Interestingly enough, there's one net radio station that says you can. Check
out Mercora. http://www.mercora.com
It allows you to webcast your legally purchased songs in your own channel
over their network once you download their IM client. I haven't tried it
yet, so I'm still not sure how they
Hello,
Again a remainder to let you noticed about the clearence for the volunteers
work that was accomplised in ISF (Indian Social Forum) from 9-13 DEC'06
Its already tooo late.
Hope to have a reply this time..
Akshay Gupta
JMI, delhi( 9891258331)
Devesh Kumar
Sawood Alam
Raj Mathur wrote:
As promised, I've done a terse write-up on using the Motorola A1200
(MotoMing) mobile phone with Linux. Rough first cut is available at:
http://wiki.kandalaya.org/cgi-bin/twiki/view/Main/MotorolaA1200
It seems that the max you can do about mobile-computer connectivity
On Tuesday 17 July 2007 15:49, Sandip Bhattacharya wrote:
Raj Mathur wrote:
As promised, I've done a terse write-up on using the Motorola A1200
(MotoMing) mobile phone with Linux. Rough first cut is available
at:
http://wiki.kandalaya.org/cgi-bin/twiki/view/Main/MotorolaA1200
It
On Tue, Jul 17, 2007 at 02:56:01PM +0530, Rohan George wrote:
Interestingly enough, there's one net radio station that says you can. Check
out Mercora. http://www.mercora.com
It allows you to webcast your legally purchased songs in your own channel
over their network once you download their IM
--- Linux Lingam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.gumstix.com/
and
http://gumstix.org/
For all those interested, gumstix i shipping DIY GSM
and GPS kits
http://gumstix.com/store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=193
On 16/07/07, vivek khurana [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
--- Anand Shankar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Looking for a cool, snap to setup with defaults,
fast to finish
solution for cloning disks over network:
Have a look at http://www.feyrer.de/g4u/ . Might
solve our problem.
Anand
Did you try
We seem to have missed this rather major development. Two years ago, MCD
(Municipal Corporation of Delhi) installed linux-based computers in 1000
primary schools, five computers in each. Here is one news item which
provides some details:
http://www.expresscomputeronline.com/20061113/market05.shtml