l?
>
> Patrick
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Dean Hamstead [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Friday, 15 September 2000 3:53 PM
> > To: Jill Rowling
> > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Subject: Re: [SLUG] Re: Moving OT a bit [was] Re: Re:
Dean Hamstead <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Ideally we
> could use optical
> mice but i have seen any at a decent price, and they would have to be
> padless (eg.
> intelimice) or the pads would surely go missing.
but at least you could nail (or glue) the mouse pads down.
Dave.
--
SLUG - Sydney Lin
TECTED]]
> Sent: Friday, 15 September 2000 3:53 PM
> To: Jill Rowling
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [SLUG] Re: Moving OT a bit [was] Re: Re: Proceedure for
> preventing 'linux single' at lilo promp t
>
>
> An interesting way ive seen tampering being p
An interesting way ive seen tampering being prevented (although somewhat
extreme)
was in mp3 (licensed mp3s) jukebox's. Although running windows, if the
cases werent
opened right the hdd would fry out. Preventing 20 gigs of licensed
material from theft
Now if you really cared, i guess you could h
This is getting way OT because I don't think anyone is running Linux on E250
hardware, but you _CAN_ disable STOP-A by turning the front panel switch to
the run position and hiding the keyswitch.
Regarding the PC RAM theft issue, I can only say YES has happened recently
and YES you need physical
On Fri, Sep 15, 2000 at 02:15:07PM +1100, Howard Lowndes wrote:
> I did hear a rumour that RAM theft is a problem in corporate
> environments. Does anyone have any first hand experience of just how
> prevelent it might be.
at uni, we had entire labs stripped of ram and the occasional
processor,