From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 10:51:08 1997
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Sun, 16 Nov 1997 19:45:44 +0100 (MET)
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 19:45:44 +0100
From: j@uriah.heep.sax.de (J Wunsch)
To: chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
References: <3466F8C4.1A3F3A1A@Shevchenko.kiev.ua> <14438.879157439@time.cdrom.com>
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Reply-To: joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de (Joerg Wunsch)
In-Reply-To: <14438.879157439@time.cdrom.com>; from Jordan K. Hubbard on Nov 10, 1997 02:23:59 -0800
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As Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> Perhaps it's merely your poor command of english at fault (and I
> really have great difficulty even understanding half of what you say)
> but it didn't look like you were doing anything more than slamming
> FreeBSD - ...
Well, that's -chat here: Jordan, is your Ukrainian better than his
English? :-))
(Your German is most likely better, i know. My Russian is probably
worse than Ruslan's English, even though i've learnt it in school.)
--
cheers, J"org
joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de -- http://www.sax.de/~joerg/ -- NIC: JW11-RIPE
Never trust an operating system you don't have sources for. ;-)
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 12:32:27 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 20:31:32 +0000
From: Ruslan Shevchenko
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To: Joerg Wunsch
CC: chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Oracle & FreeBSD [Was: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
References: <3466F8C4.1A3F3A1A@Shevchenko.kiev.ua> <14438.879157439@time.cdrom.com> <19971116194544.QQ53513@uriah.heep.sax.de>
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J Wunsch wrote:
> As Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
>
> ? Perhaps it's merely your poor command of english at fault (and I
> ? really have great difficulty even understanding half of what you say)
> ? but it didn't look like you were doing anything more than slamming
> ? FreeBSD - ...
>
> Well, that's -chat here: Jordan, is your Ukrainian better than his
> English? :-))
>
> (Your German is most likely better, i know. My Russian is probably
> worse than Ruslan's English, even though i've learnt it in school.)
>
> --
Jordan is not try to write on Ukrainion ;)
About Oracle:
If anybody interests, i begin to write RPC-bridge for Oracle OCI, now
two functions (olog ? olof) work.
After it would be complete, perl::DBD modules will be work with Oracle.
(and tcl and few C++ class libraries).
But this work is in "background" mode, so I can not say, when it will be
finished.
Now, we move services, which must interact with Oracle, to SCO.
> cheers, J"org
>
> joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de -- http://www.sax.de/~joerg/ -- NIC: JW11-RIPE
> Never trust an operating system you don't have sources for. ;-)
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 15:47:01 1997
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To: joerg_wunsch@uriah.heep.sax.de (Joerg Wunsch)
cc: chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
In-reply-to: Your message of "Sun, 16 Nov 1997 19:45:44 +0100."
<19971116194544.QQ53513@uriah.heep.sax.de>
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 15:46:41 -0800
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From: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
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> Well, that's -chat here: Jordan, is your Ukrainian better than his
> English? :-))
If I ever join any Ukranian mailing lists and need to make
myself understood in that language, I'll let you know. :)
Jordan
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 16:28:35 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 17:27:52 -0700 (MST)
From: Charles Mott
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Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
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On Sun, 16 Nov 1997, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> > Well, that's -chat here: Jordan, is your Ukrainian better than his
> > English? :-))
>
> If I ever join any Ukranian mailing lists and need to make
> myself understood in that language, I'll let you know. :)
>
> Jordan
Who knows, maybe the English language has reached its zenith. I have
actually found myself a few times wanting to read foreign language
websites and being aware of my complete lack of language skills.
In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Americans working in the areas of
physics, aerodynamics, chemistry and chemical engineering often had to
_learn_ German (not just pass an exam) in order to keep up with
developments.
Charles Mott
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 18:46:47 1997
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To: Mark Mayo
cc: Poul-Henning Kamp , Alex ,
freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
From: David Kelly
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
In-reply-to: Message from Mark Mayo
of "Sun, 16 Nov 1997 15:42:25 EST." <19971116154225.31523@vmunix.com>
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Moved to -chat:
> So everyone go out and grab the client at www.distributed.net/rc5/ and
> configure it to report as email team-freebsd@circle.net if you want to
> help out. www.circle.net/team-freebsd/ has more info.
