Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "candour".
2002 Jul 08
0
Re: Candid comment
Peter Dalgaard writes:
> Bill.Venables at cmis.csiro.au writes:
>
........
> > [WNV] Now there's an insight! In fact I think that once you get used to
> > the style you get to appreciate it. The commercial world substitutes
> > politeness for candour. True candour can be disconcerting but it does get
> > the message across much quicker.
> Also, this has less to do with free software than with the Usenet
> (and general academic) traditions of dealing with students. It is
> necessary to avoid actually doing their homework for t...
2002 Jul 09
0
Re: Candid comment
...Peter Dalgaard writes:
> Bill.Venables at cmis.csiro.au writes:
>
........
> > [WNV] Now there's an insight! In fact I think that once you get used
to
> > the style you get to appreciate it. The commercial world substitutes
> > politeness for candour. True candour can be disconcerting but it does
get
> > the message across much quicker.
> Also, this has less to do with free software than with the Usenet
> (and general academic) traditions of dealing with students. It is
> necessary to avoid actually doing their homework for the...
2006 Mar 07
9
Oh this is bad.... bindaddr and rtp traffic
I have a configuration where RTP traffic is going out interface pub0, and coming back into through pub1.
I have bindaddr=0.0.0.0 in sip.conf, and a netstat -an shows:
udp 0 788 0.0.0.0:5060 0.0.0.0:*
which means that Asterisk is listening on all addresses (on all interfaces?).
Anyway, when the RTP traffic comes back in on interface pub0, Asterisk does nothing with it. A
2002 Jul 06
3
one-sample binomial test
Hi everyone,
Here's how I solved a problem for my stats class. I'm pretty sure I
understand what's going on, but I wonder if there's a more direct way to
solve it.
Problem summary:
A recent poll indicated that Candidate A is leading B with 55% of the
vote. How many voters need to be surveyed to ensure a margin of error of
+/- 2.5% with 99% confidence.
Here's what I did: