Re: CSS Question

2003-06-12 Thread Erik Price


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

So, anyone have any really good links for learning CSS?
(Coles ref to w3schools already noted :)
This one might be too basic/introductory for you, but it's very 
well-written and can at least cement the knowledge that you already -do- 
have.  I found it very useful when first learning CSS:

http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Guide/Style.html

HTH,

Erik

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Re: CSS Question

2003-06-12 Thread Jerry Feldman
On 12 Jun 2003 10:00:16 -0400
Greg Rundlett [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 On Wed, 2003-06-11 at 17:40, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  
  
  Actually, what I'm interested in, is using CSS to replace tables for
  
  alignment.
  
 Sitepoint is hawking a book on the subject, and will let you download
 the first four chapters. http://www.sitepoint.com/  Of course their
 site is done with minimal use of tables.
 
 As another practical example, the tikiwiki.sourceforge.net website was
 just done over using CSS rather than tables.
After reading the first 4 chapters of Building Your Own... I bought
the book. I found it very useful. 


-- 
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Boston Linux and Unix user group
http://www.blu.org PGP key id:C5061EA9
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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Brian
So, it's free as in beer?

(couldn't resist)

If I had time for 1 more hobby this would be great, that stuff ain't
cheap...

On Thu, 2003-06-12 at 10:49, Michael O'Donnell wrote:
 This is definitely OT but I'd be pleased to think that
 somebody in the GNHLUG was able to snag this stuff:
 
 nh.forsale #2188
 From: mrkse [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sibject: BEER BeeR bEEr beer
 Date: Wed Jun 11 21:52:15 EDT 2003
 
  Yup Beer I have a complete home brewery FREE to a good home,
  Includes everything 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
  
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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Erik Price


Michael O'Donnell wrote:
This is definitely OT but I'd be pleased to think that
somebody in the GNHLUG was able to snag this stuff:


You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
actually done it, but I've heard about it.

New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.



Erik

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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Mark Komarinski
On Thu, Jun 12, 2003 at 11:51:55AM -0400, Erik Price wrote:
 
 You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
 beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
 corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
 night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
 and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
 something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
 actually done it, but I've heard about it.
 
 New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.

Having tried to make beer and wine in a small house with a 70-lb,
constantly-shedding dog, I'd be in for something like this.

Then again, when I get my addition built, I can have a room all to
myself and start making beer/wine/root beer again.

-Mark


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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Andrew W. Gaunt
That shedding dog environment must give your beer its unique own character.

Mark Komarinski wrote:

On Thu, Jun 12, 2003 at 11:51:55AM -0400, Erik Price wrote:
 

You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
actually done it, but I've heard about it.

New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.
   

Having tried to make beer and wine in a small house with a 70-lb,
constantly-shedding dog, I'd be in for something like this.
Then again, when I get my addition built, I can have a room all to
myself and start making beer/wine/root beer again.
-Mark
 

--
__
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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread David Long
On Thu, 2003-06-12 at 12:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
 You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
 beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
 corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
 night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
 and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
 something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
 actually done it, but I've heard about it.
 
 New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.
 

Disclaimer:  I'm not a beer brewer or beer drinker, although I am an
avid wine and cider maker and consumer.

We have at least a couple experienced home brewers on the list (I know
Rob is certainly one).  My old group at Compaq used to have group-brews
at Incredibrew, but I suspect something could be arranged without having
to involve a brew-on-the-premises operation like Incredibrew (not that
that's necessarily a bad thing).  Those of us in Nashua are lucky that
we have Jaspers a short walk from Martha's, where one can pick up pretty
much anything you might need for beer/wine/cider-making, including some
excellent advice from our friend Jeff who owns/operates Jaspers.  But I
think amongst people on this list we already have quite a good selection
of equipment that could be used in a brew-fest (and I can harass Rob
into finally harvesting some of those hops he's been growing for quite
some time).  Don't know where we would host such an event if not at
Incredibrew though.

