Comment Re:Not all religions are bad (Score 5, Insightful) 910
You'd think the almighty creator of the heavens and the earth and everything that resides therein would be able to, y'know, get his book of rules right first time round. Wouldn't you?
You'd think the almighty creator of the heavens and the earth and everything that resides therein would be able to, y'know, get his book of rules right first time round. Wouldn't you?
Gah. Beaten to it. By an hour.
Balls.
Are they out of order?
<scottish_accent>
10 coos in a field. Which one's closest to Iraq?
Coo 8.
10 coos in a field. Which one's on holiday?
The one with the wee calf.
</scottish_accent>
3 minutes? Aww, bless.
A fully configured Sun E25k takes over an hour to boot.
It's pretty much just a microphone at the base station and an ultra high frequency speaker on the aircraft, so not much.
Still trying to figure out what went wrong.
--
ilikejam
CEO, Acoustic Data Transceivers Inc.
My company sold DARPA the telemetry transceivers, and I'm pretty sure there was nothing wrong with them.
--
ilikejam
CEO, Acoustic Data Transceivers Inc.
Refer them to the reply given in Arkell v. Pressdram
Sometimes I go into work and boot up a Sun Ultra1, just for kicks.
Except it's not for kicks, and I don't have to boot the thing. Because we're still running Critical Infrastructure Applications on it.
Sober up?
And not owning a car leaves you with more cash for tasty, tasty booze. Everybody's happy!
They still making PCLs? I thought they ran out of prefamulated amulite years ago.
Unix is meant to be difficult - it keeps idiots out of the datacentre.
Ha ha, only serious.
Points 1,2,6,7 are exactly why you want this stuff in a DB: backed up, replicated off-site, consistent, and up-to-date.
If you want a hard copy, extract it from the DB and print it out (and always with a datestamp/index so you know how far out of date the ex-tree version is).
All excellent advice except one thing: Do not, ever, use spreadsheets for network configuration data. Network config matters, and shit that matters goes in a database.
Something Free like OpenNetAdmin is a very decent start; but if the OP has an unlimited budget, I'm sure there are plenty of capable commercial applications which will manage the network config much better than a Bunch Of Spreadsheets.
And that is all I have to say about that.
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?