Luke-Jr wrote:
>
> If you can dial 911, why can't you say where you are? :\
Not everyone who dials 911 is at liberty to make noise.
If you dial 911 and hang up. You'll note the nice police offers that drive
by.
> Get a UPS...
not everyone can afford one, or replacing the battery every 2 years
> And I'm sure the POTS batteries will never die when the power
> goes out either...
Not when it's running off a generator.
Each state's Public Utilities Commission requires the local telco's to
provide phone service during power outages.
> > That ice storm a few years back knocked out the power for two
> > days, knocking out cable service too (one battery-powered TV).
> > Phone lines worked fine for both days, allowing me to call the
> > electric and cable companies for information.
>
> Ouch... two days is much too long for power to be out :( What did
> people with electric heating do?
Two days may be too long for many of the elderly and infirm.
Our power was out for a week. Even people with gas heating often find that
their thermostats are electric...
We moved in with friends who had power for the week.
--
Garrett Goebel
IS Development Specialist
ScriptPro Direct: 913.403.5261
5828 Reeds Road Main: 913.384.1008
Mission, KS 66202 Fax: 913.384.2180
www.scriptpro.com garrett at scriptpro dot com
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http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
Q. What is the decimal notation of subnet mask of 255.255.255.0
A. /24
Q. What type of DNS record is associated with email servers
a. MX /Mail Exchanger and Reverse DNS (99% will miss Reverse DNS
unless they have ran their own mail server)
Q. If I build a Ipsec vpn from Site 1 to Site 2 to Site 3, Can I ping a
host on site 3 from site 1.
A. No. Ipsec creates rules to join networks. Generally you can't
route traffic between tunnels.
Q. Most managed switchs us a technique called spanning tree. A lot
of embedded devices will miss DHCP when because their boot up time is so
fast that the port is not alive before the switch determines that you do
not have a loop back condition. What is the correct way to solve this.
A. In some switches they have a feature called port fast, turn this on
ports that have embedded devices. In some middle ground switches you
have to disable spanning tree on that port or even the complete switch.
That's a few. They might be a bit beyond any junior person but if you
want someone that really knows their stuff I would get a bit harder than
these.
________________________________
From: kclug-bounces(a)kclug.org [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Garrett Goebel
Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2005 8:15 AM
To: kclug(a)kclug.org
Subject: Suggestions for interview questions
What type of networking questions would you suggest to weed out
interview candidates during a 15 minute phone conversation? The emphasis
would not be on any particular platform, but rather to discover if the
candidate had a general understanding of tcpip networking, hardware,
infrastructure, security, nat, firewalls, vpns, ipsec, ssl, dns, hubs,
switches, routers, etc.
Example:
Q: Can you name a protocol responsible for dynamic IP address
assignment?
A: BOOTP or DHCP
--
Garrett Goebel
IS Development Specialist
ScriptPro Direct: 913.403.5261
5828 Reeds Road Main: 913.384.1008
Mission, KS 66202 Fax: 913.384.2180
www.scriptpro.com garrett at scriptpro dot com
It is quite possible that we could have a LUG cluster of either of those
boards. If members donated money to purchase or several people each
purchased a board and donated, with someone donating switches, wire,
metal, HDD, CF cards, UPS, like in the article I sent, we could build
something tasty.
-----Original Message-----
From: On Behalf Of Kendrick
>>Kelsay, Brian - Kansas City, MO wrote:
>>Like this? http://www.mini-itx.com/projects/cluster/
>>
>>
>>
>
>yes but using the dual
>http://www.idotpc.com/TheStore/Desktop/1005Spec.asp?Product.id=1005&Cat
e.id=5&Product.status=green
>or a via c7 which is suposed to be near 2ghz and getting more powerful
>http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/195/5
>
I ran across this interesting nugget today:
http://cryopid.berlios.de <http://cryopid.berlios.de>
> CryoPID allows you to capture the state of a running process in Linux and
save it to
> a file This file can then be used to resume the process later on, either
after a reboot
> or even on a different machine.
...
> Yes checkpointing software such as this is nothing new, but I was unable
to find a
> tool that worked on Linux that did not require at least one of the
following:
>
> o root privileges
> o modifications to the kernel
> o recompiling/relinking your software
> o using an LD_PRELOAD when you start your program
--
Garrett Goebel
IS Development Specialist
ScriptPro Direct: 913.403.5261
5828 Reeds Road Main: 913.384.1008
Mission, KS 66202 Fax: 913.384.2180
www.scriptpro.com <www.scriptpro.com> garrett at scriptpro dot com
The answer to your domain search is
mo.us Name not found
-----Original Message-----
From: On Behalf Of David Nicol
if you're a public
resource like a lug. That and managing yout local ...us domain. Who
does that, by the way? manage kc.mo.us?
Jim Herrmann wrote:
J Leo Mauler wrote:
J L Garrett Goebel <garrett(a)scriptpro.com> wrote:
J L G Whenever it becomes affordable, I will switch to VOIP for local
J L G and long distance voice service through someone like SunRocket
J L G http://www.sunrocket.com for $200/year.
J L
J L About the only reasons I don't switch to any kind of VoIP are 911
J L service (the 911 dispatcher knows where you are with regular phone
J L service but not with VoIP), and the point that phone service doesn't
J L necessarily go out when the power goes out, but VoIP service either
J L goes out instantly during a power failure, or runs out in six hours
J L when the built-in UPS runs out of battery power.
