It's been pretty good for Exxon, Getty, Shell, etc.
From: Analyst [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu Aug 18 13:29:59 CDT 2005
To: 'The Hardware List' hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: RE: [H] Gas prices
On 19 Aug 2005 at 0:12, Tony Antoniou wrote:
Bush made the BS oil inflation happen with his War
I paid $2.55/gal for Regular today.
I just wonder if we'll ever get back to the $1.50/gal days again. As harsh as
it sounds, low gas prices are a lot more important to me that supporing
anybody's agenda or liberating other countries.
It's funny, though, that the gas companies are posting
, Ben Ruset wrote:
It's funny, though, that the gas companies are posting record profits.
So I really wonder how much of this is an increase in oil price, and how
much is just an excuse to charge more for gasoline.
I look at it this way, assuming that a gas company wants to make 5% profit
To: The Hardware List hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: RE: Re: [H] Gas prices
On Wed, 17 Aug 2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
A few years ago BMW showed off a 5 series that ran off water. It
cracked the water into hydrogen within the car itself.
Of course that tech won't ever see the light of day
If you're cracking hydrogen in your car why would you need to fill up at a
station?
From: Thane Sherrington [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed Aug 17 13:56:41 CDT 2005
To: The Hardware List hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Subject: Re: Re: [H] Gas prices
At 03:52 PM 17/08/2005, Gary VanderMolen wrote:
Did
: Re: Re: Re: [H] Gas prices
At 04:51 PM 17/08/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
If you're cracking hydrogen in your car why would you need to fill up at a
station?
Because cracking hydrogen requires more power than you can generate on
current solar panels small enough to fit on a car roof. IIRC, there's
Further proof that the oil companies are gouging customers outside the mideast.
You can't tell me that there is a ~$1.60/gal charge that goes to only pay
transport and taxes.
From: Zulfiqar Naushad [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wed Aug 17 15:17:29 CDT 2005
To: The Hardware List
the only estate
taxes, and a whole lot more. We really need that right now!
Sorryhad a senior moment and had to get that out. My fixed income will
go up about $2.50 a month. Chris, you're rightI will not do math in
class
Jeff
From: Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED
cars use heavy water.
007.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Christopher Fisk
Sent: Wednesday, August 17, 2005 2:16 PM
To: The Hardware List
Subject: Re: Re: [H] Gas prices
On Wed, 17 Aug 2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
It's funny, though
Ball lightning is real - I have seen it.
Bill Cohane wrote:
So Physicists have pretty much debunked cold fusion. Interestingly, the
DOE (Dept. of Energy) still occasionally gets suckered by cold fusion
claims. These guys still seem willing to spend our tax dollars on
research grants for
Yes - just load VNC on the Linux box and connect to it from any VNC
client (windows, Linux, Palm, etc - they will all work.)
Zulfiqar Naushad wrote:
Assuming I am going to build a linux box that has
gnome or KDE running on it
What do I need on the linux box to view the desktop
and
i am busy installing wainscotting if anybody cares.
Jim Edwards wrote:
Well, I guess you all are just silent this weekend.
At 8/14/2005 07:02 AM, Jim Edwards wrote:
Sunday
--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Anti-Virus.
Version: 7.0.338 / Virus Database: 267.10.8/71
moving?
Mark Dodge wrote:
I have a week and a half to pack up my house so I have been busy...
Mark Dodge
MD Computers
602-421-0329
Pretty scary stuff. The one thing that strikes me though:
If passengers are deemed to be inadmissible, they have no
constitutional rights even if later taken to an American prison. Mason
says that's because they are deemed to be still outside the U.S., from a
legal point of view.
Foreign
The Declaration of Independance is not the constitution. Plus a majority
of the drafters of the Consitution owned slaves.
j m g wrote:
we hold these truths to be self evident...that all men are created equal
unless you're just passing through?
On 8/11/05, Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
Why anybody would use AVG Free over ClamWin, I don't know. No
restrictive licence, and the interface is far and above better.
jeff.lane wrote:
I have never had any luck with that link. It always 404s on me. It seems
Grisoft is making it harder and harder to get to the free version. I
have had
Well, my soon to be former employer doesn't like spending money on IT.
I actually don't even have AV on my laptop right now since I did a
flatten and reload the other day. I guess I'll go back to McAfee after
seeing how bad Clam did.
