531 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
531 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
From: Digestifier <Linux-Misc-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
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To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Reply-To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Date: Wed, 28 Sep 94 13:13:40 EDT
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Subject: Linux-Misc Digest #837
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Linux-Misc Digest #837, Volume #2 Wed, 28 Sep 94 13:13:40 EDT
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Contents:
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Tierra on Linux (zachary brown)
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Re: Adaptec SlimSCSI PCMCIA Driver? (Roger C. Pao)
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Re: Maple V for linux! (NightHawk)
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[Q] SW Technology (A.R.R.Torres)
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Driver support for PS/2 (MCA) version of SMC/WD? (James F. Morris)
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Re: Device Drivers [Matrox MGA] (Stephen Louis Ulmer)
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Re: Create boot disk (Mitchum DSouza)
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Re: New Linux Distribution (J.J. Paijmans)
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Re: Linux/FreeBSD ISDN support (Jay Ashworth)
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Nr9GX64 Video Card (FORSEILLES STEPHAN)
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NEWBIE!: How do i Print from GS (not over LPR!) (k.dittmann@wizzard.ping.de)
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Re: Is Linux faster than Os/2? Please help. (Robert Gasch)
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Re: QNX, Linux, or 386BSD? (NightHawk)
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Re: Usenet groups via SLIP (Benjamin John Walter)
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Re: IP Addresses For Standalone LAN (dyfet@aol.com)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: zbrown@lynx.dac.neu.edu (zachary brown)
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Subject: Tierra on Linux
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Date: 27 Sep 1994 18:31:03 -0400
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Hi! Has anyone got Tierra (or any other AI/ALife program) working under
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Linux, and if so could you tell me where to get it and how to build it
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(if it requires special building for Linux)?
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Thanks.
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-ZB-
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------------------------------
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From: rpao@paonet.org (Roger C. Pao)
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Subject: Re: Adaptec SlimSCSI PCMCIA Driver?
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Date: Tue, 27 Sep 1994 05:22:32 GMT
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ivo@next.agsm.ucla.edu (Ivo Welch) writes:
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>Has anyone written such a beast? All I need is to hook up a large SCSI
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>disk to my portable computer while I am at home. (And if I could only get
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>more than 25 text lines on my 480line VGA LCD screen, it would be
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>perfect.)
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There is work on a QLogic SCSI PCMCIA driver and a New Media SCSI PCMCIA
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driver. There needs to be some kernel modifications before these driver
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can be completed. I do not know of any work being done on the Adaptec/
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Trantor SlimSCSI card. Are the programming specs freely available
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(non-NDA)?
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rp94
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--
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Roger C. Pao <rpao@paonet.org>
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------------------------------
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From: fsosi@j51.com (NightHawk)
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Subject: Re: Maple V for linux!
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 07:58:54 -0400
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William Huang (wyhuang@sdcc15.ucsd.edu) wrote:
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: In article <1994Sep27.003555.1874@escape.widomaker.com> shendrix@escape.widomaker.com (Shannon Hendrix) writes:
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: !swein@csc.albany.edu (Scott Weinstein) writes:
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: !
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: !>I havn't seen anything on the newsgroups about this... Maple V is
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: !>available for Linux. It looks and runs just like the Solaris version.
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: !>The binaries are not staticly linked and the entire installation takes
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: !>up 24 MB. I'm impressed.
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: !
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: I'll be really impressed when they get Matlab working for Linux.
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Matlab was ported to Linux more than a year ago in Mar. 1993. But for
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whatever reason, it was not released. Please send emails to
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info@mathworks.com.
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Please don't send emails to me.
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Thanks.
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NH
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------------------------------
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From: arrt@ukc.ac.uk (A.R.R.Torres)
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Crossposted-To: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.systems,comp.os.linux.help
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Subject: [Q] SW Technology
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Date: Wed, 28 Sep 94 12:53:19 GMT
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I am about to order a system from SW Technology.
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I am planning to run dos/windows and Linux.
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Does anyone have any experience dealing with
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them?
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-- or would anyone recomend another dealer with
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a similar price?
