523 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
523 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
From: Digestifier <Linux-Development-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
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To: Linux-Development@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Reply-To: Linux-Development@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 94 18:13:12 EDT
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Subject: Linux-Development Digest #168
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Linux-Development Digest #168, Volume #2 Tue, 13 Sep 94 18:13:12 EDT
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Contents:
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Re: Acid (Richard L. Goerwitz)
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Re: Acid (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Re: Acid (was: Simple acid test) (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Re: which kernel with dosemu 0.53 ? (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Re: Don't use Linux?! (Matt Welsh)
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Re: Don't use Linux?! (Riku Saikkonen)
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Where is Wine at? (Timothy Kulig)
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Re: Digi Intelligent Boards? ("Simon P Allen")
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Re: -fPIC flag in gcc (Carl Karlsson)
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(Q) ftape blues (Timothy Murphy)
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Bug in MSDOS fs ? (Per Holm)
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Parallel SCSI Support (Timothy Kulig)
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Looking for stories: business uses of Linux (Jay Ashworth)
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Re: MSDOS FS dates off by 5 days! (Slackware 2.0 bug?) (Matthias Urlichs)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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From: goer@quads.uchicago.edu (Richard L. Goerwitz)
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Subject: Re: Acid
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Reply-To: goer@midway.uchicago.edu
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 1994 14:34:57 GMT
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schrod@iti.informatik.th-darmstadt.de (Joachim Schrod) writes:
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>
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>There is support for typesetting approximately 50 languages, including
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>such beasts as Khmer. Multi-directional, of course. There exists also
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>a Unicode-TeX.
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>
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>Don't expect the stuff to be easy to install, though. It still have
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>its rought edges, in particular on the font side. But I did see it
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>work... :-)
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This is great news. But I've heard it many times before. Remember
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my "acid test"? Can I quote Shakespeare and the Quran in the same
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paragraph, and have everything wrap and space correctly? There are
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established typographical conventions for multilingual and multidi-
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rectional text. I've heard of several TeX "versions" hacked to sup-
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port one or another script or language. But I've never heard of a
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genuinely multilingual TeX. Is there one?
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Frustration is typically what I feel when talking to people about in-
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ternationalized/multilingual documents. For example there's been a
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lot of hoopla over multilingual Emacs extensions - which turn out to
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be hacks for Japanese mainle. And there's a supposedly "multilingual"
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Mosaic - which turns out to handle just a few European languages.
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There has even been talk about how the Linux kernel does not rely on
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national scripts, and is thus multilingual, but a quick grep of the
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source tree reveals many expressions that rely on a stable mapping of
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specific alphabetic symbols like 'a' to a single underlying code.
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One of our list readers did send me some of the specs on Mime, and lo
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and behold this does seem - really - to be a multilingual standard.
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It even has explicit discussion of multidirectional documents that mix
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scripts from languages with "incompatible" directions (at least left-
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right and right-left; the conventions for embedding left-right in
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up-down text require that you turn things sideways :-)).
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--
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-Richard L. Goerwitz goer%midway@uchicago.bitnet
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goer@midway.uchicago.edu rutgers!oddjob!ellis!goer
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------------------------------
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From: turnbull@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Subject: Re: Acid
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Date: 12 Sep 94 06:40:28 GMT
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Reply-To: turnbull@shako.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp
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In article <34goq0$b3s@ionews.io.org>, Lau <gabe@io.org> wrote:
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>
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> Postscript would come very close but having to incorporate
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>bitmaps/glyphs w/ each file would be a pain (not to mention outrageously
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>huge...have also yet to see non-European language fonts for less than an
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>arm and a leg).
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Well, you only have to do this once, if you're smart---you do it as a
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separate file. In the case of ISO8859-1 and linux, I guess that file
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is 'vmlinuz'---or, I guess, your video card ROM. (If I got that
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wrong, don't waste your breath flaming, just substitute the correct
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charset and font location.)