FORC5 wrote:
cheap asses :{)
:-}
At 12:18 PM 8/11/2005,
- From: Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; The Hardware List
hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2005 12:39 AM
Subject: Re: [H] Microsoft's Genuine Advantage Cracked Already
You can buy the OEM edition with parts that you buy from Newegg or
anybody else
inexpensive
FORC5 wrote:
cheap ???
At 11:31 AM 8/9/2005, Ben Ruset Poked the stick with:
But the question is, how is NewEgg getting the OEM licences so cheap?
And what can you, as a system builder, do to get it as cheap?
--
Tallyho ! ]:8)
Taglines below !
--
Nobody shoots at Santa
Hopefully he got the 3 year warranty. The standard warranty on the
Inspiron line is 90 days IIRC.
Bobby Heid wrote:
My friend went with a Dell Inspiron 6000:
Pentium M 1.6Ghz
512MB Ram
40GB HD
8x DVD /- RW
15,4 widescreen
It retailed for $1,559, but I found a 40% off coupon so the
Destop? Ubuntu seems to be all the rage right now. Supports a lot of
hardware and is pretty nice. http://www.ubuntu.com
Server? I personally love CentOS Enterprise Linux. It's basically Red
Hat Enterprise repackaged into a free format. http://www.centos.org
FORC5 wrote:
OK Linux gurus, what
To be fair, XP is a few years older than Ubuntu. XP is just about as
slow as Debian's releases. :)
The only issue I had with Ubuntu was getting it to run at native
resolution on my widescreen Toshiba laptop. Other than that, everything
else detected at worked. If you don't like Gnome, you can
Gnome and KDE are two different desktops for Linux.
FORC5 wrote:
whats the difference ?
do not know what knome and kde are
my bad
been awhile, played with linux a long time ago and wound up on the floor
with the cd's and a ball peen hammer :-D
fp
Make sure you have the latest BIOS for the board. Additionall, disable
any ACPI support the board may have. Further, remove any non-essential
components installed, and if you have more than one DIMM in the machine,
remove them so you only have one.
Do a full format, not a quick format as
It comes with a browser and email client. It will usually have some
games, an office suite, development (C++, etc.) tools, etc.
Pretty much anything you want to do chances are that you can do it under
Linux. It just might not have all the features and ease of setup that
Windows does.
FORC5
I've also noticed paper jams happen more often with non-OEM cartridges
than they do with OEM ones.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 07:30 PM 05/08/2005, jeff.lane wrote:
Thane,
That's interesting. I have never heard of the fuser issue. Do you have
any references to the problem?
Every Lexmark
Eudora can run under WINE just fine.
FORC5 wrote:
was wondering about Eudora
thx
At 03:25 PM 8/5/2005, Winterlight Poked the stick with:
Basic Internet office box is supported out of the box. ... or any
kind of real server support.
But you will have trouble finding support for multimedia
VanderMolen
Ben Ruset wrote:
I've also noticed paper jams happen more often with non-OEM cartridges
than they do with OEM ones.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 07:30 PM 05/08/2005, jeff.lane wrote:
Thane,
That's interesting. I have never heard of the fuser issue. Do you have
any references to the problem
Yeah, I agree. That would be awesome. And likely be cheaper on their
bandwidth costs.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message - From: Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; The Hardware List
hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2005 12:37 AM
Subject
You can not join a Windows NT domain or Windows 2000/2003 directory.
It will work just fine as a node on a home LAN.
dsinc wrote:
What does *Cannot join a domain... really mean? Like it cannot be a
node on a home LAN or something?
Thanks.
I've had some problems with the built in DNS server in several Linksys
routers. It's very likely that something just wasn't talking right.
You could have your customer set their router to give out 4.2.2.1 and
4.2.2.2 as DNS servers in their DHCP config. Those are nice public DNS
servers.
Verizon owns 4.2.2.1 and 4.2.2.2
Winterlight wrote:
At 10:19 AM 8/4/2005, you wrote:
Who owns those servers?
DLINK
Ben Ruset wrote:
You could have your customer set their router to give out 4.2.2.1 and
4.2.2.2 as DNS servers in their DHCP config. Those are nice public
DNS servers
How much time is involved in doing WGA?
As for being an unpaid policeman, I hardly think so. I see all of the
OEM System Builder promo emails. I also know that MS does a lot to
support their OEM's.
