From: Digestifier To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu Reply-To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu Date: Sat, 15 Oct 94 23:13:11 EDT Subject: Linux-Misc Digest #946 Linux-Misc Digest #946, Volume #2 Sat, 15 Oct 94 23:13:11 EDT Contents: Re: X vs non-X users? (Peter Jones) Re: quota (Martin Eggen) Re: Mystery Chip...AMD (Michael Berthold) Re: Mystery Chip...AMD (Michael Berthold) Re: Linux doesn't like my cache (Bob Kupiec) Linux Developer Resource (Infomagic) (Lasermoon Info Desk) Re: Copyright Violations Plague the Net (Paul Budnik) Re: Copyright Violations Plague the Net (Dale R. Worley) Re: Anyone using P90-Plato-INTEL board under LINUX??? (Marc Tamsky) Re: Word (Text) processors for Linux? (Jerry Leslie) Re: [H] missing "Close" item onSWiM motif menu (Jason Van Patten) Re^2: Beautifying Linux/Xfree (Karsten Mauler) Word (Text) processors for Linux? (Prof. Gavrie Philipson) GNU assembler release now folded into "binary utilities" package (Ken Raeburn) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: thanatos@drealm.org (Peter Jones) Subject: Re: X vs non-X users? Date: Fri, 14 Oct 1994 20:30:34 +0000 On 6 Oct 1994 20:37:04 GMT, Charles Blair (ceblair@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu) wrote (in article <371n5g$pn@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>): > The main reason I still have a DOS partition on my machine is that > I don't use X, and, as far as I know, there is no non-X previewer for > TeX that is equal in quality or ease of use to the emtex previewer > for DOS. > This leads to a more general question. I wonder whether we are > approaching the point where software for the two kinds of linux/unix > users will split the group. I can't suggest any particular fix. > As a matter of curiosity, I wonder what the X/non-X ratio is. It also raises the question, "Why is there no non-X graphics support in Linux, seeing as it _knows_ what the video driver looks like?". I asked ages ago about a RIP viewer for Linux without X. A TeX viewer for Linux without X would be nice, too. Maybe people could port the DOS versions to Linux? -- Peter ------------------------------ From: martine@powertech.no (Martin Eggen) Subject: Re: quota Date: Sat, 15 Oct 1994 02:31:33 GMT In article , gbrownin@sun1.iusb.indiana.edu (G. Browning) wrote: > Does anyone know if quota is available for Linux yet????????? > (for the newest kernel version that is 1.1.53) I dunno for newest kernel, but anyway, quota is included in Slackware 2.0.0, as far as I know. Martin :) |====================| Finger for PGP public key! | Martin Eggen | W3-home page: |martine@powertech.no| http://www.powertech.no/~martine/ |====================| ------------------------------ From: berthold@fzi.de (Michael Berthold) Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,comp.os.linux.admin Subject: Re: Mystery Chip...AMD Date: 14 Oct 1994 11:00:18 GMT Reply-To: berthold@fzi.de In article , dboniuk@bga.com (David J. Boniuk) writes: |> [...] |> It is possible that the DX/2-80 is simply a sampling of the "best" of the |> DX/2-66s that come off the line, but I would think it unlikely tht AMD is just That is the way I see it too. There is quiet some variance in modern processor-fabrication. |> wholesale relabling DX/2-66s to DX/2-80s. Why should they do that??? |> - Michael ------------------------------ From: berthold@fzi.de (Michael Berthold) Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems Subject: Re: Mystery Chip...AMD Date: 14 Oct 1994 11:01:47 GMT Reply-To: berthold@fzi.de |> |> Marketing shlock. Intel and MicroSquish - two peas in a pod. Funny, that the two best-going comanies are always blamed for doing bad business (jealous? :-) - Michael ------------------------------ From: kupiec@tigger.jvnc.net (Bob Kupiec) Subject: Re: Linux doesn't like my cache Date: Sun, 16 Oct 1994 00:02:28 GMT In , LONGSA%DFCS@dfmail.usafa.af.mil writes: >In article <3728q4$7vk@nntp1.u.washington.edu> dcflood@u.washington.edu (David Flood) writes: >>>Try increasing the cache read/write wait states... I have a similiar > >>Well, the default is write is 1. When I try 2, lilo bombs with a crc error >>during uncompress. The only other availible setting is 0. The only read >>setting is one called 'Cache Read Cycle'. It is set to 2-1-1-1 and can be >>set to 3-2-2-2 or 2-2-2-2. I'll try the others with a 1 write setting and >>get back to you. > >Me again... I upgraded my 386dx33 to a 486dlc40, simple chip swap since my >MB directly supports the chip. Well, 70ns main memory appears to be a bit >slow, while my 20ns cache works fine at 40 with no wait states. After >trying bunches of stuff, it turns out that I NEED 1 read and write wait >state on main memory, but no wait states on cache. I had thought that 70ns >memory was good up to 40 mhz, but I guess 60 is REALLY required. I tested After reading your message, it has me looking again into my problem. I'm still looking for the solution... ;-) I have a 486dx40 with 70ns SIMMS and 256k 20ns cache ram. The machine has problems while running with the cache turned on. (i.e. kernel compile errors, garbage reads from disk, Slackware install crashed, etc.) With cache turned off, the machine runs fine, except ~10% slower on compiles. I've tried messing with the BIOS setups ad infinitum, with no luck. Your post made me look again in the motherboard manual, and I found a jumper setting. Here is what it says: "VL-Bus Master Setting Set JP8 to configure the VL-Bus for zero wait state or one wait state (default)." It's currently set to ZERO wait states. I don't remember exactly, but I think I switched this (to ONE wait state) to test the cache problem and the machine ran REALLY slow. What does this jumper do? It sounds Bus related, not memory related. Has anyone with an AMI BIOS had and fixed this problem? What are your BIOS settings? The motherboard I'm using is made by SI3 (p/n YM413201). -- Bob Kupiec (N3MML) Phone: 1-609-897-7300 JvNCnet (GES, Inc.) Network Engineering -or- : 1-800-35-TIGER 3 Independence Way Email: kupiec@jvnc.net Fax : 1-609-897-7310 Princeton, NJ 08540 ------------------------------ From: info@lasermoon.co.uk (Lasermoon Info Desk) Subject: Linux Developer Resource (Infomagic) Date: Sat, 15 Oct 94 15:18:48 GMT !! Infomagic Linux Developer Resource !! Lasermoon will be shipping the October 1994 Linux Developer Resource from Infomagic from around 18th October 1994. The material on these discs was gathered October 1, 2, and 3. Includes TWO CD-ROMs with COMPLETE materials to install and run LINUX! The entire linux archives from tsx-11.mit.edu and sunsite.unc.edu. The COMPLETE GNU archive from prep.ai.mit.edu Linus's Kernel archive from funet.fi. All packages and utilities can be run directly from the CD! (except X-Windows) Slackware & SLS can be installed directly from the CD. Distributions included: Slackware v2.0.1, SLS, Debian, MCC, TAMU, JE kernel sources up to 1.1.51 XFree86 3.1 (Yes, we actually got this !). 2.1 & 2.1.1 also included. DOOM for Linux!!! Commercial Demo for the new FLAGSHIP DBASE compiler for Linux!!! Preliminary versions of the WINE code (Micorsoft Windows Emulator) Complete on-line documentation! HOWTO docs formatted for use with an *included* Microsoft Windows browser! (this browser allows for FULL TEXT SEARCH on any topic!) Also provided in text and Postscript for printing or non-Windows browsing. The "Installation & Getting Started Guide" on-line in text, Postscript, and .dvi format (ready to print or browse). Lasermoon offers tech support to those who need help getting started. Priced at 16.96 + post + VAT for individual copies, 6 issue subscriptions are also available. We accept VISA, ACCESS, MASTERCARD, EuroCARD, Euro Cheque/Cheque/money order drawn on a UK bank in Pounds Sterling, Cash - (in desperation) Pounds Sterling (please send by recorded delivery) or other money order drawn in Pounds Sterling made payable to Lasermoon