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I should say Chinese, Japanese, and Korean count as 'non-European',
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and any X11R[456] mirror has those in BFD format. (Japanese and
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Korean for sure, and I believe this is true of Chinese as well for R5
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and R6.) I believe there are also Arabic fonts available in the same
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places, but I'm not sure. I seem to recall that the Hershey fonts
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include several non-European fonts, but they certainly don't include
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anything like a functional set of kanji for Japanese. I believe that
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X and maybe Ghostscript include Type-1-izing programs for bitmap
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fonts, as well.
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> Actually, TeX/LaTeX would come closest...and its available for several
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>languages.
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Including Chinese and Japanese. But I don't know if Don Knuth thought
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about multidirectional languages.
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One place where people have done a *lot* of thinking about
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multilingual programming and localization is the MULE project, the
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MUlti-Lingual Emacs. I don't use the multi-lingual aspects, but they
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are apparently pretty sophisticated. Also, there are multi-locale
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extensions for Mosaic; as of 6 months ago they didn't support multiple
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languages in the same browser window, though. For both of these, you
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can point your WWW browser at www.ntt.ac.jp (love them phone company
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labs!) and Mosaic info of course can be found at www.ncsa.uiuc.ecu.
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>
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> Kin Lau (gabe@io.org)
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>
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>---
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>* UniQWK v3.0 * The Windows Mail Reader
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>
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--
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Steve Turnbull
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Chief Advice-Giving Officer, Yasepotchi-gumi (sm)
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Social Engineering and Mechanism Design
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"REAL Solutions to REAL Problems of REAL People in REAL Time! REALLY."
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(c) 1992, 1993, 1994 Yasepotchi-gumi
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------------------------------
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From: turnbull@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Subject: Re: Acid (was: Simple acid test)
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Date: 12 Sep 94 06:53:20 GMT
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Reply-To: turnbull@shako.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp
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In article <1994Sep4.180029.2249@midway.uchicago.edu>,
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Richard L. Goerwitz <goer@midway.uchicago.edu> wrote:
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>schrod@iti.informatik.th-darmstadt.de (Joachim Schrod) writes:
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>
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>>Perhaps you should differentiate between multilingual (can work with
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>>many languages/scripts at once) and internationalized (can work with
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>>an arbitrary but fixed language/script at one given instantiation).
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>>
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>>In our work this distinction has shown to be very proficient. And the
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>>literature on I18N actually often mean the latter thing.
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>
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>This really does make sense. In my muddled way of thinking, though,
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>supporting multilingual features (e.g. wide or multi-byte characters,
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>multiple scripts/wordwrap directions, and so on) is one of the best
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>ways to lay a foundation for internationalization.
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Yes, it's necessary. No, it's nowhere near sufficient. There are
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wrong ways of doing it. For example, in the original NEmacs (Japanese
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emacs) the code which handled 1-byte charsets (ie, interpolated
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English as far as I was concerned; there are other 1-byte charsets
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used in Japanese but I don't use them) for some reason insisted on
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making quotation marks into a word (so that "this" could wrap between
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the 's' and the '"') in a way that could *not* be properly fixed by
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the usual GNU emacs wordbreaking facilities. Instead a separate test
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had to be added in the wordwrapping function, a place that non-USS
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Enterprise crewmembers should never have to seek out. Furthermore,
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this was *not* robust across 2-byte charsets (for historical and
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Microsoft---why do they screw up everything they touch?---reasons
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there are no less than three 2-byte charsets for the ideographic kanji
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in common use on general purpose computers, and yet others on the
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dedicated wordprocessors). Furthermore, on at least one occasion (the
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file got lost in a flurry of editing, and I haven't been able to
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reproduce it) my fix broke the interpretation of 2-byte sequences.
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I have not checked this, but I was told that MULE, the updated
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MUlti-Lingual Emacs, uses a state flag to determine whether there is a
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one-byte charset in use, and this problem should not occur.
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>
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>--
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>
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> -Richard L. Goerwitz goer%midway@uchicago.bitnet
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> goer@midway.uchicago.edu rutgers!oddjob!ellis!goer
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--
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Steve Turnbull
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------------------------------
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From: turnbull@turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp (Stephen J. Turnbull)
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Subject: Re: which kernel with dosemu 0.53 ?
