search for: sneaki

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 123 matches for "sneaki".

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2008 Apr 02
2
Sneaky Windows install through Wine
Hello. I tried to search for an answer to this question, but found it difficult to phrase in a way that wouldn't bury the pertinent information in an avalanche of more common usage situations. My situation is this: My work machine has Windows XP on one partition, and Ubuntu 7.10 on another. Windows is so horribly locked down that I can't install a lot of the software that I need to do
2005 Nov 15
3
[Fwd: [suse-amd64] OFF-TOPIC - *very* bad]
I saw this on the SuSE AMD64 list & decided to pass it along, since it seems like a sneaky problem. Later posts confirm it is *NOT* AMD64-specific, nor SuSE 9.3 specific .... -- William A. Mahaffey III --------------------------------------------------------------------- Remember, ignorance is bliss, but willful ignorance is LIBERALISM !!!! -------------- next part -------------- An
2017 Sep 19
3
CentOS, PHP & OwnCloud/Nextcloud: the version dilemma
On Tue, September 19, 2017 1:42 pm, Nux! wrote: > Unfortunately the same can be said about Ruby, RoR, Python etc etc etc. It is not as much true about languages themselves (though it is true, and I for one call python "sneaky snake" just because of that ;-), as about how the software using these languages is written. E.g. well known mailman. I never had it give me any trouble
2005 Mar 15
2
Lemon drops
I bumped into the following situation: Browse[1]> coef deg0NA deg4NA deg8NA deg0NP deg4NP deg8NP (Intercept) 462 510 528 492 660 762 Browse[1]> coef[,1] [1] 462 Browse[1]> coef[,1,drop=F] deg0NA (Intercept) 462 where I really wanted neither, but (Intercept) 462 Anyone happen to know a neat way out of the conundrum? I can think of
2018 Apr 06
3
Semi-OT: install python package in userspace
On 04/06/18 13:51, Ulf Volmer wrote: > On 06.04.2018 18:25, m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote: >> CentOS 7 box. As there's no package in any of the repos, we're trying to >> install scikit-learn in the user's space. It refuses. My late try was, >> after d/l a .whl from last year, hoping that would work with the numpy >> package in the regular repos, I did a pip
2000 Dec 14
3
pho: [Fwd: new MS codecs]
> From: "JD Conley" <jdc@malibuboats.com> > To: "'vorbis@xiph.org'" <vorbis@xiph.org> > Subject: RE: [vorbis] new MS codecs > Date: Thu, 14 Dec 2000 10:49:58 -0800 > X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.5.2653.19) > Reply-To: vorbis@xiph.org > > Oh yeah, they have some samples on their site. Interestingly enough, they > don't
2007 Mar 09
6
AssertSelect for strings?
Hi, Is there a way to use the have_tag matcher on a string instead of the response body from a view? I have a helper in a method rails project that returns an html fragment which I would like to test. Like this: module SomeHelper def some_helper_method "<p>foo</p>" end end context "The SomeHelper" helper_name :some specify do
2008 Sep 03
8
SAS or SATA HBA with write cache
Anyone know of a SATA and/or SAS HBA with battery backed write cache? Seems like using a full-blown RAID controller and exporting each individual drive back to ZFS as a single LUN is a waste of power and $$$. Looking for any thoughts or ideas. Thanks. -Matt -- This message posted from opensolaris.org
2017 Sep 20
1
[OT] CentOS, PHP & OwnCloud/Nextcloud: the version dilemma
Straying OT ... > > On Tue, September 19, 2017 1:42 pm, Nux! wrote: > > > Unfortunately the same can be said about Ruby, RoR, Python etc etc etc. > > > > It is not as much true about languages themselves (though it is true, and > > I for one call python "sneaky snake" just because of that ;-), as about > > <snip> > Yeah, in addition to
2008 Jul 22
1
[LLVMdev] LICM/store-aliasing of global loads
Hi, > One way to fix this would be to have AliasSetTracker pretend that > pointers to constant memory never alias anything. That's a little > sneaky though, ... on the other hand it is simple and (presumably) effective. Do you think it really could cause trouble? Ciao, Duncan.