Ltd We are pleased to accept Purchase Orders for PLC's, other Quoted Companies, Government Departments and Educational Establishments. Account enquiries welcome. ***** ACCU members, Educational establishments ***** ***** and students qualify for a 10% discount. ***** For more information, please contact : -- Info Desk - info@lasermoon.co.uk Lasermoon Ltd, 2a Beaconsfield Road, Fareham, Hants, England. PO16 0QB Voice +44 (0) 329 826444 Fax: +44 (0) 329 825936 +++ The UNIX & Linux Freeware Specialists! +++ ------------------------------ From: paul@mtnmath.mtnmath.com (Paul Budnik) Crossposted-To: gnu.misc.discuss Subject: Re: Copyright Violations Plague the Net Date: 15 Oct 1994 11:31:04 -0700 Intellectual property is an important and necessary legal concept in a modern society. Stealing intellectual property is stealing. However not all the terms in every program's license are legal and not everything that is legal is moral. We need to understand that this is a complex issue with no simple solutions. Our current laws and current institutions are a long way from optimizing technical progress. We need to change the laws and evolve institutions that promote greater sharing while retaining economic incentives to do the work in the first place. There are many ways to do this. Supporting the League for Programming Freedom is one. There is nothing wrong with having a copyright on a program's source code but there is a great deal that is wrong with having a copyright on the look and feel of a program or having a patent on a mathematical method or an idea (as opposed to an implementation of the idea). These distinctions are not simple and obvious. Lawmakers and judges who are not knowledgeable in the technology can make atrocious decisions. Campaign contributions from special interests can lead to even more atrocious decisions. Reforming how we finance political campaigns can have a huge impact on what future laws are like. We need to change anti-trust laws to prevent excessive dominance in one industry even if there were no anti-competitive measures taken to gain that dominance. Large institutions are not necessarily bad but single institutions that dominate an industry inevitably stifle progress. It made me ill to hear that Microsoft was buying Intuit (the manufacturer of Quicken), one of the few companies that has been able to compete with them and win. There are experiments in new ways to develop and deliver software that are evolving. The work of the FSF and Linux are remarkable achievements. I am trying an experiment of my own in combining the free and commercial models. I have released a tool for Digital Signal Processing under the GPL and plan to release commercial versions of the same tool. If you want to use ObjectProDSP for personal purposes or to create more free software you can do so without cost. If you want to develop commercial applications with it you need to purchase a commercial license. My hope is that I will gain more from making the source code freely available so others can contribute to my tool then I will loose by giving information to my competitors. If you want to be part of the solution and not part of the problem then you have to understand that there is no simple formula to address these complex issues. Paul Budnik ------------------------------ From: drw@zermelo.mit.edu (Dale R. Worley) Crossposted-To: rec.arts.startrek.misc,misc.legal,alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.d,gnu.misc.discuss Subject: Re: Copyright Violations Plague the Net Date: 15 Oct 94 20:58:19 In article <37pipb$73a@panix.com> binesh@panix.com (Binesh Bannerjee) writes: Gina Goff (GINA@ricevm1.rice.edu) wrote: : Suppose you were a software consultant. You put together a really nifty : package for company A. In fact, it's so popular with them that you decide : to market it. Unfortunately, company A has decided to sell it, too; why : shouldn't everyone be able to just use your effort? How would