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Author Message
25 new of 219 responses total.
twenex
response 125 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 16:23 UTC 2005

That is, SunOS =>5 is aka Solaris.
tsty
response 126 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 16:46 UTC 2005

re #107 ..... here is the stuff about that university :
  
Penn State University has just told its 
80,000 students to switch to an  
alternative browser such as Firefox, Mozilla, 
Opera, or Safari.  They  
are urging their students to 
stop using Internet Explorer.

Go here for the entire article in Information Week:

<http://www.informationweek.com/showArticle.jhtml; 
jsessionid=MJHKZY2Y4HQ5OQSNDBCCKHSCJUMEKJVN?articleID=55301109> 
  
  
obviously, the url needs to be pasted twice into your location
field, minus the <> stuff.
  

you will get this headline:
  
Penn State Tells 80,000 Students To Chuck IE
  

lovely headline .......
  

mfp
response 127 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 16:54 UTC 2005

http://www.jewsforjesus.org/ (site only viewable in ie)
rcurl
response 128 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 17:00 UTC 2005

I'll help TS out - try http://tinyurl.com/63zy2 in place of that long url.

What's going on eith Mozilla/Netscape? The article doesn't mention Netscape
as an alternative, though I've gotten the sense it is now related in some
fashion to Mozilla. 
gull
response 129 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 17:05 UTC 2005

Mozilla and Firefox are based on the same rendering engine.  I'm not
sure about Netscape; I think it forked off a couple years ago, but I
could be wrong.
twenex
response 130 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 17:10 UTC 2005

Mozilla began as an open source fork of Netscape; Firefox began as a
webbrowsing alternative to Mozilla, which is an Internet user's kitchen sink.
rcurl
response 131 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 17:15 UTC 2005

The "About Netscape" under Netscape 7.1 says

"Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; PPC Mac OS X Mach-O; en-US; rv:1.4) Gecko/20030624
Netscape/7.1"

and

"Copyright 2000-2003 Netscape Communications Corporation. Portions of this
code are copyrighted by Contributors to the Mozilla codebase under the
Mozilla Public License and Netscape Public License."

So, is Netscape 7.1 the same as Mozilla 5.0?
remmers
response 132 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 19:24 UTC 2005

Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that the latest Netscape
and Mozilla use the same "rendering engine" (Gecko) -- meaning that
web pages will look the same in both browsers -- but differ in other
details such as the user interface (menus, toolbars, etc.).
juicy
response 133 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 6 19:44 UTC 2005

after Netscape 4, the entire codebase was thrown out, and they started from
scratch.  The project was handed to a semi-independent, non-profit (I think)
organisation, the Mozilla Foundation, and the source opened.  Mozilla was
released as a development version, starting w/ version .1 (or, before that,
Milestones counting up to I think 18); every so often, especially quality
Mozilla releases have been forked as official Netscape releases, starting with
NS 6.0.

At some point in the last several years, it was decided that instead of
offering the entire kitchen sink at once, users should be able to just get
the parts they want and build their own sink at home, so now there are the
Moz Firefox (browser), Thunderbird (e-mail), Sunbird (calendar), and Lightning
(calendar/address book synchro, I think) projects; you can also still get the
entire package at once.  You can read more about Mozilla at
http://www.mozilla.org/about/ ; there's probably a link to a page about the
history of the Mozilla project around there somewhere, although I don't see
it.
cross
response 134 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 7 04:02 UTC 2005

This response has been erased.

tsty
response 135 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 9 08:49 UTC 2005

re 128 .. thakxx rcurl.
naftee
response 136 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 12 03:56 UTC 2005

http://www.omegahat.org/rcurl/
rcurl
response 137 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 12 06:24 UTC 2005

It seems to be case sensitive. Try http://www.omegahat.org/RCurl/
I suppose, eventually, everyone here will be a Package...
albaugh
response 138 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 12 18:22 UTC 2005

For users of "mail", here is something I discovered is different about the
mail program on nextgrex:

R [message list]                reply to message sender(s).
r [message list]                reply to message sender(s) and all recipients.

Use of just lower case "r" annoyingly adds you (the recipient) to the reply
distribution.  Use capital R instead.
naftee
response 139 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 13 05:12 UTC 2005

re 137 Yeah, whoops.  Silly me for thinking all URLs were not case-sensitive.
juicy
response 140 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 13 06:02 UTC 2005

nope, just the domain.
gelinas
response 141 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 21 23:56 UTC 2005

Grex will be unavailable from 12:00 to approximately 15:00 tomorrow, 
22 January 2005, while it is moved from the Pumpkin to provide.net.

The old machine will move back to its old IP address, but logins (and mail)
will be disabled; it is moving back to provide DNS service for our domain
until our domain registration is updated.
mfp
response 142 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 01:02 UTC 2005

pwho
bbs
r

r






w
pwho
bbs


bbs


pwho
keesan
response 143 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 04:39 UTC 2005

Does this mean grex will be available via the website using the old machine?
gelinas
response 144 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 05:04 UTC 2005

I don't quite see how you reached that conclusion, but no: www.cyberspace is
an alias for grex.cyberspace, and so will move along with grex.  I mentioned
logins because _some_people will probably try to connect by IP address
instead of domain name.
keesan
response 145 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 05:18 UTC 2005

Why is it not possible to hook up the old grex to the same ISP connection and
DSL modem to check if the problem is in the computer or in something else
(such as the DSL modem or the connection to the ISP)?  Would this interfere
with using it as a DNS server?  And why do we need a DNS server if grex is
not working?
gelinas
response 146 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 06:20 UTC 2005

oldGrex _is_ on the same connection as the current grex.  I log into it
regularly.  However, since I'm the only user, there is not much going on.
There are other machines on the network as well, which other staff members
use regularly.  They have mentioned seeing similar behaviour there.

We need a DNS server so that people can find our machine by its name.  This
is one of the functions of the main machine.  However, DNS "bootstraps" from
an IP address.  Right now, that IP address is 216.93.104.34.  Until I can get
the new IP address registered, and so get the 'bootstrap' fixed, we have to
keep a DNS server running on the old address.
keesan
response 147 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 11:54 UTC 2005

Similar or ientical behavior?  Could we have two different problems at once?
The old problem was 2 minute freezes every few minutes.  This is 10 sec
freezes every couple seconds.  The old problem occurred during telnet, not
dialup.  What is the motehrboard maker and model?  Please email
keesan@freeshell.org
gelinas
response 148 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 22 21:11 UTC 2005

ASUS, and I looked at the capacitors; they are fine.

Grex is now in the new location.

It will take a bit longer to get the dial-ins re-directed.
naftee
response 149 of 219: Mark Unseen   Jan 23 02:17 UTC 2005

gelinas, why don't you refer ms. keesan to a text on networking, and save
yourself some time and energy?  I hate to see you stressing out.
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