On 06/03/2008, Andrew Oakley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In particular, my config is suitable for very cheap VPS hosting accounts
such as vpsville.ca , tektonic.net , cheapvps.co.uk and so forth -
basically your own root-access Internet server for less than five quid a
month!
Has anyone
On Fri, Mar 07, 2008 at 09:12:46AM +, Lucy wrote:
On 06/03/2008, Andrew Oakley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In particular, my config is suitable for very cheap VPS hosting accounts
such as vpsville.ca , tektonic.net , cheapvps.co.uk and so forth -
basically your own root-access Internet
On 07/03/2008, Alan Pope [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Personally I use bitfolk (UK based) and the service is excellent. They have
just put a new server in place so there is now some capacity, but it's
filling up fast! :)
Looks good but so far the others are doing better on price and
bandwidth
Alan Pope wrote:
Personally I use bitfolk (UK based) and the service is excellent.
http://bitfolk.com/plans.html
Oooh, very impressive. Good specifications and well priced for the UK,
too, provided you don't need much bandwidth (30GB default cap).
Lucy wrote:
On 07/03/2008, Alan Pope [EMAIL
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Daniel Lamb wrote:
Hi does anyone have experience with any groupware apps?
What would you suggest as the best one for a small business server
replacement?
Regards,
Daniel
Daniel,
I've had a lot of sucess using horde. Unfortunately, due
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 9:27 PM, Andrew Oakley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kris Douglas wrote:
Sounds cool, but I bet there are much better replacements for MySQL,
like Postgres, which runs in quite a low mem footprint.
Indeed - and I'd start with SQLite which requires no server and is
Just found this one the Internet
http://elgoog.rb-hosting.de/index.cgi?dir=/page=/linux, shame it doesn't
work anymore.
--
Registered Linux User #466407 http://counter.li.org
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/
I've tried to edit ossec.conf file in /var/ossec/etc but was not
allowed to save changes.
Before editing the file I had stopped OSSEC executing sudo
/etc/init.d/ossec stop. Then tried both gksudo gedit
/var/ossec/etc/ossec.conf and sudo -s and then as root tried to
edit the file.
In both
On Fri, Mar 7, 2008 at 10:23 PM, James Saveker [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mark Fraser wrote:
Just found this one the Internet
http://elgoog.rb-hosting.de/index.cgi?dir=/page=/linux, shame it doesn't
work anymore.