companies. It makes my skin crawl.
Brian
--
---
| [EMAIL PROTECTED]http://www.hirebrian.net |
|Simply the Best IT/MIS Manager |
| Self-taught, Fast Learner, and Team Player |
|
; would you like to do that would be FUN?
Generally anything that involves beer and learning something new.
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Brian H. Chabot wrote:
[snip]
Nevermind. It seems this was a known issue and was fixed in the latest
release of the drivers... released... only 72 hours agao... about as
long as I've been struggling with this. Grrr. That'll teach me not to
keep a close eye on the forums every da
about at my wits end here. Any thoughts?
Brian
--
---
| [EMAIL PROTECTED]http://www.hirebrian.net |
|Simply the Best IT/MIS Manager |
| Self-taught, Fast Learner, and Team Player
On Thu, 2004-01-29 at 10:57, Mark Komarinski wrote:
> George Bush = Hitler
> Max Cleland = Bin Laden
>
> There. Thread's over.
>
Haha... Invoking Goodwin's Law Good one :)
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On Thu, 2004-01-29 at 10:20, Greg Rundlett wrote:
> However, (and I'm really not looking for flames) I can't for the life of
> me understand why people still would vote for George Bush / Republican
> after 9/11
And that's what makes this country interesting, the ability to vote your
choice.
Do
ly waiting for all my problems to go away.
>
>If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right!
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-
I must concur about the whole office V.X suite on OSX ... I know some guys
of the development team and it is a whole separate code base. In many ways
the Mac office suite is 'ahead' of the windows code base. Mant features
appear in Office Mac then show up the following year in office XP ...
I per
irus propagation, and it allows you to use
fancy HTML "stationary", because every message is more powerful with
yellow text on a purple background.
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I just switched from the default nv driver to the nvidia commercial one
and I'm not too pleased.
The framerate on anything using GLX is abyssmal. We're talking 6.2 FPS
on glxgears and about one frame per 20 seconds on America's Army or
ut2003demo.
Perhaps someone here could tell me what I'm d
am a reality?
Anyone want to start something big?
Brian
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I've turned on. In the associated
> "Settings" dialog, I use hard coded values rather than the "Use same
> settings as my incoming mail server" option. Account name is set. In
> the "Advanced" tag, I've got &quo
sions,
perhaps) but I was in no mood for it after watching my desktop lose X
functionality.
Just thought I'd warn you.
(drakfont is part of drakxtools. I've got drakxtools-9.2-19.6.92mdk
installed.)
Brian
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I've turned on. In the associated
> "Settings" dialog, I use hard coded values rather than the "Use same
> settings as my incoming mail server" option. Account name is set. In
> the "Advanced" tag, I've got "This server requires a secur
brian wrote:
Been using Redhat for years (still have my 5.0 installation CD's and
diskette from Redhat (am on 9.0 currently)).
[snip]
My major wants/needs are:
Support for my dual-head ATI card
Gnome out-of-the-box (preferred)
Some degree of mutli-media support ("stereophonic beeps&qu
Been using Redhat for years (still have my 5.0 installation CD's and
diskette from Redhat (am on 9.0 currently)).
Some would consider this a character flaw, I know, and don't really
care.
However, I've been thinking recently of switching to a different distro,
mostly for "because" reasons and par
buggy. But, hey, if you
know PHP and want to make it work,it's robust and fairly easy to learn.
Good luck and let us know what you settle with.
Brian
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On Wed, 2004-01-14 at 14:46, Tom Fogal wrote:
> I'm not quite sure what webtrends does, but you might want to look at
> 'webalizer'. It works with apache log files (among other things).
Thanks, last time I looked, I don't think that webalizer got detailed
enough, but I will look again.
> Also, if
but should offer similar
detailed log analysis. Can anyone recommend anything good (or provide
an anti-recommendation/warning)? And of course, I want it to run on
linux natively.
Thanks...
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On Wed, 2004-01-14 at 11:30, Brian Chabot wrote:
> Brian wrote:
> > For anyone interested... It seems that a lot of spam is starting to slip
> > through Spam Assassin again.
>
> I've had some pretty good luck using a combination of server and client
> spam filters.
Brian wrote:
For anyone interested... It seems that a lot of spam is starting to slip
through Spam Assassin again.
I've had some pretty good luck using a combination of server and client
spam filters.
On the server side I've been using Spam Bouncer www.spambouncer.org and
since i
27;t see it making an impact, due to too many forged
headers, off-shore operations, etc.
Could be that I'm just bitter and pessimistic though. :)
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On Wed, 2004-01-14 at 08:04, Travis Roy wrote:
> I noticed that too, then I looked at the headers:
>
> X-Habeas-SWE-1: winter into spring
> Since I saw no use for anything Habeas would send me, I just made a rule to
> block stuff with those headers in it as well :)
I have only (so far) gotten a
ittle processor
intensive on a busy mailserver with a lot of users, but for the price of
hardware these days, it's been affordable to provide effective spam
scanning.
