On 6/14/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Of course, logging into the DynDNS UI is an easy way to manage my
DynDNS entries. The whole point of installing OpenWRT/ez-ipupdate
(with which fact I opened my initial post on this subject) was to
avoid having to do this by automating the
Sorry to dredge it all up, but there was a discussion some time back about
an app that was supposed to be a drop in replacement for ES including all
of the calendaring crap. Does anyone remember what that was?
PostPath (http://www.postpath.com) advertises on their homepage:
The only
Another option is Open Xchange. It's actually a bit of a superset of
Exchange in that it offers some features not available in Exchange. I've
installed this for a client that has Linux servers and Windows desktops
and it works well with Outlook!
Their web site is at http://www.open-xchange.com/
We do have a page specifically for clients that are compliant to our
protocol. The UNIX specific client page is:
http://www.dyndns.com/support/clients/unix.html
I asked our client certification guy what he would recommend for OpenWRT
and he suggested the inadyn client.
--
Cole Tuininga
On 6/15/07, Mark Mcsweeney [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PostPath (http://www.postpath.com) advertises on their homepage:
On 6/15/07, Dan Coutu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another option is Open Xchange. It's actually a bit of a superset of
Exchange in that it offers some features not available in
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 08:42:28 -0400
From: Tom Buskey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've been using zonedit and a cronjob script to check if my router's IP
changed.
It's got some old cruft in it.
Please, please, please, folks! Don't even THINK about doing stuff
like this. (Newbies, cover your eyes!)
On 6/15/07, Drew Van Zandt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PostPath says it's a wire-level reverse-engineer, so no PST files.
O... shiny.
/me moves Look at PostPath up a few notches on my to-do list
(Unfortunately, that still means Possibly not within this decade. ~sigh~)
-- Ben
PostPath says it's a wire-level reverse-engineer, so no PST files.
--DTVZ
On 6/15/07, Ben Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/15/07, Mark Mcsweeney [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PostPath (http://www.postpath.com) advertises on their homepage:
On 6/15/07, Dan Coutu [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 2007-06-15 at 11:03 -0400, Thomas Charron wrote:
On 6/15/07, Stephen Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, that gives the IP address of this machine, not the IP address
of the router, which, given that it's IP address might change, is quite
likely doing address translation before
On 6/15/07, Thomas Charron [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/15/07, Stephen Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, that gives the IP address of this machine, not the IP address
of the router, which, given that it's IP address might change, is quite
likely doing address translation before
On 6/15/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 08:42:28 -0400
From: Tom Buskey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've been using zonedit and a cronjob script to check if my router's IP
changed.
It's got some old cruft in it.
Please, please, please, folks! Don't even THINK
(sorry, meant to send this to the list)
On Fri, 2007-06-15 at 10:35 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Date: Fri, 15 Jun 2007 08:42:28 -0400
From: Tom Buskey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I've been using zonedit and a cronjob script to check if my router's IP
changed.
It's got some old cruft in it.
On 06/14/2007 08:30 PM, Ric Werme wrote:
A 1500 byte Ethernet message is 12,000 bits, and hence only 12 usec of
wire time. If you need full performance and can use Jumbo Frames
of 9,000 bytes (72 usec) so much the better.
The other advantage of jumbo frames is that there's less packet
On Fri, June 15, 2007 11:03 am, Thomas Charron said:
On 6/15/07, Stephen Ryan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Actually, that gives the IP address of this machine, not the IP address
of the router, which, given that it's IP address might change, is quite
likely doing address translation before
FiOS uses another brand (Acctron?). It's got an IP to coax connector for
IPTV. Each TV set top box on coax has an IP address (192.168.1.100 and up)
Hm. Do you think it'd be possible to use this as a signal source for
a MythTV box? brain.gears[0].setMotion(new Motion.turning());
On 6/15/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
FiOS uses another brand (Acctron?). It's got an IP to coax connector
for
IPTV. Each TV set top box on coax has an IP address (192.168.1.100 and
up)
Hm. Do you think it'd be possible to use this as a signal source for
a MythTV box?
Ben Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On 6/15/07, Drew Van Zandt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
PostPath says it's a wire-level reverse-engineer, so no PST files.
O... shiny.
/me moves Look at PostPath up a few notches on my to-do list
(Unfortunately, that still means Possibly not within
Oooh, interesting. Open Xchange does NOT speak MAPI. You need to use
either POP or IMAP for email connectivity. It uses WebDAV for the
calendar, shared folders, and other features.
Dan
Drew Van Zandt wrote:
PostPath says it's a wire-level reverse-engineer, so no PST files.
--DTVZ
On
On 6/15/07, Mark Komarinski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I haven't checked to see what PCI-X/PCI-E does, but I've hit pretty high
speeds with it (see below).
I looked it up last night. According to the always reliable
Wikipedia, PCI-X brings the bus clock to 133 MHz. Still 64-bit. So
8512
The June meeting of CentraLUG, the Peterborough chapter of
the Greater New Hampshire Users Groups, was held last night,
Thursday, 14 June 2007, Charlie Farinella presiding.
Our presenter was Ed Haynes, with Wind River in Nashua.
Wind River is one of the organizations which (as I remember
them) a
On 6/15/07, Paul Lussier [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Calendaring is HUGE in the MS world. MS users can not live without
it. Yet, there is no mention of this one killer feature of Exchange
that I found.
It might be worth noting that Outlook implements calendaring as just
another class of the
Bill Sconce writes:
There's another approach, which Ed described but did not
demonstrate: running Linux on top of a small, deterministic
realtime kernel. In Wind River's hands this is partly GPL,
partly proprietary.
If you want a hard-realtime system with access to Linux, I highly
On Thu, 2007-06-14 at 22:16 -0400, Paul Lussier wrote:
Tom Buskey [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On top of that, if hdparm says timed disk writes are around 40MB, what
could you see for sustained download speeds? Maybe a static cached
webpage could saturate a gig connection, sustained 5 gig
A lot of what Maddog wrote pertains more to coax or hub based Ethernet
(CSMA/CD, Carrier Sense, Multiple Access with Collision Deterction) which is
true Ethernet. Twisted pair media used with switches and routers I
believe is all Single Access and has no collisions.
If I remember correctly,
On Thu, 14 Jun 2007, sean wrote:
Here is the problem.
The local ISP they use, Comcast, gives them a free connection, but the
address is dynamic.
When on that time the address renews and is not the same, they link to
the online catalog cannot be reached. Looking it over the link is
specified
There are still collisions (of a sort) even on full-duplex switched
networks. Two 10 Mbit devices can't talk full speed to the same 10
Mbit conversation partner, obviously. Store-and-forward switches and
routers help with short-term congestion, but even without 2-to-1
bottlenecks, most switches
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