Well, low priority based on port numbers for torrent stuff and consistent throttling or putting it in a round-robin queue to drop would be fine. That way you wouldn't get the tcp synchronization spikes like that question the other day. Still on the phone though.
@Fabby - The thing with it was, prioritization of one traffic type over another gets knocked out by that bill of you look at the short list of stuff it tries to accomplish. The bits I'm interested in aren't deprioritizing medical traffic over netflix, but that no prioritization is allowed, and it can be prosecuted.
It's odd that the solution to not being able to have a regular sleep cycle for me was to have a multi-phasic sleep cycle. That's all I was getting at. You didn't say anything rude, it was just an angry at myself moment.
I just want to know the difference between the classic and desktop version but for the professional status :)
If I have a desktop in my company the other can see a "non professional" user of linux or some of compagny have now a graphic interface to manage linux ?
I would like to know the opinio...
I read that question as "I find linux to be unprofessional. You should just use Windows or OSX. That's what all the professionals use. Submit your rebuttal." <-- which I find to be an asinine statement.
DV okay, but ...? Well, just tried to get some easy rep points. threehundredsomething is not very much... and I get the feeling questions tend to be either more complicated (too hard for me) or totally bullsh##
@ByteCommander Not really. We just don't have as many good questions as we used to. Occasionally you can really pull one out of the shit and answer a bad question really well, like this
I leave the permissions question alone, since they're usually the result of someone doing something really crazy. On networking and package mgmt, definitely though.
It's good to know if you hit a wall on a question that is about something else, but I won't touch those questions for reasons already expressed. That's not to say I don't think it's a good thing to learn. It is to say, I stay away from those questions, because I'ld call someone a retard.
I sort of like the book RHCE by Jang for a rapid up to speed on things you might need to know about linux in general. It's probably that I'm predisposed, because that's where I started though.
Well, a picture is work 1k words:
Looks bad, huh?
I am using the 331-updates latest 331.67 drivers from NVidia's website on a Dell Latitude e6400. Everything else is up-to-date. This only happens when I resume from sleep, or I switch to a VT and back. It also doesn't ALWAYS happen, which I fi...
@hbdgaf well, the last I got a Linux book was the fedora core 4 book, a lot of "you could do this, but we won't tell you or include it because - reasons"
I should get out for maybe another hour or so. Still suffering from that RE homework. If I hear "Jesus" once again during the next week, I'll throw at that person with sandals.
Oh, I don't usually do linux books. The RHCE book was interesting because it outlined some things you don't think you need to know, like raid, lvm, etc. Places you normally wouldn't take your desktop, but that are good to know.
^^ that style of book is always one of my favorites. I always tell the people studying for Cisco stuff to do the portable command references. They're put together really well.
I frequently tell people that REALLY want to learn to use linux at a low level to try LFS. Then come back to a place where stuff just works. Or decide you love being bothered by infinite minutiae and use a BSD ;)
How can you not find it? It's the second link from the top at the top left. If you read asian languages, you naturally read top down instead of left to right, so it makes sense ;)
every time i solve a problem on ubuntu, i'm like "Well done chaps. We should really push this to head as a matter of course." Conversely, every time i solve a problem on FreeBSD, I'm like this. So, read that how you want.
@Rinzwind: My activity doesn't keep tract of my upvotes apparently, and I can't remember exactly. Normally I don't open answered questions, but I was interested in the question and opened it and Voilà: an excellent answer by you, so an upvote!
First I would like to congratulate Luis Alvarado on his efforts today in dealing with the Close Vote queue.
It would appear from the questions I have asked here
Should we be able to review 40 close votes when the queue length is less than 1000?
and on Meta StackOverflow
Close Vote review th...
Edited and answered 500 questions THIS IS CLEAR (both actions within 12 hours, THIS: is that 12 hours for editing and 12 hours for ansewering OR 12 hours to do both answer score > 0). IS THAT PERHAPS TOTAL of all edits/answers?
@blade19899 it does NOT say answer>0 PER EDIT/ANSWER.
so could be a total of those 500 edits/answers that needs to be positive
I explain the gritty details here:
Final requirements:
Edited n questions within 12 hours of posting an answer (that's 12 hours before or after answering), where:
The question was asked by someone other than the answerer
Neither the questions nor the answers are deleted
The ...
"tl;dr: answer a question, then edit the question. Or edit the question and then answer it. If your answer then gets voted > 0, it'll count toward a badge." - that makes sense
days represented 1296 rep cap was reached via rep from upvotes *only* on 39 days earned at least 200 reputation on 67 days earned 174 reputation from suggested edits
Kuratas is a rideable and user-operated robot built by the Japanese company Suidobashi Heavy Industry. Billed as "the world's first giant boarding robot", the Kuratas was unveiled when the website was opened in 2012. It was demonstrated at Wonder Festival.
== Developers ==
The Kuratas robot was developed by artist Kogoro Kurata (after whom the suit is named), and roboticist Wataru Yoshizaki.
Kurata stated that he was inspired by the mecha frequently featured in anime, especially those of the series Armored Trooper Votoms, which he watched as a child. "When I was a kid, I thought there were going...
Yeez they already made a Wiki page for it.
> This page was last modified on 10 June 2014, at 17:54.
@fossfreedom, @blade19899, @Rinzwind: as the Ubuntu community doesn't have many unique golden badges, I propose we review Rinzwind's answers every day and upvote every time we see a good one!
Do Wine Viruses only work while Wine is running?
Yes, if it is a trojan, rootkit, worm program specifically designed to infect Windows machine. Viruses through wine has already happened.
could I stop a virus from doing it's thing by just quitting Wine?
Yes and no.
Yes: If It's a Wind...
@blade19899 and now for the KICKER: it happens on Windows to if you by mistake use "Program Files" as the installation path. When removing it removed "Program Files/*"