Displaying 20 results from an estimated 104 matches for "prejudices".
2017 Mar 08
3
From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
On 08/03/17 11:10, James Hogarth wrote:
> On 8 March 2017 at 10:58, Giles Coochey <giles at coochey.net> wrote:
>>
>> On 08/03/17 10:52, John Hodrien wrote:
>>>
>>> It means you're stuck in your own hand crafted niche. Which is fine, but
>>> it's
>>> up to you to maintain the niche, or you find yourself using obsolete tools
2006 Sep 07
3
comments on handbook chapter
``You do not want to overbuild your security or you will interfere
with the detection side, and detection is one of the single most
important aspects of any security mechanism. For example, it makes
little sense to set the schg flag (see chflags(1)) on every system
binary because while this may temporarily protect the binaries, it
prevents an attacker who has broken in from making an easily
2016 May 06
4
Resuming the discussion of establishing an LLVM code of conduct
On 6 May 2016 at 22:57, Tanya Lattner <tanyalattner at llvm.org> wrote:
> The major weapon of harassers is arguing whether something is actually
> harassing. It is difficult to enforce a CoC if you have to have a month long
> nasty argument about whether it was violated. It burns out people like you.
The major weapon about enforcers is *not* wanting to argue.
Harassment is a very
2007 Aug 24
1
Strange behavior from OO Writer
...ssor).
Today, it will not open. I copied it to a new file, and it opened
fine. I edited it, updated it and closed it. Then I tried deleting
the original file and copying the new one to the old name. Won't
open. Renamed again, and it opens fine.
WTF???? Does OO and/or the writer have name prejudices that develop?
Thanks.
mhr
2007 Sep 24
2
ANNOUNCE: Facter 1.3.8
...at:
https://reductivelabs.com/downloads/facter/facter-1.3.8.tgz
I''ll be going to RubyForge and FreshMeat to do the announcements
next. Hopefully the packagers will get the real work done now.
--
A great many people think they are thinking when they are merely
rearranging their prejudices. -- William James
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Luke Kanies | http://reductivelabs.com | http://madstop.com
2007 Mar 19
3
certificate trouble
Hi Puppet-Team,
first thanks for this great configuration management tool !
My name is Matt and i am on creating a puppet plugin for openQRM.
The basic framework is already existing and working well so far.
Now, after having it working ok once i now ran into a problem that
my puppet-clients do not get their configuration any more from the
puppetmasterd. What i saw on the puppetmasterd logs is :
2008 Nov 11
2
[LLVMdev] Validating LLVM
> to a testsuite, we can use them for validation. But I wouldn't want to
> require a validation to pass some set of random tests that shifts each test
> cycle.
This is easy to fix: just specify a starting seed for the PRNG.
However I think you should get past your prejudice against tests that
shift each cycle, since changing tests have the advantage of increased
test coverage.
2009 Apr 23
3
AGI PHP script
...contents of this information is
prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please notify the
sender immediately by "reply to sender only" message and destroy all
electronic and hard copies of the communication, including attachments.
"Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen."
-- Albert Einstein
"Once you can accept the universe as matter expanding into nothing that
is something,wearing stripes with plaid comes easy." -- Albert Einstein
"I know a little of everything, but a lot of nothing"
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2013 Feb 02
1
Choice of text for intermediate level R programming course
The Subject line mostly says it. I'm designing it as a semester-long, 3
hours per week, course
that takes in students who got the basics of R in stats classes, but don't
really know how to
program in it. Translation: if their own examples don't look enough like
examples from
previous work, they're stumped.
Does anybody have a text for an intermediate R course (but not too
2015 Oct 14
11
RFC: Second draft of an LLVM Community Code of Conduct
Greetings all,
First off, thanks to everyone who contributed to the initial discussion
thread. Judging by the responses from that thread, there seems to pretty
broad interest in pursuing this. There also seem to be a few concerns. =]
I'm including an updated draft based on the feedback, and I'll also try to
break down the major points I've seen of discussion. Sorry for the long
email,
2004 Aug 06
2
do darkice and shout play together well
Mixice (www.lns.com/papers/mixice) does. I have it running on
FreeBSD 4.x machines for KKSF, KPFA, KFCF, etc. for a live MP3
stream (icecast 1.x.x). I will have an OGG version of it soon as
we have some demand for better quality streams.
