similar to: As Kevin Fleming says "So long, and thanks for all the fish!", we say thank you - and look to the future

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "As Kevin Fleming says "So long, and thanks for all the fish!", we say thank you - and look to the future"

2013 May 16
0
AstriCon 2013 (our 10th AstriCon) needs YOU!
As we plan for our 10th AstriCon, which will be in Atlanta, GA the week commencing October 7th, we want to make sure that our conference sessions are the best they've ever been! That's why we need YOU to submit a speaking proposal - to share you experiences and ideas around Asterisk! The best sessions at AstriCon are always those from the Community that show what you've been up
2012 Sep 12
0
Asterisk in the London Olympics
I am looking for any information of the possible use of Asterisk in any of the systems used by/for the London Olympics. Please get in contact if you know of any such use(s). Thank you, David Digium logo David Duffett Digium, Inc.??? Director, Worldwide Asterisk Community 6 Landscape Close, Weston on the Green ??? Bicester, Oxfordshire OX25 3SX ??? UK direct/fax: ? +1 256 428 6119 ??
2015 Jun 30
1
Help With Physical Layer
What response do you get to *CLI> pri show spans ? On 30 June 2015 at 09:34, Tony Kasule <timotsmith at gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > Anyone to help me with this issue? It has never worked :( > > On Wed, May 20, 2015 at 11:34 AM, Tony Kasule <timotsmith at gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Hello users, >> >> I have a Digium Te235 and asterisk 13
2004 Dec 23
0
Is there a fix available for CAN-2003-0190(with test program)
> Sergio Gelato wrote; >> I see that the rest of that function has an "if (problem) goto out;" >> after >> every krb5 library call. Doesn't that also introduce measurable time >> differences? Interesting. > I wrote a test case with expect to measure the time difference for valid and invalid user with the same workaround as said before. It seems to
2017 Apr 15
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On 09/04/17 14:39, Anthony K wrote: > > So, at which stage are you in w/ regards to adopting systemd? Are you > still ridiculing it, violently opposed to it, or have you mellowed to it? Thanks for all those that responded. systemd still appears to be a sore topic. systemd is still coping a whole lot of ridicule but not so violent opposition. Can't say I understand why, but you
2017 Apr 16
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
> Indeed. I think the assertion "OSS is somehow safer because of community > audit" is a logical fallacy. How would one go about "auditing" in the first > place? There are tools to audit source code for problems - OSS is safer *because* the source is available and can be audited. > Even if the various Intelligence agencies are not injecting > vulnerabilities
2010 Aug 12
0
Good bye (and thanks for all the fish)
The management decided to switch over to Zimbra so we will no longer be using Dovecot...which served us exceedingly well. May Timo and the Dovecot community prosper. Thanks for all the help from all of you in the years since our switch from UW-IMAP. -- "Grant us, in our direst need, the smallest gifts: the nail of the horseshoe, the pin of the axle, the feather at the pivot point, the
2017 Apr 19
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 5:21 AM, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote: > > On Mon, April 17, 2017 17:13, Warren Young wrote: > >> >> Also, I???ll remind the list that one of the *prior* times the systemd >> topic came up, I was the one reminding people that most of our jobs >> summarize as ???Cope with change.?? >> > > At some point
2017 Apr 16
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On 04/15/2017 04:46 AM, Pete Biggs wrote: > Not wishing to extend this thread further, but ... > >> There are conspiracy theories out there that the NSA is involved with >> bringing systemd to Linux so they can have easy access to *"unknown"* >> bugs - aka backdoors - to all Linux installations using systemd *[1]*. > They're conspiracy theories, and
2005 Nov 11
1
Xen/ia64 status update
Rather than cross-post, if you are interested in the following status information about Xen/ia64, please click-through: Xen/ia64 multiple domain support and SMP-Xen support NOW in xen-unstable! http://lists.xensource.com/archives/html/xen-ia64-devel/2005-11/msg00140 .html Xen/ia64 (paravirtualized dom0) overhead now at 1.7%!
