Comment Re:Light cant pass thru walls (Score 3, Funny) 200
since when can't lasers pass through walls!?
since when can't lasers pass through walls!?
This is really great - I was setting up rsync and ssh on my parents computer a couple days ago as part of a backup system. I was having a problem with rsync hanging on a 2GB pst file, but the new cygwin brings rsync up to date, and whatdoya know... it works! Now my openbsd box happily backs up their stuff!
BSD rises from the dead... news at 10. BSD sighted at Apple and in the wild!
but how does any of that reflect on OpenBSD?
Of Speed: In my experience, testing hypothesis is better than untested presumptions. Also, is speed your only concern - is your server that highly utilized?
One example, OpenBSD chroot/jails Apache by default, Ubuntu doesn't. If someone hacks your website on OpenBSD they are limited to
Doing what others only dream... a scheduled release, early!
This will work great... until someone duplicates their warning popup, and take that poor customer off to a malware site!
not only that, but BTOS was command line driven in a way that linux/unix and windows can only dream of
BTOS is dead as far as I know. It's almost impossible to find anything on the internet about it...
except I do have a B28 at home that can run it... but that machine hasn't been powered on for years.
Yeah, this is obviously Verizon's fault.
The aggressive customer acquisition and retention training program clearly has too much bandwidth. Verizon cannot continue without bailouts.
Why didn't they spin up the drive to check for a disk, run the routine that doesn't spin the drive up and based on the results, adapt the result to the computer...
1) Build a collider 'thinggy'
2) Create a blackhole which consumes the entire universe... into a single point.
3) this causes a "Big Bang"
4) Big Bang re-creates 'life'
5) 'life' gets too smart for its own good - Goto step 1
either way, cut and paste the backup url links, supply user name, passord and your done. Make alittle more than alot of sense to me
"Just think, with VLSI we can have 100 ENIACS on a chip!" -- Alan Perlis