like using vi to look at a config file you have no intention of editing
For that we use view of course.
And
I got the Programmers at Work book recently (picked it up in a second hand book sale). After reading the articles I looked up a few Wikipedia entries. John Page is not there at all. And PFS:FILE is mentioned only in passing in an entry on pfs:Write [sic] - in which Page is entirely absent.
I always thought XV was shut down for being the shareware everyone had but nobody ever paid for.
Hey! I paid for it!
The total charge was $25.00 plus $0.00 tax.
...
Contact: John Bradley
Email: xvcc@trilon.com
Receipt: [elided]
Anyone know how the measure this stuff?
Short term (human lifetime) by using GPS, VLBI and measurements of seismic activity.
Long term (earth lifetime) by using magnetic stripe lineations on the seafloor, hot-spot tracks (eg, the Hawaiian volcano chain) and other geologic indicators.
True, I suppose
... and the places where earthquakes occur are deep in the earth and not amenable to direct observation. Earthquake prediction, in the sense of saying when any specific event will occur, is a very hard problem.
Simply make the filesystem mark deleted files as "hide from directory listing, and really delete only if you need the space". Then add a couple of syscalls to examine these "recyclable" files and restore them to normal status.
Netware has a Salvage utility that relies on a filesystem with those attributes. It used to be called the Netware File System (yes, NFS). More recent versions are now called Novell Storage Services. Ported to SuSe now according to Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novell_Storage_Services/
Swath bathymetry is how the high resolution mapping is done.
http://woodshole.er.usgs.gov/operations/sfmapping/swath.htm
>The longest word I got was 'redrawerredrawers',
>which probably indicates that my wordfile is corrupted
I think you've found a bug
% grep '^redrawer'
redrawer
redrawerredrawers
redrawers
The three or four I listened to all sounded pretty similar. Still, I can imagine that some readers here might like them as ringtones...
"Luke, I'm yer father, eh. Come over to the dark side, you hoser." -- Dave Thomas, "Strange Brew"