you feel : then? Incredible how you just described someone in real life... Let me quote from an interview... > BYTE: A cynic might wonder how you earn your living. > > Stallman: From consulting. [etc.] Though, of course, Stallman lives very frugally. Dale Dale Worley Dept. of Math., MIT drw@math.mit.edu -- On the contrary, it is impossible to separate a cube into two cubes, a fourth power into two fourth powers, or generally any power above the second into two powers of the same degree. I have discovered a truly marvelous demonstration which this margin is too narrow to contain. -- Pierre de Fermat, sometime in the late 1630's (translated from the Latin) ------------------------------ From: tamsky@pride.ugcs.caltech.edu (Marc Tamsky) Subject: Re: Anyone using P90-Plato-INTEL board under LINUX??? Date: 14 Oct 1994 09:57:27 GMT Working configuration--no problems (believe me, I was amazed I didn't have to wrestle it to make it work!) Works like a champ... Intel PCI Premiere II BabyAT motherboard P5/90 256K cache (36.08 Bogomips) version 10 of FLASH BIOS -- it's on Intel's BBS. 2 SMC-Ultra Ethernet cards 1 EGA+ 8-bit monitor 1 ASUS 53c810 PCI SCSI controller (~$80!) Quantum LPS540 SCSI hard drive (~$290!) Linux 1.1.52 (!$0! YAAY!) Slackware 2.0.? (!$0! YAAY) NCR boot disks from slackware release to get started (they are 1.1.19... so get 52 after you're up and recompile.) Cheers! Marc. >>>>> In article <37gmhf$6jb@brachio.zrz.TU-Berlin.DE>, tilo@ftat64.ee.TU-Berlin.DE (Tilo Schuerer) writes: } I indent to buy an Pentium P90 INTEL Board, which } has the nicname "Plato" Because I never heart anything } about that board I wonder if anybody already used it } sucessfully under LINUX. -- | Marc Tamsky --- http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~tamsky/ | Protect your rights: Learn, Use, And Practice safe encryption. | | "My life used to be boring before Internet. Now, I'm a socialite!" -jkoga ------------------------------ From: jleslie@dmccorp.com (Jerry Leslie) Crossposted-To: comp.unix.questions Subject: Re: Word (Text) processors for Linux? Date: 14 Oct 1994 19:50:19 GMT Byron A Jeff (byron@gemini.cc.gatech.edu) wrote: : In article <37c5dn$dhk@plato.simons-rock.edu>, : James A. Robinson wrote: : >>The question is how to accomplish this? : > : >I would think you need to ask yourself how this word processor will : >differ from things already around (EZ, Doc, etc...). Once you have a : >set of proposed ideas on what it needs, what exists, and what needs to : >be implemented, you can start looking for the right language : >combination to handle this. : The primary difference is that I personally feel that we don't need another : WYSIWYG X based wordprocessor. It exists in basic form in EZ. : However what's missing is the functionality along the lines of early : WordPerfect or Word applications. Text based, formatting hidden from the : user, prints to lots of printers, basic wordprocessing functionality of : font size and type, text placement, highlights like bold, italics, underline : etc., and basic table generation. : In fact HWP is making headway towards this goal. : I think we can integrate existing editor (JED), menu(dialog), mouse(the : selection replacement of the Mouseless Commander), formatter (QuikScript), : and renderer (GhostScript) into a workable system that can meet the basic : wordprocessing demands of most folks. : Comments? : BAJ : -- : Another random extraction from the mental bit stream of... : Byron A. Jeff - PhD student operating in parallel - And Using Linux! : Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332 Internet: byron@cc.gatech.edu Regarding "integrate existing editor", why not make it flexible like 'elm' and 'tin', where a user can specify an editor like 'vi', 'jed', 'emacs', or our favorite, 'ed' (not the line-mode ed, but an editor patterned after DEC VMS's EDT editor) ? That would allow a new user of this information processor to concentrate on learning it, and