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emails) is a
known spam haven it is likely they are looking for open relays. It
looks like this web site is hocking cable filters and that "Banned CD".
It makes me wonder if this isn't the result of a worm as you mentioned.
I'd guess this is
e kind of
automation here that is common to each of these machines. A trojan perhaps?
Brian
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as the developers consider it bloat. Great, but what about an
.XPI as an optional component?
Don't get me wrong... I love Mozilla... but its still far from perfect
for the non-geek end-user.
Brian
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[EMAIL PROTEC
nt "DB insert failed for filename (bugger!)\n";
print "File will be left in place\n";
}
$sth->finish();
}
}
closedir DIRH;
On Sun, 2003-11-23 at 22:19, Vince McHugh wrote:
> Hi All,
>
>I'd like to preface this question by saying I
place my Cisco routers with PC router boxes. The number of failure
points goes up dramatically when using PC hardware, and when you look at
the costs, a $4,000 savings on something that routes/firewalls/whatevers
hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of annual revenue isn't worth it.
--
br
On Fri, 2003-11-14 at 07:46, Sharpe, Richard wrote:
> Hi all
>
> We are attempting to find a Enterpise strength Firewall, so far
> Smoothwall has been evaluated and we found that SuSE's Firewall on CD
> is not sold in the US, do any of you have any favorites to recommend ?
> I would feel bett
mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss
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vi /etc/mail/access
[EMAIL PROTECTED] REJECT
??
On Wed, 2003-11-05 at 10:16, Mark Fearer wrote:
> I have a sendmail config question: How do I explicitly define a
> username to reject mail? I have a virtuser setting that accepts ANY
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] and forwards to me. However, I ha
I would imagine that at least a double-digit percentage of this lists
subscribers read Cringely already, but if you don't, this weeks article
is worth a perusal:
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20031023.html
--
brian <[EMAIL P
I would imagine that at least a double-digit percentage of this lists
subscribers read Cringely already, but if you don't, this weeks article
is worth a perusal:
http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/pulpit20031023.html
--
brian
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On Tue, 2003-10-28 at 09:40, Sharpe, Richard wrote:
> http://www.newsforge.com/trends/03/10/26/135244.shtml?tid=149
>
Please tell me nobody actually took that seriously?
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the install. There is a review of it at:
http://www.ofb.biz/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=268
Hope this helps,
Brian
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What I've heard it that is was pretty buggy out of the gate and had a
lot of "odd" little problems...
On Mon, 2003-10-27 at 09:27, Rob Lembree wrote:
> Has anyone run Mandrake 9.2 yet? Opinions, comparisons
> to Red Hat 9? Anyone want to do a talk on it perhaps?
>
> Every now and then, I like t
recognise these bloody 150K virus spams so they can be
> shunted aside before spamassassin starts wasting time
> on them? they're killing my system..
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http
On Thu, 2003-10-16 at 12:14, Tom Buskey wrote:
> I have a free email address that redirects to my real address:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's a valid email address but I get little spam on
> it. Probably because the harvesting software discards addresses with
> "spam" in them. Thanks to everyone w
w it was done.
(Honestly, my idea would work (almost) equally well under Windows, but
the licensing fees would be up there... impeding on our profit.)
Brian
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intersted in seeing
proposals that have workd in similar situations.
Anyone have any that have worked?
Thaks in advance,
Brian
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On Wed, 2003-10-08 at 07:39, Jon maddog Hall wrote:
> Mixture of Windows, Unix and Linux systems, the person needs to do these
> things over the net, preferably with a graphical interface.
>
Over the Internet, or over an intranet? Are there concerns for
reliability/timliness (ie in real-time?)
This would defeat the whole purpose of having the print server, i.e. Not
having to have a given computer up and running in order to print, the print
server and printer use about one-fifth the the electricity that a Winders
box uses! (I live off the grid and saving 80-130 watts matters!)
On 10/5/0
a Network print server?
Cheers ... 73 de brian riley, n1bq
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On Tue, 2003-09-23 at 00:52, Greg Bonnette wrote:
> http://www.dotservant.com/webhosting/compareplans.shtml
>
> Their plans seem fair. I am currently using enom.com for
> registrar/dns/pop3 services, but it looks like I can consolidate much
> of that in a dot servant plan and save money. Has anyon
On Thu, 2003-09-18 at 22:29, Brian Chabot wrote:
> On Thu, 18 Sep 2003, Brian wrote:
>
> > I'm also working on a perl/cgi-based procmail manager (we have about a
> > dozen email servers to maintain) that allows you to have 1 "master"
> > procmail body t
On Thu, 18 Sep 2003, Brian wrote:
> I'm also working on a perl/cgi-based procmail manager (we have about a
> dozen email servers to maintain) that allows you to have 1 "master"
> procmail body that can be edited via html GUI and then sync'd to the
> remote boxes.