No! No! No! The rules changed for RC5-64. You are supposed to report
your *real* email address. Then use their web page to assign your
contributions to a team. The problem was tracking down the real machine
that solved the puzzle thru dynamic IP addresses. So now they want your
real email address. Also by using your real email address you can check
on your personal status with their stats page AND check on your team's.
So what team number is FreeBSD?
And a suggestion: run "./rc564 -c [0-5] -benchmark" for each CPU type
then hardcode the best with item 15 in "./rc564 -config". Don't trust
the auto detect. My PPro usually auto-selects type 1, 386/486, which is
plainly wrong and not as good. I crunched the first couple of weeks
incorrectly optimized. At least it was the 2nd best setting:
CPU type desc kkeys/sec
0 Pentium 406
1 386/486 422
2 PPro & II 461
3 AMD 486 405
4 AMD K5 380
5 AMD K6 334
On day I'll try overclocking. How's that done? My bus speed jumpers are
set for 66 MHz and the multiplier is 2.5, for 166 MHz. What do I do? Is
it so simple as to lie and claim its a 200 MHz CPU by using a 3.0
multiplier? MB is an Asus P6NP5 and my CPU is auto-setting its voltage.
Does the PPro have any kind of thermal protection or detection?
--
David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@hiwaay.net
=====================================================================
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 19:47:53 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 21:48:38 -0600
From: Steve Price
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Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
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BTW, does anybody know how I can get a box that does not have
a direct connection to the internet working on a set of keys?
There's a dual P6-180 NT box at work that I would love to throw
into the mix.
This box is connected to a FreeBSD box that acts as our server
(files/mail/etc.) at work. The FreeBSD box has a dialup PPP
connection and gets assigned a dynamic IP. In fact, it is out
there somewhere chugging away on keys right now. :) But it
sure would be nice to have a M$ box looking for keys in an
effort to advance FreeBSD's cause.
Thanks, Steve
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 19:51:23 1997
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From: Wes Peters
To: Tim Vanderhoek
CC: chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: Bad Winds of Winter - Please Read!
In-Reply-To:
References: <199711150307.WAA01607@dyson.iquest.net>
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Tim Vanderhoek writes:
> On Fri, 14 Nov 1997, John S. Dyson wrote:
>
> > I just landed in Indianapolis last night (from the Bay area), in a twin
> > engine plane, with approx 5cm of slush. We had approx 10-12cm of snow
>
> Well, if it makes you feel any better, the official count now
> puts us at 17cm of snow. :)
If you guys are talking about early snowfall this year, you're
apparently not aware that Solitude ski resort near here (Salt Lake City)
opened a week ago yesterday (Nov 8). They currently have 28" (71 cm) of
snow at the bottom of the hill. For details on "The Greatest Snow on
Earth", see:
http://www.skiutah.com/snowrep.html
It's already snowed several times at my house (about 4300' or 1300m
elevation) -- we got snow the first weekend of October. All hail El
Nino! ;^)
--
"Where am I, and what am I doing in this handbasket?"
Wes Peters Softweyr LLC
http://www.xmission.com/~softweyr softweyr@xmission.com
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 20:08:48 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 21:26:04 -0700 (MST)
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From: Wes Peters
To: Kim Culhan
CC: chat@freebsd.org
Subject: telnet interop with SunOS and IRIX
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Kim Culhan writes:
>
> I have been having problems when telnet to the above on a 2.2.5-RELEASE machine.
>
> If, when running VI, I hit several down-arrow key strokes, at some point
> it begins to apparently ignore the escape char and prints an upper case
> character depending on the arrow key.
>
> With the Sun machine for instance, if I hit down-arrow it will, after a
> few keys, begin to print an upper case 'B' after this point for each
> press.
>
> In the case of the IRIX 5.3 machine, it won't allow any arrow keys at all.
> It just returns a BEL character for each key press.