not be distracted by having to learn a new editor as well. --Gerald (Jerry) R. Leslie Staff Engineer Dynamic Matrix Control Corporation (my opinions are my own) P.O. Box 721648 9896 Bissonnet Houston, Texas 77272 Houston, Texas, 77036 713/272-5065 713/272-5200 (fax) gleslie@isvsrv.enet.dec.com jleslie@dmccorp.com ------------------------------ From: vanpatjm@craft.camp.clarkson.edu (Jason Van Patten) Subject: Re: [H] missing "Close" item onSWiM motif menu Date: 12 Oct 1994 21:49:02 GMT : regular menu My window menu (Alt+F4, Alt+F5, Alt+F3 don't function) : +-----------------+ +-----------------+ : | Restore Alt+F5 | | | : | Move Alt+F7 | | Move Alt+F7 | : | Size Alt+F8 | | Size Alt+F8 | : | Minimize Alt+F9 | | Minimize Alt+F9 | : | Maximize Alt+F10| | Maximize Alt+F10| : | Lower Alt+F3 | + ----------------+ : | Close Alt+F4 | : +-----------------+ Find in your .mwmrc (or the system.mwmrc if you're root and want to make the change global to everyone) where this menu is defined. It'll be real easy to spot. I'm not sure where it is in the file because I don't have SWiM. Add these lines: "Restore" _R AltF5 f.normalize "Lower" _L AltF3 f.lower "Close" _C AltF4 f.kill In whatever order you want them to appear in the menu. The new labels will appear with an underline under the specified character (R in Restore, for example). This should do the trick for you. Jason -- Jason Van Patten | If at first you don't succeed, keep | Clarkson University | on sucking till you do succeed. | vanpatjm@craft.camp.clarkson.edu | - Curly Howard | | (The Three Stooges) | ** Any opinions expressed here are actually yours, you just don't know it, yet. ** ------------------------------ Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development From: SMOKIE@bmb.escape.de (Karsten Mauler) Subject: Re^2: Beautifying Linux/Xfree Date: Thu, 13 Oct 1994 17:54:00 +0100 Hi DAVID 13.10.94 / 18:53 d> This is arleady avialable. Try GREAT. Really. It takes a while to d> configure, and you should have Motif to get the best performance, but it Is it right, that motif is a comercial prog ? Or is there a free port ? "Ansehen ist der gut Ruf, den man geniesst, weil viele schweigen." (Zitat: Earl of Chesterfield 1694-1773) Cu / Fido :Karsten Mauler@2:241/565.27 ** \ mokie ** Z-Netz :SMOKIE@BMB.escape.de / Inernet :SMOKIE@BMB.escape.de ## CrossPoint v3.02 R ## ------------------------------ Subject: Word (Text) processors for Linux? From: gavrie@pesach.jct.ac.il (Prof. Gavrie Philipson) Date: Thu, 13 Oct 1994 23:50:01 GMT Well, as for converting DOS/Linux file formats: Slackware has two little progs, fromdos/todos which do just that. Moreover, there is a filter (don't remember its name) which converts RTF/TeX. So it should be easy enough to move files between TeX/WinWord/Mac. I heard there is a package for Emacs, called AUC-TeX, which uses a special TeX mode. Where can I get it? -- Gavrie Philipson gavrie@sparc.jct.ac.il ------------------------------ From: raeburn@cygnus.com (Ken Raeburn) Date: Thu, 13 Oct 94 13:24:34 PDT Subject: GNU assembler release now folded into "binary utilities" package Crossposted-To: gnu.announce,gnu.gcc.announce,gnu.g++.announce,gnu.utils.bug,alt.lang.asm,comp.unix.programmer,comp.unix.misc,comp.lang.misc There will be no version 2.4 of gas. Version 2.5 will be part of the binutils-2.5 package, which is going to be released shortly. Look for a coming announcement... ------------------------------ ** FOR YOUR REFERENCE ** The service address, to which questions about the list itself and requests to be added to or deleted from it should be directed, is: Internet: Linux-Misc-Request@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU You can send mail to the entire list (and comp.os.linux.misc) via: Internet: Linux-Misc@NEWS-DIGESTS.MIT.EDU Linux may be obtained via one of these FTP sites: nic.funet.fi pub/OS/Linux tsx-11.mit.edu pub/linux sunsite.unc.edu pub/Linux End of Linux-Misc Digest ******************************