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Hi Shmuel!
On Sunday 08 April 2007, Shmuel Fomberg wrote:
> Hi Shlomi.
>
> > Would you or any other F5er would like to update the site directly?
>
> I'm
>
> > getting tired of doing it, and want to delegate some responsibilities
>
> to
>
> > people with less community involvement.
> > A similar is
> > to the initrd can solve the problem.
> >
> > Is it a way to achive same on Windows, i.e boot
> > windows, which was installed "native" under VMWare
> ?
> >
> > Valery
> >
>
> See this page for SCSI Disk Drivers
>
http://www.vmware.com/download/server/drivers_tools.html
Thank you for the pointe
Quoth Geoffrey S. Mendelson:
> Marc, do you remember the PC BIOS upgrade you downloaded almost 10 years
> ago the included in plain text "SHEMA YISRAEL A."? I'm sure anyone
> a few kilometers to the east of us would have loved seeing that. :-)
Yep. If I am not mistaken, it was in the BIOS fon
On Sunday, 8 בApril 2007 13:59, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Oron Peled wrote:
> > Fedora is a fast paced distro like Debian testing
> I'm assuming you meant "Debian Unstable"
No, unless I missunderstood the Debian process.
In Fedora untested packages first goes to the Rawhide
repositories (which I t
I disagree, Debian Unstable (Sid) is an ever-updating, bleeding-edge
distro: *tends to bring the latest version of each software*, while
Fedora doesn't.
For example, FC6 has Firefox 1.5, and 2.0 will never be there, only in
FC7.
Debian Testing is the next Debian Stable, like FC is the next RH
Oron Peled wrote:
> Fedora is a fast paced distro like Debian testing
I'm assuming you meant "Debian Unstable"
Shachar
--
Shachar Shemesh
Lingnu Open Source Consulting ltd.
Have you backed up today's work? http://www.lingnu.com/backup.html
==
On Sunday 08 April 2007, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 06, 2007 at 11:53:45PM +0300, Dan Armak wrote:
> > On Friday 06 April 2007, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> > > I have a philosophical question. With open source software how do you
> > > make sure that the copy you are running was
a few good scripts for you:
phpXplorer (my favorite)
http://phpxplorer.org/phpXplorer/www/
blueshoes (windows folders like using JS)
http://www.blueshoes.org/en/applications/filemanager/
or some others
http://phpfm.sourceforge.net/
http://pfn.sourceforge.net/
On Sun, April 8, 2007 13:12, Amos
On Sunday, 8 בApril 2007 01:16, Amos Shapira wrote:
> Sticking to supported versions is rule number one in production networks
> (and plan ahead to switch to a later version well before the current one you
> use get's EOL'ed).
Correct. Ori used FC2, while FC4 is already EOL many months.
> As far
On Sunday 08 April 2007 13:12, Amos Shapira wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'd like to let a friend of mine to upload a file to my home server. It's a
> one-off need.
>
> Does anyone know of a simple web application I can install to let him do
> that through HTTP without too much hassle?
>
> I'm using Debian
1. run it behind a decent firewall ( even pf,iptables logs should give you
some idea about who's accessing your computer and using which service )
2. dont run anything with root
3. run chrooted env's if possible
4. reinstall using something more updated system and dont install anything
you dont
Hello,
Well, there are few problems with such application:
1. HTTP is limited to the amount of files that "PUT" or "fileupload"
field allows.
2. It's easier to write your own program, rather then to tweak an
existed program (it will take you the same amount of time imho, or
even more).
3. It's no
Hello,
I'd like to let a friend of mine to upload a file to my home server. It's a
one-off need.
Does anyone know of a simple web application I can install to let him do
that through HTTP without too much hassle?
I'm using Debian Etch.
Thanks,
--Amos
On Sun, Apr 08, 2007 at 07:46:12PM +1000, Amos Shapira wrote:
> I must share with you another story - just last week I talked to a guy who
> programmed the real-time code in SHDSL cards many years ago. They had very
> tight CPU and memory constraints but they HAD to put in some easter egg. One
> of
On 08/04/07, Oron Peled <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Eastern Eggs -- do you know any big proprietary application without ones?
Care to explain how these filter into the code in a "tightly controlled"
environment? Don't make us laugh.
Geoff, maybe development process was tightly controlled in 60'
On Sunday, 8 בApril 2007 00:00, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
> First of all, the probablility in the real world of someone
> being able to verify the source code is "clean" is not very large.
> Few people can actually read source code to the point that a hidden
> exploit is not present. Even those
On 08/04/07, Moshe Gorohovsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I need a perl book for a system administrator with Java/C++/C
background, with lots of examples.
If examples are what you are after then maybe the perl FAQ could suffice.
http://perldoc.perl.org/ is a very conveient way to browse the do
On 4/8/07, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You could do few things:
2. Have some logs emailed to you from the server on a daily basis
(crontab). By default, Redhat/CentOS/Fedora does this automatically,
but you can enhance it to send pack few log files and email them to
you as .tar.bz2
Hi Shlomi,
The perl course slides at cs.technion.ac.il that are linked from your
site is just what I need.
Is there an exercises [ and solutions :) ] page for that course
that we can access ?
Thank you.
- Moshe.
Shlomi Fish wrote:
> On Sunday 08 April 2007, Moshe Gorohovsky wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>>
Noam Meltzer wrote:
> "Learning Perl" & "Programming Perl", both by O'reilly.
> The first is a gr8 dive into water for everyone, programmer or no
> programmer. The latter is a great reference for those who know.
>
Thank you for the recommendation, I will look at "Learning Perl".
I had looked at "
On Sunday 08 April 2007, Moshe Gorohovsky wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Can you recommend a perl "cookbook" please ?
> Please share your opinion on perl books or other manuals that you have
> used.
>
> I need a perl book for a system administrator with Java/C++/C
> background, with lots of examples.
>
Hi Moshe
"Learning Perl" & "Programming Perl", both by O'reilly.
The first is a gr8 dive into water for everyone, programmer or no
programmer. The latter is a great reference for those who know.
On 4/8/07, Moshe Gorohovsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
Can you recommend a perl "cookbook" please ?
Plea
Hi,
Can you recommend a perl "cookbook" please ?
Please share your opinion on perl books or other manuals that you have
used.
I need a perl book for a system administrator with Java/C++/C
background, with lots of examples.
--
Moshe Gorohovsky
A6 CC A7 E1 C2 BD 8C 1B 30 8E A4 C3 4C 09 88 47
On 07/04/07, Gil Freund <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I am considering buying a Nokia e61 phone, and would appreciate any
> note on syncing the thing with Linux (more specifically Kontact,
> FireFox or Evolution). Any experience?
At the worst case, you're likely to be able to sync any
On 4/8/07, Orr Dunkelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You will also need to install everything from scratch (and I suggest you
init. your bios as well).
Flashing your BIOS for no real need (and the attack you're talking about is
purely theoretical) is calling for trouble. While it's fun to play
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