Displaying 5 results from an estimated 5 matches for "barish".
Did you mean:
baris
2005 Nov 22
2
Can't browse \Windows from Linux
I have Samba working nicely on my network, except that there are a few
folders, including \Windows, on the XP machine that I can't browse from
Linux. I can see and enter the folders, but the contents are null. What
is preventing me from getting to these folders?
--
Jeffrey Barish
2005 Nov 12
1
Automounting Windows XP share on Linux
...39;t know what effect the $ has, but otherwise this entry is correct.
Does anyone know why I am getting the other entries? Is there anything I
can do to Windows XP to suppress these bogus responses? If anyone else has
a Windows XP server, do you get the same stuff back from smbclient?
--
Jeffrey Barish
2009 May 28
1
Interaction plots as lines or bars?
Dear r-helpers,
An editor has suggested that I use bar plots to capture an interaction
of two 2-level factors and an interaction of a 2 by 3 factorial
experiment. (It would seem that there's a fear that someone might try
to interpolate between, e.g., 'male' and 'female'.) In general it
seems to me that an interaction plot with lines is easier to read, and
not likely
2005 Dec 01
1
Printer access denied problems
I've had a nagging problem for a long time where I cannot connect to my
printers from Windows 2000 or XP. I'm using CUPS printing and Samba
3.0.14. I've seen people report a similar problem where they can print,
but can't open the queue or manage the printers. The message you get is
"Operation could not be complete. Access is denied."
I found the problem to be
2009 Jun 01
1
installing sn package
...lot with lines is easier to read, and
> not likely to mislead. Does anyone know if and where this has been
> discussed?
>
Editors are paid by the ink.
I have never seen anything else than lines for such a plot. However, I once
was successful in using somewhat wider lines that looked barish. Which made
me believe that the "paid by the ink" is not too bad an analogy: editors
fear graphics that look too empty, so give them their black. I am sure
Hadley will argue that this is the reason why ggplot2 by default has a gray
background.
Dieter
--
View this message in context:...