25%
07.06.2019
.10e-10 ***
monthJuly 211.030 20.849 10.122 < 2e-16 ***
monthJune 167.145 22.755 7.345 5.85e-13 ***
monthMay 24.528 21.411 1.146 0.2524
monthMarch -10
25%
13.12.2022
is my home network (192.168.x.x). The second NIC is connected to a private Ethernet network (10.0.0.1, subnet mask 255.255.252.0), which follows the network addressing discussed in the
25%
04.11.2011
out the relevant line in the/etc/inittab
file. This will free up some memory:
# Run xdm in runlevel 5
# x:5:respawn:/etc/X11/prefdm ‑nodaemon
Now perform a first full-system package update
25%
30.11.2025
initial tests are quite reasonable: 1GB memory, a virtual CPU, about 20GB of disk space, and a bridged network adapter with an Internet connection will do for now. Sun xVM VirtualBox is a good choice
25%
29.09.2020
a 1600x900 screen that will not make your eyes want, even today. Unfortunately, my unit came with the lesser 1366x768 screen option, but it is still perfectly suitable for its target application at the lab
25%
26.01.2025
.DevCenter/devcenters/attachednetworks@2024-02-01' = {
18 name: networkConnection.name
19 parent: devcenter
20 ... }
21
22 resource devcenterGalleryImage 'Microsoft.DevCenter/devcenters/galleries/images@2024-02-01' existing = {
23
25%
28.11.2023
:43 ubuntu22-vbox code[33011]: [2023-10-14 15:20:43] debug [tunnels::connections::ws] sent liveness ping
Oct 14 15:20:43 ubuntu22-vbox code[33011]: [2023-10-14 15:20:43] debug [tunnels
25%
11.10.2016
, interesting, and worthwhile exercise. I argue that systems administration needs a command-line editor, because it can be used even if X windows isn't working or isn't installed on the servers. Knowing how
25%
30.11.2025
X4 920 CPU (quad core)
8GB of memory (DDR2-800)
The operating system and boot drive are on an IBM DTLA-307020 (20GB drive at Ultra ATA/100)
/home is on a Seagate ST1360827AS
A 64GB Intel X
25%
08.07.2018
seconds set connect timeout (default is 10 sec)
-u seconds set command timeout (no default)
-f n use fanout of n nodes
-w host,host,... set target node list on command line
-x