unfortunately, java indeed is a performance hog in various areas - and
just by saying "it is not", you're not going to burst anyone's bubble ;)
Benchmarks can be found all over the web, don't take *my* word for it. ;)
i won't even mention java GUI programs. it could be that you can write a
GUI pro
Sharon Dagan wrote:
Hi All,
Putting the JIT aside for a moment, consider an arbitrary C/C++ application
optimized for Xeon - will it run faster, unconditionally, on Itanium?
Describe "optimized for Xeon". What extensions are you referring to ?
(and please don't say SIMD).
I guess that 'to get bet
Couple of points,
1. In normal circumstances the compiler automatically generates a
bitwise copy constructor if none is present. This can be verified
easily. Note that in this case, the copy ctor is declared but not
implemented which means the compiler will not create a default copy
ctor. (Myer
On Thursday 22:04:42, Oron Peled wrote:
> ... QT does not ship these tools as Trolltech probably assume
> you will use their qmake tool...
Yes, I mentioned the possibility of qmake, but
but for developing Qt/KDE apps, it is THE easiest tool that I've seen.
Exactly. The question is if your proj
PostgresQL seems to have something like this, see:
http://www.sql.org/sql-database/postgresql/manual/arrays.html
(for those who need yet another reason to switch :-) )
Yes, PostgreSQL is a fine DB and there is every good reason to switch :-)
It only suffers from two main problems that I can see:
1
On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 12:08:48 +0200, Gershon Geva <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi.
I have a server (kernel 2.4.20) with a network card and a
cellular modem. On that server I run an application
That waits for incoming connections on a known port. It is
important to me to know to which Network Int
On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 16:24:10 +0300, Shachar Shemesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
Howdie,
Someone (i think it was Shachar) asked about shutdown and loosing
messages - well, I jsut came across the SO_LINGER socket options (man 7
socket) and though it can help:
" SO_LI
Hi all,
Does anyone have any experience with exporting HTML from Lyx ?
I'm trying to export an article I wrote that contains some math expressions
and none of them show up in the output HTML.
Am I missing something here ? Am I missing some component that I am
not aware of ?
After all, I've seen H
I must say, from my own experience with RH9, it is actually
much faster than my old distro (7.3). My educated guess is as
good as any but it doesn't *feel* like a kernel problem (hehe,
yes I am a Zen master :). I might be tempted to look into the
standard C library or any other general component of
y option (aside from using pslatex) ?
Eli
On Sunday 14 December 2003 06:16 pm, Dekel Tsur wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 04:44:11PM +0200, voguemaster wrote:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > Not too long ago I was still using Lyx version 1.2.x to write my
> > technical papers
Hello all,
Not too long ago I was still using Lyx version 1.2.x to write my technical
papers. It used (as some of you must know) the xforms frontend. Now that
I've migrated to a newer version of Linux (and KDE, etc...) I'm using the
newer Lyx with the Qt frontend. Now, this shouldn't matter much
Maybe the new version of KMess ? I have yet to unpgrade my Qt
libraries to support it but from what I understand it supports the
newest MSN protocol.
Eli
On Mon, 01 Dec 2003 23:29:04 +0200, Diego Iastrubni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
×â×â×â×ï ×Â×Â×â, 1 ×â×â×Â×ï×â× 2003, 22:52, ×Â×â×Ã×â ×Â×ï ×â×â
Hi list,
I'm writing a portable set of classes for a network application
(the classes will be reused) for Win32 and Linux. I don't wish to
use external libraries since those are simple primitives.
I'm generally using some #ifdef statements (although I've minimized their
use using a header file for
On Sun, 31 Aug 2003 19:26:01 +0200, Alexander Maryanovsky
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
At 17:54 31.08.2003 +0300, Aviram Jenik wrote:
Hi,
We are currently debating on what GUI infrastructure to use for one of
our
products, and the main downside of qt seems to be its constraining
license.
Can any
I've a question on the matter:
How do you go about setting up such a system ? What are the
hardware/software
requirements ?