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Date: 12 Sep 94 07:17:08 GMT
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Reply-To: turnbull@shako.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp
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In article <CvnBt8.42F@pe1chl.ampr.org>, Rob Janssen <pe1chl@rabo.nl> wrote:
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>In <1994Sep4.203531.71964@kuhub.cc.ukans.edu> srini@tisl.ukans.edu (Srini Seetharam) writes:
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>>I downloaded the dosemu0.53 pre alpha release.
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>>I would like to know which kernel it is compatible with.
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>
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>Then why don't you read the documentation in the dosemu0.53 package?
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>
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>Rob
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I haven't read the dosemu0.53 docs, but the previous ones basically
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say 1.1.something+, or 1.0.soemthing with some patch. They all also
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say "your mileage may vary" or equivalent disclaimer, since it is
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alpha software still.
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Grepping for 'kernel' and 'compat' gave nothing useful, although I
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may not have all the docs.
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Presumably he wants to know which kernels seem to break dosemu---I
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have seen such posts on this group. Maybe completely unwarranted, but
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I've seen them. (I don't know or care whether they were true bugs or
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not, since I'm using 1.1.18 + dosemu 0.52 and nothing's broke yet, nor
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do I yet need any capabilities that pair doesn't have.)
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'Twould be 'nice' (I should volunteer, but I'm not even keeping up
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with my other volunteer projects) if there were a 'kernel-incompatibility'
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file to go with the 'EMU-success' file, just to record people's
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complaints. (Compiler wouldn't bother to verify them, just archive
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them for others to check out.)
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--
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Steve Turnbull
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------------------------------
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From: mdw@cs.cornell.edu (Matt Welsh)
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Subject: Re: Don't use Linux?!
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 1994 14:23:47 GMT
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In article <34pq45INNojt@sbusol.rz.uni-sb.de> hightec@sbusol.rz.uni-sb.de (Michael Schumacher) writes:
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>installations, but it's likely to be in the 100000's. One could think
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>that companies are willing to consider Linux a reasonable and serious
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>platform, and that they would port and offer their products to the
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>Linux community. However, they are far away from doing so, actually.
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>Here's why:
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I have to agree with most of your observations. This was a
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well-thought-out article.
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> Quo vadis, Linux? Do we continue to like Linux "as is", or should we
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>change something in order to encourage companies to develop commercial, but
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>sophisticated end-user software for this beautiful OS? Do we continue to
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>keep Linux a powerful tool for wizards only, or do we want to see Linux
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>being used in offices and other commercial environments? If we *really*
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>want Linux to succeed, we *need* the companies and their commercial products!
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This is one of the goals of Linux International, a nonprofit organization
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which is currently forming. A number of Linux developers, such as Michael
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Johnson, Alan Cox, and Ian Murdock are working with Linux International in
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order to promote the development and growth of Linux. One of LI's goals is
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to lobby commercial software developers to release products for Linux.
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This is not LI's only goal, of course. Another focus is to support the
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Linux developers themselves, by helping to direct donations and funding.
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My concept has been to form a "grant fund" where people can send donations
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to support Linux development. People who wish to develop software for
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Linux (such as new device drivers, applications, and so forth) and require
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funding (to purchase equipment, documentation, etc.) can make a
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grant request. Grants will be awarded out of the pool of donations sent
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to this fund.
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This seems to be the only way to manage donations for Linux development.
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With all due respect, it doesn't make a great dceal of sense to send
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your money just to Linus Torvalds or Patrick Volkerding. Scores of
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others have spent as much time working on Linux over the last two
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years. You could always support the FSF, which does, in fact, support Linux.
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But what about people developing the Linux kernel? And the many others not
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affiliated directly with the FSF? Because the Linux "development team" is so
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disorganized, a grant fund seems to be the best way to go.
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There's no organization behind Linux. LI is not an attempt to form one.
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It is just an attempt to promote the growth of Linux through aiding
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developers.
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LI is still in the planning stage, but watch c.o.l.* and Linux Journal
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for more details.