>
> If anyone has any info on this it would be very greatly appreciated.
Sounds like your terminal is set to something close but not exactly the
same as what it really is. This is pretty common with "ansi" style
terminals. If you're logging in from an xterm, make sure your TERM
environment variable is set to "xterm" and the rows and columns, as
showed by 'stty -a', are correct.
--
"Where am I, and what am I doing in this handbasket?"
Wes Peters Softweyr LLC
http://www.xmission.com/~softweyr softweyr@xmission.com
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 20:37:32 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 22:36:55 -0600
From: Jonathan Lemon
To: Steve Price
Cc: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
References: <199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net> <346FBE96.167EB0E7@hiwaay.net>
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On Nov 11, 1997 at 09:48:38PM -0600, Steve Price wrote:
> BTW, does anybody know how I can get a box that does not have
> a direct connection to the internet working on a set of keys?
> There's a dual P6-180 NT box at work that I would love to throw
> into the mix.
Also, what is the best way to get things working from behind a
firewall? I have a few boxes behind a machine running the TIS
fwtk, but I can't seem to get a proxy connection through. Web
browsers, cvsup, etc work, but not rc5.
--
Jonathan
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 21:19:19 1997
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To: Charles Mott
cc: chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
In-reply-to: Your message of "Sun, 16 Nov 1997 17:27:52 MST."
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 21:19:10 -0800
Message-ID: <24684.879743950@jkh.cdrom.com>
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
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> Who knows, maybe the English language has reached its zenith. I have
> actually found myself a few times wanting to read foreign language
> websites and being aware of my complete lack of language skills.
Actually, if anything I'd say that english has become more of a
"lingua franca" than ever. I haven't personally been to every single
country in the world (yet :) but it seems that there's almost none
where one can't find english spoken in some capacity if it's truly you
language of last resort. 100 years ago, that was also true for
French, so I think it's simply a shift in what people consider to be a
reasonably common language to learn if they wish to communicate across
borders. Esperanto was a nice try for this, but it appears that
few wish to really learn it (with the exception of a few die-hards
here and there who subscribe to Esperanto newsletters and such).
A pity since English, by comparison, is a cast-iron bitch to learn
if you're not a native speaker: cough, plough, dough, that sort
of berzerkness abounds in this language. ;)
> In the late 1800s and early 1900s, Americans working in the areas of
> physics, aerodynamics, chemistry and chemical engineering often had to
> _learn_ German (not just pass an exam) in order to keep up with
> developments.
Yep, or French if they worked in the standards bureau. I think
that time is definitely past though (und das ist wirklich eine Schade :-).
Jordan
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 21:30:33 1997
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To: David Kelly
cc: Mark Mayo , Poul-Henning Kamp ,
Alex , freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
In-reply-to: Your message of "Sun, 16 Nov 1997 20:28:51 CST."
<199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net>
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 21:29:59 -0800
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From: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
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> On day I'll try overclocking. How's that done? My bus speed jumpers are
> set for 66 MHz and the multiplier is 2.5, for 166 MHz. What do I do? Is
> it so simple as to lie and claim its a 200 MHz CPU by using a 3.0
> multiplier? MB is an Asus P6NP5 and my CPU is auto-setting its voltage.
Yep. I have both of my P6s (single and dual) set to 3.5 for 233Mhz
and it works just peachy. I did some benchmarks at 180, 200
and 233 and the overclocking definitely makes a measurable
difference, as one would hope and expect.
> Does the PPro have any kind of thermal protection or detection?
Yes. Apparently if they get too hot, they simply shut down
until they're cool again.
Jordan
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 21:34:40 1997
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To: David Kelly
cc: Mark Mayo , Poul-Henning Kamp ,
Alex , freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
In-reply-to: Your message of "Sun, 16 Nov 1997 20:28:51 CST."
<199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net>
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 21:32:03 -0800
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From: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
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> On day I'll try overclocking. How's that done? My bus speed jumpers are
> set for 66 MHz and the multiplier is 2.5, for 166 MHz. What do I do? Is
P.S. Both of my successful overclocks were with the 256K cache
P6 parts. I've heard that people have somewhat less success
with the 512K caches as, obviously, there's more cache to get
annoyed with you as you push it past its rated specs.
