it can sort & be operated thru 'threading'!
That's my point! Imagine being out for 3 days and i got almost 100kb of mails aside
from unsolicited 'meatspreads' & non-stop commercialism??
Am in the midst of structuring an RDBM for a net application & i understood ur 'tips',
i guess you have done
The link is fine, and it can sort by subject (what I guess you are
calling title) or by thread, which is even more powerful.
Cheers,
Cliff
On Monday, Jan 20, 2003, at 22:03 US/Pacific, d* Lin wrote:
Thanks for your comments.
There's an important point that i may have not included, the point is
Interesting. This url worked for me just a couple minutes ago!
Alternatively, go to www.bawug.org, click on "Communicate", and then
click on "wireless" under "Archives" near the bottom of the page.
Regards,
Greg DesBrisay
> -As for the URL suggested by a gud Bawug friend;
> http://lists.bawu
Thanks for your comments.
There's an important point that i may have not included, the point is 'just to INCLUDE
ONLY the message title of each contributory list/s' on outbound Bawug mail' with such
title 'Linked' to the Bawug webDB. With that, even for an aggregate total of more than
30 posted
On Mon, Jan 20, 2003 at 08:35:10PM -0800, Greg DesBrisay wrote:
> On Mon, 2003-01-20 at 15:04, Tim Pozar wrote:
> > And it doesn't take into account refraction and curvature of the earth.
>
> That's absolutely right. You have do curvature and Fresnel-zone
> clearance calculations by hand with sim
Cliff Skolnick writes:
> Has a cold start been done at this temperature? Turn the unit off for
> a few hours then try and turn it on. This is usually where things fall
> apart, just after a power failure in the cold.
No, but that's interesting to know, should we have a power failure.
In an
Has a cold start been done at this temperature? Turn the unit off for
a few hours then try and turn it on. This is usually where things fall
apart, just after a power failure in the cold.
Cheers,
Cliff
On Monday, Jan 20, 2003, at 21:23 US/Pacific, Russell Nelson wrote:
So far, my neighbor's
Something like what you're asking for already exists in the form of the
archives for this list at http://lists.bawug.org/pipermail/wireless/ .
Will that solve your problem?
Greg
On Mon, 2003-01-20 at 21:11, d* Lin wrote:
> Can BAWUG makes "a day's transmission" more friendlier
> & more manag
So far, my neighbor's Linksys WAP11 in client mode has had no trouble
with sub-zero temperatures. See "burnetts quality" for the ap-mrtg
plot, and "temperature" for the, well, temperature.
http://desk.crynwr.com/mrtg/
--
-russ nelson http://russnelson.com | You get prosperity whe
Can BAWUG makes "a day's transmission" more friendlier
& more manageable for subscribers by consolidating a days outbound messages into one
transmission or split that to no more than 2 messages of equal KBs of mail??
It was all 'Too Frequent' for recipient like me to get more than two mails for a
EN,
OK, just about any modern hand-held GPS receiver will give you the
heading between two points (as others have described today on the BAWUG
list), just like you want.
A word of caution: a compass is usually useless on top of a building.
The steel in buildings throws compass readings way off
On Mon, 2003-01-20 at 15:04, Tim Pozar wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 19, 2003 at 11:49:01PM -0800, Greg DesBrisay wrote:
> > Sure, I do this all the time.
> > GPS units work great (as long as you're outdoors and you're not
> > surrounded by too many tall buildings).
> > Just about any brand works fine.
> >
Actually, most power strips don't use MOV. They use TVS (transient
voltage suppressor) that have high capacitance. So, MOV does not harm
HomePlug signals.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Joel Jaeggli
Sent: Monday, January 20, 2003 1:57 P
yes, i think what you want to do is get a "bearing".
to do this travel to Point A and mark it by pressing
the 'mark' button. When it asks
for a 'label' call it "TowerA" or something like that.
now you have made what is called a 'waypoint' which just
a neat way of saying you have stored a LAT/LON
On Sun, Jan 19, 2003 at 11:49:01PM -0800, Greg DesBrisay wrote:
> Sure, I do this all the time.
> GPS units work great (as long as you're outdoors and you're not
> surrounded by too many tall buildings).
> Just about any brand works fine.
> Most of my experience has been with Garmin gear, and olde
On Mon, 20 Jan 2003, Elsa Chan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Actually, it is because the power strips often have a built-in surge
> suppressor which filters out the entire signal. It is recommended that
> you don't use any power strip...instead, plug directly into the power
> outlet.
The surge protector po
I should have mentioned that this was with those really cheap power
strips that don't mention anything about surge suppressors, and in
general I tend to avoid those. I was thinking that there was maybe
something to do with the switch. Strips not labeled with surge
suppressors are also problem
Hi,
Actually, it is because the power strips often have a built-in surge
suppressor which filters out the entire signal. It is recommended that
you don't use any power strip...instead, plug directly into the power
outlet.
Best,
Elsa
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EM
I've played around with it a little bit, and have had some success.
First, just give it a try and it may work. There is no formula that I
have found to figure out if a link will work or not. Second, one thing
that seems to effect it more than you would expect is power strips.
Using power st
Has anyone had experience with Linksys powerline networking? Is it
reliable/fast/easy?
Thanks!
-Gus
Gus Welter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
c| (254) 715-2964
Persnickety Tim's Coffee
http://www.ptims.com
p| (254) 836-4599
f | (254) 836-9203
For great coffee and coffee gifts, go to ptims.com!
--
gene
Title: Looking for wireless Guru
Want to talk about outdoor obstructions and 5.8ghz point to multipoint. Please call if you have lots of experience and an opinion.
Tom Pleickhardt
Sr. Manager, Infrastructure
The Irvine Company
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(949) 720-2571
Hello, I have
a question. At http://www.cablemodeminfo.com/quicktip-cabling-power-ethernet.html-ssi the site describes what appears to be a
quick and easy hack for sending power over Ethernet. I am using a dlink
900AP+, in AP mode attached to my computer by 15 meters of Cat 5
cable. T
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