Eli
On Mon, 18 Aug 2003 13:59:45 +0300 (IDT), Jonathan Ben Avraham
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
The YES remote control is apparently an OEM Pace RC 10. That solved the
This is indeed a viable and good solution. What strikes me odd is that
you have the sources, you KNOW the changes made (obviously you also
document them :). You should at least have an idea about your class
interfaces. Following good OO design for your class interfaces usually
means almost no probl
Regarding interfaces that are up, consider looking at the
source of ifconfig (yes I know it's a lame suggestion but
it works :).
With interfaces that are down it's a bit more problematic.
I'm guessing looking for configuration scripts or aliases for
the relevant modules might do the trick (??).
Eli
Linux Administration, a beginner's guide.
Very good IMO. Mine deals with RH6.1 but it's a good starting point
and I'm sure there is a newer version or something..
Eli
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 14:21:47 +0300, Shachar Shemesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
Hi there,
Is there anyone here who can recommend
On Fri, 04 Jul 2003 12:03:26 +0300, Eliran Gonen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Shlomi Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Python is your friend. http://www.python.org
Or Perl - http://www.cpan.org/. Or Ruby...
There's no need to discriminate against languages.
It was just an example. Generally, interpreted
y Win32 and EVERYTHING else. I'd like to somehow
detect Linux and glibc (yes i know about __GLIBC__).
Well, thanks for the help
On Thu, Jul 03, 2003, Voguemaster wrote about "Cross platform code":
The problem is very basic: Linux and Win32 have different include files
for some t
Hi all,
For the life of me, I can't seem to find anything that will help me
write code that can compile under Linux AND Win32. Basically I want
to write a small network application (details later) that will be
cross platform.
The problem is very basic: Linux and Win32 have different include files
On Sat, 07 Jun 2003 17:49:39 +0300, Vadim Vygonets wrote:
I wasn't talking about speed and overhead, I was talking about
all the different features of C++.
Vadik.
How do you consider those features as "bloating" ???
Those features are great for good program design.
Eli
--
Using M2, Opera's r
On the other hand (and in a totally non-related non-attached way), I am
looking for some junk myself. I don't necessarily expect a trade,
although that would be nice.
What kind of junk ? ;-)
Eli
BTW, I've been to BeyondSecurity. Nice place... :)
--
Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client:
Damn, I could use an ISA soundblaster... hehe
Couldn't find one anywhere!
Eli
On Sun, 02 Mar 2003 12:20:23 +0200, Aviram Jenik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
My contribution to the junk pile:
- Several 10Mb combo network cards (ISA) - 10b2 (yes, with a BNC
connector only) net card (ISA)
- Buslogic
I myself would go bltting a 2D image using OpenGL. Assuming of
course you actually need fast block transfers, which I'm almost
sure you don't.
Well, you do, for smoother animation, but that's diferent (in order
to do double buffering).
However, fractals and other parametric generated graphics can b
I personally do this too, though... sometimes I forget.
Since I don't post that often, it's not too much of a problem
to edit the "To:" field, and I never have more than 1 address
for the list there to edit anyway.
Eli
On Tue, 18 Feb 2003 12:21:34 +0200, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm not famil
Hey, I've a question:
Why did you have to recompile your kernel ?
Eli
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003 10:50:57 +0200, Eli Segal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
well, I went and bought the samsung ADSL modem for 249 nis, and
an ST Lab ethernet card (Realtech chipset) for 70 nis
Ethernet:
On box it says
Well,
I'm not sure about newer kernels but from my experience,
the linux kernel doesn't have built-in support for
some Intel chipsets. It actually surprises me.
I had to compile a kernel module for an onboard chip
(forgot which) on my RH 6.2 (yes, it still works :) ).
Eli
On Sun, 16 Feb 2003 14:
Hmmm,
I don't have a URL but I know the Broadband forum in Tapuz
have a site with instructions for using PPPoE, for both
Linux AND Winblows.