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They are offering a P90 (intel plato), 8MB, 540 M Quantum HD, NCR SCSI,
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2x CD-Rom for $2499.
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Thanks
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Ana
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------------------------------
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Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.development
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From: jfmorris@netcom.com (James F. Morris)
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Subject: Driver support for PS/2 (MCA) version of SMC/WD?
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Date: Tue, 27 Sep 1994 04:47:05 GMT
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I have been working on getting Linux up and running on an IBM PS/2 Model
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70, which has not been an enviable task, to say the least! But, beggars
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can't be choosers, either.
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I have no problem with the Adaptec AHA-1640 SCSI host adapter, which Linux
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detects and uses as an AHA-1542. My 1.7GB SCSI-2 drive and 2GB Archive tape
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drive work flawlessly under Linux.
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Which leaves me stuck with the following problem: network support. I
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originally had an NE/2 adapter in this machine, which was not supported by
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Linux at all. For that matter, the Crynwr packet drivers for the NE/2
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under DOS don't work either (Russ Nelson says he hasn't tested them).
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So, to make a long story short, I was able to scrounge an IBM PS/2 Ethernet
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Adapter /A. This is a microchannel version of an SMC Ultra, from what I
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have been able to tell. Under DOS, the same SMC_WD.COM packet driver is used
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for this card, as for an ISA based SMC Ultra or WD8013. Biggest difference
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is that the I/O port address range is up at 0x800, rather than 0x300 - no
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big deal, and the RAM address is fixed in the PS/2 setup program.
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Problem is, even with the 0x800 I/O port range added to the scan list in the
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WD.C and SMC-ULTRA.C kernel driver, the card just doesn't work right (under
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Linux - works fine under DOS). I get TX status 3 (timeout on TX) when
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attempting to access the network.
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Looking through the Crynwr packet drivers shows that there are differences
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between operation of the NS (8390?) chip used on these boards on the ISA
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vs. MCA bus. Specifically, the MCA bus has twice as fast a clock cycle as
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the ISA bus. The Crynwr driver inserts extra delays if it detects operation
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on a Microchannel machine. Other differences are some extra setup in
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certain registers on the NIC's ASIC.
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Has anyone done this work already? I.e., does anyone have Linux working
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with an IBM Ethernet /A? If so, PLEASE share it with me!
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If not, then I intend to rewrite the SMC/WD kernel drivers in Linux to
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support the microchannel version, as my contribution to the Linux
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community. I just hate to duplicate the work, or spend time I don't
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have on this project...
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Thanks!
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--
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Jim Morris (jfmorris@netcom.com)
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------------------------------
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From: ulmer@ketch.cis.ufl.edu (Stephen Louis Ulmer)
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Subject: Re: Device Drivers [Matrox MGA]
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Date: 26 Sep 1994 17:36:35 GMT
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There is currently no "drivers" for the Matrox MGA. There is,
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however, a private company developing a replacement Xserver for Linux
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that includes MGA support. Xmga will go into BETA some time this
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month, I believe the beta period will be rather short, as they've put
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LOTS of work into the pre-beta testing;). This will be a commercial
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product, I THINK it retails for around $200, but I'm not sure. My
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point of contact there is inappropriate for pricing information, but
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is you call Matrox they have the information.
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Ulmer
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------------------------------
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From: Mitchum.DSouza@mrc-apu.cam.ac.uk (Mitchum DSouza)
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Subject: Re: Create boot disk
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 13:13:52 GMT
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In article <kkfongCwr8nF.9qD@netcom.com>, kkfong@netcom.com (Another Totoro)
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writes:
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|> I would like to know how to create a boot disk. In case my system won't
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|> start, at least I have a second mean of reaching it, and hopefully fix the
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|> problem. Can anyone tell me how to approach this? Since I don't use Linux
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|> that often, I consider myself a newbie. If possible, please give me detail
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|> instructions. Or if a FAQ exists, just point me to it.