Tim
On Thu, Nov 07, 2002 at 09:36:16PM -0500, Jim wrote:
> ok then what runs reliably on a freeBSD system? ices?
>
> On Thursday, November 7, 2002,
2002 Jun 10
3
OpenSSH with slow login
Hi,
I have installed Openssh on a HP-UX 11.00 and I am having a problem. It
lasts 5 minutes to login, after I enter my login and password.
I try to connect from a Windows machine having a Tera Term SSH client to the
HP UX with the OpenSSH server ?
Why does it take so long time (5 minutes) to establish a connection from a
remote machine to this openssh server ?
When I do Telnet to the same
2002 Dec 12
4
sum a list of vectors
In Mathematica there is a neat feature, where you can change the head of a list from "list" to say "+" and obtain a sum of the list elements.
I can't find a way to sum a list of vectors of same length or list of matrices of the same dimension and was curious if something like that exists in R. do.call("+",list) doesn't work because "+" accepts only
2006 Jan 09
4
Lack of support of Stored Procedures is a Show Stopper
In my opinion most mature/complex client/server or n-tier applications
using SQL Server, Oracle, or MySQL, use stored procedures.
Without support (except by use of the execute method) for Stored
Procedures, Ruby on Rails or MonoRail is a Show Stopper. We are unable
to effectively use Ruby On Rails as all access to the db is using Stored
Procedures.
This does not mean that we are unable to use
2016 May 06
2
Resuming the discussion of establishing an LLVM code of conduct
On 6 May 2016 at 22:21, Tanya Lattner via llvm-dev
<llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote:
>> How many is "many, many", actually? How many of these are really in fear, how many are just trying to impose their mindset without actually planning to contribute in earnest, how many are so fearful that they should really seek professional help?
>
> And this is illustrating my
2006 Aug 30
6
dovecot with Calendar or Contacts?
When I attempted to import my Contacts list into dovecot, my mail
client told me that the IMAP server did not support "Special" folders.
Is there a way to to do the contacts, or sync up Contacts & Calendar from a
database or something else?
I'm using both Thunderbird and Outlook.
Thanks.
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2008 Nov 11
0
[LLVMdev] Validating LLVM
On Monday 10 November 2008 22:17, John Regehr wrote:
> Lately our random C program generator has seemed quite successful at
> catching regressions in llvm-gcc that the test suite misses. I'd suggest
> running some fixed number of random programs as part of the validation
> suite. On a fastish quad core I can test about 25,000 programs in 24
The problem with random tests is that
2008 Nov 11
0
[LLVMdev] Validating LLVM
>> to a testsuite, we can use them for validation. But I wouldn't want to
>> require a validation to pass some set of random tests that shifts each test
>> cycle.
>
> This is easy to fix: just specify a starting seed for the PRNG.
...which defeats much of the point of random testing.
> However I think you should get past your prejudice against tests that
>
2017 Mar 09
0
From Networkmanager to self managed configuration files
Did I see an implicit "do as Red Hat says or else" there somewhere? Not appropriate. Linux is not Windows (yet). In the heat of the moment it may easily be forgotton that Linux is all about choice. We choose to run CentOS, and we choose to run it the way we see fit. We appreciate the efforts that go into the *Community* *Enterprise* OS, and if you have dealt with buggy crap like Ubuntu
2006 May 02
1
RE: Is Xen affected by this x86 hardware security hole?
> A better solution would be to have a kernel module that
> provides services to the X server, but this would require
> more code per platform, which is partly why it wasn''t done
> like this... *sigh*
Isn''t this what the kernel /dev/fbdev driver does?
If you''re running an fbdev Xserver you shouldn''t need to give the
Xserver io or mmio