Not to mention more water resistant, when printing things like envelopes.
I'm not the only one then! :-)
Yes, but I was replying to the above, using redirection and tail -f.
Isn't that what tee is for? Like $ prog | tee /tmp/log.txt
As others have said, it is easy enough for a child in the 80s, with only a BASIC manual to come up with it. Been there, done that. Didn't even had a name for it. Later I read a magazine explaining several algorithms and…
If cassettes are still around, then the standard icons for 'play', 'rewind', etc will still make sense for a younger generation :-)
The Spectrum did feel slightly better, but the most annoying thing of the ZX81 was the lack of autorepeat. Moving the cursor on a long line was real physical exercise :-)
Version 1 of Time Machine was great, you could travel to the past and see how your documents looked like! Too bad that they never released version 2. Would have been great to be able to travel into the future and see…
My first email usage was at University, pre-WWW. After that I briefly used some ISP email service, but that was on a time of very limited storage and POP only accounts, so I started hosting my own email even before…
Those wore the days :-) I remember playing on a University lab with half a dozen Unix workstations, sending an email with the path of server1!server2!server3 etc and hearing the email flowing from server to server by…
Ironic that a big telecom does not believe in decentralized protocols. Oh wait….
Not really, SMTP relays will only send messages once, to one server. But it’s not receiving that is the problem, that is generally fine, if ports are open at ISP / network level. It is the sending that is often tricky.…
Spoiler alert, it’s Postfix. So not really 1984 software. But then again, neither is Linux…
From one of the blog posts: > 8080 assembly (Altair 8800) > > First time I've heard of binary-coded decimals I’m really surprised with that, that someone with such broad interests never heard of BCD. I mean, there’s is…
“Give at least five rules to be observed in maintaining good health.” It would be interesting to know what was the “right” answer to this in 1912.
Hope this goes viral in some way. I think it can make non technical people aware of the problem.
Not to mention more water resistant, when printing things like envelopes.
I'm not the only one then! :-)
Yes, but I was replying to the above, using redirection and tail -f.
Isn't that what tee is for? Like $ prog | tee /tmp/log.txt
As others have said, it is easy enough for a child in the 80s, with only a BASIC manual to come up with it. Been there, done that. Didn't even had a name for it. Later I read a magazine explaining several algorithms and…
If cassettes are still around, then the standard icons for 'play', 'rewind', etc will still make sense for a younger generation :-)
The Spectrum did feel slightly better, but the most annoying thing of the ZX81 was the lack of autorepeat. Moving the cursor on a long line was real physical exercise :-)
Version 1 of Time Machine was great, you could travel to the past and see how your documents looked like! Too bad that they never released version 2. Would have been great to be able to travel into the future and see…
My first email usage was at University, pre-WWW. After that I briefly used some ISP email service, but that was on a time of very limited storage and POP only accounts, so I started hosting my own email even before…
Those wore the days :-) I remember playing on a University lab with half a dozen Unix workstations, sending an email with the path of server1!server2!server3 etc and hearing the email flowing from server to server by…
Ironic that a big telecom does not believe in decentralized protocols. Oh wait….
Not really, SMTP relays will only send messages once, to one server. But it’s not receiving that is the problem, that is generally fine, if ports are open at ISP / network level. It is the sending that is often tricky.…
My first email usage was at University, pre-WWW. After that I briefly used some ISP email service, but that was on a time of very limited storage and POP only accounts, so I started hosting my own email even before…
Spoiler alert, it’s Postfix. So not really 1984 software. But then again, neither is Linux…
From one of the blog posts: > 8080 assembly (Altair 8800) > > First time I've heard of binary-coded decimals I’m really surprised with that, that someone with such broad interests never heard of BCD. I mean, there’s is…
“Give at least five rules to be observed in maintaining good health.” It would be interesting to know what was the “right” answer to this in 1912.
Hope this goes viral in some way. I think it can make non technical people aware of the problem.