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<0> DaveHowe: in any case, I give you permission
<0> Lion-O: wherre, where? :)
<1> hmm. going to have to lose a 230 day uptime here in the house, to rearrange some cables..
<2> smsie: and I'm not kidding about the finger ;) seems not to work now though :/
<3> whyzzyrd: I lost my 497 due to a power outage :|
<0> Lion-O: and you didn't keep a copy?
<2> smsie: /notice ;-)
<4> K_F: didnt you have a ups?
<2> smsie: got that or should I /msg ? ;)
<4> s/didn't/don't
<5> /wallchops :)
<1> Bjprn-: I've no fscking ups here either
<0> Lion-O: haha
<3> Bjprn-: outage was too long, multiple hours
<2> siglite: there ya go
<1> outages here tend to be too long for upsen in houses..



<6> uptimes..blegh. not much to them
<5> lol
<6> these days you can keep just about any kernel up for years
<4> gnu/hurd?
<3> has the counter issue even been fixed?
<3> hmm, I wonder how that is on this 64 bit system actually
<3> will it be able to count past 497 days?
<3> 19:06:40 up 47 days, 8:32, 7 users, load average: 0.00, 0.01, 0.00
<3> <- still has some time untill I find out on the new box
<6> the hurd doesn't count.. people actually have to use it
<2> whyzzyrd: you missed that? ;)
<1> Lion-O: of course
<2> awww
<1> K_F: I had a box roll over last year or so.
<1> K_F: But then we had a power "issue" involving UPS maintenance.
<3> whyzzyrd: so it has been fixed? I know it was a problem with prior kernels at least
<3> whyzzyrd: but then again, that was a 32bit thing, and the current system is 64 bit
<1> K_F: I've one on 435 just now, but it's 32-bit.
<1> K_F: wonder if I'll find out.
<1> that box isn't on UPS.
<3> hehe, let me know
<1> more impressively, that box is actually doing something, not just sitting there.
<3> My old server crashed, the new server is simply over-spec-ed as a measure of (hopefully) further growth
<3> even during the digging it looked relaxed
<7> ah whyzzyrd
<7> of course i try to impersonate him
<3> it _is_ him
<2> K_F: naah, LIES ;)
<7> he's so good looking and handsome
<3> Lion-O: regarding?
<2> K_F: I wouldn't trust bjorn_ :)
<3> hehe
<7> i really want to be him
<3> Lion-O: nobody would :)
<7> especially since he ****s the router up to disconnect him... that's impressive.
<8> o_O
<8> It's a clone!
<4> *yay*
<9> Ka-bar, http://www.servetheworld.no/gallery/dvd-to-avi.avi
<4> lets disconnect!
<10> this is pet cloning!
<10> oops.
<4> Bjoern-Erik looks suspicious
<4> copy-cat!
<11> Hmm... "Hello -- I am a reporter for the Wall Street Journal writing an article about subscription music services and would love to ask you a few questions about your thoughts on Yahoo Music, which I saw you wrote about on your blog."
<11> That's weird.
<9> jgaddis, along the lines of "it ****s?"
<12> jgaddis, how so?
<11> Liandrin: I don't normally get e-mails like that.
<8> reporter from WSJ... or stooge from RIAA?
<11> Ka-bar: Well, let's check the headers... =)
<11> Originated at SBKE2KMB04.win.dowjones.net (172.26.150.158), then to an Exchange 2000 server at SECE2KFE02.win.dowjones.net (10.13.32.24), then on to secinmr02.dowjones.com (205.203.136.134). Looks okay to me. =)
<11> s/an/another/
<8> fredk, for real?
<11> Actually, the second one is E2K3, dunno about the first.
<9> Ka-bar, haha
<11> fredk: And, BTW, I'm actually quite happy w/ the Yahoo subscription service.



