Re: System Scripts

2009-05-21 Thread james michael
Dan Langille wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 james wrote: are scripts that you make to make your life easier forbidden to share? I've been sharing mine at http://fishy.ath.cx/scripts.html which are just simple scripts to solve problems... I wonder how many times people

Re: System Scripts

2009-05-21 Thread Dan Langille
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 james wrote: > are scripts that you make to make your life easier forbidden to share? > > I've been sharing mine at http://fishy.ath.cx/scripts.html which are > just simple scripts to solve problems... I wonder how many times people > have written the

Re: svn commit: r192398 - in head/usr.bin: . perror

2009-05-21 Thread John Baldwin
On Thursday 21 May 2009 11:11:12 am George Neville-Neil wrote: > > On May 21, 2009, at 10:52 , M. Warner Losh wrote: > > > In message: <20090521110115.ga50...@freebsd.org> > >Alexey Dokuchaev writes: > > : > Given how easy it is to "grep <> /usr/include/sys/ > > errno.h" or > > : >

Re: FSF v Cisco on GPL reached settlement

2009-05-21 Thread Tony Theodore
2009/5/21 Brett Glass : > Note that the FSF says that "compliance" is their number one goal. In other > words, they are saying, "Bend over." > > This is one reason why I am very glad about the work on "un-GNUed" (but > fully compatible) versions of utilities such as grep. I am looking forward > to

System Scripts

2009-05-21 Thread james
are scripts that you make to make your life easier forbidden to share? I've been sharing mine at http://fishy.ath.cx/scripts.html which are just simple scripts to solve problems... I wonder how many times people have written the same scripts because they weren't available. Anyways just an idea

an interesting observatation

2009-05-21 Thread Aryeh Friedman
There seems to be a inverse square law of Moore's Law at work between the amount of available processor power and the actual end-user applications neing used on a typical day seem to be inverse perportiant and the actual ratio is apparently a constant over time. I have always wondered why UNIX and