(we have about a
dozen email servers to maintain) that allows you to have 1 "master"
procmail body that can be edited via html GUI and then sync'd to the
remote boxes.
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[EMA
On Sat, 2003-09-13 at 20:14, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On 13 Sep 2003, at 9:09am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > ... optimized for sending lots of data (many gigs) over a slow pipe (T1 in
> > this case) ...
>
> I suspect that is not reasonably possible.
Actually, it *is*, but not in a very desir
I need to backup some Winders machines in a remote location (California)
to a server in Massachusetts. I could do this by paying Veritas a bunch
of money and running the backup on a Win2K box, but I'd rather not.
However, I haven't (in my admittedly narrow search) found a linux-based
IP backup so
r the wired NIC is the 8139too (never had a problem in
older versions...) and the wireless LAN uses the orinoco_pci (even
though it is actually a brand name Prism2 mini pci card...).
Any ideas?
Brian
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On Thu, 2003-08-28 at 18:34, Neal Richardson wrote:
> I needed to install a small hub in part of the build that was not on
> the network. When I connected the hub to the switch from the crossover
> port the whole network came crashing to the ground and the server locked
> up hard. Upon further
On Mon, 2003-08-25 at 16:15, Larry Cook wrote:
> I'm looking for recommendations on shopping cart software.
>
Check out Miva Merchant. I used it on an ecommerce site for a few years
and was very happy with it. It is sort of a PHP-ish concept, using
something called Mivascript, which I believe p
I hope this isn't out of line, but we have the following position
available at our company. I figured that someone on the list might be
interested, and/or know someone interested.
> > Access NorthEast, established in 1999, is a Network Service Provider
> > offering Internet Connectivity, Private
> But I thought Ben was trying to say that this company invested some
> [potentially significant] resources studying the physiology of the human
> hand, and devising an innovative keyboard that minimizes the strain
> associated with typing. I've seen one of these keyboards up close when
> a fr
On Fri, 2003-08-01 at 09:40, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> "Five-hundred and five dollars!?! For adjusting a valve??" exclaims the
> manager.
Once upon a time a company charged too much for a keyboard.
Why?
Because they could.
I guess you can look at it both ways (not meaning to be too negative..
On Fri, 2003-07-18 at 13:30, Morbus Iff wrote:
> Incidentally, I contributed to Linux Server
> Hacks, and did Perl consulting on Google Hacks ;)
To anyone who hasn't read it, the Linux Server Hacks book is a great
collection of, well, hacks. That book was (to me at least) worth 3x
it's cover pri
On Thu, 2003-07-17 at 13:34, Matt Brodeur wrote:
> You, as usual, are on crack.
This brings up a question I've been meaning to ask... I've only lived in
the Nashua area for a couple of years and haven't found any good,
reliable crack houses. In Detroit they were much easier to find, and
abundan
We use a lot of Greatspeed brand routers for our corporate DSL
offerings. They seem to be pretty reliable, and they have models with a
decent built-in firewall. Check ebay, you can usually find them out
there for less than $100.
Check out www.dyndns.org , or similar, for a free dynamic dns servi
On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 11:52, Bob Bell wrote:
> Well, then these sites should install HP-UX or Tru64 UNIX with
> TruClusters and keep me employed :-)
I'll be sure to mention that to them... ;)
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On Thu, 2003-07-10 at 10:16, Bob Bell wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 10, 2003 at 06:56:51AM -0400, Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I think many sites consider downtime to just be part of life for
>
> That's pretty stupid if they do. Clustering technologies should let
>
On Wed, 2003-07-09 at 21:21, Bruce Dawson wrote:
> I'm mostly wondering how other sites handle this with minimal hardware
> and proprietary software investments.
I think many sites consider downtime to just be part of life for server
moves, upgrades, etc. Even "name brand" sites like ebay and Ama
On Tue, 2003-07-08 at 16:19, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I finally did what I should have done: Googled for it. The consensus
> appears to be that it is a spam technique: Spammer sends out an inventive
> email like this. Curious people, knowing it obviously is not a legit
> commercial effort, go
On Tue, 2003-07-08 at 16:07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Yup. The first time I got one, I laughed so hard I nearly did myself
> injury. Originally, I figured someone had just paid to have it spammed out
> as a gag. But they keep coming. Nowhere near as bad as the ads for the
> enlargement of sex
On Tue, 2003-07-08 at 15:54, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> A couple of other things:
>
> 1: A bit of netiquette. If you respond to my email privately, and I
> reply to your reply privately, then it's not OK for you to
> subsequently reply and CC: a public mailing list.