WGA _is_ your protection against the pirate stores. The black market for
Windows should
Christopher Fisk wrote:
Normally this wouldn't be an issue for the kid, he would just ride his
bicycle, except that all the kids friends ever wanted to do was play
ball. They were afraid of the bicycle.
You _have_ to be kidding me. WGA takes less than 10 seconds to do. After
that, you don't
Thane,
If you got the impression that I insinuated that you condoned piracy in
your business, pleas accept my apologies for that *misunderstanding.*
-ben
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 10:56 AM 03/08/2005, Christopher Fisk wrote:
Also, your insinuation that Thane supports the piracy of any
Can you use SUS to load all of the updates instead of using Windows Update?
Come to think about it, I think that most large OEM's just ship with
what the latest service pack is and let the customer handle any
additional updates.
Chris Reeves wrote:
I have no problem with WGA.
At the same
First off, do you have any idea how long it takes a lawsuit to move
through the courts? Second, how do you know FOR SURE that nothing has
been done or is in the works? Maybe they didn't shut down the
Either way, WGA will block the FCKGW and like keys. So the problem is
solved. Microsoft
Yes, that's right.
Christopher Fisk wrote:
To legally buy OEM versions of software you generally need to buy
hardware at the same time right? And am I also correct in thinking you
can't resell them without an OEM agreement with Microsoft? I'm a novice
in this area, so my lack of knowledge
You don't think that MS won't go after these companies when they have to
give out free XP licences to the end users???
Christopher Fisk wrote:
WHAT? Microsoft benefits by allowing the Black Market OEM's to continue
selling illegal versions of Windows? WGA will block those keys, but it
We used to use Ingram.
FORC5 wrote:
my source is $144, still way to high.
OK, system builders on the list, what are your sources. Mine has been
Buy101 ?
I went to Chucks vendor he recommended but did not want to fill out a
credit apt from them to be a partner, I already have a business
, and the company that we bought that
software got fined HEAVILY. And if you don't believe me, wait for
Warpmedia to read the list because we both worked at the same shop when
this happened.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 12:19 PM 03/08/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
You don't think that MS won't go after
And most people are not buying XP Pro in retail form. They will either
get it from an OEM, or find a way of buying an OEM licence.
Steve wrote:
In Oz MS retails XP Pro (Full) for US$370...that's equivalent to the
take home pay of many aussiesno wonder many feel MS is gouging the
consumer
- From: Ben Ruset
To: The Hardware List
Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2005 2:03 AM
Subject: [hardware] Re: [H] Microsoft's Genuine Advantage Cracked Already
And most people are not buying XP Pro in retail form. They will either
get it from an OEM, or find a way of buying an OEM licence.
Sorry, I meant they got a judgement against them.
FORC5 wrote:
fined by whom ? MS cannot fine anybody, only Gov can do that.
courts would be judgements
fp
At 09:02 AM 8/3/2005, Ben Ruset Poked the stick with:
Case in point: The OEM I used to work for got a smoking deal on Office
97 Pro
in my living room
controls darn near everything; it can tell me when my AC kicks on and off ;)
or Caller ID with pictures of the person who's calling :)
CW
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Ruset
Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2005 12:50 PM
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Then came Service Pack 1 and later, Service Pack 2 for updating Windows
XP. Then they quit, as far as I know. It is time for another CD that
either includes Service Pack 2 or should be used after Service Pack 2
(stand alone or slipstream installation).
You can
No, it's a requirement from MS. To be sold with non peripheral hardware
only.
FORC5 wrote:
I'm not sure that the HW is a requirement from MS, some DSP OEM's sell
without the HW. May be up to the individual vendor. Makes no sense since
MS does not make HW ( well other then input devices AFAIK
It's cached by the browser, not Google. Steve's instructions are correct
for clearing your browser auto complete history.
Mark Dodge wrote:
Are you talking a Google search bar? I am talking a Google page.
Mark Dodge
MD Computers
602-421-0329
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL
What browser are you using?
Mark Dodge wrote:
I do not have either of these two drop downs.