1997 Apr 08
1
R-alpha: User friendly functions
A loose idea for *post*-0.50 development I've been giving a some (but not all that many) thoughts to whether some of the conceptual difficulties facing newcomers could be avoided by having simplified functions for common operations. We already have parts of this, e.g. in Kurts ctest routines. Specifically, I was thinking about data frames: How about
2006 Jun 26
1
How to model attribute and attribute-value dependencies
I''m being sneaky and reposting this question; I got no anwsers perhaps because I posted it over the w/end. I apologize for this but I''m completely stumped and need either an answer or some clue about how my approach is flawed. Thanks... I have a rails application which has a table ''cells'' which contains some 80 or so attribute fields (related to the electrical
2003 Jun 10
3
tftp server error
I have got a Solaris 9 package build from the latest tftp software at ftp.kernel.org. When I do the following: ./in.tftpd -l -s /tftpboot -m /tftprules -v The tftp server does not start. The error in /var/adm/messages is "too many -s directories". If i do ./in.tftpd -l -s /tftpboot -v then it works fine. But i need remap feature for my project. The message I get when i do
2008 Jul 22
0
[LLVMdev] LICM/store-aliasing of global loads
On Jul 21, 2008, at 3:51 PM, Stefanus Du Toit wrote: > Our frontend can guarantee that loads from globals are > rematerializable and do not alias with any stores in any function in > the given module. We'd like the optimization passes (and ideally the > register allocator as well) to be able to use this fact. The globals > are not constant "forever" but are constant
2014 Jul 05
6
[LLVMdev] Instructions on a target with no general purpose registers
I've mentioned my sneaky plans to target the MOS6502 here before. The big issue I think is that a lot of instructions don't really have a choice for output register. It all just goes into the accumulator, X index, or Y index based on the specific instruction. So, my question is, when I'm defining my ins, outs and registers for these instructions, is it going to be a problem that
2006 Oct 12
2
1.0rc8: another problem? Possibly 64-bit index?
Yesterday I gave a status report about 10.rc8 in production, which mentioned a problem about "Login process died too early..." Timo suggested a patch for logging error messages. I've applied this. Others suggested increasing "login_max_processes_count". That was already way above our likely maximum, but I've doubled it anyway. Today, I've just repeated the
2003 Mar 01
2
density(), with argument of length 1 (PR#2593)
The following is from version 1.6.2 of R under Windows, or 1.6.1 under Mac OSX/X11 > density(1) Error in if (!(lo <- min(hi, IQR(x)/1.34))) (lo <- hi) || (lo <- abs(x[1])) || : missing value where logical needed I am not sure how this should be handled. I encountered it in connection with densityplot(). In that connection, it might be enough to modify density() so that it
2008 May 13
7
[LLVMdev] LLVM as a DLL
Michael T. Richter wrote: > Apparently the APIs in the LLVM docs missed your > attention. They're sneaky that way because, you know, > they just form the bulk of available documentation. I began my original message saying that I was providing "constructive criticism". That means I want to HELP if I can. Your sarcastic attitude is unprofessional. > The
2006 Aug 24
4
Looks like 3.8 is not ready to download
This is just a heads up that 3.8 does not look ready to download. There are 3.8 files at the CentOS mirrors, but the files (including the iso images) are constantly changing or disappearing. It looks like the hard-working diligent CentOS workers are making some last minute changes before getting CentOS 3.8 out the door. I presume that there will be a posting made to this list when 3.8 is
2018 Apr 06
2
Semi-OT: install python package in userspace
Richard Demeny wrote: > Just sudo it > > On Fri, 6 Apr 2018 17:25 , <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: > >> CentOS 7 box. As there's no package in any of the repos, we're trying to >> install scikit-learn in the user's space. It refuses. My late try was, >> after d/l a .whl from last year, hoping that would work with the numpy >> package in the