First of all Thanks a lot for help
see inline
--- Jim Nelson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Not exactly. The processor speed is an indication
of how fast it can
carry out instructions, but on CISC (complex
instruction set computing)
computers (x86, x86-64) some instructions take more
than one c
James Miller wrote:
I tend to use somewhat older computers and older, smaller (and
cheaper--sometimes free!) hard drives. As a result, I end up with 2 or
more hard drives in any given machine. I've been manually partitioning
and usually making / the mount point for smaller of the disks, /home the
At 02:43 PM 10/13/2004 -0400, Eve Atley wrote:
When someone SSH's into our Redhat Linux box, all files that are
uploaded are set to read-only. How can I set it so files are
automatically set to 777, or 775 at the very least?
First, you shouldn't. It is NEVER smart, from a security standpoint, to
c
Sorry. The reply-to wasn't set to the list and I didn't check.
Brain outgassing there. I should have said 666, not 555. Yes it will allow
r/w, just not execute.
-Original Message-
From: Eve Atley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2004 2:11 PM
To: 'Little, Chris'
C
Will that allow any read/write? I suppose not at 555. Is there another
way to give write ability, short of the user setting it him/herself?
At any rate, how can I go about giving the most permissions upon upload?
Thanks again,
Eve
-Original Message-
From: Little, Chris [mailto:[EMAIL PR
Sorry could not understand this. <1> What is making AMD
processors work faster than Intel processors at a
lower clock cycle. <2> also i want to know how to prove
this that AMD 64 bit processors will work faster than
Intel 32 bit processor even if they have clock cycles
like 3.6 GHz
<1>
An AMD
I tend to use somewhat older computers and older, smaller (and
cheaper--sometimes free!) hard drives. As a result, I end up with 2 or
more hard drives in any given machine. I've been manually partitioning
and usually making / the mount point for smaller of the disks, /home the
mount point for the
When someone SSH's into our Redhat Linux box, all files that are
uploaded are set to read-only. How can I set it so files are
automatically set to 777, or 775 at the very least?
Thanks,
Eve
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First of all Thanks a l