Jordan
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 21:35:47 1997
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Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 23:34:04 -0600 (CST)
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From: Bruce Albrecht
To: Jonathan Lemon
Cc: Steve Price , freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
In-Reply-To: <19971116223655.54597@right.PCS>
References: <199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net>
<346FBE96.167EB0E7@hiwaay.net>
<19971116223655.54597@right.PCS>
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Jonathan Lemon writes:
> On Nov 11, 1997 at 09:48:38PM -0600, Steve Price wrote:
> > BTW, does anybody know how I can get a box that does not have
> > a direct connection to the internet working on a set of keys?
> > There's a dual P6-180 NT box at work that I would love to throw
> > into the mix.
>
> Also, what is the best way to get things working from behind a
> firewall? I have a few boxes behind a machine running the TIS
> fwtk, but I can't seem to get a proxy connection through. Web
> browsers, cvsup, etc work, but not rc5.
If you don't have a direct connection, you might want to try running a
copy of rc564 in a second directory with just -fetch to get the
blocks, and then ftp buff-in.rc5 file to the NT box. When it's done,
ftp the buff-out.rc5 file back and do an rc564 -flush. I don't know
for sure that it will work, but you could try it with a small set of
blocks, and if it doesn't work, run the blocks again on your freebsd
box.
I'm able to run the Solaris client via a firewall by telling it to
talk to my firewall proxy in http mode. I can send a copy of my ini
file tomorrow.
I have a dual CPU P6-200, and I can do about 340 blocks/day (537472.57
keys/sec). I'm also running it on about 30-40 sparc 5's at night and
all weekend. If I recall correctly, it takes about 9 sparc 5's to do
as many keys as my SMP P6.
From owner-freebsd-chat Sun Nov 16 23:02:29 1997
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Message-ID: <19971117074508.30373@keltia.freenix.fr>
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 07:45:08 +0100
From: Ollivier Robert
To: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
References: <199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net> <346FBE96.167EB0E7@hiwaay.net> <19971116223655.54597@right.PCS>
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According to Jonathan Lemon:
> fwtk, but I can't seem to get a proxy connection through. Web
> browsers, cvsup, etc work, but not rc5.
The current clients supports HHTP and can be proxyied. My client at work is
using this method.
--
Ollivier ROBERT -=- FreeBSD: The Power to Serve! -=- roberto@keltia.freenix.fr
FreeBSD keltia.freenix.fr 3.0-CURRENT #49: Sat Nov 15 20:03:33 CET 1997
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 01:26:48 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 01:26:22 -0800 (PST)
From: Annelise Anderson
To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
In-Reply-To: <24684.879743950@jkh.cdrom.com>
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On Sun, 16 Nov 1997, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> Actually, if anything I'd say that english has become more of a
> "lingua franca" than ever. I haven't personally been to every single
> country in the world (yet :) but it seems that there's almost none
> where one can't find english spoken in some capacity if it's truly you
> language of last resort. 100 years ago, that was also true for
> French, so I think it's simply a shift in what people consider to be a
> reasonably common language to learn if they wish to communicate across
> borders. Esperanto was a nice try for this, but it appears that
> few wish to really learn it (with the exception of a few die-hards
> here and there who subscribe to Esperanto newsletters and such).
> A pity since English, by comparison, is a cast-iron bitch to learn
> if you're not a native speaker: cough, plough, dough, that sort
> of berzerkness abounds in this language. ;)
I think the spread of English as everyone's second language is pretty
much a consequence of the outcome of the Second World War, after which
English became the language of air traffic control, diplomacy, science,
military matters (NATO), and so forth; and during these years the United
States was (and still is) the world's largest single market for the
exports of other countries.