Mark Dodge
MD Computers
602-421-0329
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Ruset
Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2005 6:02 AM
To: The Hardware List
--- TAMA - The Strongest Name in Drums ---
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Ruset
Sent: Tuesday, 26 July 2005 1:53
To: The Hardware List
Subject: Re: [H] GTA San Andreas Pulled from Shelves
Okay, but the point is that what
According to MS this is what they collect automatically:
* OEM product key
* PC Manufacturer
* OS version
* PID/SID
* BIOS info (make, version, date)
* BIOS MD5 Checksum
This is what they ask for when you register:
* Home, small business or enterprise user
*
What, exactly, is the problem with the information they collect?
You do realize that people gather and share far more information on you
when you apply for credit cards and the like? How is this any different?
Koy Fales wrote:
the only thing they do not log is the size of my shoes.
Linux
I'm sure it's just for demographics. They can track how quickly their CD
keys get put into production, and they can also track black-market keys
as well.
I mean, who really cares if Microsoft knows that I use a Toshiba laptop?
Thane Sherrington wrote:
That's not the point, Ben. The point is
or
consent. THAT is what bothers me, not if I get a popup for a Dell PC or
something equally as trivial.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 11:59 AM 26/07/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
I mean, who really cares if Microsoft knows that I use a Toshiba laptop?
Toshiba might, if MS sold the information
Damn, you're paranoid.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 12:11 PM 26/07/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
Microsoft does not sell ad space on any of the Microsoft.com sites. So
I don't know how I'd see any Dell ads when I update.
Right now.
T
http://www.clickz.com/news/article.php/3519521
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 12:18 PM 26/07/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
Damn, you're paranoid.
You do know they are rumoured to be buying Claria?
T
Ahh, I get what you're asking.
I guess the brand of PC would be Generic or something. Maybe they
have a radio button or something for that. As for penalizing, I don't
know why they would do that. They know that there are whitebox OEMs as
well as retail copies sold.
dsinc wrote:
Ben,
Not
I wonder if you could mount the drive from a Knoppix CD.
It's been SO LONG since I have looked at a SCO box. I don't even
remember what filesystem they use.
Chris Reeves wrote:
I have a box running SCO OpenServer 5. Pentium 166. Box has apparently
been running for a few years. They had a
Ahahahahaha that's great. Definately R rated.
Hayes Elkins wrote:
Please show me genitals engaged in what they were designed to do, or
anything depicting something that is NOT in a PG-13 or R movie:
http://files.gtanet.com/gtasa/videos/hotcoffee.wmv
No shit. I was quoting Hayes post:
Please show me genitals engaged in what they were designed to do, or
anything depicting something that is NOT in a PG-13 or R movie:
http://files.gtanet.com/gtasa/videos/hotcoffee.wmv;
Analyst wrote:
On 24 Jul 2005 at 8:06, Ben Ruset wrote
http://ydr.com/story/main/78396/
Thanks, Hillary! :(
As I understand it, she pretty much launched a campaign against the game.
Al wrote:
Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://ydr.com/story/main/78396/
Thanks, Hillary! :(
For the sake of fairness:
I'm not particularly fond of Hillary, but she didn't have any thing to
do with it's
Of Al
Sent: Saturday, July 23, 2005 5:33 AM
To: The Hardware List
Subject: Re: [H] GTA San Andreas Pulled from Shelves
Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
As I understand it, she pretty much launched a campaign against the
game.
After some further searching:
That's not good enough, according
It's buried, and not accessable through normal methods. Without someone
hacking the game, you're not going to get at that content. How can the
game manufacturer be held liable for that?
My gas tank is full of gasoline. If I shot a hole through it, my car
would explode. Can I sue Jeep if that
Clamwin is free and subscriptionless.
I just switched to it on my laptop as well as all of the machines here
at work.
joeuser wrote:
I've never heard of any anti-virus that wasn't a subscription.
Kaspersky is a subscription though. Kaspersky new price is ~35.00 and
renewal is ~25.00
Lexmark inkjets blow. Someone has one at work - they have to be an
administrator on their PC for it to work.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 07:51 PM 19/07/2005, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I always said that HP is the only name in printers, but make a lousy
computer, like the rest of the name
in duplexing which is cool.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message - From: Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: The Hardware List hardware@hardwaregroup.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 20, 2005 7:46 AM
Subject: Re: [H] Disposable computers
Lexmark inkjets blow. Someone has one at work
My iPod has totally replaced all other forms of media (audio cd, radio,
etc.) in my daily life. It's been terrible the last few days. I am going
to actually have to burn a CD to listen to in the car until my pod gets
repaired! :(
Jin-Wei Tioh wrote:
Hello Ben,
Great to hear that. I can't
I've switched to $90/hr, $60/hr each additional. Seems to work out OK
for me. Oftentimes, though, I will round down so 1.5hr ends up being
$90. I may be too nice.