<9> jgaddis, I just checked out your site
<9> jgaddis, and it makes sense
<9> they cant do anything to stop that
<11> Oh, the DRM stuff? I've wrote a few other things about the subscription service on there in the past.
<9> Yea, the DRM stuff
<13> a buddy of mine works at that dow jones location.
<13> not that anyone gives a ****. heh
<14> Hey, guys... once upon a time there was a Win32 tool that would let you script a telnet connection. Now I can't find it again. Anyone want to suggest a way to telnet into $ARBITRARY_SYSTEM, run a command or commands, and exit again?
<2> eeew, 30 beheaded bodies found in iraq...
<15> are they ok
<1> mwilson: Net:Telnet perl?
<1> mwilson: I have scripts using net:telnet:cisco
<2> mwilson: no idea, sorry.
<1> mwilson: you have perl?
<11> Sarah-: Ahem, "beheaded bodies"?
<2> Sarah-: I don't think so.
<11> I'm guessing they're probably not "ok"
<10> lol
<15> they could be ok
<2> Sarah-: how can you be ok without your head? :P
<15> ive seen movies where the guy has no head but is still walking around bumping into things
<1> Sarah-: they're not real you know?
<16> he could probably still run for president :)
<1> DaveHowe: as much active brain power as GWB?
<10> he could probably make some homemade lemon chicken% noodles!
<15> chickens run around when they dont have heads
<16> whyzzyrd: probably an improvement...
<15> like, because they are happy
<1> tsokolat: homemade lemon chicken noodles rock
<2> "I have decided to leave my head at home so making sure no nonsense would come out. thank you very much, this was a recording - the beheaded president"
<14> whyzzyrd: No, I don't have perl on the win32 box.
<15> in futurama the president is just nixons head in a jar
<14> whyzzyrd: If I could have any scripting language there, it'd be python.
<1> mwilson: you can't have activestate's perl/python on it then?
<14> whyzzyrd: I wish.
<10> Lion-O: and the president could say during the speech, i don't my head today, so forgive me for being a moron.
<10> have*
<1> mwilson: oh, our experience of python is it's evil-huge and evil-slow, but I suspect that's down to our code monkey.
<15> night all
<1> mwilson: no expect then?
<14> whyzzyrd: No. See, the real problem is that I need to park something out on a network share that can automate telnetting into a box, running a process there that creates a file, then kills the telnet and ftp's the file off the box.
<14> It doesn't bother ME to do it by hand, but I need to automate it for when I'm not there.
<14> PITA, really.
<1> mwilson: then write a cgi on the remote machine that runs the process, and write a small piece of visual-foo that pulls the cgi, which just returns the file contents into a file?
<11> mwilson: Is that box a webserver? Can you write a CGI to create the file?
<8> mwilson, there's an expect sort of perl module on CPAN that I've used before that works quite nicely. Don't remember the exact name because it was a couple years ago.
<14> So even if *I* had perl/python/whatever on mine, it wouldn't help $RANDOM_PERSON who needed to run the batch.
<1> Ka-bar: no perl/python/foo
<14> No, the remote box runs Flex.
<14> No web server. :)
<1> got a unix box that's always on?
<1> run the webserver on it, pull the file back through it.
<14> If I did, I wouldn't have this problem. :)
<1> ahh.
<14> Not worth running another box, just for this.
<11> Or giving out step-by-step instructions to others who may have do this in your absence...
<14> I have the step-by-step instructions written out already... I'd just like to not have to USE them. :)
<17> Did you want it to kill telnetd or just the telnet session?
<14> Just to log off the remote box.
<14> Telnetd on the remote is always running.
<17> And the remote box is running?
<14> jgaddis: It's also a question of people logging into the remote manually... I'd rather not print out a set of instructions that say "oh, here, use this login".
<1> reality: he said Flex ..
<14> reality: Sure. It has to be. It's our point-of-sale controller.
<17> whyzzyrd: I just came in on the conversation
<17> mwilson: I meant the OS...I would ***ume the thing is running
<1> reality: stops you reading back?
<17> whyzzyrd: Yes /clear dow


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