similar to: How to test WINS functionality and swat question

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "How to test WINS functionality and swat question"

1999 Jul 06
0
How to test WINS functionality
When the world was young, Ariel_Orellana@penoles.com.mx carved some runes like this: [snip] > Secondly, I'm not exactly sure my host, which has "wins support = yes" > option, with no other WINS server in the network, is working. How can I > test this? For example, I have another samba server which has "wins > server = 130.6.96.2" (the first server) but it
1999 Jun 14
1
Doubt on browsing across subnets
Hi everyone, I'm getting roughed up trying a new setup on my server. I tried this with 1.9.18p10 and now with 2.0.3, first I want to see if I'm getting this correctly and then if there's a solution to what I think is happening. I have the following setup: One server with two NICs IP1=130.6.96.2, IP2=130.6.98.2, SM = 255.255.255.0 (BTW, these are internal IPs, not internet
1999 Dec 22
0
Possible problem with SAMBA 2.0.6 distribution for HP?
Hello, I downloaded 2.0.6 and compiled under HP-UX 10.20, gcc 2.8.3 and everything funtioned properly, except for smbrun, which didn't link. I started looking around for it in the binary distributions available (2.0.3 and 2.0.4a) and found it was also missing here. Lastly, I sarted asking other hp sysadmins if they could send me theirs, turns out NOBODY has it, even after compiling with
2008 Feb 22
0
Ariel te envió una invitación para que seas su amigo en Tagged...
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" &nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp&nbsp"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html> <head> <title>Ariel has Tagged you! :)</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
2008 Oct 16
3
defining a function using strings
Hi All, I need to evaluate a series expansion using Legendre polynomials. Using the 'orthopolinom' package I can get a list of the first n Legendre polynomials as character strings. > library(orthopolynom) > l<-legendre.polynomials(4) > l [[1]] 1 [[2]] x [[3]] -0.5 + 1.5*x^2 [[4]] -1.5*x + 2.5*x^3 [[5]] 0.375 - 3.75*x^2 + 4.375*x^4 But I can't figure out how to
2005 Oct 10
2
A xenu kernel 2.6.11 with physical access to a PCI netcard.
I just compile one kernel to the domU but cant see the PCI netcard, i hide the card from dom0 physdev_dom0_hide=''(00:11.0)'' and added to the domU config pci = [ ''0,11,0'' ] and dint work.. any howto to do that? - ariel ariel en BSDlatino . org ariel en ferreras . info http://www.BSDlatino.org http://ariel.BSDlatino.org
2006 Mar 07
0
RE: nuevos requisitos
Ok, barbaro, entonces los nuevos requerimientos ser?an: 1) Que ariel pueda cambiar la configuraci?n de su pantalla. 2) Que ariel pueda acceder al servidor de desarrollo (10.0.9.119) a los puertos comunes de servicio (ftp, smtp, pop3, imapd, http, https, samba, svn, csv). Lo que necesito que acceda ahora es al samba, http y svn, lo dem?s planeo darle un futuro uso. 3) En
2005 Feb 17
1
(Kphone) Registration Failed: Forbidden
I just can't get kphone to register with asterisk, i can make calls to the demos and even get into the mailbox but kphone cannot register. Here's my story. Can you help me?? Please I have installed asterisk on debian using apt-get install asterisk. I have configured an extension in extensions.conf as follows exten => 8003,1,Dial(Sip/8003,${RINGTIME},rt) exten =>
2016 Apr 12
0
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
Use all.equal instead of identical if you want to gloss over integer/numeric class differences and minor floating point differences (and a host of others). Bill Dunlap TIBCO Software wdunlap tibco.com On Mon, Apr 11, 2016 at 5:25 PM, Paulson, Ariel <apa at stowers.org> wrote: > Hi Jeff, > > > We are splitting hairs because R is splitting hairs, and causing us > problems.
