Subject: Linux-Misc Digest #383
From: Digestifier <Linux-Misc-Request@senator-bedfellow.MIT.EDU>
To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.MIT.EDU
Reply-To: Linux-Misc@senator-bedfellow.MIT.EDU
Date:     Wed, 6 Jul 94 06:13:19 EDT

Linux-Misc Digest #383, Volume #2                 Wed, 6 Jul 94 06:13:19 EDT

Contents:
  MIDI Sequencer? (Daniel Garcia)
  Linux Shark GIF (BAdelsman)
  Re: X editors (Jake Vogelaar)
  Re: What networking version is in Slackware 2.0? (Alan Cox)
  Re: What networking version is in Slackware 2.0? (Alan Cox)
  Re: OS/2 and Linux discussed (Re: TCP/IP: The reason I dumped OS/2) (Alan Cox)

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From: kender@spawn.erinet.com (Daniel Garcia)
Subject: MIDI Sequencer?
Date: 6 Jul 1994 01:43:42 GMT
Reply-To: kender@eri.erinet.com

Hello alls - 

I was wondering if anyone out there has writen, or knows of a midi sequencer
for linux?  I searched the LSM for both midi and sequencer, and didn't
get to much that looked promising.  Thanks in advance for any thing you can
offer!

D

-- 
 Daniel Garcia - kender@[eri.erinet.com|esu.edu] - Soon to be PhD Student.
UseLinuxReadMoreThinkALotFightClipperBelieveWritePlayMusicOpenHeartsLiveBreath
LoveThinkFeelListenActReasonWatchLearnRideFlySpeakWinFightRiseSingShoutCryDie
<A HREF=http://www.esu.edu/~kender">My Homepage</A> 

------------------------------

From: badelsman@aol.com (BAdelsman)
Subject: Linux Shark GIF
Date: 6 Jul 1994 01:30:05 -0400

I found a cool GIF showing the words 'LINUX' on the ocean surface
with a hammerhead shark dorsal fin forming the 'I'.  I pulled it off
mdw's Web page at sunsite.unc.edu.  I'd like to find a 640x480 or
larger GIF of this exact same image.  I located a 1024x768 somewhere
but the shark is barely visible (underwater) in that version.

Any ideas?

Thanks,
Bruce Adelsman

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From: vogelaj@nntp.basf-corp.com (Jake Vogelaar)
Subject: Re: X editors
Date: 5 Jul 1994 18:44:22 -0400

Anybody know where point1.63 is archived?

-jake
-- 
/////////////////////////////-----Jake Vogelaar-----\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\
|  jxv3790@hertz.njit.edu - New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark NJ    |
|  jake.vogelaar@basf-corp.com - TDG, BASF Corporation, Parsippany NJ        |
\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\///////////////////////////////////////

------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.admin
From: iiitac@uk.ac.swan.pyr (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: What networking version is in Slackware 2.0?
Date: Wed, 6 Jul 1994 08:10:33 GMT

In article <2vcml8$qqq@agate.berkeley.edu> maxims@ucsee.EECS.Berkeley.EDU (Maxim Spivak) writes:
>What version of networking is in Slackware 2.0? Is it Net2, Net3, 
>net-32b, net-32d? Does it depend which kernel I install (1.0.8 or 1.0.18) ?

1.0.8 has the NET2-Debugged kernel. 1.1.18 has the NET3 kernel. As far as I can
tell Patrick has done his usual fine job in putting the right tools in the
right places.

There is a lot of unneccesary worrying about all of this. I don't normally
see people debating the precise SCSI driver version they have. Networking
from NET2D->Net2Debugged->NET3 is an evolutionary path that is almost
100% binary compatible. To do it any other way would be wrong.

Alan


------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.linux.admin
From: iiitac@uk.ac.swan.pyr (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: What networking version is in Slackware 2.0?
Date: Wed, 6 Jul 1994 08:21:42 GMT

In article <2vcml8$qqq@agate.berkeley.edu> maxims@ucsee.EECS.Berkeley.EDU (Maxim Spivak) writes:
>Hello!
>
>I'm still trying to figure out the Network Version Game(tm).  ;-)
>
>What version of networking is in Slackware 2.0? Is it Net2, Net3, 
>net-32b, net-32d? Does it depend which kernel I install (1.0.8 or 1.0.18) ?
>
>I think a mini-FAQ is needed to ease the confusion of different versions...
>
>Thanks!
>Max
>
>
>-- 
>**************************************************************************
>Maxim Spivak                            |  #include <GoBears.h>
>University of California, Berkeley      |  #include <StdDisclaimer.h>
>maxims@ucsee.eecs.berkeley.edu          |  #include ".signature"



------------------------------

Crossposted-To: comp.os.os2.advocacy
From: iiitac@uk.ac.swan.pyr (Alan Cox)
Subject: Re: OS/2 and Linux discussed (Re: TCP/IP: The reason I dumped OS/2)
Date: Wed, 6 Jul 1994 08:26:19 GMT

In article <CsHDtp.EB9@visix.com> david@visix.com (David Charlap) writes:
>Oh, so Linux doesn't let you do everything from a single disk boot.  A
>single disk lets you access someone else's Linux system...

It lets you set everything up from a single disk boot, installing files via
NFS (as can be done sort of with OS/2). You can also boot and use another
disk for most files which works pretty well for things like home directories.
Paging binaries over an ethernet is not good under any OS however.

Alan


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