J
J There is supposed to be e911 now. They know where you are now because
J you tell them where you are, and the calls are routed to the 911
J operator in your area. Eventually, I think it's supposed to be able
J to figure out where you are. That's kind of disturbing, yet
J comforting. Hmm.
SunRocket has E911. Not all the other VOIP providers did last time I
checked...
I have a cell phone which covers your power outage scenario. And the downed
phone line scenario you didn't mention. Not that it matters much to me, our
phone and power are buried.
Makes me rememer an article I read a while back about a VOIP to GSM gateway.
Ah thank you google, here it is: http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=26715
And that makes me remember how back around '93 you could send faxes
internationally or long distance if you knew the email address that'd been
setup to forward it to a fax machine in the same local calling area as the
destination fax number.
--
Garrett Goebel
IS Development Specialist
ScriptPro Direct: 913.403.5261
5828 Reeds Road Main: 913.384.1008
Mission, KS 66202 Fax: 913.384.2180
www.scriptpro.com garrett at scriptpro dot com
If you get the clusterKnoppix LiveCD, there is at least one prime
calculating client on the disk IIRC. That is supposed to be for testing
the cluster. You boot one unit to the LiveCD or to it loaded on a HDD
to be the master node, and the other units are set to bootp or PXE and
they connect up to the master node on boot. Obviously, there are many
ways to make this work and clusterKnoppix is not the only answer.
Check out www.grid.org . Apparently some of the distributed.net team
and a few SETI@home guys got jobs there at United Devices
www.uniteddevices.com, who also does grid.org as a non-profit project.
-----Original Message-----
From: kclug-bounces(a)kclug.org [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of James Sissel
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2005 12:50 PM
To: Kclug(a)kclug.org
Subject: RE: Somewhat OT: Top 500 list
I love those projects and I'm involved in 4 of them. SETI -
looking for ET, Einstein - looking for gravity waves, folding proteins,
and climate forecasting. I've got anywhere from 1-3 PCs dedicated to
them at all times. But that's distributed computing and not a
supercomputer.
Do you think KU or UMKC might have a suitable project for a
small supercomputer? Or how about some of our local medical research
companies? Maybe we could offer it to Channel 9 so they can get our
local weather forecasts right (tongue in cheek).
"Kelsay, Brian - Kansas City, MO" <brian.kelsay(a)kcc.usda.gov>
wrote:
I know that finding primes and cracking encryption is
not considered sexy, but that is one basic thing you can use to test
your computing cluster. After that you could move to the SETI client,
folding@home, one of the other protein folding clients. Those folding
clients may actually help people down the road.
Start here:
http://www.ibiblio.org/gferg/ldp/Distributed-Computing-HOWTO/ for a
list of projects.
I know that finding primes and cracking encryption is not considered
sexy, but that is one basic thing you can use to test your computing
cluster. After that you could move to the SETI client, folding@home,
one of the other protein folding clients. Those folding clients may
actually help people down the road.
Start here:
http://www.ibiblio.org/gferg/ldp/Distributed-Computing-HOWTO/ for a
list of projects.
*******************************************
If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the
computer, a Rolls-Royce would today cost $100, get a million miles per
gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. - Robert X.
Cringely
-----Original Message-----
From: On Behalf Of James Sissel
Sent: Thursday, November 17, 2005 10:14 AM
This LUG supercomputer sounds interesting. But what great
social use would we dedicate it to solve (other than figuring out future
Lotto winning numbers).
"Kelsay, Brian - Kansas City, MO" <brian.kelsay(a)kcc.usda.gov>
wrote:
It is quite possible that we could have a LUG cluster of
either of those
boards. If members donated money to purchase or several
people each
purchased a board and donated, with someone donating
switches, wire,
metal, HDD, CF cards, UPS, like in the article I sent,
we could build
something tasty.
Do you have a link to that announcement? I hadn't heard that TWC was
leaving the KC Metro area.
Kyle
-----Original Message-----
From: kclug-bounces(a)kclug.org [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of lerninlinux(a)comcast.net
Sent: Tuesday, November 15, 2005 12:07 PM
To: Luke-Jr; kclug(a)kclug.org
Subject: Re: SBC to unbundle local service from dsl
Stuck with Comcast, who doesn't offer that, and since the change merger
is supposed to be happening in the next 9 months, those on Time Warner,
will be losing this option.
Time Warner is supposed to be getting all of someplace in Texas, for
Comcast getting all of KC metro.
> On Tuesday 15 November 2005 15:21, lerninlinux(a)comcast.net wrote:
> > Cable companies unbundling? Unbundling what?
> >
> > You can just get cable modem now, but they charge you more for that
then
> > for the basic cable with the cable modem, because they have to
install the
> > filters to block cable. I just had to go through rigamaroar with
them as I
> > did basic with modem, and didn't hook up the tv. They wanted to say
I
> > didn't have the tv and increase my bill by $30 a month, I proved I
had tv
> > and offered to call the state, and they said "oops".
>
> According to http://www.twckc.com/savingsCalculator/, plain old
internet is
> cheaper than internet+TV
> _______________________________________________
> Kclug mailing list
> Kclug(a)kclug.org
> http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
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