-dl
-- 
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JumpShift, LLC

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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RE: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Sharpe, Richard

Hey I knew the people that owned Jaspers when it was in Litchfield the
Calahan's, Dan Calahan works for IBM and Jasper's was his wife's business,
good stuff. I would love to make some beer again like at Incredibrew, my
wife did not like the brew stuff in the kitchen, I have my brewing hardware
stored in my basement..

Rich

-Original Message-
From: David Long [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2003 12:46 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Free brewing kit


On Thu, 2003-06-12 at 12:00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 
 You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
 beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
 corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
 night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
 and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
 something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
 actually done it, but I've heard about it.
 
 New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.
 

Disclaimer:  I'm not a beer brewer or beer drinker, although I am an
avid wine and cider maker and consumer.

We have at least a couple experienced home brewers on the list (I know
Rob is certainly one).  My old group at Compaq used to have group-brews
at Incredibrew, but I suspect something could be arranged without having
to involve a brew-on-the-premises operation like Incredibrew (not that
that's necessarily a bad thing).  Those of us in Nashua are lucky that
we have Jaspers a short walk from Martha's, where one can pick up pretty
much anything you might need for beer/wine/cider-making, including some
excellent advice from our friend Jeff who owns/operates Jaspers.  But I
think amongst people on this list we already have quite a good selection
of equipment that could be used in a brew-fest (and I can harass Rob
into finally harvesting some of those hops he's been growing for quite
some time).  Don't know where we would host such an event if not at
Incredibrew though.

-dl
-- 
David A. Long
JumpShift, LLC

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Tom Buskey
Erik Price wrote:


You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
actually done it, but I've heard about it.

New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.

Didn't GNHLUG give Maddog a gift certificate there for being our 
chairperson when he stepped down?

Every year my wife and another couble make wine at a place in Natick, MA 
called Barleycorn's.  A bit out of the way for GNHLUG, but it's another 
place

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Re: CSS Question

2003-06-12 Thread Kevin D. Clark

Cole Tuininga [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

 The best firewall is a pair of wire cutters.
 -Unknown, from the net

For some reason, this reminded me of the following snippet, which is
from Chuck Shepherd most excellent News of The Weird:

: ** Police in Albany, Ore., were looking this week for an extremely
: incompetent warehouse burglar.  All they know is that they found
: singed bolt cutters and burned clothing beside a live, 440-volt wire,
: along with part of a human scalp.   Albany Democrat-Herald 
: http://www.democratherald.com/articles/2003/06/02/news/local/news02.txt 

The mind boggles.  (and the scalp singes...)

--kevin
-- 
Kevin D. Clark / Cetacean Networks / Portsmouth, N.H. (USA)
cetaceannetworks.com!kclark (GnuPG ID: B280F24E)
alumni.unh.edu!kdc

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Re: Learning SNMP

2003-06-12 Thread Larry Cook
Gambit Communications has books and internet resources listed on their 
website.  On their support page, click the Reference link:

http://www.gambitcomm.com/site/support/

Larry

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Re: CSS Question

2003-06-12 Thread Greg Rundlett
On Wed, 2003-06-11 at 17:40, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
 
 Actually, what I'm interested in, is using CSS to replace tables for 
 alignment.
 
Sitepoint is hawking a book on the subject, and will let you download the first four 
chapters.
http://www.sitepoint.com/  Of course their site is done with minimal use
of tables.

As another practical example, the tikiwiki.sourceforge.net website was
just done over using CSS rather than tables.
 
-- 
FREePHILE
We are 'Open' for Business
Free and Open Source Software
http://www.freephile.com
(978) 270-2425
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Re: CSS Question

2003-06-12 Thread Erik Price


Greg Rundlett wrote:

Sitepoint is hawking a book on the subject, and will let you download the first four 
chapters.
http://www.sitepoint.com/  Of course their site is done with minimal use
of tables.
I was extremely impressed with the sitepoint.com website makeover, it 
looks incredible but like you said, makes almost zero abuses of the 
table tag.

