Michelle, jenn, Nancy,
>One time someone told me to study Logic...but not just any logic, some
>specific type of logic. I can no longer remember what it's called. Maybe
>you know. I can see how it would help me to cover all my bases when
>writing programs. It involves mapping out truth tables
On Sat, 24 Mar 2001 10:47:24 +0100, Makiko Itoh writes:
>Anyway, this is my first post here. I've enjoyed lurking so far. :)
welcome! and finally someone from "central" europe! :-)
cheers,
Gina
--
The correct plural of virus is "vi". Throw enough of the little buggers
together and they neutr
I'm using an Microsoft's optical mouse (Intellieye), and am having trouble
getting it to work well with X. In particular, I can't get the mouse to
emulate the middle button (I tried using Emulate3Buttons). I'm using Debian
2.2 which comes with XFree86 3.3.6.11. Although I think this is an X issue
I have a Debian 2.2 firewall doing
ipmasquerade running the kernel that came with it (2.2.18 IIRC).
This machine also serves as a web, email and DNS
server.
I woke up this morning and saw the following on the
monitor:
IP_MASQ:reverse ICMP: failed checksum from
24.112.23.202
IP_MASQ
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 09:20:14AM -0800, jennyw wrote:
> I'm using an Microsoft's optical mouse (Intellieye), and am having trouble
> getting it to work well with X. In particular, I can't get the mouse to
> emulate the middle button (I tried using Emulate3Buttons). I'm using Debian
> 2.2 which
Is that (the
IP_MASQ:reverse ICMP: failed checksum from
24.112.23.202!) anything to worry about?
- Kath
- Original Message -
From:
Kath
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, March 24, 2001 12:58
PM
Subject: Odd firewall outputs
I have a Debian 2.2 firewall
greets!
what you can try for sure is look into the settings for gpm, they're
usually not usuable/correct. I use debian potato here with a MS
intellimouse. part of my settings of /etc/X11/XF86Config are:
Section "Pointer"
Protocol"IMPS/2"
Device "/dev/mouse"
ZAxisMapping
Hi!
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 11:54:13AM -0600, ktb wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 09:20:14AM -0800, jennyw wrote:
> Before going any farther with configuring this mouse to run in X, turn
> off gpm (console mouse driver). For some reason 2.2 has a hard time
> with gpm running and a working X mous
On 0, Angela Nash <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Snort by itself doesn't seem to use a lot of CPU. What eats up CPU on my
> Snort system is the snortsnarf tool that takes the log information and
> outputs it to HTML reports. A "reasonably fast" system like a Pentium II or
> higher should work jus
On Fri, Mar 23, 2001 at 04:55:09PM -0800, Nancy Corbett wrote:
> One time someone told me to study Logic...but not just any logic, some
> specific type of logic. I can no longer remember what it's called. Maybe
> you know. I can see how it would help me to cover all my bases when
> writing progr
On Fri, Mar 23, 2001 at 04:55:09PM -0800, Nancy Corbett wrote:
> Knights and Knaves problem.
>
> Suppose you visit a strange island with three types of people. Knights,
> who always tell the truth, Knaves, who always lie and Normals who
> sometimes lie and sometimes tell the truth. It is also th
On my OpenBSD system right now snort is using 7MB of RAM. I don't think you
can have one snort process listen on multiple interfaces, so you would have
to run more than one process. I may be wrong on that, but the -i option
doesn't seem to take multiple options.
If you have to listen on 3, I'd
Mary Gardiner wrote:
> So everyone's a normal.
>
> Is this actually right?
I haven't stepped through each individual stage, but it looks like
your working is correct.
Your answer agrees with mine, as well.
Note that 'My husband is right, Mr Smith is a knight' is a complex
statement, and tec
Mary Gardiner wrote:
> I've only been looking at Prolog for a few days though and got very
> frustrated at the step of defining Y true, from knight says Y.
Been many years since I last used prolog. Lemme go grab a book.
true(Y) :-
knight(X)
says(X, Y)
Try that.
Jenn V.
--
Kath wrote:
> I have a Debian 2.2 firewall doing ipmasquerade running the kernel that
> came with it (2.2.18 IIRC).
>
>
>
> This machine also serves as a web, email and DNS server.
>
>
>
> I woke up this morning and saw the following on the monitor:
>
>
>
> IP_MASQ:reverse ICMP: fai
It was actually four times in sequence. Checking to see if there is any new
user accounts on the system.
Did anyone on the list do it?
I did give out my domain name which corresponds to this box. If you did,
just say so, I won't be mad or anything. I would just like to know what the
hell that
On Sat, 24 Mar 2001, Makiko Itoh wrote:
> Speaking of which, I wonder if anyone has any thoughts on how
> learning human languages, or the ability to, translates to the
> ability to learn programming languages, or vice versa? Both my
> husband and I are multilingual and we often talk about h
On Sun, Mar 25, 2001 at 09:36:18AM +1000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Note that 'My husband is right, Mr Smith is a knight' is a complex
> statement, and technically should be separated into 'My husband is
> right' and 'Mr Smith is a knight'.
Yeah I realised that, and I'm also not sure what a li
If your connection is on cable or DSL, expect to get port scanned every few
minutes. You'll fill up your firewall logs very fast.
Jason
-Original Message-
From: psyche [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, March 24, 2001 7:26 PM
To: Kath
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [techtalk
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 04:01:14PM -0800, Nancy Corbett wrote:
> YES!!! We talk about that a lot where I work. My company is crawling
> with people who have advanced math degrees. I affectionatly call 'em
> "Those Math People." They took to computer languages so easily. I, on
> the other hand
On Sat, 24 Mar 2001, Kath wrote:
> Is that (the IP_MASQ:reverse ICMP: failed checksum from 24.112.23.202!)
> anything to worry about?
>
> - Kath
> - Original Message -
> From: Kath
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Saturday, March 24, 2001 12:58 PM
> Subject: Odd firewall o
Mary Gardiner wrote:
> And is there much non-academic work for programmers/designers* in this
> sort of area? (Yes I realise I'll have to be good :) )
Depends on what 'this sort of area' is. Where in Australia are you?
Dancer (my husband) nowadays has the geek-cred to be getting research
and bl
My Cisco teacher at school runs a firewall and he told me he gets scanned
tons of times.
I just never saw these things echoed to my display before, so it scared me.
- Kath
- Original Message -
From: "Angela Nash" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'psyche'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Kath" <[EMAIL PRO
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 11:20:17AM +0100 or so it is rumoured hereabouts,
Gina Lanik thought:
> On Sat, 24 Mar 2001 10:47:24 +0100, Makiko Itoh writes:
> >Anyway, this is my first post here. I've enjoyed lurking so far. :)
>
> welcome! and finally someone from "central" europe! :-)
>
I'm from "
On Sat, Mar 24, 2001 at 07:31:04PM -0500, Angela Nash wrote:
> If your connection is on cable or DSL, expect to get port scanned
> every few minutes. You'll fill up your firewall logs very fast.
As Clifto said when I posted about this in
news.admin.net-abuse.email, `Raise the drawbridge and ma
25 matches
Mail list logo