When the Soviet empire collapsed with the fall of the wall in 1989, and
the Soviet Union itself collapsed at the end of 1991, English instead of
Russian made a big jump in being the second language of the countries of
the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. There was a dramatic shift
from Russian to English in hours taught in school, etc. Quite a few
people, though, learned English secretly from the broadcasts of the BBC
or Radio Liberty. Some students who played significant roles in the
transition of Communist countries to capitalism and democracy learned
their economics secretly from photocopies of textbooks in English.
In other words, we won a couple of big ones, a hot one and a cold one.
It's useful for people to agree on what they're going to use as a second
language. Although English is difficult in some respects, it's also
easier than some languages in terms of understanding the spoken language
(easier than French, for example); it's extremely flexible in adoption of
vocabulary and creating new words, and there are no "authorities" who
object to such developments; and it is less inflected than many languages,
using word order and additional words rather than word endings to indicate
relationships (subject, object, indirect object, etc.), and may in this
respect be relatively easier. Spelling, of course, is difficult. Verbs
must be a nightmare. But--
I think native English speakers are quite willing to figure out
what people using English as a second language are trying to say and are
a lot nicer about such efforts than, say, the French are about French.
As we should be.
English is not only "everybody's second language" on the Internet and the
language people use to talk about computers; but an arresting and really
quite fundamental indicator of its dominance is that it's the language
computers use to talk to each other. It seems the major computer
languages are "in English"--if, else, while, for, do, continue, break--
this doesn't get translated into, say, French or Russian, does it?
Then the compilers would also have to be translated....what a mess
that would be. I bet no one did it more than once! And a French
computer speaking SMTP still says HELO and not BONJOUR, I imagine, and
has an operating system that's basically in English. (But maybe there
are operating systems that were written in Russian or German or whatever;
I have never seen such systems mentioned.)
Maybe in 20 or 30 years the language we will all want to learn as a
second language will be Chinese.
Annelise
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 01:59:38 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 11:58:54 +0200 (IST)
From: Nadav Eiron
X-Sender: nadav@csd
To: Annelise Anderson
cc: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
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On Mon, 17 Nov 1997, Annelise Anderson wrote:
>
>
> On Sun, 16 Nov 1997, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
>
> > Actually, if anything I'd say that english has become more of a
> > "lingua franca" than ever. I haven't personally been to every single
> > country in the world (yet :) but it seems that there's almost none
> > where one can't find english spoken in some capacity if it's truly you
> > language of last resort. 100 years ago, that was also true for
> > French, so I think it's simply a shift in what people consider to be a
> > reasonably common language to learn if they wish to communicate across
> > borders. Esperanto was a nice try for this, but it appears that
> > few wish to really learn it (with the exception of a few die-hards
> > here and there who subscribe to Esperanto newsletters and such).
> > A pity since English, by comparison, is a cast-iron bitch to learn
> > if you're not a native speaker: cough, plough, dough, that sort
> > of berzerkness abounds in this language. ;)
>
> I think the spread of English as everyone's second language is pretty
> much a consequence of the outcome of the Second World War, after which
> English became the language of air traffic control, diplomacy, science,
> military matters (NATO), and so forth; and during these years the United
> States was (and still is) the world's largest single market for the
> exports of other countries.
>
> When the Soviet empire collapsed with the fall of the wall in 1989, and
> the Soviet Union itself collapsed at the end of 1991, English instead of
> Russian made a big jump in being the second language of the countries of
> the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. There was a dramatic shift
> from Russian to English in hours taught in school, etc. Quite a few
> people, though, learned English secretly from the broadcasts of the BBC
> or Radio Liberty. Some students who played significant roles in the
> transition of Communist countries to capitalism and democracy learned
> their economics secretly from photocopies of textbooks in English.
>
> In other words, we won a couple of big ones, a hot one anda cold one.
>
> It's useful for people to agree on what they're going to use as a second
> language. Although English is difficult in some respects, it's also
> easier than some languages in terms of understanding the spoken language
> (easier than French, for example); it's extremely flexible in adoption of
> vocabulary and creating new words, and there are no "authorities" who
> object to such developments; and it is less inflected than many languages,
> using word order and additional words rather than wordendings to indicate
> relationships (subject, object, indirect object, etc.), and may in this
> respect be relatively easier. Spelling, of course, is difficult. Verbs
> must be a nightmare. But--
>
> I think native English speakers are quite willing to figure out
> what people using English as a second language are trying to say and are
> a lot nicer about such efforts than, say, the French are about French.