2011 Aug 12
1
[LLVMdev] link missing for type based alias analysis
Sir, We are interested in implementing Type Based Alias Analysis(TBAA) in LLVM. This is prescribed as one of the projects in the Open Projects list of the LLVM website. One of the links in your page is not working. I am giving the link below http://www.ice.gelato.org/oct07/pres_pdf/gelato_ICE07oct_aliasing_isaev_intel.pdf Kindly send me any additional resources and suggestions you have on this
2017 Apr 24
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Apr 24, 2017, at 7:53 AM, Lamar Owen <lowen at pari.edu> wrote: > > James' point isn't the hardware cost, it's the people cost for retraining. Unless you?ve hired monkeys so that you must train them to do their tasks by rote, that is a soft cost, not a hard cost. If you?ve hired competent IT staff, they will indeed need some time to work out the differences, but they
2005 Jul 01
0
It is time to say thank you.
I would like to express my thanks to the many people who got together and developed the R project. The idea, and work, of organizing and, for no compensation, supporting an open software project must have been (and still be) daunting. It is clear that the availability of a free, high-quality programing environment for programming and statistical analysis has allowed people around the world to
2016 Aug 23
2
Dial and start music on hold after timeout
Maybe try progress() instead of answer () ?????? 23 ????? 2016 7:19 PM,? "Jean Aunis" <jean.aunis at prescom.fr> ???: > Thank you, I just tried your suggestion. Strangely, the announcement is > played only if I try to dial a SIP peer which is not available (not > registered to be more precise). If the SIP peer is available, I only get > the ring tone, and never hear
2017 Apr 16
3
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
> > There is no doubt that most security agencies have a long list of zero- >> day exploits in their toolbox - I would hazard to suggest that they >> wouldn't be doing their job if they didn't! But I seriously doubt they >> would commission exploitable code in something that is openly >> auditable. >> >> P. >> > > P., I used to think
2017 Apr 20
0
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Apr 20, 2017, at 7:33 AM, James B. Byrne <byrnejb at harte-lyne.ca> wrote: > > When a vendor ... fundamentally changes the way the administration > of an operating system is presented I?ve gotten the sense from this other part of the thread that the answer to my question, ?What are you moving to?? is FreeBSD. If you think FreeBSD system administration hasn?t changed over the
2016 Oct 05
0
Just want to say Thanks!!
Just want to thank everyone for their help. I finally got the virtualization going. I know you guys that do this for a living may not feel this way, but in the eyes of this guy, this is AWESOME!! Been doing linux as a hobby since Slackware 1.0, then moving to RH 2.x. I have a little website but it's a hosted site. Back in the early days, I previously tried doing it from home. Upgraded to
2017 Apr 19
2
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
On Mon, April 17, 2017 17:13, Warren Young wrote: > > Also, I???ll remind the list that one of the *prior* times the systemd > topic came up, I was the one reminding people that most of our jobs > summarize as ???Cope with change.??? > At some point 'coping with change' is discovered to consume a disproportionate amount of resources for the benefits obtained. In my sole
2017 Apr 15
5
OT: systemd Poll - So Long, and Thanks for All the fish.
Not wishing to extend this thread further, but ... > There are conspiracy theories out there that the NSA is involved with > bringing systemd to Linux so they can have easy access to *"unknown"* > bugs - aka backdoors - to all Linux installations using systemd *[1]*. They're conspiracy theories, and that's it. The bottom line is that in general people don't like
2007 Jun 26
2
RFC: multiple address spaces for one process
In a hosted VMM like LinuxOnLinux or UML, context switch time can be a major problem (as mmap when repeated for each guest page frame takes a long time). One solution is to allow the host kernel to keep a cache of address space contexts, and switch between them in a single operation. The attached patch is a start at this. It works well for LinuxOnLinux; but I'd be interested from the