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Read the docs in
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sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/Linux/system/Recovery/rescue.tgz
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Mitch
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------------------------------
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From: paai@kub.nl (J.J. Paijmans)
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Subject: Re: New Linux Distribution
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 12:52:56 GMT
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In article <36ber3$4ht@gandalf.rutgers.edu> madrid@gandalf.rutgers.edu (Juana Moreno) writes:
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>I have been thinking of putting up a new Linux distribution especially
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>oriented to DOS-Win dummies. I have taken a nontraditional approach and
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>am willing to sacrifice many of the sacred cows of Unix. I really think
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...
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>
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>Well, that's my idea. I'd like to hear comments before I start packaging
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>everything, because if you think this is useless I'd like to know before
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>I waste my time. All suggestions will be appreciated.
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>
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In itself it sounds like an excellent idea. Don't forget to include
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UMSDos though!
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The only snag I see is that the typical DOS/Windows user that you have
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in mind, actually is better served by his/her MS-Windows system. If
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you only use one task at a time and don't put too much load on the
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machine, there is no inherent need to use Linux. The typical Windows
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application is sufficient for that and certainly 'smoother' in looks
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and use.
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Real operating systems only come into their own when you have
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complicated tasks and heavy loads on the machine, like program
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development. I feel that from the beginning the 'newbie' (Yes, I was
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one myself not too long a time ago and some might still consider me
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one) should be able to experiment with the features in which
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Unix/Linux/X is way better than DOS and MS-Windows. Unfortunately that
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are exactly the applications that you proposed to omit.
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So at least you should make certain that 'upgrading' is very, very easy!
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Paai.
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------------------------------
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From: jra@zeus.IntNet.net (Jay Ashworth)
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Crossposted-To: comp.dcom.isdn,mn.general,comp.os.linux.development,umn.net-lists.linux-activists
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Subject: Re: Linux/FreeBSD ISDN support
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Date: 27 Sep 1994 21:31:25 -0400
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nrd@scrapie.med.umn.edu (Neal Dalton) writes:
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>I called Digiboard about there ISDN board and asked if they supported
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>Linux or FreeBSD. They told that they didn't support either, so I them
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>why did not support and they told me they had seen the demand for it.
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>They where planning on a SCO driver.
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Calm down, Neal.... calm down.
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One of Digi's employees is currently at work on a PC/Xe driver for Linux,
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with release due in a month or two. I suspect he's listening, and when
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they ask him what's next, he'll say "ISDN". :-)
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Cheers,
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-- jr 'right, Troy' a
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--
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Jay R. Ashworth High Technology Systems Comsulting Ashworth
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Designer Linux: The Choice of a GNU Generation & Associates
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ka1fjx/4
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jra@baylink.com "Hey! Do any of you guys know how to Madison?" 813 790 7592
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------------------------------
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From: sforseil@vub.ac.be (FORSEILLES STEPHAN)
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Subject: Nr9GX64 Video Card
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 12:54:58 GMT
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I'm looking for informations about the compatibility/installation
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of a Nr9GX64 VLB video card under Linux. Does somebody use it? Was the
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Xconfig-instakllation straightforward?
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Thanks.
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++=============================================================++
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|| Forseilles Stephan || sforseil@ulb.ac.be ||
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|| Av. FRISSEN 1/14 || ------------------------------||
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|| 1160 Bruxelles || Fido: 2:291/705.3503 ||
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|| BELGIUM || Phone: +32 2 675-61-09 ||
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||-------------------------------------------------------------||
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|| Home Page at http://rcibm.ulb.ac.be:8000/~sforseil ||
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||-------------------------------------------------------------||
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|| Anarchy is not disorder. Anarchy is the absence of orders. ||
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++=============================================================++
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------------------------------
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 12:54:00 +0200
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From: k.dittmann@wizzard.ping.de
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Subject: NEWBIE!: How do i Print from GS (not over LPR!)
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Hello Brothers & Sisters :)
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I believe, It's one time more a very simple newbie question...
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(Some of you would Think, RTFM, but I've done it, but i dunno found
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anything...)
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How do I Print from GhostScript 2.6.x directly to my
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HP-Deskjet/Laserjet.
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I have a PostScript File that's over 1.6 Megs great, and if i
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try to Print over the LPR Daemon, i got after some time and many
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Pages an errormessage like:
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"Spoolfile to great", or so... (Sorry, I haven't noticed it,
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and now i'am sitting in my office :/( .)