> As we should be.
>
> English is not only "everybody's second language" on the Internet and the
> language people use to talk about computers; but an arresting and really
> quite fundamental indicator of its dominance is that it's the language
> computers use to talk to each other. It seems the major computer
> languages are "in English"--if, else, while, for, do, continue, break--
> this doesn't get translated into, say, French or Russian, does it?
> Then the compilers would also have to be translated....what a mess
> that would be. I bet no one did it more than once! And a French
> computer speaking SMTPstill says HELO and not BONJOUR, I imagine, and
> has an operating system that's basically in English. (But maybe there
> are operating systems that were written in Russian or German or whatever;
> I have never seen such systems mentioned.)
Well, Microsoft thought otherwise (at least temporarily). With WFWG 3.11
the Hebrew version was fully bilingual, i.e. you could choose at install
time whether you want the menus, system messages, help files, etc. in
Hebrew or English. When they first started selling Win95 Hebrew Edition it
was Hebrew only. They took great pride in having *everything* translated
(at the GUI level - the DOS prompt still speaks DOS). The result - people
couldn't understand what they were talking about because no one understood
the terms Microsoft came up with for all sorts of things, some of which
were really wierd. On the other hand, no computer-literate person here has
any problem understanding what an IRQ line is. So, after a year and a half
they were forced to come up with the Hebrew-Enabled edition that had an
English GUI but supported Hebrew applications. With NT 4.0 they didn't
even try to make it Hebrew all around.
>
> Maybe in 20 or 30 years the language we will all want to learn as a
> second language will be Chinese.
>
> Annelise
>
>
Nadav
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 02:21:16 1997
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To: Annelise Anderson
cc: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
In-reply-to: Your message of "Mon, 17 Nov 1997 01:26:22 PST."
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 02:21:02 -0800
Message-ID: <3642.879762062@jkh.cdrom.com>
From: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
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> [a number of comments on english's new dominance elided]
Yep, all agreed. I often stop to congradulate myself on my
extraordinary good fortune to have been born a native speaker. We
americans often take this for granted, to say nothing of our
occasional reluctance to even learn it well! And no cracks from the
British, please, or I'll start talking about east-enders or
Glaswegians. :) Sometimes I wonder if it's only the non-native
speakers who truly concern themselves with proper grammar now. :)
> Maybe in 20 or 30 years the language we will all want to learn as a
> second language will be Chinese.
Do you mean Mandarin or Cantonese? :-) Mandarin seems to be the
"official" dialect and the one you'll learn at Berlitz if you sign up
for their language course, but everyone I seem to meet in California
speaks Cantonese. In the martial arts, for example, all of our
instruction is in Cantonese (not english) and though I'm steadily
increasing my vocabulary in this dialect out of necessity, I wonder
how practical a skill it's going to be in the future. Anyone know
the current ratio of Mandarin/Cantonese speakers world-wide? What's
the official language of Hong Kong, now that it's been handed back?
Jordan
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 05:25:18 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 06:24:41 -0700 (MST)
From: Charles Mott
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To: chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
In-Reply-To: <24684.879743950@jkh.cdrom.com>
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On Sun, 16 Nov 1997, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> Actually, if anything I'd say that english has become more of a
> "lingua franca" than ever. I haven't personally been to every single
> country in the world (yet :) but it seems that there's almost none
> where one can't find english spoken in some capacity if it's truly you
> language of last resort.
It's true that English is now the standard second language of the world
(although Russian and Mandarin are important over certain regions), and if
you use computers at a detailed level, some understanding of English is
absolutely necessary.
It's just that I've been noticing that web pages seem to naturally adapt
themselves to localization and that people will tend to revert to their
native languages when it is convenient to do so.
I also have this vague feeling that the Chinese are eventually going to do
something really stunning in science or technology, and completely within
their own culture, so that these developments will be opaque to the
non-Chinese speaking world.