I somehow overlooked this book the last time I was at their site.  As 
another person who is interested in learning how to use CSS to overcome 
table tag addiction, I will check it out.



Erik

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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread pll

In a message dated: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 13:29:18 EDT
Tom Buskey said:

Erik Price wrote:
 
 You know, that might be a cool activity for a GNHLUG social.  There's a 
 beer-brewing place in Nashua, and you can do group-brews where 
 corporate/religious/other parties can go there and make the beer one 
 night (they show you how to do everything and provide the materials), 
 and then a couple weeks later you go and pick it up.  It's like $25 or 
 something depending on how many people do it.  Disclaimer, I've never 
 actually done it, but I've heard about it.
 
 New Hampshire's Finest Open Source Beer.  LinuxBeer.  BrewLinux.
 

Didn't GNHLUG give Maddog a gift certificate there for being our 
chairperson when he stepped down?

Yup, it's called Incredibrew.  I've brewed there several times, a few 
with md, a few with friends.  My only complaints about it are:

- they force you to use 22oz bottles, I like 12oz.  
- they use forced CO2 for carbonating, I prefer using 
  primining sugars, which results in less CO2.

Other than that, it's not bad.  As for the price, well, it depends 
upon what you brew.  I've left the place having spent $200 between 
the beer and bottles, and I've walked out for as little as $50.  And 
I always leave with far more beer than I can drink!  I still have 
about a case or so from the last time I brewed there, and that was 
over 2 years ago :)
-- 

Seeya,
Paul
--
Key fingerprint = 1660 FECC 5D21 D286 F853  E808 BB07 9239 53F1 28EE

It may look like I'm just sitting here doing nothing,
   but I'm really actively waiting for all my problems to go away.

 If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right!


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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread Erik Price


[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Other than that, it's not bad.  As for the price, well, it depends 
upon what you brew.  I've left the place having spent $200 between 
the beer and bottles, and I've walked out for as little as $50.  And 
I always leave with far more beer than I can drink!  I still have 
about a case or so from the last time I brewed there, and that was 
over 2 years ago :)
Hey, if you're thinking of giving it away free as in beer...

bah dump PSH!



;)



Erik

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Re: Free brewing kit

2003-06-12 Thread numberwhun
I emailed the guy out of curiosity and the stuff is available.  The only thing
is, he is located in Laconia.  

Regards,

Jeff

 
 This is definitely OT but I'd be pleased to think that
 somebody in the GNHLUG was able to snag this stuff:
 
 nh.forsale #2188
 From: mrkse [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sibject: BEER BeeR bEEr beer
 Date: Wed Jun 11 21:52:15 EDT 2003
 
  Yup Beer I have a complete home brewery FREE to a good home,
  Includes everything 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
  
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RH question

2003-06-12 Thread pll

Hi,

I was just showing someone the use of xargs in conjunction with find.
I thought I'd show him how to find which files in the /etc tree 
contain the system's hostname.  So, I did:

find /etc -type f | xargs grep qatest52

(qatest52 being the system's name).

I was pretty confident of the results, but was surprised by one 
additional line which I've never seen before:

/etc/sysconfig/rhn/systemid:valuestringqatest52/string/value

This appears to be an XML formatted file.  It's on an RH9 system.
Of course, before I could go looking around the system more, the guy 
went back into the lab and rebooted the system which killed my ssh 
session.  And my curiousity is killing me!

So, what's this file for, and what else does it contain?
What's the /etc/sysconfig/rhn subdir for, and what's in there (other 
than the systemid file :)

Thanks,
-- 

Seeya,
Paul
--
Key fingerprint = 1660 FECC 5D21 D286 F853  E808 BB07 9239 53F1 28EE

It may look like I'm just sitting here doing nothing,
   but I'm really actively waiting for all my problems to go away.

