> there are external RAID boxes that will take a few IDE disks and look as
> one big SCSI device on the outside, but either way, what you are doing
> sounds a little crazy to me :)
The boxes are not cheap ($5000-$6000) w
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002, Ira Abramov wrote about "Re: 2 IDE cards ?":
> umm, the idea of calling ourselves IGUL dropped long ago, my man :)
the "Israeli Group of Unix Lusers"? :)
--
Nadav Har'El|Thursday, Nov 14 2002, 10 Kislev 5763
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |--
There is no problem in breaking RAID (mirror or otherwise), you do not lose
information.
So, backup, break the raid, repartition, rebuild the raid and restore.
I did it, and it's very simple.
- Original Message -
From: "Sagi Bashari" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Ira Abramov" <[EMAIL PROTECTE
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Arie Folger wrote:
> Anybody found a good way to convert documents from LyX or Latex to Kword? How
> about the other way around? I mean without using either plain text or html
> transformation, as I am concerned about documents with footnotes.
I'm not sure about Hebrew
>
> T
umm, the idea of calling ourselves IGUL dropped long ago, my man :)
Quoting Ehud Karni, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> I want to build a cheap file server (samba and NFS) with more than
> 600 GB so I need to install another IDE card to add the extra drives.
there are external RAID boxes that wil
I want to build a cheap file server (samba and NFS) with more than
600 GB so I need to install another IDE card to add the extra drives.
An experiment with "no-name" pci IDE card failed because it was
identified as USB and not IDE. The system is RH 7.3, kernel 2.4.18-4
(it now serves 330 GB - LVM o
Hi Arie,
Please check this web site: http://koffice.kde.org/filters/status.phtml
For more info I would suggest for you to connect to irc.kde.org on channel
#koffice (I think the latex filter was improved a lot lately)..
Thanks,
Hetz
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 11:06:08 -0500, Arie Folger wrote
> Anybo
Anybody found a good way to convert documents from LyX or Latex to Kword? How
about the other way around? I mean without using either plain text or html
transformation, as I am concerned about documents with footnotes.
Thing is, even as I love LyX, Kword is doing unicode while lyX isn't (yet).
On 14/11/2002 17:30, Ira Abramov wrote:
Quoting Sagi Bashari, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
I can move /var to / and repartition /var. But I have software RAID
running on this drive. Is it safe to do, remotely, when software RAID is
activated on / and /home?
probably OK, but you won't
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002 17:24:58 +0200, Alexander Maryanovsky wrote
> >Like I said before, working Rotal modems are a hoax. The only thing you can
> >try is to sniff out the synchronization sequence yourself - and I wasnt able
> >to do that because the USB snooper crashes my only Windows box.
> >
> >Th
Quoting Sagi Bashari, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> >
> >time to split it up. worth a few minutes of downtime to improve
> >relyability and performance.
> >
> I only have remote access to the server (it is colocated).
>
> I asked here few weeks ago if there is a reason to put /var/www
> somewhe
Like I said before, working Rotal modems are a hoax. The only thing you can
try is to sniff out the synchronization sequence yourself - and I wasnt able
to do that because the USB snooper crashes my only Windows box.
The symptoms are the same in at least 3 confirmed cases.
Not sure I understan
On 14/11/2002 16:50, Ira Abramov wrote:
Quoting Sagi Bashari, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
I can't change the partition settings or repartition the harddisk
because /var is a very big partition that is also used for data
(database,web).
time to split it up. worth a few minutes of down
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 05:20:31PM +0307, Baruch Even wrote:
> Note: they may wonder how comes you expect to have free time to
> actually do any such projects.
That's only a problem with startups, and (in my experience) startups
that do not understand how development works. "this should take 4
we
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 03:18:06PM +0200, Martin Polley wrote:
> The problem is that signing certain NDAs means that your employer owns
> all the IP coming out of your brain in the time you are employed by
> them. Therefore, anything you contribute to any open-source project
> (during this time) is
Quoting Sagi Bashari, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> I can't change the partition settings or repartition the harddisk
> because /var is a very big partition that is also used for data
> (database,web).
time to split it up. worth a few minutes of downtime to improve
relyability and performance.
That's where I took the original command from.
I can't change the partition settings or repartition the harddisk
because /var is a very big partition that is also used for data
(database,web).
However i have empty 6GB partition on the harddisk. I don't need that
much for spool directory, is it
Quoting Martin Polley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> The problem is that signing certain NDAs means that your employer owns
> all the IP coming out of your brain in the time you are employed by
> them. Therefore, anything you contribute to any open-source project
> (during this time) is also subject to su
* Nadav Har'El <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [021114 17:08]:
> But my suggestion: do the "NDA refusal" only after you are guaranteed the
> job and given a contract to sign. If you go with the "I will not sign an NDA"
> to the first interview or put it in the CV, they can easily ignore you
> without even cons
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002, Martin Polley wrote about "RE: OT, NDA (was: Looking for a Job :
Shlomi Fish' Bio)":
> The problem is that signing certain NDAs means that your employer owns
> all the IP coming out of your brain in the time you are employed by
> them. Therefore, anything you contribute to an
Maybe I did not made myself clear. What I meant is that I would be able to
tell what I do at the workplace and not have to keep exactly what I'm
doing secret (as is the case with Rephael). If NDA simply means that you
don't give the code you wrote to anyone else - that's fine with me.
