also sprach DvB (on Wed, 11 Jul 2001 03:40:00PM -0500):
> I'm willing to be that's exactly what they're talking about. There was 
> quite a to do about this a year or so ago when it happened at some large 
>   company which then banned linux. I believe you have to explicitly tell 
> samba in the config file to become the master browser though... I don't 
> think being elected is a problem. However, I'm not a samba expert either...

redhat's samba has this on by default. debian's doesn't.

election priorities are on a scale between 0-20 (this is all from
memory, don't flame me if i am wrong). now tell me *why*, just *why*
did these clowns in redmond decide on *7* for their domain server?
because they wanted to have an additional 6 priorities that could
always steal the master browser position and screw around? another
case of micro$oft can't even copy the others correctly (did micro$oft
*ever* do anything *original*, or did they *ever* copy something
*right*?)

martin;              (greetings from the heart of the sun.)
  \____ echo mailto: !#^."<*>"|tr "<*> mailto:"; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 
f u cn rd ths, u cn gt a nce jb in th prgrmng indstry

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