Eli Marmor wrote:
The real thing that is missing, is the opposite one.
We have a problem of rich men: too many choices.
Isn't that what "Free Market" means? The usual sequence of events is
that when you have 10 options for a library, 7-8 of them die out, and
you are left with two. That's wh
Chazal said: "Kin'at Sofrim Tarbe Hochma".
What I really miss in Open Source? What does it lack?
Open Source offers almost everything we need.
Actually, much more than we need:
- You need a text editor?
- No problem; We have emacs for you, we have vi, etc. Just take one.
- You need a deskto
I don't want to start a distro war, but as a satisfied Mandrake user since 7.0,
I have to say that MDK 9.0 is really greatly improved. The installation and
hardware identification is much better and almost everything has been improved
in some way. The Conrol panel is easier to use. My scanner was a
I don't know if these are Mozilla or Mandrake problems. After installing MDK9.0,
I decided to try Mozilla 1.1 - **out of the box**.
1 - I can reach any site I want, and so long as I click on links, everything
works. But if I enter any info (for instance a search string in GOOGLE), nothing
happens
Hi,
I'm answering my own post, since the solution may help someone else.
I discovered that iptables refuses to run when ipchains is also active.
Disableing ipchains solved the problem. The error messages from iptables were
really not helpful. :-( And I didn't find any mention of this in the
docu
I think it would be a good idea to put up a page with "The current state of
events", specifying what is currently supported, what known problems exist
and what's being worked on...
Alexander Maryanovsky.
At 23:21 11.12.2002 +0200, Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
http://www.openoffice.org.il
The site
On Wed, 11 Dec 2002, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> And if you can, use XDR (External Data Representation). Standard is
> always good. http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1014.html.
the problem with this specification is it is wasteful in network
resources, because it uses a lot of padding for small data ty
FWIW, I find hose and faucet useful. I commonly use two scripts to
do simple file transfer. 'tar' is the "protocol".. ;)
wwserve.sh:
---
#!/bin/bash
if [ "$1" == "" ]; then
echo "Usage: `basename $0` [tar options] "
else
echo -e "Starting faucet...\n"
faucet 12345 --verbose --out --once t