On Tuesday 17 April 2007 01:29:44 guy keren wrote:
> Tzahi Fadida wrote:
> > On Monday 16 April 2007 22:16:00 Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> >> 5) A virtual machine such as VMware. You will need a decent computer,
> >>enough memory, etc., but the requirements are modest by today's
> >>standards.
Tzahi Fadida wrote:
On Monday 16 April 2007 22:16:00 Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
5) A virtual machine such as VMware. You will need a decent computer,
enough memory, etc., but the requirements are modest by today's
standards. I run Linux on a T43 Thinkpad and there are some things
(being nic
Hi,
The talk today:
http://haifux.org/lectures/163/
Was excellent (at least the part I saw, I got late).
Few photos of the toy:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/oron_peled
Photos of some people were sent to the guilty by private mail ;-)
--
Oron Peled Voice/Fax: +97
On Monday 16 April 2007 22:16:00 Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> 5) A virtual machine such as VMware. You will need a decent computer,
>enough memory, etc., but the requirements are modest by today's
>standards. I run Linux on a T43 Thinkpad and there are some things
>(being nice to co-workers
Tzahi Fadida <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> As part of my new job, i am going to develop also windows
> kernel/drivers. Therefore i will have to (naturally) run windows,
> however, i got comfortable with linux desktop and i am reluctant to
> move back to windows as my main desktop environment.
Do
I think that your best bet would be to use virtual machines (VMware or
competitor). You can (EULA permitting) save copies of images at various
stages of installation and operation.
Then, when something goes wrong (as it invariably would), you can
restore an older image, with cost only of copying 4
Hi,
As part of my new job, i am going to develop also windows kernel/drivers.
Therefore i will have to (naturally) run windows, however, i got comfortable
with linux desktop and i am reluctant to move back to windows as my main
desktop environment.
What are my options, considering i am willing to
I have used RAIDCore cards (then Broadcom). Purchased from Excellnet.
I used 8 port cards, and the beauty is that since they do "software"
raid, you can combine up to 4 controllers and created a 32 drives RAID
array (>16TB with 500GB SATA disks ). The driver is not open-source,
but they provide dr
El lun, 16-04-2007 a las 21:51 +1000, Geoff Shang escribió:
> Hello,
>
> Thanks to everyone who responded.
>
> So it seems that some howtos need updating. Ok so since I'm going to get a
> router eventually anyway, I need to get one that does L2TP, right? Are
> most Israeli routers L2TP enable
Hi!
ADSL standard is PPPoE .
Dani
Geoff Shang wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Thanks to everyone who responded.
>
> So it seems that some howtos need updating. Ok so since I'm going to
> get a router eventually anyway, I need to get one that does L2TP,
> right? Are most Israeli routers L2TP enabled or d
Hi,
I assume you want to use your box as router+WiFi or such. Instead of
building the configuration from scratch, I would recommend to look at
LinkSys WRT54GL, which is availabe on zap:
http://web.zap.co.il/models.asp?sog=&keyword=WRT54GL
And then reflash it with Linux:
http://www.lifehacker.c
Hello,
Thanks to everyone who responded.
So it seems that some howtos need updating. Ok so since I'm going to get a
router eventually anyway, I need to get one that does L2TP, right? Are
most Israeli routers L2TP enabled or do I need to specifically ask for it?
I was hoping in the short te
Quoth Maxim Veksler:
> Could someone please recommend a PCI WiFi card with prism 2/2.5/3
> chipset available for purchase in Israel ?
>
> I would like to make an AP from it based on RH4.
> http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/07/10/1729226
>
> Can't find any of those in Zap or anything
> http:
Hello,
Could someone please recommend a PCI WiFi card with prism 2/2.5/3
chipset available for purchase in Israel ?
I would like to make an AP from it based on RH4.
http://www.linux.com/article.pl?sid=06/07/10/1729226
Can't find any of those in Zap or anything
http://wiki.personaltelco.net/inde
On 4/16/07, Amos Shapira <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 16/04/07, Ilya Konstantinov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Just when did this list go crazy? There's a solution fitting your
> problem - dynamic DNS (with DNSSEC). Why hack something when any modern DNS
> server supports it through configura
On 16/04/07, Ilya Konstantinov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just when did this list go crazy? There's a solution fitting your problem
- dynamic DNS (with DNSSEC). Why hack something when any modern DNS server
supports it through configuration?
When not having access to the DNS server to enable
On 4/15/07, Maxim Veksler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 4/15/07, Ehud Karni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, 14 Apr 2007 16:18:20 +1000, Amos Shapira wrote:
> >
> > That said, I'm not sure that I can trust SSH_CLIENT/SSH_CONNECTION
since
> > they are passed from the client. Maybe a getpeerna
Just a small correction
> I've never seen anything like it. BTW, routers purchased in the U.S.
> WON'T work here. The only exception is the Linksys WRTG54-L (linux
> version) with third party firmware.
I have a D-LINK 614+ router purchased in the USA, and it works fine here
with cable internet (L
Here's something I wrote to the Israel Mac user's list about it cable modems.
I'll make changes where needed:
- Forwarded message from "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -
> Date: Thu, 1 Mar 2007 21:57:43 +0200
> From: "Geoffrey S. Mendelson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PR
El lun, 16-04-2007 a las 10:40 +0300, Jonathan Ben Avraham escribió:
> > http://www.netcheif.com/Articles/BrdBandDefs/BrdBandDefs.htm
>
> This is a Hebrew article - is there something similar in English?
>
>- yba
You are right. Sorry( see original Geoff comments bellow). At least the
word L
On Mon, Apr 16, 2007 at 10:40:23AM +0300, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
> >AFAIK and at least until four months ago, cable uses L2TP. For more
> >information check out
> >http://www.netcheif.com/Articles/BrdBandDefs/BrdBandDefs.htm
>
> This is a Hebrew article - is there something similar in English
On Monday 16 April 2007 03:08, Arieh Skliarouk quoth:
> Hi,
LSI Logic have multiple models. From 150-4 (4 SATA-1 ports) to 300-8X (8
SATA-2 ports).
I am using an LSI 150-6 (6 SATA-1 ports) and it can be installed
transparently. The later models (3xx) have RAID 0,1,5,6,1+0 and 10. The
earlier m
On Mon, 16 Apr 2007, Julian Daich wrote:
[snip]
El lun, 16-04-2007 a las 10:46 +1000, Geoff Shang escribi?:
I'm about to move to Israel with my wife. We've managed to land ourselves
a good deal for cable Internet, and I've been reading conflicting
information about how it works.
[snip]
AFA
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