| bio | website | kutulu.org |
|---|---|---|
| location | Florida | |
| age | 37 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 3 months |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
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Apr 22 |
comment |
Why is a .ISO called a .ISO? @ZanLynx note that some CD images are not uncompressed bitwise-copies of an ISO-9660 or ISO-13346 file system; those should not use an .ISO extension. In your examples, CDR is just the MacOS name for ISO, but IMG could literally be anything (including a floppy disk image). |
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Feb 15 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
In a URL, what is // for? I don't think so. At least I've never seen any draft documents/examples/etc that have alternative heirarchy scheme for URLs. My impression has always been that TBL just wanted something to make it obvious that a URL pointed to an actual resource (and not arbitrary data), and using // made things look sufficiently-file-like. Every other style of URN I've ever seen has no special prefix in it's data part. Some protocols do allow that (I think telnet and gopher, e.g.) but I've never seen anything like that for http(s). |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
In a URL, what is // for? @Izkata: you would probably not see a non-URL URN used with a communications protocol; that's what the // is for. It indicates that the protocol is being used to access a (possibly remote) network location where a resource is to be found. There are plenty of other URN's that have other data parts and don't use // (your browser probably recognizes "mailto:", for example). See: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_scheme |
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Jul 21 |
comment |
What is .ncftp? or try asking on superuser (so they can tell you to man ncftp :) |
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May 30 |
comment |
MSDN Ultimate - using Office 2010 for general business purposes you are correct; the wording in the MS Guidance is meant to differentiate 'production' use (Office products, for whatever you normally use Office for in your business) from 'development' use (everything else, for developing solutions only), which I think MS believes is a clearer distinction than "general use". |
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May 7 |
comment |
Flatmate uses torrents, will this slow the internet connection? +1 for the scheduler, hadn't seen that before and it looks really useful. Clearly I need to spend more time in the uTorrent options. |
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May 7 |
comment |
Flatmate uses torrents, will this slow the internet connection? @ChrisNava My 1/3 number was based purely on the fact that there are 3 people sharing one connection so each gets 1/3 :) Not at all scientific, just easy to sell to your roommates. |
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May 6 |
answered | Flatmate uses torrents, will this slow the internet connection? |
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May 1 |
awarded | Editor |
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May 1 |
revised |
How to use SSH private key to log in without entering passphrase every time on Mac OS X Lion? added 668 characters in body |
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May 1 |
answered | How to use SSH private key to log in without entering passphrase every time on Mac OS X Lion? |
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May 1 |
answered | how to make a folder with the same name as a file in command prompt (Recurse subfolders) |
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Apr 25 |
answered | Using sa-learn on already filtered mails? |
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Apr 20 |
comment |
Why is there a difference between ping “localhost” and ping “local IP address”? @KevinCathcart my dig returns A, AAAA, and NS records for localhost, including an authority record for: localhost. IN NS localhost. |
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Apr 16 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Apr 16 |
answered | Why doesn't “cd D:” change the command context to D:? |
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Apr 16 |
comment |
Why doesn't “cd D:” change the command context to D:? This is the real answer to "why Widows works this way": because DOS did it that way. |
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Mar 15 |
awarded | Supporter |