(someone wrote, regarding different ls output)
sudo ls -lGgh /srv/ftp/pub
-r--r--r-- 1 14M Nov 7 16:02 GE_Mainline_Ansys ver2.ppt
HUH? when I do it manually the output is
sudo ls -lGgh /srv/ftp/pub
-r--r--r-- 1 14M 2006-11-07 16:02 GE_Mainline_Ansys ver2.ppt
As others have
Jim Bohnsack wrote:
Back around 1970 or so, I did a performance study on a S/360-30.
At that time, IBM published instruction times
somewhere--don't remember where. But I came up with a
result that said that a mod 30 was an 18 kip machine.
For some reason I have the 360/30 Functional
Alan Ackerman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Usually, high port numbers are assigned to clients.
Clients on VM include FTP, TELNET, NFS, and
Charlotte (web browser).
That is usual for most TCP/IP systems. High source ports
are assigned to any client, not just the obvious ones.
All the more
I have scanned GC23-0059-2, 3270 Data Stream Programmers Reference,
and sent it to bitsavers. I don't know that it is actually available yet.
I do see that Gc23-0059-7 is available from IBM in paper or electronic form.
-- glen
The source to older versions of JES2 and JES3 are available,
at least I believe they are. It must be in there somewhere.
-- glen
David Boyes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Does anyone still know of a source that sells 3420 cleaning fluid and
supplies? In the process of working through these old tapes from
Princeton, I'm burning through the small supply I have of the stuff
rapidly (2 pints so far), and still have a few
Rich Seifert (who worked on the original 10Mbit ethernet)
in his Gigabit Ethernet book has some explanation about this.
Token Ring requires more complicated hardware, keeping the
price higher. The higher price reduces demand, making it harder
to reach the economy of scale point.
There is a
Tom Duerbusch [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From my understanding, when a client connected to the server stack at a
particular port, that port is tied up and no one else can connect to
it.
If I remember correctly, when you FTP to port 21, the FTP server
responses with another port that you
(I wrote)
VAX uses a two level system where page tables are paged.
There is kernel space, which isn't paged and holds the first
level tables referencing pagable second level tables.
z/Archtecture has three levels.
(someone else wrote)
Actually, z/Architecture has 5 levels. So far,
the
Marten Kemp [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The recent thread about virtual memory sparked a (kind of)
idle question: why did the implementation in the S/370
have a two-level scheme (segment and page)? My original
thought was that it facilitated definition of discontiguous
parts of an address
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