Displaying 20 results from an estimated 221 matches for "ubiquitous".
2018 Sep 26
4
WebRTC as Softphone substitute ?
...is morning, I asked myself if WebRTC could be a viable alternative to
softphone deployment.
For me, main issue with Softphones is the amount of work needed for
installation and configuration.
Also, Softphones must be carefully choosen if Deskphone-like quality is
expected.
Now that WebRTC becomes ubiquitous, it might make sense to trade Softphone
features (call history, BLF, ...) for WebRTC deployment simplicity.
What do you think of this ?
What kind of experience did you met with such WebRTC deployments ?
What about classic telephony features (CallTransfer) ?
Have you tried Cyber Maga Phone 2K ?
[1...
2007 Sep 16
10
I lost the RSpec fight
...ing team to add some manpower, we
realized we had to switch to a single framework. This is a team that''s
fairly experienced with Rails and active in the Rails community, but was
quite opposed to choosing RSpec.
Here are the arguments I heard against unifying on RSpec:
* Test::Unit is ubiquitous. Everyone knows it. This is hard to
counter; it comes with Rails and is the default. Same reason many
people use Prototype even though JQuery/dojo might suit them better.
* For that reason, it''s a lot easier to find examples of "how to do
something" in Test::Unit than in R...
2015 Oct 01
6
Problem with 90MB Initrd
...eems trivial and unnecessary), what other benefits are
there to this strategy?
--
-Gene<<<
Considering any editing/buffering benefits are only marginal (AFAIK) there are not benefits with the current approach.On the other hand the list of potential problems includes:
1) We cannot use the ubiquitous EFI PXEbc protocol forcing us to rely on the (not always present) EFI Binding Services.
2) We cannot implement i.e. TFTP windowsize option (RFC 7440)3) Linked timeouts; a timeout situation while downloading a nested file impacts the whole download chain. I wonder how many times this schema was resp...
2015 Apr 27
2
Real sh? Or other efficient shell for non-interactive scripts
...r BSD-old:
> >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BSD_licenses
> >
> > Do you like to discuss things or do you like to throw smoke grenades?
>
> The only thing I'd like to discuss is your reason for not adding a
> dual license to make your code as usable and probably as ubiquitous as
> perl. And you have not mentioned anything about how that might hurt
> you.
I explained this to you in vast details. If you ignore this explanation, I
cannot help you.
J?rg
--
EMail:joerg at schily.net (home) J?rg Schilling D-13353 Berlin
joerg.schilling...
2016 Apr 27
3
Apache/PHP Installation - opinions
...thinking
>>> it uses it if available. So even if you do post it on your DNS, how
many clients out there are using DANE on their set up? By the time it
becomes more than a tiny % and generally useful, it will be in CentOS 8.
It
>>> also requires certificates to be implemented more ubiquitously than at
present - although we do now have affordable solutions, so this one may
resolve
>>> more quickly.
>>
> Security and Privacy on the Internet are both severely broken.
>
> If you read the white papers from when the Internet was first being
designed, security was rare...
2018 Aug 09
2
Best practices for backing up small mailserver to remote location
On 8/7/2018 5:08 PM, Adi Pircalabu wrote:
> - Since you're on dynamic IP at home, set up a VPN tunnel using the
> mailserver as server and HTPC as client. OpenVPN is ubiquitous and
> widely supported.
> - rsync your mailboxes using the tunnel connection.
> This way you can back up your entire server, not only the mailboxes.
Instead of openvpn, I use openssh. Use compression in the ssh tunnel,
not the rsync connection, as rsync compression tends to be buggy and...
2017 Nov 20
2
LMTP "Relative home directory paths not supported"
...(Postfix upstream) prior
to a transition off `nix accounts to virtual accounts and am stumped by
LMTP reporting
??? dovecot: lmtp(10019, jeff at example.com): Error: Relative home
directory paths not supported: 0
LDA does /not /have any problems with PAM or passwd-file passdb/userdb
and the ubiquitous definition of
??? mail_location = maildir:~/Maildir:LAYOUT=fs
I have yet to be able to get LMTP to deliver mail, nor have I found
anything on the Dovecot wiki to describe how to represent that the
mail_location is <whatever/userdb/returned/for/home>/Maildir
I'd prefer to localize th...
2015 Sep 08
3
Euro LLVM videos finally online - proposal to use torrents for sharing
...builtin
> plugins for all mobile platforms and browsers. It's not as easy to
> make an mp4 work out of the box in a way that you hope it would.
>
> I don't see a problem in hosting the videos *in addition* to having
> them in a CDN, but especially because Youtube is free and ubiquitous,
> anything else (maybe apart from Vimeo) would be less ideal, especially
> if they require plugins for browsers or mobiles, even if they're free.
Anything that doesn’t *offer* a download option (breaking ToS is not an option) shouldn't be considered as the primary hosting IMO, which...
2010 Sep 01
4
deprecation warning in Rails 3 about Base.named_scope
I recently upgraded to Rails 3, and this error has come up
ubiquitously:
DEPRECATION WARNING: Base.named_scope has been deprecated, please use
Base.scope instead.
Any ideas on how to get rid of it? Or should I just wait for
something?
There''s actually no place in my application where the code
"Base.named_scope" exists, so I assume the problem is...
2018 Jun 22
3
RFC: Should SmallVectors be smaller?
...d that Clang is using more stack recently (we're seeing more crashes from template recursion; it seems the template recursion limit needs to shrink), and somehow that train of thought led to this.
