search for: heafty

Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "heafty".

2005 Dec 13
6
compaq r4000 /proc/cpuinfo reports 997 and should be 2400
Hi I have a compaq R4000 with the 2.4GIG AMD 64 bit. 4000+ rated. proc cpuinfo reports cpu Mhz as 997.481 Do I have to run the 64 bit version to have things run correctly? I just have the normal 4.2 loaded at this time. The laptop seems slow for 4000+ as reflected by the cpu Mhz also. Any thoughts on running the 32 bit version of 4.2 vs the 64 bit version of 4.2? Jerry
2007 Jun 26
1
(no subject)
Hello, I am on a page that lists 78 items and can only show 25 per page, so there are links for each page of results and a "Next >" link. I''d like to get Mechanize to follow the Next link but the link looks like this: <a class=''searchlinks'' href=''javascript:lnkclick(2);''>Next ></a> If I try to "click" the link,
2007 Jun 29
0
(no subject)
...exception. At this point I am using all sorts of fun regular expressions to parse the Javascript and send the appropriate values to the page with a WWW::Mechanize.post call. Is there an easier way? Thanks. Not yet, I don''t think. Javascript support would be awesome, but it''s a heafty beast to tackle. The last time I needed to do javascript stuff, i basically ended up using a combination of regexps and lots of code tracing to make the same requests that the javascript would have made. Charles is a handy tool for viewing the final request. -Mat _________________________________...
2005 May 20
1
Re: Hi, Bryan; was: Re: pronunciation? <snip> -- don't shoot the messenger ...
...it comes to actual donations and endeavors, they are very, very, _very_ proprietary. IBM's entire solutions are built upon proprietary tiers with little-to-no standards, whereas HP and Sun are at least "open standard," and HP's frameworks are increasingly open source based (with heafty donations). What I'm trying to say here is that IBM is offering "vendor lock-in" no different than Microsoft from a solutions standpoint, which matches the fact that they are porting their proprietary software to Linux and leaving it proprietary. Other than some community endeavors...