Andre Hedrick writes:
> Those are not threats they are terms to enforce the License you agreed
> upon the very act of editing the source code that you are using in the
> kernel.
Get it right, Andre. The mere act of editing a file that is part of a
GPL-licensed source distribution doesn't bind
Ton Hospel writes:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > I am afraid I have missed most earlier messages in this thread.
> > However, let me remark that the problem of assigning a
> > file descriptor is the one that is usually described by
> > "priority queue
Marty Fouts writes:
> Actually, you have the sequence of events slightly out of order. AT&T,
> specifically Bell Labs, was one of the participants in the program that
> would develop Multics. AT&T opted out of the program, for various reasons,
> but it continued apace. The PDP-8 of fame was
Igmar Palsenberg writes:
> > Ugh. What rubbish.
> >
> > The moment I detect my provider changing anything beyond a TTL is the
> > moment I find a new provider.
>
> The 'problem' is a bunch of stupid American politics (excuse anyone
> American), than passed a law that all spam containing a
David Feuer writes:
> People keep saying it's OK to start muted on boot, but I must say that I
> don't think this is really acceptable I may very well want to set my
> mixer and just leave it that way forever would there be any way to give
> the sound driver a scribble pad on disk
Jeff V. Merkey writes:
> There was also an issue relative to how sendmail is interpreting load
> average on a linux box. [EMAIL PROTECTED] pointed out that perhaps you
> are not factoring sleeping processes, which Linux does -- a deviation
> from BSD's interpretation of load average.
At wors
Albert D. Cahalan writes:
> Alexander Viro writes:
>
> > [...] Not allowing multiple mounts of the same
> > fs was an artifact of original namei() implementation. At some point
> > (late 80s) it had been fixed by Bell Labs folks in their branch. In Linux
> > it had been fixed during the las
Dennis writes:
> I KNOW this..my point is that menuconfig is not intuitive in providing the
> choices.
Linux kernel configuration isn't intuitive. menuconfig isn't there to
handhold newbies through the process.
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the
Jamie Lokier writes:
> (tar has a silly pad-to-multiple-of-512-byte per file rule, which is
> inappropriate for this).
If you remember that 'tar' means "tape archiver", and that at the time
it was written the standard tape block size was 512 bytes, the rule
isn't silly at all, although it may b
Jonathan Lundell writes:
> At 10:03 PM -0400 2001-04-29, Andres Salomon wrote:
> >Americans can spell? Since when?
>
> OED 2nd Ed:
>
> deregister. v. trans. To remove from a register. Hence
> deregistration. (first citation 1925)
>
> unregistered. ppl. a. Not entered in a register; u
10 matches
Mail list logo