I share your skepticism that it will help stack usage much, but SmallVector/SmallVectorImpl is so ubiquitous, it could help the heap a bit. And if it doesn’t hurt runtime performance in practice, there’s no reason to fork the data structure.
If no one has measured before I might try it some time.
> -Chris
>
>
>>
>> The current scheme works out to something like this:
>> `...
2015 Oct 01
1
Problem with 90MB Initrd
>>>
> Considering any editing/buffering benefits are only marginal (AFAIK) there are not benefits with the current approach.On the other hand the list of potential problems includes:
> 1) We cannot use the ubiquitous EFI PXEbc protocol forcing us to rely on the (not always present) EFI Binding Services.
> Best,Patrick
Speaking utterly ignorantly here... could this switch help with the
issues we see with HP systems?? The load-and-hang many of them do with
syslinux.efi as discussed here?? E.g., maybe they imp...
2007 Jul 04
1
Using speex on ARM7TDMI...
Hi,
I'm evaluating the libspeex library for usage in an embedded platform
based on an ARM7 TDMI micro (the ubiquitous Atmel AT91SAM7S).
In details, I'm trying to use libspeex to encode the audio stream
coming into the micro from an I2S channel and saving the encoded audio
to an SD card (currently in binary format just to test it decoded back
to the I2S channel from the saved file), but I've some difficulti...
2010 Feb 11
1
Blinder-Oaxaca decompositions
I'm looking for a routine in R to do Blinder-Oaxaca (and related)
decompositions. A very nice one has been written (by Jann) for Stata
(and I'm evaluating whether I can switch over to R). I'm having a hard
time finding any reference in R documentation to this pretty
ubiquitous tool (in labour economics) for decomposing differences
between two groups into differences in means and differences in
coefficients.
In general, I find it tough to google on R functions and capabilities,
because putting "R" as a search term is a weak criterion. Any tricks
for googling r...
2010 Mar 30
1
AR 9.3+ vs. savable fill-in PDFs on CentOS
...ouble at all with them
in my Windows virtual machine, but the Linux version starts up,
displays the window/frame outline, then crashes and dies silently.
Since Adobe doesn't provide any useful channel of communications for
support to users of its free products, even though they are
essentially ubiquitous and somewhat essential (for things like this),
apparently their recent breakthrough in the area of supporting Linux
systems does not include actually supporting Linux systems users.
So, since I have made that enormous leap of logic, I wonder, is anyone
else experiencing this problem?
Yes, I know...
2004 Sep 15
1
ash replaced
...odern NetBSD-derived ash. The
initial port was done by Olaf, and I've mostly applied the chainsaw to
it until it was less than 50% larger than the old one.
It's still substantially larger, but should also eliminate need for some
external binaries like expr and test, which are otherwise ubiquitous for
any sensible shell scripts, and perhaps most importantly, it works
correctly on 64-bit platforms.
-hpa
2018 Sep 26
2
WebRTC as Softphone substitute ?
...o softphone deployment.
> >
> > For me, main issue with Softphones is the amount of work needed for
> > installation and configuration.
> > Also, Softphones must be carefully choosen if Deskphone-like quality
> > is expected.
> >
> > Now that WebRTC becomes ubiquitous, it might make sense to trade
> > Softphone features (call history, BLF, ...) for WebRTC deployment
> > simplicity.
> >
> > What do you think of this ?
> > What kind of experience did you met with such WebRTC deployments ?
> > What about classic telephony feature...
2010 Apr 26
2
[LLVMdev] Proposal for a new LLVM concurrency memory model
...o the very minimal set of operations, supporting more
> obscure ones by pattern matching or intrinsics.
If you add it to the instructions, their syntax will be more complex
than they are today, and reading them could prove a challenge.
IMHO, we should keep it simple. I agree that multi-task is ubiquitous
nowadays but the detailed implementation might vary considerably from
language to language and making it explicit only helps, at least in
the beginning.
cheers,
--renato
http://systemcall.org/
Reclaim your digital rights, eliminate DRM, learn more at
http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_drm
2019 Oct 31
5
[PATCH] Replace mkproto.pl with mkproto.awk
This replaces the build dependency on perl with one on awk which is
already used in the build system and is much more ubiquitous than perl
---
Makefile.in | 2 +-
mkproto.awk | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
mkproto.pl | 48 ------------------------------------------------
3 files changed, 40 insertions(+), 49 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 mkproto.awk
delete mode 100644 mkproto.pl
diff --git a/Makefile.i...
2016 Mar 23
1
Redundant load in llvm's codegen compares to gcc when accessing escaped pointer?
The rationale given does not seem to square (IMHO) with the ubiquitous
practice of having 0- or 1-length array at the end of a struct and then
allocating additional elements for it using malloc, or the so-called
"struct hack":
http://c-faq.com/struct/structhack.html
For example:
typedef struct {
enum inst_type type;
unsigned num_ops;
struct...
2010 Apr 06
0
[LLVMdev] Call for Help: Testing
...etty much the only way you'll get an x86-32 these days is by purchasing an
> Atom netbook or laptop. Unfortunately, these kinds of devices don't suit
> themselves well to testing as they frequently aren't connected to the 'net.
While x86-32 disappears, virtualization becomes ubiquitous along with
x86-64. What about running your tests in x86-32 guests under KVM or
Xen? That seems like it would solve everything on the infrastructure
you already have. You can run any guest OS you want, too.
> I have a netbook I can add to the testing pool. If enough other people do the
&g...