In any case, a driver is only needed for the Ethernet card,
just reminding you :)
Eli
On Sun, 16 Feb 2003 10:54:43 +0200, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--- Forwarded message ---
From: Voguemaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Eli Segal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Linux-IL <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: ADSL modem
Date: Sun, 16 Feb 2003 19:39:09 +0200
My suggestions,
You might want to call you ISP and let them know to forget a
My suggestions,
You might want to call you ISP and let them know to forget about
the PCI modem. I'm not sure on the status of drivers for PCI
ADSL modems but I'm sure it's far from perfect.
The best way is to get an Ethernet modem. The Alcatel would obviously
be the 1st choice but the old versions
Hi,
I'd recommend the following book:
"Linux Administration: A Beginner's Guide" - Steve Shah
This book, albeit older is quite good as a starting point
for administration. It also touches the usage of the CLI
and it covers some very basic administration functions.
It even shows how to incorporate
--- Forwarded message ---
From: Voguemaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: guy keren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: OT: PROG question: regarding returning errors in libraries
Date: Fri, 07 Feb 2003 15:52:36 +0200
Well, I can only speak from my exprience. When I wrote a mail
Pardon my intervention but when have you seen a normal
software package containing only makefiles and has
a 'configure' option ???
If I remember correctly, configure is a part of autotools.
I could be wrong tho :)
Eli
On Mon, 03 Feb 2003 01:28:33 +0200, Oron Peled <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On
, Hetz Ben Hamo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Monday 20 January 2003 17:37, voguemaster wrote:
>> Alcatels are pretty rare commodity now.
>> I've heard you can find some at BezeqStore but whether they've got some
>> in their inventory at the moment, who knows.
Alcatels are pretty rare commodity now.
I've heard you can find some at BezeqStore but whether they've got some
in their inventory at the moment, who knows. I've also heard that Bezeq
have ordered more Alcatels. I wonder when we'll see those...
Eli
20/01/03 12:22:51, Ishai Parasol <[EMAIL PROTECT
Muli (and others),
Just for the record, examples of problems with ADSL modems such as the Samsung and
others can be easily found in Tapuz's networking and broadband forum.
As for myself, I wouldn't trade my Alcatel for anything right now.. I'm actually going
to call
199 and buy it from them (cos
Hi Michael,
Well, getting the list of open sockets and their respectable processes is ONE thing,
but closing those file descriptors that 'reside' (to remind you) in different
processes'
address space is an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT thing altogether.
That's basically what you need to do. However i'm unsu
I'll definately be attending. However, I'd like to suggest re-arranging the priorities
a little :-)
Seems more logical, at least to me, to have printing and hardware issues before
development and the web server thing. Just a thought...
Eli
04/12/02 13:57:24, Eddie Aronovich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wr
02/12/02 11:52:53, Ehud Karni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Sun, 01 Dec 2002 19:07:50 +0200, voguemaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> 3. Using SIGALARM. I forgot how this is implemented. Never did go into this since
>> it has problems (also among platf
01/12/02 07:55:04, Ira Abramov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> second
> that sendmail as a user process, manages it's own TCP connection timeout
> when that's a kernel thing. I'm no great programmer, but I think
> creating a TCP connection is a blocked call and the timeout is fixed in the
> kernel
A
>
>there you go. the fact that IE runs slow on some hardware, does not mean
>that every other browser has to run as slow. if we looked up to misrosoft
>for comparing stuff, linux would have crashed every few days and we'd be
>filling fine. is that the kind of standard you're looking for?
>
Of
>
>when i say something is bloated, i mean it takes too many resources. as
>you quite well know, two programs doing the same things can use different
>ammounts of resources. in fact, the same program can do the same thing in
>two manners - one optimized and one not.
>
And what would you say we
>
>But then again: if you want to put an image "here", don't put it in a
>float.
>
Indeed, but it's customary to have a caption below a figure (sometimes above) and as
far
as I can tell, the only *good* way of doing this is using float figures.
Eli
>--
>Tzafrir Cohen
>mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>First let's be exact. It's LaTeX that doesn't layout the page as you want. LyX is only
>a nice GUI front end.
I know, that's what I meant. No need to be picky.