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If i let GS write the output via -sOutputFile=/test/out.prn
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into an PRNfile it goes perfectly, but the file are over 36Megs
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in great (Uhmm...) The same, if i wrote it into singlefiles for
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each page with .../out%d.prn.
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It works perfectly (and the copy it in binarymode to lpt1 via MS-DOG)
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What i searching for, is a function to print directly to
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the lpt1/lp0 Port from GS. NOT VIA THE LPR Daemon !
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Otherwise, if it should go over the LPR-Daemon, how do i say him,
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"Start printing after each 10 Pages!", because i don't wanna get
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the same errormessage like yesterday...
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By the way, the Document is the LDP-Install-guide :))))
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Please send Suggestions and helpful hints via eMail...
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---Kai
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k.dittmann@wizzard.ping.de
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###
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## CrossPoint v3.0 ##
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------------------------------
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From: rgasch@nl.oracle.com (Robert Gasch)
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Subject: Re: Is Linux faster than Os/2? Please help.
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Date: Wed, 28 Sep 1994 15:25:57 GMT
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A. Rohde (exp109@modcomp.physik.uni-kiel.de) wrote:
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: I use a standalone Linux Slackware 2.0.0.
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: I have an 'optimised' kernel (no drivers for things I don't have compiled in),
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: run 4 getty's, use tvtwm (eats a little bit more RAM than fvwm) and rxvt.
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: When I start X11 on my 8MB system (one rxvt running), I have 4.2 MB free
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: (free+buffers, swap is 0). A 'default' window-manager is unknown to me. I think
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: Robert is talking about olvwm. olvmw (and the libraries it has to use) wastes ca.
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: 1.3 MB RAM. Robert you don't know what your talking about. You did not spent any
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: time in configuring Linux.
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Funny, I thought I did. I built a new kernel throwing out support
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for all the stuff I don't need, played with tvtwm (which was even more of
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a hog than olvwm) and removed some other processes I don't need. BTW, on my
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installation (Infomagic CD, Slackware 2.0), olvwm is the *default* window
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manager since that is what works out of the box.
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Since you're such an expert: Can disk buffers shrink to 0 or is there
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a minimum size for them? Can I specify that I want to shrink disk buffers
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before I start swapping out unused (in this case presumably getty) processes
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in favor of maintaining larger disk buffers which I don't use?
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Thanks
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--> robert
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------------------------------
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From: fsosi@j51.com (NightHawk)
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Subject: Re: QNX, Linux, or 386BSD?
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Date: 28 Sep 1994 08:02:39 -0400
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Lee Hounshell (lee@tcs.com) wrote:
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: Dan Pop (danpop@cernapo.cern.ch) wrote:
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: : In <3680r1$dlu@girtab.usc.edu> plin@girtab.usc.edu (Po-Han Lin) writes:
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: : >If one has a pc compatible with a 486, which OS is the best unix
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: : >operating system? QNX, Linux, or 386BSD?
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: : You forgot to tell us what you mean by "the best unix operating system".
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: : Or specify a method of comparing two OS's. So, your question is
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: : meaningless.
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: I've been wondering the same thing. I'm developing a distributed
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: fuzzy neural network (using RPC, and TCPIP, and Internet) with a fancy
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: X-windows interface. It is intended to be portable and eventually run
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: on a variety of platforms, including PC's... assuming they ever
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: adopt a native multi-tasking OS. Anyway, I need a good unix development
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: environment, that's also cheap. I've lot's of experience with
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: SunOS and SysV-R4, but know virtually nothing aobut QNX, Linux, and FreeBSD.
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: Because the eventual target market is "everyman", I can't select an
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: expensive, development environment, like NextStep or SunOS, unless I can
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: ensure easy portability to "free" unix and PC machines later. The
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: programming is being done using C++. Networking hooks are required.
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: recommendations anyone? (please support your position, also)
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Since you mentioned C++, I would say go for Linux. I think only Linux
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gives you the best C++ support in stdio. Under Linux, the C++ iostream
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is built on the top of libio in the Linux C library. You don't have to
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worry about anything.