Charles Mott
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 06:26:29 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:24:39 -0500 (EST)
From: Jamie Bowden
To: "Jordan K. Hubbard"
cc: Annelise Anderson , freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: The Language Barrier [Was: Could FreeBSD be ...]
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On Mon, 17 Nov 1997, Jordan K. Hubbard wrote:
> > [a number of comments on english's new dominance elided]
>
> Yep, all agreed. I often stop to congradulate myself on my
congratulate
> extraordinary good fortune to have been born a native speaker. We
Not a native speller however :)
> Jordan
Jamie Bowden
Systems Administrator, iTRiBE.net
If we've got to fight over grep, sign me up. But boggle can go.
-Ted Faber (on Hasbro's request for removal of /usr/games/boggle)
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 07:19:22 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:17:30 -0600
From: Jonathan Lemon
To: Ollivier Robert
Cc: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
References: <199711170228.UAA00283@nospam.hiwaay.net> <346FBE96.167EB0E7@hiwaay.net> <19971116223655.54597@right.PCS> <19971117074508.30373@keltia.freenix.fr>
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In-Reply-To: <19971117074508.30373@keltia.freenix.fr>; from Ollivier Robert on Nov 11, 1997 at 07:45:08AM +0100
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On Nov 11, 1997 at 07:45:08AM +0100, Ollivier Robert wrote:
> According to Jonathan Lemon:
> > fwtk, but I can't seem to get a proxy connection through. Web
> > browsers, cvsup, etc work, but not rc5.
>
> The current clients supports HHTP and can be proxyied. My client at work is
> using this method.
Yes, but it doesn't seem to work:
http-gw[1263]: permit host=free.pcs use of gateway (V2.0beta)
http-gw[1263]: log host=free.pcs protocol=HTTP cmd=put
dest=rc5proxy.distributed.net path=/cgi-bin/rc5.cgi
http-gw[1263]: exit host=free.pcs cmds=1 in=547 out=0 user=unauth duration=0
http-gw[1264]: permit host=free.pcs use of gateway (V2.0beta)
http-gw[1264]: log host=free.pcs protocol=HTTP cmd=put
dest=rc5proxy.distributed.net path=/cgi-bin/rc5.cgi
http-gw[1264]: Network error: net_flags[4] set (read)
http-gw[1264]: exit host=free.pcs code=1
The first connection to the rc5proxy works, and I get a reminder to
subscribe to the mailing list, but the second connection (to get the key
blocks) always fails. Is it just something with the TIS toolkit?
--
Jonathan
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 07:53:00 1997
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Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:52:51 -0600 (CST)
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 09:52:51 -0600 (CST)
From: David Kelly
Message-Id: <199711171552.JAA25185@fly.HiWAAY.net>
To: freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG, sprice@HiWAAY.net
Subject: Re: Twice as many OS/2 as FreeBSD ???
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Steve Price writes:
>
> BTW, does anybody know how I can get a box that does not have
> a direct connection to the internet working on a set of keys?
> There's a dual P6-180 NT box at work that I would love to throw
> into the mix.
>
> This box is connected to a FreeBSD box that acts as our server
> (files/mail/etc.) at work. The FreeBSD box has a dialup PPP
> connection and gets assigned a dynamic IP. In fact, it is out
> there somewhere chugging away on keys right now. :) But it
> sure would be nice to have a M$ box looking for keys in an
> effort to advance FreeBSD's cause.
Download the Bovine Unix Personal Proxy Server
ftp://ftp.distributed.net/pub/rc5-64/v2-proxyper/rc5proxyper-v2b251-freebsd-x86.tar.gz
Then point the NT (and whatever else you have) at your own
proxy server. I also point my proxy server's client at its
own proxy server if for no other reason than to create a
unified log of crunched blocks. Don't be shy, bite off 500
blocks at a time.
As for others trying to get out thru firewalls where telnet
and http works but Bovine http doesn't, try selecting the
network option for "can communicate via telnet". This also
works for the personal proxy server as the main backbone
proxies listen on both port 23 and 2064.