Wayne Johnson wrote:
Hey if they insist on a per hour fee then I'll quote them $100/hr for a
stand alone machine $150/hr if it's
The one thing that GS has that nobody else can touch is the brand.
Most customers (lemmings) feel safer dealing with a big name company
rather than Joe Blow Computer the sole proprietorship. It gives
customers a sense of security in that they have a large company to hold
accountable when there
Thane Sherrington wrote:
I'm insured, but not bonded. Is that something I should consider?
I dunno. I'm not even insured. But then again I try to limit dealing
with on-site service or really anything outside of my 9-5 IT job.
Ugh. I've switched all of our corporate PC's to ClamWin anti-virus.
Seems to do a good job, auto-updates, and best of all - is free.
I have never liked Symantec/Norton AV. Best commercial product I have
used has been McAfee VirusScan Enterprise, but it's expensive and their
central management
We played with that. The boss didn't want to pay for it so we switched
to Clam.
Chris Reeves wrote:
On the corporate level, I really like TrendMicro's OfficeScan series.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Ruset
Sent: Tuesday, July 19
It's funny because I've been applying for Army Civilian jobs and have
not had a single bite. And I have 10 years in the field.
Brian Weeden wrote:
Lol those are better qualifications that 75% of the tech force here in
the military :)
Ah, that I have heard. My friend works for a contractor on Ft. Monmouth
in New Jersey. Apparently the networking guys are pretty bad over there.
Brian Weeden wrote:
On 7/18/05, Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It's funny because I've been applying for Army Civilian jobs and have
not had
Check your BIOS settings as well. Maybe something there activated a
sleep mode.
Winterlight wrote:
I have a old 233CP Latitude that I use as a print server, and a few
other things. It has been running 2K SP4 great for almost a year. It is
plugged into power with no battery.
I just did MS
Or, you know, stop using IE and clicking on EVERY popup that comes up.
And stop surfing porn too.
Robert Turnbull wrote:
I was spending time every week trying to keep the machine free of
viruses and worms, said Mr. Tucker, a vice president of Salesforce.com,
a Web services firm based here. I
It's cheaper and easier to flatten and reinstall. :)
I could use his old PC though. I need to make a file server in my house.
My wife's PC is too slow and can't hold more than 1 drive at a time.
Wayne Johnson wrote:
At 12:28 PM 7/17/2005, Ben Ruset typed:
I wonder how he'll feel when he has
Yeech. Figures that they'd target that POS towards the Mac crowd.
I don't know a single person who uses a Mac who hasn't put a 2 button
scroll mouse on their computer.
Al wrote:
Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Damn. Sign me up.
Me too. But their mouse idea sucks rubber ducks.
http
1) How many people pay for MS support for Windows? There are SO MANY
more qualified MS Admins than Linux admins. It's easier to support
in-house. Plus, in my experience, Windows is more reliable than Linux
for some applications. Hell, I wish my Linux DNS server was as reliable
as my Windows
Hmm, you might have a problem with Windows Scripting Host then.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 10:38 AM 14/07/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
http://asp.flaaten.dk/pforum/topic.asp?ARCHIVE=TOPIC_ID=603
Thanks. Registering these files doesn't work for me, unfortunately.
T
That's how I understand it, yes. (It is also my understanding that at
some point, you pay for MS support.)
You pay $X for a copy of Windows 2003 Server. After that is paid, you
don't have to pay a dime for support if you don't want to.
I can't comment on products like SQL server or whatnot,
Thane Sherrington wrote:
Actually, a friend of mine worked for Nortel, and they finally scrapped
Windows development because MS couldn't give them accurate answers as to
how the software worked or would work in the future.
Sounds like a very specialized case. I can't see Nortel dropping
deployment base. We only support this on X server, version X,
with only X kernel, and X packages installed.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 01:28 PM 14/07/2005, Ben Ruset wrote:
Sounds like a very specialized case. I can't see Nortel dropping their
Contivity VPN client for Windows. That's product
Glasswolf would likely know that answer. He's not on the list anymore,
though.
http://www.wickedcases.com
Julian Hale wrote:
I seem to remember there was a discussion on the list about a really
good glucose monitor maybe 2 years ago... I just found out that my dad
has not been testing his
Harry McGregor wrote:
Dynamic DNS is a kludge, and ugly one at that. The workstation should
not have control over it's hostname, that is the network's job.