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NH
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------------------------------
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From: ben@tsunami.demon.co.uk (Benjamin John Walter)
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Subject: Re: Usenet groups via SLIP
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Date: Mon, 26 Sep 1994 19:38:21 +0000
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Hi Dan!
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: I have a linux system set up to run over SLIP at this time. I dial into
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: my slip server every night to get my SMTP mail. The mail-server trys to
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: deliver mail every 30 minutes. Therefore, I may have a waste of up to 30
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: minutes waiting for mail. What I would like to do is set up an NNTP news
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: transfer program to accept the groups I follow down to my Linux machine.
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: From there, I could read, post, etc. What I am looking for is what I
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: would need to setup in terms of configuration files, etc. and what program
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: would work best. I don't expect to receive enough news to overload the
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: bandwidth. Only about 10 groups.
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I use a program called 'slurp', I think you should be able to
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pick it up from ftp.demon.co.uk somewhere in the /pub/unix/news
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directory. I can always gzip it and mail it to you, its not so large.
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This works with Cnews to get news via UUCP. You tell it what groups
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you want from your newserver, and everytime you connect you invoke the
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program to retrieve new articles.
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I'm happy to help you try and configure it and news if you email
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me privately. In a nutshell you'll have to first configure Cnews,
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then add a couple of files for slurp. Slurp itself is easy to install
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and use.
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peace, Ben
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--
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__ _
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/ / (_)__ __ ____ __
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/ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / . . . t h e c h o i c e o f a
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/____/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\ G N U g e n e r a t i o n . . .
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------------------------------
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From: dyfet@aol.com
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Subject: Re: IP Addresses For Standalone LAN
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Date: Wed, 28 Sep 94 08:42:28 PDT
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In article <1994Sep24.165911.4051@tsunami.demon.co.uk>,
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<ben@tsunami.demon.co.uk> writes:
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> Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.misc
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> From: ben@tsunami.demon.co.uk (Benjamin John Walter)
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> Path:
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interramp.com!psinntp!news.intercon.com!howland.reston.ans.net!news.sprintlink.
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net!demon!tsunami.demon.co.uk!ben
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> Subject: Re: IP Addresses For Standalone LAN
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> X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.2 PL2]
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> Organization: Organized? Me?
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> References: <dangitCwMB7o.Gpv@netcom.com>
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> Date: Sat, 24 Sep 1994 16:59:11 +0000
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> Message-ID: <1994Sep24.165911.4051@tsunami.demon.co.uk>
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> Sender: usenet@demon.co.uk
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> Lines: 25
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>
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> : Are there IP addresses set aside for standalone LANs? Where are they
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> : documented?
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>
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> Okay, I have two suggestions... In ``TCP/IP Network Administration''
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> by ORA, it says that the address with a first byte "Greater than 223,
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> indicates the address is reserved. We can ignore these reserved
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> addresses". You shouldn't find people using those addresses on the
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> Internet, so I guess you could use address then 224.0.0.x for your own
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> LAN.
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>
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> My other suggestion is to register your own Class C Network with
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> InterNIC, who will assign you your own IP numbers. It doesn't cost
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> anything, and if you planning to eventually connect your LAN to the
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> Internet it might be worth looking into. I *think* you can pick up
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> the form from internic.net somewhere, but I don't remember where.
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> See what you think.
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>
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> peace, Ben
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>
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There is an RFC which covers this very topic. Unfortunately, I do not recall
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which RFC it was. However, the point is that there are several blocks of
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address space which have been excluded from internet mapping to allow
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stand-alone networks. Several blocks of class-A, B, and C addresses have been
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reserved for this purpose. The only block I recall is the one I use
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internally, which spans 172.16.x.x through 172.31.x.x (16 class b subnets). I
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usually use 172.16.machine.1 for my private hosts, and special addresses such
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as 172.16.machine.100 for snmp traps on those machines, etc...
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Of course, if you plan to connect your private network to the internet, you
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need to use a machine with a valid (non-private) ip address for the ppp or slip
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device. I have not done this yet, so perhaps someone else can clerify the
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routing issues when connecting private ip space to the public internet...
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