--
David Kelly N4HHE, dkelly@hiwaay.net (hm)
======================================================================
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten percent of its
capacity -- the rest is overhead for the operating system.
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 08:24:22 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 17:24:12 +0100 (MET)
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From: Eivind Eklund
To: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Stealable idea? [c.o.l.a] WANTED: Become a Debian Developer! Debian Mentors are waiting to help you.
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Would it be an idea to steal the debian idea mentioned below?
Setting up something so simple as a mailing-list where somebody could
request a mentor (or perhaps just using hackers for this purpose)
and a web-page that describe the concept might effectively off-load
the mailing lists and increase our development speed a _lot_. Being a
developer contact isn't _that_ much work, and would combined with
Mark's (?) project database make it much easier to be an external
contributor, and hopefully increase development speed quite a bit.
Eivind.
------- Start of forwarded message -------
From: Bruce Perens
Subject: WANTED: Become a Debian Developer! Debian Mentors are waiting to help you.
Newsgroups: comp.os.linux.announce
Date: Sun, 16 Nov 1997 19:15:04 GMT
Organization: none
Reply-To: Bruce Perens
Message-ID:
Do you want to see your software fly on the Space Shuttle? Want to see it
used in classrooms and companies everywhere? Want to give something back
for all of the great free software that others have contributed? Want to
be part of the best project in the free software world, with lots of smart
people to work with?
*** BECOME A DEBIAN DEVELOPER ***
Be a technical writer, a package maintainer, or a programmer.
Now, it's easier than ever to become a Debian developer, because we've
set up "mentors" - experienced Debian staff who will guide you
through the process. You can meet them on the Debian Mentors mailing
list. To subscribe, send a message to
debian-mentors-REQUEST@lists.debian.org with the word "subscribe" in
the body.
About the easiest way to become a developer is to adopt a software
package. You can find a list of software packages that need maintainers at
ftp://debian.crosslink.net/pub/debian/doc/package-developer/prospective-
packages.html
You can find more information in our "Developers Corner",
at http://www.debian.org/developers_corner.html . Documents here include
the Debian Policy Manual and the Debian Packaging Manual, key references
for every Debian package maintainer.
Thanks
Bruce Perens
Debian Project Leader
- --
Can you get your operating system fixed when you need it?
Linux - the supportable operating system. http://www.debian.org/support.html
Bruce Perens K6BP bruce@debian.org NEW PHONE NUMBER: 510-620-3502
From owner-freebsd-chat Mon Nov 17 09:14:41 1997
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Date: Mon, 17 Nov 1997 18:14:25 +0100 (MET)
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From: Eivind Eklund
To: chat@freebsd.org
Subject: Example of mentor page
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Regarding the mentoring possibility I just sent a message about - here
is a suggestion for a web-page to better describe what I was talking
about:
%includes;
]>
&header;
The intention behind The FreeBSD mentor project is to give outside
parties developing from FreeBSD a channel into the formal FreeBSD
development process. This is not intended to be a replacement for the
normal mailing lists, but a way for outside developers to get certain
way of getting timely feedback and integration.
The workings are very simple - to get a mentor, send a mail to
hackers@freebsd.org with a
subject of "Call for Mentor" or similar, with the body of the mail
containing a small description of your interests and what kind of
project you are doing or are interested in doing with FreeBSD.
The mentor will have the following responsibilites:
Providing timely integration or rejection of changes.
Giving information on the FreeBSD project structure where that
is unclear to the mentoree.
Answer questions relating to the mentorees FreeBSD devlopment
project to the best of his/her ability (in the cases where it isn't
obvious that this should go to a larger audience).
Set the mentoree in contact with other FreeBSD developers in
the cases where it is obvious that this is something that should be
done in collaboration with another developer.
Aquiring a mentor will of course not free the mentoree from their
normal responsibility of attempting to gain knowledge from
documentation and source before contacting using other people's time.
A mentor can reject a mentoree at any point (how could we stop this?),
but should not do this without a good reason. Examples of reasons
include abuse of the mentors time by the mentoree, and the mentor just
plain running out of time
&footer