On Mon, 18 Jul 2005, Oren Held wrote:
> Hi,
>
> We're trying to set quota per directory in my organization.
> We use Linux & Solaris, and the builtin-kernel quota feature is only per
> file owner or amount of inodes, afaik.
indeed so.
> Problem is, that some directories are shared for many peop
Hi,
We're trying to set quota per directory in my organization.
We use Linux & Solaris, and the builtin-kernel quota feature is only per
file owner or amount of inodes, afaik.
Problem is, that some directories are shared for many people
(i.e. /data/projects/webapp) with different UIDs and GIDs, t
I've used a bluetooth dongle from conceptronics (called CBT100U). It
works fine on linux, and I was able to transfer files to my phone, and
to my friend's thinkpad. There are problems with synchronization with my
phone, but that's the phone's old software's fault (it's a nokia 7650).
Good luck
Hag
the following is from the questions and answer page at the ministry of
communications:
http://www.moc.gov.il/moc/doa_iis.dll/Serve/item/English/1.1.98.10.html
class 2 and 3 bluetooth is approved, 100 milliwatt is awaiting approval.
-yair
On 7/17/05, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> H
Maybe, but until IDF
released these freqs, so that civilians could use them for BT, they
were not allowed. Today the 900Mhz phones are legal as well, and are
being sold, as far as I know, by Bezeq themselves, as part of their
digital phones.
802.11a/b/g have
limitations, both regarding freqs,
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:42, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> Sure, but wouldn't a USB cable be a better bet? A lot cheaper, no
> radiation, no signal to jam (2.4gHz cordless phones are notorious for
> this), no network to hack, etc.
I agree, but if you followed my previous thread, you'll know that
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:34, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
>
> I don't want to start a war, but who's right, you or Geoffrey S. Mendelson
> who wrote that it's illegal?
>
> And if it is legal, I'm back to my original questions - mainly, can anyone
> recommend a dongle that is known to work in Israel.
>
I
On 7/17/05, Shlomo Solomon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote:
> > The problem was not with the distance, but with the frequencies. BT used
> > frequencies previously used by IDF, so it was illegal (and distance).
> > Now these freqs are open for BT devices, wh
Hi,
> > > 1 - Is it worth trying?
>
> No.
And thats because ... ?
> > > 2 - Does anyone have hands-on experience?
>
> No. There are three "bands" that bluetooth uses. The first is for "local"
> communication such as between your headset and a phone on your belt.
> Range is about one meter. Th
Every BT USB dongle
I've touched (so far two. of which one is the one Cellcom sells) worked
flawlessly under Linux. never had problems using BT.
My tip - get the
cheepest one. They're all the same.
Ez.
Shlomo Solomon wrote:
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote:
The probl
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 12:38:03PM +0300, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> Thanks for your reply, but now I'm confused. What are all the dongles being
> sold in stores? I realize that there may be some stores selling these things
> illegally, as you say. But I doubt that large chains like BUG and Office
On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote:
> The problem was not with the distance, but with the frequencies. BT used
> frequencies previously used by IDF, so it was illegal (and distance).
> Now these freqs are open for BT devices, which, in turn, can reach 100M.
I don't want to start a war, but
The problem was not
with the distance, but with the frequencies. BT used frequencies
previously used by IDF, so it was illegal (and distance). Now these
freqs are open for BT devices, which, in turn, can reach 100M.
Actually, the 10M reach up to 5-7M without disturbances, so I tend to
believe t
On Sunday 17 July 2005 10:31, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> No. There are three "bands" that bluetooth uses. The first is for "local"
> communication such as between your headset and a phone on your belt.
> Range is about one meter. This band is legal in Israel.
>
> The next two bands, designed fo
On Sun, Jul 17, 2005 at 09:54:27AM +0300, Shlomo Solomon wrote:
> Sorry to be a NUDNIK, but I received no replies and I find it hard to believe
> that nobody on the list has used a bluetooth dongle. I know that any
> standards compliant dongle should work, but before I buy, I really would
> pref
Sorry to be a NUDNIK, but I received no replies and I find it hard to believe
that nobody on the list has used a bluetooth dongle. I know that any
standards compliant dongle should work, but before I buy, I really would
prefer some first hand info, especially concerning models available in Israe
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