I intended for my orig
Anybody else been getting these Dimensional Warp Generator Needed spams
lately? Any idea what the purpose of sending a completely useless
message is??
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t an
email marketing scheme.
On Tue, 2003-07-08 at 14:12, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Yeah, and then I felt sorry for the poor clod who has his real email
> > address hanging out in the wind.
>
> Your response is very naive.
>
On Wed, 2003-07-02 at 13:25, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> We have a need to divide up an Internet feed among several tenants in a
> building. The feed will come in on a T1 or similar. Upstream provider
> gives us a CSU and a routable IP block. So we need to plug into the CSU and
> be a router.
Ob content: I'd prefer if it ran linux...
Anyone have a good recommendation (or warning) in regards to a
decent,portable wireless PDA-esque device? I was looking at some of the
Pocket PC-enabled phones at Verizon (current wireless provider), but
don't want to go that route if I can help it. Basi
hat it returns are actually supposed
> to be there. ls is almost always trojaned, hence the reason to use find.
>
> Also, a useful command is RPM -Va. The output is documented in man rpm,
> but it checks all of the files from RPMs for changes. You could also make
> this quicker
ct them are also welcome.
>
> Thanks!
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distro that includes a
> windowing system (not X) and TCP/IP stack.
>
> Getting Linux plus X plus a TCP/IP stack in 32M is pretty tough - you
> can't even do it on the Zaurus.
>
> -Mark
--
brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
___
> with less. Your system will appear to run slowly, slower than your
> processor speed might suggest that it should.
Oooops... I think my original message came across wrong. RAM is
virtually unlimited. Boot disk space *is* limited, preferably to a 32MB
Flash card.
till X is generally a
> pig. I'd say skip the X if you want small.
That is my worry, is that I won't be able to get any sort of a desktop,
which I would kind of really like to have...
> --
> brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ointers
on where to start looking/downloading?
Thanks...
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On Mon, 2003-06-16 at 13:51, Tilly, Lawrence wrote:
> As an aside to this, it's interesting how some cable ISPs are configured
> differently than others. I was on attbi for a little over a year, and with
> them I had to actually "register" each of my PCs that I wanted to be on the
Having worked wi
rything from brew barrels and directions and 286 quart
> > bottles with caps and even a rack for storage. Must be picked up
> > in Central New Hampshire
> >
> > E-mail me for more info and address
> >
> > Kevin
>
> __
Dvorak is an idiot Bob-Cringly-Wanna-Be.
I used to think he actually had some insight, about 15 years ago, but I
no longer pay him any mind. He reminds me of a raving lunatic still
grasping for attention, most of his work is either a statement of the
obvious or a bizzaro prediction.
This assessm
le every X minutes (in my case 5 minutes)
and hup the daemon at scheduled intervals or scriptmatically when the
new config file varies from the operating config file.
--
Brian Karas - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
There are only 10 kinds of people in the world.
Those that understand binary. And those that don
is to be able to configure virtual
> hosts from apache dynamically ... from data in a database (probably
> MySQL).
>
> I took a look through http://modules.apache.org but all I found were
> some things for doing dynamic vhosts based off the filesystem.
>
> Anybody have
gt; African or American?
>
> (Come on... that was a gimmie...)
s/American/European/
:)
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On Tue, 2003-06-03 at 08:18, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I also have an autographed hardcover copy of John Moy's OSPF book, if
> > anyone needs an OSPF manual.
>
> Which one? Blue or yellow?
Yellow... No, Blue!!! ...
over copy of John Moy's OSPF book, if
anyone needs an OSPF manual.
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I installed RH7.2 on a Dell 1650 with Perc3Di recently. In this
particular case I used a CD that came with the server that walks you
through some pre-config stuff and then prompts you fro the RH CD's. Not
sure if the Dell CD is what actually had the perc drivers.
On Thu, 2003-05-29 at 14:17, [EM
'Twere it me, I'd use scp and keys. Makes SSH easier and allows for
secure copying without having to dork with passwords.
BTW, on a related note, I've been working on the same concept, but am
parsing log files from many servers into a MySQL database. Makes for
easy lookup of issues, and also eas
The only thing to remember is that most LCD monitors are maximized for a
single resolution. Check the docs for that monitro and found out what it is
and setup your system for that res. Then hook it up. when I hooked my NEC
LCD up i wasn't thinking and just plugged it in hwere a 15in CRT had been
... hell ... as long as we are reminiscing about the good old days. The
first computer I worked on had a punched paper tape operating system that
paged 128 byte chunks into a 256 byte core memory space. All the "i/o" was
via a Flexowriter. The first major upgrade to the OS was when they st
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