Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 18391
Berkeley CSUA MOTD
 
WIKI | FAQ | Tech FAQ
http://csua.com/feed/
2025/04/07 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/7     

2000/6/2-3 [Computer/SW/OS/Windows, Computer/SW/Unix/WindowManager] UID:18391 Activity:moderate
6/2     I'm looking for open source unix ware to create a web based email
        archiving service.  It should allow people to sign up/remove remove
        themselves and have a threaded message archive.  Some sense of user
        levels would be nice, too, like anonymous people can only read the
        archive, but 'registered' people can do whatever, and an admin level
        who can delete messages.  The number of registered users is going to
        be under 20 and never grow above 20 or so.  Performance isn't a big
        issue.  This is a personal project.  Thanks for any pointers!
        \_ you seem to be describing a web based newsgroup like slashdot
           more than you are a web based email service.  if that's the
           case just go to http://slashdot.org.  they have their entire source
           code (called slash) published online under gpl.
           http://www.slashdot.org/code.shtml
                \_ I want archives based on incoming mail.  The web interface
                   is only for reading old email archives in threaded format.
                   I don't want slashdot.  Email comes in to some majordomo
                   like handler, gets archived on the web pages, and gets sent
                   out to the correct list of folks on the list.  If there's a
                   web interface to archived majordomo email that would
                   probably do the trick.
                   \_ Do you mean something like hypermail?
                        \_ I might.  Got a URL?  Thanks!
                           \_ http://www.landfield.com/hypermail
2025/04/07 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
4/7     

You may also be interested in these entries...
2003/8/29-2004/2/14 [Computer/Networking] UID:12259 Activity:nil
2/13    In NT or XP, is there a way to display the IP address of a remote
        machine when the remote machine is pinging my machine?  Thanks.
        \_ netstat?
              \- netstat is ridiculous for this. hammer. nail. bad. wrong.
                 i believe tcpdump runs on msftware:
                 tcpdump -i <if> 'icmp[0] = 8 or icmp[0] = 0'
	...
2002/6/17-18 [Computer/SW/OS/Windows] UID:25122 Activity:low
6/17    I need to write an interrupt service routine to detect hardware
        interrupts, under Win2000, but I don't want to reinvent the
        wheel.  Is there some place that offers skeleton code for ISR's
        so I don't need to write one entirely myself? I searched the
        msdn site but they only had a few help pages worth of material,
        nothing else.
	...
2001/10/25 [Computer/SW/OS/Windows] UID:22824 Activity:high
10/25   NT was supposed to be much more stable than Win3.x.  Then Win2k was
        supposed to be much more stable than NT.  And now XP is supposed to
        be much more stable than 2k.  Sigh.
        \_ Thing is, Win2k really is more stable than NT. Sure, it locks up
           occassionally, but not the seemingly hourly BSODs in NT
        \_ Also, XP supposedly "does away with the decades-old DOS fundamentals
	...
Cache (1293 bytes)
www.slashdot.org/code.shtml -> slashdot.org/code.shtml
TechJobs - 10 Slashdot Broadband 11 Search 12 X 13 Click Here 14 Welcome to Slashdot 15 It's funny. We've set up a site, using Slash, devoted to the development and use of Slash. The latest patches, bugfixes, documentation, FAQs, and everything else will always be on 51 Slashcode. You can find a list of sites that use Slashcode on the 52 Slashcode site list. The document is fairly self explanatory, and the rules are simple: Do whatever you want, but don't access the file more than once every 30 minutes. The server is plenty bogged down without adding a hundred stock tickers refreshing themselves every 60 seconds. If your automated loading of slashdot becomes too much of a burden on our servers, you run the risk of having your IP banned, so play fair! Programs that use the Ultramode These programs are provided as-is. K has developed a 61 Newsgrabber Perl module to grab and display news from over thirty sites, including Slashdot. If you're interested in a headline grabber 69 Written in PHP then say thanks to 70 Veigar Freyr for writing it. If none of the previous AvantGo channels light your fire, then check out 73 Ed Gatzke's page for instructions for how to make a different one. If you're into Java and JavaServer Pages, you can find a Headline Reader at 78 Sylistron's site.
Cache (93 bytes)
www.landfield.com/hypermail -> www.hypermail.org/
Download Netscape Navigator for frames support. FRAME: 17 body FRAME: 18 search References 1.
Cache (4017 bytes)
slashdot.org -> slashdot.org/
Will this signal new life for the console, or is it too little, too late? We linked to leaked pictures of the N-Gage follow-up late last week on Slashdot Games , and theres further information at GameSpot , which mentions: When bundled with a service contract, the QD is expected to sell for $99. Without subsidy from a service provider, the phone will go for $199 with the platforms Tony Hawk title bundled in at that price. Posted by timothy on Wednesday April 14, 12:21AM from the it-would-have-been-someone dept. Shippy writes Ten years ago today, a pair of Arizona attorneys launched a homemade marketing software program that forever changed the Internet. They did this by whipping up a Perl script that flooded message boards advertising their legal services. Update: 04/14 05:26 GMT by S : Thatd be ten years ago, not twenty. JigSaw writes Well known Lycoris person Jason Spisak left the company to join Element Computer , a new hardware company which now strives to offer the Apple experience on PCs: they sell Linux-certified modern hardware with their own flavor of Debian, ION Linux. ION is a desktop distro and it is developed specifically to work perfectly with the accompanied hardware. Other highlights include usage support as opposed to installation-only support other distros provide and system upgrades specific to the exact hardware the user runs. The KDE-based distro will only sell with their hardware as Mike Hjorleifsson says in his interview . Free Software Foundation writes Stanford Professor Lawrence Lessig was elected to the Free Software Foundations Board of Directors on March 28, 2004. With Eben Moglen, the two most prominent academic legal minds on the subject of copyleft licensing now both serve as Directors of the Foundation. Professor Lessigs involvement will undoubtedly give a major boost to the FSFs ongoing efforts to neutralize legal threats to software freedom. The flaws could allow attackers to break into PCs running Windows in several ways and then use the system to run malicious programs and steal or delete key data. These latest security flaws affect the latest versions of Windows, including Windows NT 40, Windows 98, Windows 2000 , Windows XP, as well as software for networked computers such as Windows NT Server and Windows Server 2003. Despite the growing success of the Open Source movement, most of the general public continues to feel that Open Source software is inaccessible to them. This paper discusses five fundamental problems with the current Open Source software development trend, explores why these issues are holding the movement back, and offers solutions that might help overcome these problems. What do you think of the issues given in this paper, and how do you think the Open Source community should address these issues? Analog, wind-up Analog, battery-powered Analog, solar-powered Digital Digital w/calculator Digital w/mp3 player Digital w/cell phone Implant Results Polls Comments: 953 Votes: 23320 Book Reviews Need something to read? Slashdots book review section is full of reader-submitted reviews of books you should know about. Preston Tollingers review of Bruce Schneiers security overview Beyond Fear : should be required reading for members of Congress. Honestpucks review of Managing Linux Systems With Webmin : a good guide to using Webmin, flawed by lack of structure. Fancellus review of Extreme Programming Refactored : a critical look at the popular XP development method. Alex Moskalyuks review of the Secure Programming Cookbook for C and C : a security cookbook that teaches you how to make a basic ham-and-cheese sandwich as well as fine cuisine. Neads review of Automating Unix and Linux Administration : How to leverage the power of a few common tools to significantly reduce the time and effort system administrators spend doing their jobs. Just read Slashdots book review guidelines , and then use the web submission form . Updated: 20031013 17:00 by timothy Quick Links Cool Sites: AnimeFu Addicted to Anime?