Ok, so this last came up in March 2008. My media PC, an old system from
2001, finally bit the dust, and I've decided to take the plunge into a
proper home automation and media server, ala LinuxMCE. My custom-built
HTPC will arrive next week sometime, and I'm going to try give the
LinuxMCE 810
On Jun 12, 2009, at 10:01 AM, Gadi Cohen wrote:
Ok, so this last came up in March 2008. My media PC, an old system
from 2001, finally bit the dust, and I've decided to take the plunge
into a proper home automation and media server, ala LinuxMCE. My
custom-built HTPC will arrive next week
Shachar Shemesh writes:
> I'm not sure whether base addresses are allocated randomly or
> something else is at work here, but collisions are not that common.
You can manually rebase a DLL at post-link time, and I think that DLLs
shipped by commercial vendors (such as MS :) have precomputed base
Gadi Cohen wrote:
> Ok, so this last came up in March 2008. My media PC, an old system
> from 2001, finally bit the dust, and I've decided to take the plunge
> into a proper home automation and media server, ala LinuxMCE. My
> custom-built HTPC will arrive next week sometime, and I'm going to try
On Fri, Jun 12, 2009 at 10:21:56AM +0300, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> Shachar Shemesh writes:
>
> > I'm not sure whether base addresses are allocated randomly or
> > something else is at work here, but collisions are not that common.
>
> You can manually rebase a DLL at post-link time,
On Linux y
On Friday 12 June 2009 00:13:45 Ori Berger wrote:
> Shlomi Fish wrote:
> > I've compared the size of the Linux .so file (after -Os and strip) to the
> > size of the Windows MSVC-generated .dll.
> >
> > With gcc -Os before strip - 86,464 bytes
> > same after strip - 74,584
> >
> > With gcc -Os that
Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
Shachar Shemesh writes:
I'm not sure whether base addresses are allocated randomly or
something else is at work here, but collisions are not that common.
You can manually rebase a DLL at post-link time, and I think that DLLs
shipped by commercial vendors (such
Hello ,
I wish to port my kaddressbook data into newly installed OpenLdap server.
The server will work only as a contact list server.
I'm used to use Mozilla-schema(*) to work with multiple values such as :
firstEmail
secondEmail
etc ..
But i believe that im doing this in the wrong way what
I manage a voip provider company, on my business side. on the
personal level started researching into home deployment possibilities.
I am not referring now to the telephony side of deployment, but more
toward home-automation applications.
If you get into X10, GSM controllers etc, and need a testi
Windows Vista has some very nice Hebrew fonts, in stark contrast to
Ubuntu or other Linux distros. Although one can easily aquire the
Vista fonts with English glyphs, in order to get them with Hebrew
glyphs I need to find a machine with Hebrew Vista. If anyone has
access to such a machine, I would
Hello list,
I have encountered today a weird problem with a CentOS 4.7 Final server.
A cli based PHP script took a long time until it executed. Even code such as
:
Took few minutes to execute.
After doing some strace on php, I found out that it attempt to do resolving
for several addresses pr
On Fri, Jun 12, 2009 at 10:29:36PM +0300, ik wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I have encountered today a weird problem with a CentOS 4.7 Final server.
>
> A cli based PHP script took a long time until it executed. Even code such as
> :
>
>echo "Hello World\n";
> ?>
>
> Took few minutes to execute.
Hi Ido,
I tried the same thing here. I tried it on 2 machines (CentOS 5.3 both
of them).
In both cases, the first time it runs the script, it takes few seconds
to "initialize" things, that takes 2-3 seconds, but after the 1st
time, everything runs real fast..
Here's the result from my production
the msttcorefonts package does just that: it download some fonts,
place them in your distro and let you use them.
So if you use ubuntu/debian/xandros, just do: apt-get install msttcorefonts
Enjoy,
Hetz
On Fri, Jun 12, 2009 at 7:42 PM, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> Windows Vista has some very nice Hebrew
> the msttcorefonts package does just that: it download some fonts,
> place them in your distro and let you use them.
>
> So if you use ubuntu/debian/xandros, just do: apt-get install msttcorefonts
>
Thanks, Hetz, but the .exe on sourcefourge that it downloads only
contains Latin glyphs, no Hebrew
Oh, those fonts are unicode, and I can assure you that they do have
Hebrew fonts. I use Arial from this download all the times on browser
and many other applications (pidgin etc..)..
You can also copy the TTF files from your Vista or XP install and use
ttmkfdir so your X can recognize those fonts.
> Oh, those fonts are unicode, and I can assure you that they do have
> Hebrew fonts. I use Arial from this download all the times on browser
> and many other applications (pidgin etc..)..
>
They are unicode, but they do not seem to contain the Hebrew glyphs.
Is there a way to open them to be cert
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