>
>> I've used the '!ht" options for floats but in any case, when lyx doesn't have
>
>You should put \usepackage{float} in the LaTeX pr
>Of course there is direct TeX/LaTeX support in LyX. Simply go
>to insert->TeX (CTRL-L in the default keybinding) and enter
>your TeX code in the box.
Obviously, but since I've no real knowledge in LaTeX, it would be
pointless. That's what I was saying by "no direct LaTeX for me..".
E
>
>This i
res...
I'm not too happy about this.
Eli
29/11/02 02:11:54, Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Fri, 29 Nov 2002, voguemaster wrote:
>
>> That reminds me,
>>
>> I've been messing with float-figures in LyX but don't seem to be able
>> to
That reminds me,
I've been messing with float-figures in LyX but don't seem to be able to put them in
the
proper place. I've used the '!ht" options for floats but in any case, when lyx doesn't
have
enough space left in a page it will stuff more text into it and the figure on the next
page.
What
Have you tried LyX with the Heb-LaTeX and the necessary KB bindings etc.. ??
It can export to pdf and html, although I'm not sure how well the html would look in
different browsers (I haven't tried it yet).
Eli
28/11/02 18:22:26, Shlomi Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Thu, 28 Nov 2002, Tzafr
Ira,
Don't count on it :p
Do you think they'd really publish your reply to him ?...
Eli
15/11/02 02:58:37, Ira Abramov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
"There's so many different worlds
So many different suns
And we have just one world
But we live in different ones.."
- Dire Straits - "Brother
Hmm,
Performance in a word processor is not just about "typing". Try to stuff big tables and
Excel worksheets into the doc (with graphs and all) and some other things. Word crawls
like a baby. It's quite possible for a word processor to be a burdon on the system.
While on the subject, there are al
Hi list,
I've posted a similar question at the Linux forum at Tapuz but no one really
answered my question.
My question is simple: Does OpenOffice.org has any mechanism to incorporate
mathematical formulas in the document (like much MathType for MS Word) ??
One day I'll move to LyX and LaTeX, whe
Nov 2002, voguemaster wrote:
>
>
> It is also a great and better idea to coordinate InstaParty at TAU with
>the TAU/CC, for much improved facilities and possiblities (network and
>otherwise).
>
=
To unsubscribe, se
Although I was present for a brief period of time (about 40 minutes)
I saw that there was responsiveness by people in general.
I think InstaParties at TAU is an excellent idea.
Eli
07/11/02 16:04:33, Alexander Maryanovsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Currently installations only. We might resp
ff one, if possible. In fact, I use my RH7.3's kernel for my workstation and
it works great. Does it support bttv ? I'd rather see kernel modules than
a new kernel. I'm not too keen on changing kernels
Eli
>they are on the kernel already. Those are experimental drivers.
&g
Mind my ignorance for a second, but I wasn't even aware linux supports
bttv based video capture cards, i'm dying to use mine on it as well!!
Any pointers ?
Eli
11/10/02 22:09:48, Amir Tal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>hi,
>
>i am using bttv with my FlyVideo II TV card, under mandrake9 (decided t
07/10/02 21:32:22, Sagi Bashari <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On 10/7/2002 11:13 PM, Noam Meltzer wrote:
>
>>Where is it avail. for download?
>>
>>
>
>http://www.openoffice.org/dev_docs/source/643/index.html
>
>BTW - It took me awhile to figure this - to change to full BiDi RTL mode
>you need to
07/10/02 01:31:04, Oded Arbel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>áéåí øàùåï, 6 áàå÷èåáø 2002, 19:38, Dvir Volk ëúá:
>> I highly doubt it's legal. I've looked in fraunhofer's site, which
>> refered me to an mp3 licensing site, that said:
>>
>
>From that Q&A it seems to me that developers are required to
04/10/02 14:11:16, Oleg Kobets <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Besides, you can easily d/l the missing rpm from xmms website.
>
>Oleg.
And is THAT legal ?? Those libraries use a technology which is
patented, how is that allowed ???
