Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Rich Shepard
On Thu, 30 Jul 2009, Jameson Williams wrote: > Well, I can see that -- Mac OSX is more like UNIX than Linux is, from a > user experience. Both are broken and kind of suck. Hoho. Now, does this reflect on the BSD rather than SysV origins for OSX? Rich -- Richard B. Shepard, Ph.D.

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Jameson Williams
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 5:01 PM, Jameson Williams < jame...@jamesonwilliams.com> wrote: > > > On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 4:26 PM, Randal L. Schwartz > wrote: > >> For example, MAC OSX 10.5 *is* "Unix". Officially. >> > > Well, I can see that -- Mac OSX is more like UNIX than Linux is, from a > user

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Jameson Williams
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 4:26 PM, Randal L. Schwartz wrote: > For example, MAC OSX 10.5 *is* "Unix". Officially. > Well, I can see that -- Mac OSX is more like UNIX than Linux is, from a user experience. Both are broken and kind of suck. Hoho. ___ PLUG

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Fred James
Randal L. Schwartz wrote: >> "Fred" == Fred James writes: >> > > Fred> Fisticuffs should be unnecessary here - there is no *NIX that is UNIX! > > Wrong. The Unix trademark is still owned by the Open Group, and if > you're compatible with the Single UNIX Specification (from

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Randal L. Schwartz
> "Fred" == Fred James writes: Fred> Fisticuffs should be unnecessary here - there is no *NIX that is UNIX! Wrong. The Unix trademark is still owned by the Open Group, and if you're compatible with the Single UNIX Specification (from which I quoted earlier regarding to find), you can call

[PLUG] Web Designer - The Northwest Woodworking Studio (fwd)

2009-07-30 Thread Rich Shepard
Someone here is probably interested in this. Rich -- Richard B. Shepard, Ph.D. | IntegrityCredibility Applied Ecosystem Services, Inc.|Innovation Voice: 503-667-4517 Fax: 503-667-8863 -- Forwarded me

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Fred James
Jameson Williams wrote: > On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 9:34 AM, Randal L. Schwartz > wrote: > > >> Andrew> find . -empty -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \; >> >> Beware. -empty is a stupid GNUism because the GNU people were >> too lazy to type "-size 0". >> >> The *real* find is documented in: >> >> http

Re: [PLUG] Home server to Amazon S3

2009-07-30 Thread wes
I use EC2 and S3 at my company. It is pretty much like you describe. The cheapest EC2 instance is $72/mo plus bandwidth usage. S3 is great for cheap storage, as long as that's ALL you need - storage. If you need URL rewriting or any other interesting features, S3 is not is. For personal use, I ha

Re: [PLUG] Home server to Amazon S3

2009-07-30 Thread Dan Colish
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 10:19:27AM -0700, Andrew Brookins wrote: > Hey, > > I've been running my own home server for a while -- centralized > backups, IRC, fileserver, svn (now git) repo's, etc. It was all fun > and games until I got married. > > Now I'd like to consolidate my five home computer

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Jameson Williams
On Thu, Jul 30, 2009 at 9:34 AM, Randal L. Schwartz wrote: > Andrew> find . -empty -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \; > > Beware. -empty is a stupid GNUism because the GNU people were > too lazy to type "-size 0". > > The *real* find is documented in: > > http://opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/xcu/

[PLUG] Home server to Amazon S3

2009-07-30 Thread Andrew Brookins
Hey, I've been running my own home server for a while -- centralized backups, IRC, fileserver, svn (now git) repo's, etc. It was all fun and games until I got married. Now I'd like to consolidate my five home computers into one laptop and possibly an Amazon EC2 instance or two. Have any of you

Re: [PLUG] One-liners

2009-07-30 Thread Randal L. Schwartz
> "Andrew" == Andrew Brookins writes: Andrew> find . -empty -maxdepth 1 -exec rm {} \; Beware. -empty is a stupid GNUism because the GNU people were too lazy to type "-size 0". The *real* find is documented in: http://opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007908799/xcu/find.html "GNU - because, h