. :)
Of course, it's all so clear to me now!
But thank you both for the responses. I shall head to the back of the
pub then find the group with the highest beard density.
Cheers,
--Matt
--
Matthew Boyle, Systems Administrator, CoreFiling Limited
Telephone: +44-1865-203192 Website:
three.
At what sort of time will people start to arrive? And will there be a
stuffed camel or similar distinguishing feature i can use to identify
the right table(s)?
Cheers,
--Matt
--
Matthew Boyle, Systems Administrator, CoreFiling Limited
Telephone: +44-1865-203192 Website:
s "at the other end of a really slow NFS
connection to the other side of the world". Mind you, absent running the
rsync daemon at the other end and using that instead of NFS, I'm not
sure if there's a better way of doing it.
the --no-whole-file option? or am i missing so
nding three MD5 collisions in seven files
that are actually different to each other would be a really remarkable
result
depends on where the PDFs came from :-)
http://www.win.tue.nl/hashclash/Nostradamus/
--matt
--
Matthew Boyle, Systems Administrator, CoreFiling Limited
Telephone: +44
re grammar/idiom errors
suddenly render it incomprehensible.
you've never seen the comments on youtube or have your say?
--matt
--
Matthew Boyle, Systems Administrator, CoreFiling Limited
Telephone: +44-1865-203192 Website: http://www.corefiling.com
perl downloads/linked_list_segfault.pl
# is fine
[chemn...@10:53 ~]$ perl downloads/linked_list_segfault.pl 8
# segfaults again
--matt
--
Matthew Boyle, Systems Administrator, CoreFiling Limited
Telephone: +44-1865-203192 Website: http://www.corefiling.com
4 tokens in container
created 4 tokens
[New Thread 0xb7fe26c0 (LWP 9178)]
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x026e6105 in Perl_sv_free2 () from
/usr/lib/perl5/5.10.0/i386-linux-thread-multi/CORE/libperl.so
(gdb) bt -1
#229310 0x08048a2e in main ()
(gdb)
quarter of a mil