Eli
"There's so many different worlds
So many different suns
04/10/02 15:58:09, Amir Tal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Friday 04 October 2002 11:28 am, voguemaster wrote:
>> Honestly I don't quite get it.
>> How can they break such a behaviour or supported feature of the system ??
>>
>> RH at previous versions co
04/10/02 13:39:57, Mark Veltzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>What is so strange ? MP3 is a COPYRIGHTED format. A german research
>institution holds the copy right and has started to sue companies who
>distribute mp3 players without paying them royalties (since they can't sue
>the users themselv
Honestly I don't quite get it.
How can they break such a behaviour or supported feature of the system ??
RH at previous versions could play mp3 easily, now you can't use XMMS ??
This makes me think twice about this release..
Eli
04/10/02 04:40:42, Amir Sela <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
29/09/02 12:50:08, Nadav Har'El <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi people, I have a question that has been bugging me for quite some time
>now.
>
>I'm using Redhat 7.3 and its 2.4.18-3 kernel. I have 128MB of RAM. I
>frequently use memory-hogging applications such as Mozilla and OpenOffice.
>
>The p
Just use 700mb CDs, they cost just as much nowadays :)
Besides, the feature you were referring to about burning larger images on 650 CDs
is called "Overburning" (just in case you didn't know..).
You can usually set the maximum length to burn (in Nero for example) and specify
a 700Mb CD or so... (
>The problems started after upgrading to 1GB memory, I assume because the
>pattern of operation changed (less swapping). The problem occurs in
>kjournaled in a reproductivable manner, but I do not think kjournald is
>the problem, but that something else gets stuck, which causes kjournald to
>fail,
> and by telling
>ariel "you are talking bullshit because it works for us" - you are not
>making a good case. fact is, that it didn't work. and as far as i know
>ariel, i don't think he would go saying something did not work without
>doing some proper testing, and without realy seeing it not t
26/09/02 15:46:11, guy keren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>dear people,
>
>i think there's some great confusion here about the usa of the term
>'stable'.
>
>ariel (at least as far as i know) runs systems that bear a rather heavy
>load over network connections. most people run machines that do n
>There are plenty of open source utilities: memory patrol, electric fence, checker
>- just to name a few. I don't have time to check every one of them. What you can
>propose ?
>
I've had good experience with DMALLOC and a bit of electric fence. I haven't been
able to find a VERY GOOD tool for mul
> Supporting anything but your distro is quite impossible if you want to use
> the neat macros that each distribution supplies, and don't want to go for
> the lowest denominator or do all the hardwork about guessing architecture,
> library locations, etc'. my solution is to build RPMs for my d
hat automatically somehow, who knows...
>
>3. Manually (or by scripts) create a hosts file (/etc/hosts) with the
> addresses of all the relevant internal machines
>
>Should be enough for a two-computers network
>
You know, I've tried that when I had the same problem. For some reason
it doesn't
Hmm, i just gave a reply similar to this one in Tapuz's forum.
Look, wu-ftp is problematic. It insists on performing DNS queries for
the client at login time, but fails to act whenever it isn't needed.
I'm assuming your linux box has it's DNS servers configured in it's
resolv.conf file.
See, when
>
>inside the top gcc source directory,
>mkdir somedir
>cd somedir
>../configure --prefix=/usr/local/some/directory/for/this/gcc
>make install
>
>Then, put /usr/local/some/directory/for/this/gcc/bin in the beginning of
>your path. For c++ programs you will also want to put
>/usr/local/some/directo
>
>gcc has its own built-in include and libs parameters (set at compile
>time), right?
>
I don't know about that. When you configure gcc before compilation
you usually set the installation location, library dirs if you want'em changed,
other compile options etc..
I don't know enough because I've
--- Start of forwarded message ---
From: voguemaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Organization: Jurassic Park
Subject: Fwd: Re: KDE location [was Re: basic debian question]
Date: 02/09/02 11:56:17
>
>But they a
--- Start of forwarded message ---
From: voguemaster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Organization: Jurassic Park
Subject: Fwd: Re: KDE location [was Re: basic debian question]
Date: 02/09/02 11:29:35
What really annoys m
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