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Pastimes : The Big Tex House of Coin -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Michael E. Baldino who wrote (13455)4/27/2000 6:31:00 PM
From: Skycat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19297
 
Jeffro & Berto...if you are out there somewhere....this kitty put out 'Missing' posters w/ your pictures on them on all the utility poles in the neighborhood....so far, the dogs are just urinating on them....LOL...but hopefully, you'll turn up sooner or later....you are missed! :o) Meow!

Michael, concerning your last post.....Oooooohhhhh...I'm so confused! LOL...I do well just to sign on successfully in the morning...good luck w/ your new set up and web/auction site!



To: Michael E. Baldino who wrote (13455)4/27/2000 7:48:00 PM
From: Mike Perras  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19297
 
Mike

I run ADSL at home, you're gonna love it, speed factor is just, I can move a 1 meg audio piece in seconds as opposed to 3 or 4 days LOL!

Mike



To: Michael E. Baldino who wrote (13455)4/27/2000 8:29:00 PM
From: Aubie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19297
 
Although your ADSL will be dynamic IP, you can still register and maintain a internet/gateway/firewall/email...
server at home. check out the service at tzo.com
For 100 bucks every two years, they allow you to update their DNS automatically each time your DHCP server changes your IP address. Cool stuff. My cable modem is dynamic IP and I run a cron job every 10 minutes on my Linux box that will push a new IP to TZO should it change.

Roddy...



To: Michael E. Baldino who wrote (13455)4/29/2000 3:21:00 PM
From: Aubie  Respond to of 19297
 
Mike, I have never used Mandrake so I'm not sure about their installation. (I know it uses the Redhat code) I put a better video adapter in my Linux server last night and noticed that there were at least 600 monitors listed in the picklist. ( Xconfigurator on Redhat 6.1) I never had to address the card as Xconfigurator probed the bux and came back and told me what I had. I also have TurboLinux 4.0 and Caldera OpenLinux 2.3 running. They both had around 600 monitors to choose from. Of the three, Caldera is the most simply to install. Of the three, Redhat is the the most robust IMO.

I'm in the process of writing a HOWTO for a Home Linux server network running over a DHCP connection. (be it Cable or ADSL, should work the same)

Roddy...