2011 May 23
1
delegation of admin rights
Hello, We're a rather largish university (largest in Israel), with some 60-70k users, using Dovecot 1.2.14 (we're cautious about moving to 2.0.x for now). We need to provide admin rights to faculty computer/IT staff, so they can have access to the mailboxes of their respective users. We use LDAP as an authentication/authorization backend. Currently, dovecot has a "master
2016 Apr 12
0
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
> -----Original Message----- > From: bgunter.4567 at gmail.com > Sent: Mon, 11 Apr 2016 19:18:39 -0700 > To: murdoch.duncan at gmail.com > Subject: Re: [R] [FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply() > > "The documentation aims to be accurate, not necessarily clear." > > !!! > > I hope that is not the case! Accurate documentation that is confusing > is
2016 Apr 12
0
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
On 11/04/2016 10:18 PM, Bert Gunter wrote: > "The documentation aims to be accurate, not necessarily clear." > > !!! > > I hope that is not the case! Accurate documentation that is confusing > is not very useful. I don't think it is ever intentionally confusing, but it is often concise to the point of obscurity. Words are chosen carefully, and explanations are
2016 Apr 12
2
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
"The documentation aims to be accurate, not necessarily clear." !!! I hope that is not the case! Accurate documentation that is confusing is not very useful. I understand that it is challenging to write docs that are both clear and accurate; but I hope that is always the goal. Cheers, Bert Bert Gunter "The trouble with having an open mind is that people keep coming along and
2016 Apr 12
0
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
On 11/04/2016 8:25 PM, Paulson, Ariel wrote: > Hi Jeff, > > > We are splitting hairs because R is splitting hairs, and causing us problems. Integer and numeric are different R classes with different properties, mathematical relationships notwithstanding. For instance, the counterintuitive result: The issue here is that R has grown. The as() function is newer than the as.numeric()
2016 Apr 12
6
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
Hi Jeff, We are splitting hairs because R is splitting hairs, and causing us problems. Integer and numeric are different R classes with different properties, mathematical relationships notwithstanding. For instance, the counterintuitive result: > identical(as.integer(1), as.numeric(1)) [1] FALSE Unfortunately the reply-to chain doesn't extend far enough -- here is the original
2010 Sep 29
0
[LLVMdev] bitcode / bytecode
Hi Ariel, > can you say what was the reason to rename bytecode? I am still interesting in you forgot to send this to the mailing list, so I have (probably someone there knows better than I). I think the reason is that bitcode is bit-packed, i.e. you can have multiple pieces of information stored in one byte, so byte code was a misnomer. Ciao, Duncan. > > 2010/9/29 Duncan Sands
2010 Sep 29
0
[LLVMdev] Fwd: bitcode / bytecode
Chris rewrote the original LLVM bytecode into it's present bitcode form. The newer code is much smaller than the previous form. That would be my guess for why he chose to call it bitcode. Of course, he can say for himself. :-) -bw On Sep 29, 2010, at 5:15 AM, Ariel Feinerman wrote: > Anyone, > > can you say what was the reason to rename bytecode? I am still interesting in >
2007 Dec 03
0
Hello I'm new and I've got a problem using metaflac
hmm... your cut-and-paste looks like ascii, but is the cuesheet in utf-8? --- Ariel Arelovich <aarelovich@gmail.com> wrote: > Hollo I'm new, My name is Ariel Arelovich > > I've encountered the following problem trying to sue metaflac. I used > the > following command: > > c:\Archivos de programa\FLAC>metaflac >
2016 Apr 11
0
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
Hypothesis regarding the thought process: integer is a perfect subset of numeric, so why split hairs? -- Sent from my phone. Please excuse my brevity. On April 11, 2016 12:36:56 PM PDT, Bert Gunter <bgunter.4567 at gmail.com> wrote: >Indeed! > >Slightly simplified to emphasize your point: > >> class(as(1:2,"numeric")) >[1] "integer" > >>
2016 Apr 11
5
[FORGED] Re: identical() versus sapply()
Indeed! Slightly simplified to emphasize your point: > class(as(1:2,"numeric")) [1] "integer" > class(as.numeric(1:2)) [1] "numeric" whereas in ?as it says: "Methods are pre-defined for coercing any object to one of the basic datatypes. For example, as(x, "numeric") uses the existing as.numeric function. " I suspect this is related to