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M. Welsh
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------------------------------
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Subject: Re: Don't use Linux?!
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From: riku.saikkonen@compart.fi (Riku Saikkonen)
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 94 17:45:00 +0200
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>Wrong. You may make statically linked, binary-only releases.
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>All you have to do is to distribute an unlinked version of your
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>program along the ready-to-use version. This is not too much
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>of a hassle.
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Uh... Stupid question: What is the best way to distribute the unlinked
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binary? The .o files?
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-=- Rjs -=- riku.saikkonen@compart.fi - IRC: Rjs
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"For still there are so many things / that I have never seen: /
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in every wood in every spring / there is a different green." - Tolkien
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------------------------------
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From: tim@systel.com (Timothy Kulig)
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Subject: Where is Wine at?
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Date: 13 Sep 1994 02:13:23 GMT
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I mean this in the Process manner, not the ftp site names.
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Where is it at in terms of movement? Is it really obtainable?
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Again I mean this in the completion sense. Not that I'm knocking
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the more than intelligent people who are developing it, because
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I could'nt touch them with a twelve foot pole. Will "Chicago"
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make all wine work obsolete? Just curious.
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I Thank you.
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Timothy Kulig
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--
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=============================================================================
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__&__ |
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/ \ | Timothy Alan Kulig tim@systel.com or tkulig@ic.net
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| | |
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| (o)(o) | S Y S T E L Unix Windows Dos Vax - You name it!
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C .---_) |
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| |.___| | If you need anything in the Unix World, Feel Free to call!
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| \__/ |
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/_____\ | (800) 906-2167 (810) 960-9783 Data: (810) 960-7679
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/_____/ \ |
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/ \ | Homer Simpson is my Idol. MMMMM Fuzzy Grape!!
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=============================================================================
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------------------------------
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From: simonallen@cix.compulink.co.uk ("Simon P Allen")
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Subject: Re: Digi Intelligent Boards?
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 1994 19:08:51 GMT
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Linux device driver for Specialix Intelligent serial card is in Alpha
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test. See the Linux project FAQ for details.
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Cheers & Beers, Simon.
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------------------------------
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From: d90-cka@dront.nada.kth.se (Carl Karlsson)
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Subject: Re: -fPIC flag in gcc
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Date: 13 Sep 1994 20:02:48 GMT
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[Jumping in on the -fPIC discussion :)]
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I'm trying to port a few dynamic libraries from a sparc to Linux.
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Everything have been working OK until now, when I realize that I can't
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have mutually dependent libraries (that is, a routine in lib X calls
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a routine in lib Y, and vice versa).
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I've tried a few things, but no matter what I end up with symbols
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undefined in one of the libraries.
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It seems that a DLL have to be self-contained. I know the obvious answer
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to this question - rearrange the libraries - but since that is a little
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bit of too much work, I would like to know if there's another way out.
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PIC works OK both under SunOS and Solaris 2. I'm using tools-2.16 and
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gcc 2.5.8.
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Rgds,
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Calle
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------------------------------
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From: tim@maths.tcd.ie (Timothy Murphy)
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Subject: (Q) ftape blues
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Date: 13 Sep 1994 15:32:13 +0100
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(1) The ftape that comes with Slackware 2.0
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does not work with my Colorado Jumbo
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(the first drive mentioned in the documentation).
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The drive works perfectly under MSDOS.
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Did anyone get ftape to work "out of the box"
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with this version of Slackware?
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My impression is that it does not work.
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In that case it surely should not be distributed?
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(2) Although the latest version of ftape from sunsite
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compiled without problem,
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insmod threw up half-a-dozen linking errors.
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Is one meant to apply a patch?
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If so, why is that not stated anywhere in the distribution?
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(3) Am I alone in finding this software (ftape) causes undue suffering?
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--
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Timothy Murphy
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e-mail: tim@maths.tcd.ie
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tel: +353-1-2842366
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s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
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------------------------------
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From: ph@fi.aau.dk (Per Holm)
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Subject: Bug in MSDOS fs ?
