Hi Jack,
Further to my email of 06/15/2002. I shopped around here, Hong Kong, and
found the street price of following items which may be interested to you :
1) Buffalo
a) WLAR-L11G-L
http://www.airstation.com/english/products/wlar-l11-l.html#2
b) WLI-PCM-L11G
http://www.airstation.com/engli
If the terminal "goas away", like the user turned it off,
or there was a power failure, The server will take care
of killing the processes.
There have been some problems in the past, most notably with gdm,
where the processes wouldn't get killed. But, i'm pretty sure that
gdm has been fixed, an
We boot a Pentrium 75 MHz, 66 Megs RAM, Intel Ether Pro 100 in 45 seconds. The network
is 100BaseT and the machine is *not* in
our /etc/hosts file since another machine on another subnet does all of our name
serving.
-- David
begin:vcard
n:Harrison;David M.
tel;fax:416 978 1547
tel;work:416
On Sun, 2002-06-16 at 18:02, Georg Baum wrote:
> > This is ok for a process that just explodes it's memory consumption. Has
> > anyone implemented a script that checks if a user i logged on and kills
> > any outstanding programs if not? I would guess there's some tuning
> > needed so you don't shu
> This is ok for a process that just explodes it's memory consumption. Has
> anyone implemented a script that checks if a user i logged on and kills
> any outstanding programs if not? I would guess there's some tuning
> needed so you don't shutt down root progs etc, but it would be _very_
> handy!
Am Samstag, 15. Juni 2002 00:00 schrieb Tom Allison:
> I have an Athlon 650 with 768M of RAM, a fastethernet network, and
> an IBM 300GL Pentium 200 desktop PC.
> I want to play with ltsp.
>
> I've got Debian and I'm not afraid to use it...
>
> But before I shoot myself:
>
> Of the ltsp packages.