The workstations name is set locally. What I mean is that when it gets
an IP address from DHCP, DHCP updates DNS records with the
Sharepoint is free though.
It's actually pretty cool, from what small amount of time I've played
with it.
Wayne Johnson wrote:
At 12:28 PM 7/14/2005, Ben Ruset typed:
That's what's killing Microsofy with Office. Office 97 does everything
that most casual office workers need to do
/2005, Ben Ruset typed:
Sharepoint is free though.
Running it on a separate server sure isn't free Office 2k3 isn't free.
Without Outlook 2k3, Sharepoint is severely limited.
It's actually pretty cool, from what small amount of time I've played
with it.
Yes it's pretty neat as I beta
Our network is shit, though. Cat5e cabling, but to Linksys Gigabit
switches, and likely a lot of stupid broadcast crap.
Harry McGregor wrote:
7MB on FTP sounds a little low, but not a lot. Max would be
12.5MByte/sec, and normal max would be about 11MByte/sec.
Some phones are locked to not allow file transfers over Bluetooth. I
believe that my Sony T-610 won't let me, which is why I use it's IR
interface instead.
Bill wrote:
Anybody have any experience with nasty little devils? I thought setup should be
a 30 second snap... Setting up this tiny
notepad c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts
Delete everything in the file, and paste this in. This is the vanilla
hosts file that ships with Windows 2000/XP. Alternately you could just
keep the file empty. I don't know if anything really needs the localhost
line.
# Copyright (c) 1993-1999
Because DOS/Win95 doesn't have the same panache that an old
Commodore/Apple/Atari 8 bit has.
Besides, the games are better for the old systems. :)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Original Message - From: Gary VanderMolen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: The Hardware List hardware@hardwaregroup.com
You could probably get some money for it off ebay. Vintage computing
seems to be the current fad.
Gary VanderMolen wrote:
What do people use Commodores for these
days?
The same things they always use them for. :)
And more. There's more to computing than the MHz race. :)
Is there a
] On Behalf Of
FORC5Sent: Thursday, July 07, 2005 11:02 PMTo: The
Hardware ListSubject: Re: [H] Outlook 2003 Rules
Question
ctrl+alt+J should mark it as not junk
AFAIKf\pAt 07:47 PM 7/7/2005, Ben Ruset Poked the stick with:
I just recently switched to Outlook
2003 from Thunderbird and am trying
For a $30 DVD it had better have some really good bonus features,
interviews, etc.
If it's the plain movie, then no. If there is some value added above and
beyond the movie itself, then yes.
Thane Sherrington wrote:
At 03:22 PM 06/07/2005, Hayes Elkins wrote:
work deserves the same amount
They should just sue the internet for making it easy to pirate movies.
I wish people would stop going to the movies and stop buying music in
response to these stupid lawsuits. Ultimately, fair-use rights are going
to be eliminated, and we'll all be forced to live in a safe, happy DRM
land,
I am trying to setup a CentOS4 based DHCP and DNS server. I'd like to
have DHCP update my DNS server with whatever leases get sent.
I have it working up until the point where DHCP tries to update DNS. It
then chokes on creating the journal files. It's trying to create the
files in /var/named/
looked at the Infinities at Crutchfield and they looked
interesting. I have som Boston Acoustics at home that I like. Anyone know
anything about those for the car?
Thanks,
Bobby
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ben Ruset
Sent: Tuesday, June
You'll need external amps for MB Quarts and most Infinity's. I get the
feeling that he just wants to replace the stock speakers, so any Pioneer
or Kenwood speaker should do just fine, and not break the bank.
Brian Weeden wrote:
If you don't want to DIY I have always been a big fan of MB
I used to be really big into car audio myself. Now I find that my iPod +
iTrip, stock Jeep stereo and Infinity basslink do it fine for me. :)
Brian Weeden wrote:
On 6/21/05, Ben Ruset [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You'll need external amps for MB Quarts and most Infinity's. I get the
feeling
501 - 600 of 625 matches
Mail list logo