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Date: Tue, 13 Sep 1994 20:48:53 GMT
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There seem to be a bug in the msdos fs..
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I have a 250 MB dos partition (formattet with MSDOS 5), and when mounting
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this partition under linux, I'm not able to read a file using the last
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cluster on the disk... It causes an I/O error...
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There is not any problems reading the same file when booting plain dos..
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The error has been in the kernel since 1.1.29, and may be in older versions.
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Regards
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Per Holm
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------------------------------
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From: tim@systel.com (Timothy Kulig)
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Subject: Parallel SCSI Support
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Date: 13 Sep 1994 02:15:24 GMT
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Is there such a thing? I have a friend with a Parallel NEC CDROM Drive
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who wants to run it with Linux, Is there a Parallel SCSI support for
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Linux? I appreciate it.
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Thanx in advance!!!!!
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Keep up the beautiful work!!
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Timothy Kulig
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--
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=============================================================================
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__&__ |
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/ \ | Timothy Alan Kulig tim@systel.com or tkulig@ic.net
|
||
| | |
|
||
| (o)(o) | S Y S T E L Unix Windows Dos Vax - You name it!
|
||
C .---_) |
|
||
| |.___| | If you need anything in the Unix World, Feel Free to call!
|
||
| \__/ |
|
||
/_____\ | (800) 906-2167 (810) 960-9783 Data: (810) 960-7679
|
||
/_____/ \ |
|
||
/ \ | Homer Simpson is my Idol. MMMMM Fuzzy Grape!!
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||
=============================================================================
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||
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------------------------------
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From: jra@zeus.IntNet.net (Jay Ashworth)
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Subject: Looking for stories: business uses of Linux
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Date: 13 Sep 1994 17:01:09 -0400
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I'm compiling stories from the net concerning the use of Linux in
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commercial environments. If you have anything to contribute, please email
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it to me, at the .sig address. I'm summarizing; I'll post id there's
|
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interest. Please let me know what you're doing, even if you can't release
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details to the public, I'll respect proprietary rights. I'm just trying
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to document critical mass.
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Cheers,
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-- jra
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--
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Jay R. Ashworth Ashworth
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Designer & Associates
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||
ka1fjx/4 High Technology Systems Consulting
|
||
jra@baylink.com +1 813 790 7592
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: urlichs@smurf.noris.de (Matthias Urlichs)
|
||
Subject: Re: MSDOS FS dates off by 5 days! (Slackware 2.0 bug?)
|
||
Date: 13 Sep 1994 08:49:30 +0200
|
||
|
||
In comp.os.linux.development, article <NOZOMI.94Sep2085902@glaucomys.seino.tsukuba.ac.jp>,
|
||
nozomi@glaucomys.seino.tsukuba.ac.jp writes:
|
||
>
|
||
> Not +5 days, but EET diff * 60 seconds.
|
||
> sys_tz.tz_minuteswest sustains not minute, but seconds!
|
||
|
||
Well, it _should_ contain (not sustain) minutes.
|
||
|
||
> Try
|
||
> secs += sys_tz.tz_minuteswest;
|
||
>
|
||
Don't.
|
||
|
||
> Of course, its better to set tz_minute in munute....
|
||
|
||
True. Therefore, the problem is not in the kernel but in whichever program
|
||
uses seconds for minuteswest in the settimeofday() system call. See "man
|
||
settimeofday"; it talks about minutes.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
By the yard, life is hard.
|
||
By the inch, it's a cinch.
|
||
--
|
||
Matthias Urlichs \ XLink-POP N<>rnberg | EMail: urlichs@smurf.noris.de
|
||
Schleiermacherstra<EFBFBD>e 12 \ Unix+Linux+Mac | Phone: ...please use email.
|
||
90491 N<>rnberg (Germany) \ Consulting+Networking+Programming+etc'ing 42
|
||
PGP: 1B 89 E2 1C 43 EA 80 44 15 D2 29 CF C6 C7 E0 DE
|
||
Click <A HREF="http://smurf.noris.de/~urlichs/finger">here</A>.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
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||
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||
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|
||
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|
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