On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 11:25 PM Russell Senior
wrote:
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 9:00 PM Keith Lofstrom wrote:
>
>> MY FIRST QUESTION IS: can multiple domains and multiple
>> SSL certificates share one IP address? I can rent more
>> IP addresses, but I hope to avoid complication and cost.
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 9:00 PM Keith Lofstrom wrote:
> MY FIRST QUESTION IS: can multiple domains and multiple
> SSL certificates share one IP address? I can rent more
> IP addresses, but I hope to avoid complication and cost.
>
The way I did it is to create an SSL certificate with multiple d
MY FIRST QUESTION IS: can multiple domains and multiple
SSL certificates share one IP address? I can rent more
IP addresses, but I hope to avoid complication and cost.
NEXT QUESTION: what is a good ten page summary of how to
set up and maintain SSL certificates in the simplest way?
Ditto for D
+1 on your radio suggestion.
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020, 19:45 Tomas Kuchta
wrote:
> I literally stumbled on internally broken wire - 13mm (1/2" for readers in
> Zimbabwe) from the cable end. Somehow it connected when clamping the ends
> together to measure them. Thankfully, there was enough differenc
I literally stumbled on internally broken wire - 13mm (1/2" for readers in
Zimbabwe) from the cable end. Somehow it connected when clamping the ends
together to measure them. Thankfully, there was enough difference when
measuring wire pair capacitance from the broken end.
The wire strand got cut b
On Sun, 22 Mar 2020, Russell Senior wrote:
I would really like a time domain reflectometer so that when I screw up a
crimp I can tell which end I screwed up.
They're rather pricey for occasional use. Sigh.
... then cut off the worst looking end retry the crimp until either
it works or I run
I have an ethernet tester. It basically energizes one pin at a time and
LEDs at the other end indicates whether they are seeing current (so, if
there are shorts or miswirings, those are evident). I would really like a
time domain reflectometer so that when I screw up a crimp I can tell which
end I
Thanks for the response Rich,
Reading your suggestion, I realized that I might not check for shorts on the
final product. I fave rechecked it - no opens, no shorts.
Multimeter is a device for two point measuring voltage, current, resistance,
etc. Mine also has a beeper that is what I used.
So, I
On Sun, 22 Mar 2020, tomas.kuchta.li...@gmail.com wrote:
I have this very special cat5e patch cable - which I am now really attached to.
The cable has good end to end continuity test, but only works at 100Mb/s.
Any ideas what this could be caused by - realistically verifiable ideas only
please?
I have this very special cat5e patch cable - which I am now really attached to.
The cable has good end to end continuity test, but only works at 100Mb/s.
Any ideas what this could be caused by - realistically verifiable ideas only
please?
Story for long days:
The cable worked at normal 1Gbs, I th
On Sun, 22 Mar 2020, Ben Koenig wrote:
What tool does the chrombook use to view gmail?
Chrome. Everything on a chromebook goes through the google web browser.
Oy. I didn't realize this.
Thanks, Ben,
Rich
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On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 5:53 AM Rich Shepard
wrote:
> On Sun, 22 Mar 2020, Chuck Hast wrote:
>
> > It keeps on trying to send the pages as A1 rather than LETTER.
>
> Chuck,
>
> A1 size is the metric equivalent of 36" x 48" and usually requires a large,
> roll-fed printer. Many applications with a
On Sun, 22 Mar 2020, Chuck Hast wrote:
It keeps on trying to send the pages as A1 rather than LETTER.
Chuck,
A1 size is the metric equivalent of 36" x 48" and usually requires a large,
roll-fed printer. Many applications with a European origin (or flavor)
default to A4 paper which is the metr
>
> It keeps on trying to send the pages as A1 rather than LETTER. She has a
> couple of documents on google drive, those print just fine, it appears to
> only be when she tries to print from
> Gmail that this takes place. I have looked but do not see where it is
> telling the printer to use A1 pap
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