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jep
questions and answers Mark Unseen   Jan 6 20:35 UTC 2006

This item is for questions and answers of a general nature.
139 responses total.
jep
response 1 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 20:49 UTC 2006

I just found a coin.  A co-worker tells me it's Russian.  It has milled
edges and is slightly larger than a dime.  It's brownish/greenish colored.  

On one side it has a small circle with a hammer and sickle in it, and
this circle is surrounded by what appear to be sheafs of wheat wrapped
in something.  At the top is a tiny star.  On the bottom are the letters
"CCCP".

The other side says "15" and what looks like "KOHEEK" but the "H" looks
more like a tall "pi" character.  It says "1978", and the entire side is
bordered by two sheafs of wheat.

Is this a 15 kopek coin?  I'll probably give it to my kid, but I'd like
to tell him what it is when I do so.
klg
response 2 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 20:50 UTC 2006

Do you like Ike?
kingjon
response 3 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 20:55 UTC 2006

Is there any way to check the terminal settings on the computer I'm SSHing or
telnetting in from, in my .profile here on Grex for example?

mcnally
response 4 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 21:11 UTC 2006

 re #1:  Yes, it sounds like a 15 kopek coin.
         http://www3.tky.3web.ne.jp/~jafarr/USSR.htm

 A friend who was born in the Soviet Union told me an interesting story
 about the 15 kopek coin, which I've found a version of here:
 http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/1.04/russnet_pr.html

 Apparently all the payphones in Russia at one time were built to accept
 15 kopek coins, but when the Soviet Union dissolved and the Russian govt
 stopped controlling the economy, kopek-denominated coins were worth so
 little they stopped minting them.  However -- they still have millions
 of pay phones throughout the country that are built to only work on the
 old 15 kopek coins.  Consequently, such coins trade at many times their
 face value because they've essentially stopped being used as a currency
 unit and have switched to mainly being traded as a phone token.
tod
response 5 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 22:12 UTC 2006

THe phones in Romania use irdeto encryption cards just like many subscription
satellite tv receivers.  Hacking at its finest, say I.  15 kopek sounds like
a jazz band.
  

Since this is the question item:
What is the naming convention/format to get your mp3 recognized by "album"
and "author" and "song" on a Sansa mp3 player?
jep
response 6 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 02:48 UTC 2006

re resp:4: Yep, my coin looks like that.
100 kopeks per ruble... and a ruble is worth a couple of cents.  Heh.  I
didn't exactly strike it rich here, did I?
keesan
response 7 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 03:45 UTC 2006

It used to be (artificially) one ruble per dollar.  What looks like CCCP
transliterates SSSR - soyuz sovetskikh socialistickikh respublik- which
translates as union of soviet socialist republics, or USSR.  Romania also had
15-something coins (and I think also 30s').  Do they still?  I have a paper
ruble somewhere.
gull
response 8 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 04:05 UTC 2006

Someone based at the Auburn Municipal Airport (aka. Dick Scobee Field)
likes Antonov An-2s.  There's two of them in good condition parked
there, in easy view of the street, and I recently saw a tired-looking
one having its fabric stripped off, as well.  It still had the "CCCP"
markings on the wings and something in Cyrillic on the fuselage. 
They're kind of unmistakable aircraft -- there just aren't that many
biplanes that size around.
naftee
response 9 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 05:43 UTC 2006

i had the goofiest backpack in grade 1.

once i forgot it in my classroom.  i went almost home, turned and ran back
to school, and found it on my chair which was on my desk.  when i walked 
into the classroom, the teacher was talking to another person and i don't
think she noticed me walk in.  i think i concluded at the time that she was
waiting for me to pick up my bag and was all going to be like, "you forgot
your bag!".

but now i guess she was just chilling there after school or something.
bhoward
response 10 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 06:39 UTC 2006

Re#3 You can insert a line:
   env

near the beginning of your .profile or .login file to printout what
your environment looks like before the standard system profiles are
sourced.  

A number of environment variables are or may be passed from your
local machine to grex when you first sign on via ssh or telnet.
Typically things like your TERM environment variable will be
initialized with whatever value TERM was on the originating side
of the connection.
gull
response 11 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 06:49 UTC 2006

Okay, here's a weird one. 
 
When I moved from Michigan to Washington, I brought a FreeBSD system 
with me.  When I set it up here, I naturally changed /etc/localtime to 
reflect Pacific time instead of Eastern.  The 'date' command shows 
times in PST, like I'd expect.  However, my user account's cron jobs 
still run on EST.  Where does cron get its idea of an account's proper 
time zone? 
 
mcnally
response 12 of 139: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 07:48 UTC 2006

 Is anything in your account setting the TZ environment variable to EST?
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