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Comments:
<0> It's...weird <1> always nice and relaxing <0> Boring music <0> :) <1> actually have some rather jazzed up tunes of it <1> besides, most would say I'm boring in the first place <0> Feck, X got upgraded so my keymaps are f00ked <1> hehe, I don't have an active ctrl+f atm due to that :p <1> messed up xbindkeysrc , but haven't bothered fixing it / rebooting <0> Can't be arsed to fix it right now <0> The most annoying bit is that I now have to reach for teh mouse to skip songs <2> www.kernel.org is down? <2> I didn't get any response. <3> same here.
<1> ditto <1> there we go <4> PolarWolf: or use a console player ;) <0> Lion-O: Meh <1> anyways, time to do some exersising if I am to keep up the timescheme of my strategy :) <1> spring is arriving :p <0> I could also type xmms -fwd <1> PolarWolf: I only use mplayer myself.. <0> xmms is OK <0> Not too intrusive <1> PolarWolf: not when the music plays on workstation and I'm sitting in a lazy chair with my laptop :) <4> I really like the <win>-<key> combo; hardly any other program uses that. <1> amarok isn't bad for a GUI app <0> Hmm, hmm <1> ... but its still a GUI app :p <4> And I really like their pr0n viewer which they so conveniently call "cover manager" :) <1> hmm, guess it is time to look at life through rose-gl***es <4> Oh wait; my mistake; thats the usual way for those bimbos to dress these days :) <1> any more of this and I'll have to purchase a trumpet again <1> damn it has been years since I've played <0> 15 years or so for me <0> Probably more <1> 5-10 for me <4> When a wireless alcatel thompson (iirc) allows you to connect but refuses to release an IP yet goes into an infinite loop I think its safe to conclude that the device is likely to be flakey, right? ;) <0> I doubt I can still read music <1> nah, the theory is still there <4> 'speedtouch' <5> I can read music on treble clef still <1> ... Rawhide! <4> thats the one <5> not on b*** clef <1> ... too <4> 'showers', 'rain', 'PM Rain'. WTH is 'pm rain' ? <6> TenBaseT_: er.. it's just shifted two <6> K_F: heh, I used to play tuba. the problem there is that most of your notes are really low, and usually right off the staff. <1> hehe <1> Nanuq: I used to go to the other end of the scale on the trumpet <1> was fairly adequate at one point.. <1> the problem was that combining playing the trumpet and being a soccer goalie didn't really mix <1> usually had at least one finger broken or twisted somehow <6> K_F: heh <6> K_F: music was the only cl*** I ever did well in ;) <6> which isn't saying much, really <1> Nanuq: nah, this wasn't school related at all, I used to play in an orchestra <6> K_F: ah <1> in ogni caso, arrivaderci <7> sup K_F <8> w00t <8> got paid for that cabling job the other day <9> fun :) <9> I'm doing some uh manual cabling myself right now <7> anyone got any suggestions on a nice small home server motherboard? It's been about 5 years since I bought a mobo and the market's changed quite a bit. I'm leaning towards either a micro ITX box + terratstation or just building a server with raid 5... any suggestions?
<4> google <10> newegg <10> use the product search wizard <7> I've been googling on and off for about 2 hours... nothing's really jumping out at me <10> sort by reviews <4> morgajel: then I guess it can't be done. <10> lol <10> it's impossible! <7> extremetech had a nice home server setup that I was looking at, but wanted some second opinions <7> Lion-O: heh <11> have you ever been to computer chaos camp? <4> morgajel: try #hardware or something. <10> find out what mobo the extremetech uses, then find boards of the same spec <4> or use google, as I said. Plenty of forums around for that kind of stuff. <10> then google for the chipsets they use <12> hah, I thought he said he wanted to do a micro itx with raid5 (in the same box) ...that of course would just be retarded <11> none of you ever been to computer chaos camp? <7> Lion-O: the big concern is with linux support- not that long ago SATA was a PITA in the 2.4 kernels. I'm guessing it's changed quite a bit <12> mikaa: have you ever been to sesame street? <11> mm no.. <12> SATA is pretty much golden now <10> umm... i wouldn't trust an onboard raid5 controller <12> mikaa: omg you've never been to sesame street? wtf <7> safemode: well, if I got the micro ITX, I'd get the terrastation which has the raid 5... if I went with a larger board I'd expect raid 5 from it. <11> is there a comparison between sesame street and ccc? <10> you are probably going to be more limited by the controller, rather than the mobo in Linux <4> morgajel: once again: google is your friend. <12> mikaa: yea, as in, linux in no way requires CCC as you call it, as a prerequisite. <4> well, that and the manufactorers website. <7> Lion-O: I haven't seen many motherboard manufacturers who list the state of linux support for their chipsets :) <4> morgajel: I have. <4> ****s to be you then I guess. Oh well. <12> raid5 in linux is software ...in 99% of the cases. Nvidia has some hardware offloading support. Most others do not in linux. <7> MSI was pretty good 5 years ago, but as I said before, things have changed a lot in the last 5 years <10> rackable systems might <11> well.. thats true safemode.. but since linux is kind of a geekthing and ccc might be too.. I wondered if you have been there <10> but they don't make mobos afaik <10> that's an idea... <10> call rackable systems and ask what mobos they use <11> and I think there might be some lectures about linux at ccc too <7> Lion-O: what happened to you man- you used to be always helpful and optimistic- now you're sounding like mwilson used to :( <7> Lion-O: I didn't mean to offend. <4> morgajel: When it concerns Linux, sure. I don't really care for people looking for hardware in the wrong places. <8> safemode: Really? I've only done software RAID5 on Linux once, and that was recently. Everything else was hardwaid RAID. <7> I'm looking for hardware that has good linux support, if that helps Lion-O <12> hardware raid in linux has always been crappier than their software support.. to the point where the software raid outperformed their hardware drivers <4> morgajel: and so, as I said before, look at the manufactorers website to see if stuff is supported. <12> BSD has always been the opposite. it may be different in late 2.6 kernels. I dont know. I only use software raid <10> dude, yer gettin a dell :) <12> in any case, the SATA support is great now. <4> reminds me, picked up something about the latest and greatest 2.6.20 being released. WITH virtualisation support. Could be nice. <7> Lion-O:ac merged in kvm iirc. <12> i'm not sure what the hell the virtualization support does for running anything other than linux in linux... Like is the kernel virtualization **** supposed to supplant Vmware? otherwise I dont give two ****s about it. <4> safemode: true. But sometimes it can present advantages if you're messing with the same OS. You see the same on Solaris; their zones (virtual environments) take up a lot less resources than, say, usermode linux. <12> though i'm sure it works great for those people that setup single linux boxes and multiple dumb terminals at school to run 16 linux "computers" using only one computer's hardware. etc etc <4> not exactly comparible ofcourse. but hey :) <5> virtualization is supposed to help out when its running as the guest OS <5> so yeah <5> vmware, or parallels <7> safemode: it'll be a tough sell to get us to consider something other than VMware :) <5> I'm running a linux box inside of vmware right now <7> alright, time to go to lamaz cl*** with the wife. bbl <10> if you spent more time on google, she might not hav egotten pregnant <10> i knew there was a reason you couldn't find a mobo! <13> I read that as lame *** <13> Too much time around kiddiots. <10> good word <10> i speak to kiddiots daily
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