 If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right!


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Re: RH question

2003-06-12 Thread Ben Boulanger
On Thu, 12 Jun 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 So, what's this file for, and what else does it contain?
 What's the /etc/sysconfig/rhn subdir for, and what's in there (other 
 than the systemid file :)

It's the redhat network stuff for doing up2date and the auto-update 
features.  RHN (RedHat Network) registers your machine architecture, 
version, hardware and packages (optional on each, I think), and when you 
run up2date, it knows what relevant updates to give you.

Ben


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Re: RH question

2003-06-12 Thread Jason Stephenson
I'm guessing the rhn subdir is for the Red Hat Network programs. When 
you sign up for up2date, you're signing up the Red Hat Network.

My RH 8.0 machine does not have that subdir, but I've also never even 
run one of the rhn apps on it. I update using wget and a NFS-mounted 
directory from my server.



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Re: RH question

2003-06-12 Thread pll

In a message dated: Thu, 12 Jun 2003 16:52:12 EDT
Jason Stephenson said:

I'm guessing the rhn subdir is for the Red Hat Network programs. When 
you sign up for up2date, you're signing up the Red Hat Network.

Yeah, that's what Ben said too.

My RH 8.0 machine does not have that subdir, but I've also never even 
run one of the rhn apps on it. I update using wget and a NFS-mounted 
directory from my server.

We have a lot of 7.3 and 8.0 machines none of which this subdir 
exists on.  This is the first 9 machine I've seen, and it was just 
loaded.  I'm pretty sure the guy who installed it doesn't know about 
RHN, so I'm guessing this is something which gets set at install time 
now for everything.
-- 

Seeya,
Paul
--
Key fingerprint = 1660 FECC 5D21 D286 F853  E808 BB07 9239 53F1 28EE

It may look like I'm just sitting here doing nothing,
   but I'm really actively waiting for all my problems to go away.

 If you're not having fun, you're not doing it right!


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Re: RH question

2003-06-12 Thread Ben Boulanger
On Thu, 12 Jun 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 We have a lot of 7.3 and 8.0 machines none of which this subdir 
 exists on.  This is the first 9 machine I've seen, and it was just 
 loaded.  I'm pretty sure the guy who installed it doesn't know about 
 RHN, so I'm guessing this is something which gets set at install time 
 now for everything.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] Ben]$ cat /etc/issue
Red Hat Linux release 8.0 (Psyche)
Kernel \r on an \m

[EMAIL PROTECTED] Ben]$ ls /etc/sysconfig/rhn/   
rhn-applet  rhnsd  systemid  up2date  up2date-keyring.gpg


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Samba Question

2003-06-12 Thread Richard Sharpe
Hi

I have got myself confused, how do you make a Windows Server
2000 share read/writeable using samba, I can attach just fine and read
but can not get write perms on the share through the samba mount
point.The Windows share has the perms set to full access for everyone.

Thanks Much

Rich
-- 
Richard A Sharpe
DBA - DB2/Sybase/Oracle/Sqlserver
Merrimack, NH 03054

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Re: Samba Question

2003-06-12 Thread ken
Well... it's a little hard to tell, since I don't know what it is you're
doing to see the files, but it sounds as if you're not authenticating as a
domain user.  How are you seeing the files?  Through an SMB browser (eg.
Konqueror)?  Mounting the SMB share?  Whatever way, you should be telling
it:
your username
your password
and, implicitly or explicitly, the domain
If you're not, you're likely logging in as guest, which pursuant
permissions (or lack thereof).

-Ken

 Hi

 I have got myself confused, how do you make a Windows Server
 2000 share read/writeable using samba, I can attach just fine and read
 but can not get write perms on the share through the samba mount
 point.The Windows share has the perms set to full access for everyone.

 Thanks Much

 Rich
 --
 Richard A Sharpe
 DBA - DB2/Sybase/Oracle/Sqlserver
 Merrimack, NH 03054

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