Regards,
The problem is that signing certain NDAs means that your employer owns
all the IP coming out of your brain in the time you are employed by
them. Therefore, anything you contribute to any open-source project
(during this time) is also subject to such an agreement...
Martin Polley
Technical Communic
Take a look here:
http://www.stahl.bau.tu-bs.de/~hildeb/postfix/ext3.shtml
Cheers,
Henry
Sagi Bashari wrote:
On 14/11/2002 13:51, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Sagi Bashari wrote:
Hi,
I just setuped a new server. It is only running postfix at this time,
relaying mail from a
Hello Sagi,
> >Maybe limit the number of postfix processes (of some kind?)
> >
> No, it's not that:
> [sagi@black sagi]$ ps auxww|grep -ic postfix
> 77
> [sagi@black sagi]$
> >
Command w or uptime shows number of processes that are waiting for CPU
AND number of processes that stuck for one or oth
I hope this is not too OT for this list, but why not sign an NDA ?
I understand not signing total relinquishment of one's past, present or
future IP
to one's (prospective) employer.
(I refused signing such an agreement for a previous employer)
I very much agree with not signing anything you h
On Thu, 2002-11-14 at 11:39, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 11:20:17AM +0200, Eli Marmor wrote:
>
> > These days, the chance is not way better when you agree to sign
> > NDA's
>
> Maybe we should start up a list of Linux friendly AND IP friendly
> companies. Although I'm afr
On Thu, 2002-11-14 at 11:20, Eli Marmor wrote:
> Ira Abramov wrote:
> >
> > Quoting Shlomi Fish, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> > > 1. I will not sign an NDA.
> >
> > that's very brave, but there's 0% chance of finding anything without an
> > NDA in today's market other than in the Universities.
On 14/11/2002 13:51, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Sagi Bashari wrote:
Hi,
I just setuped a new server. It is only running postfix at this time,
relaying mail from another server.
The distribution is RedHat 7.3 with all of the updates.
There is a large amount of mail in the que
I/O bound?
Being killed by the journalling overhead of ext3?
Insufficient RAM to cache the files being accessed in the disk
(improbable)?
My first guess is that this has to do with interaction of postfix with
ext3 journalling.
Things to check/try:
- Is the system actually I/O bound?
- What happens
On Thu, 14 Nov 2002, Sagi Bashari wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just setuped a new server. It is only running postfix at this time,
> relaying mail from another server.
>
> The distribution is RedHat 7.3 with all of the updates.
>
> There is a large amount of mail in the queue (about 17k mails).
>
> The load
Hi,
I just setuped a new server. It is only running postfix at this time,
relaying mail from another server.
The distribution is RedHat 7.3 with all of the updates.
There is a large amount of mail in the queue (about 17k mails).
The load average goes upto 8.x. If I kill postfix, it goes back d
Still, regarding speed - will be 750/96 Kbps connection
good enough ?
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Hetz Ben Hamo [mailto:hetz@;witch.dyndns.org]
> >
> > GnomeMeeting - THE best app I've seen for this usage:
> > http://www.gnomemeeting.org
> >
> > It works very nicely with other V
Simple...
GnomeMeeting - THE best app I've seen for this usage:
http://www.gnomemeeting.org
It works very nicely with other Video Conferencing programs like MS Netmeeting
(as long as you install the GSM codec from this web site on the windows
machine).
Speed - really depends on various issues.
On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 11:20:17AM +0200, Eli Marmor wrote:
> These days, the chance is not way better when you agree to sign
> NDA's
Maybe we should start up a list of Linux friendly AND IP friendly
companies. Although I'm afraid I can think of companies that fit in
either set, but no compan
Ira Abramov wrote:
>
> Quoting Shlomi Fish, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> > 1. I will not sign an NDA.
>
> that's very brave, but there's 0% chance of finding anything without an
> NDA in today's market other than in the Universities. do your math.
These days, the chance is not way better when
Quoting Shlomi Fish, from the post of Thu, 14 Nov:
> 1. I will not sign an NDA.
that's very brave, but there's 0% chance of finding anything without an
NDA in today's market other than in the Universities. do your math.
if you give up that one ideal (I did, and I agree it's painful), I can
pass y
Hello
In continuing of recent discussion of ISP's I wanted to ask if anybody
have experience with video conferencing applications under Linux.
How do they compare to Windows applications ?
What speed is required for video conferencing ?
Anybody on this list actually use video conferencing on regu
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