Ocean Park's 11th Bill. Working on a Restructuring Plan. And Executing It.

 
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Old 09-30-2010
Ocean Park's 11th Bill. Working on a Restructuring Plan. And Executing It.

Ocean Park Advisors has filed its 11th monthly bill in the SCO bankruptcy, for $15,831, 80% of the bill for August, plus $196.13 in expenses. That's for 68.6 hours. According to the bill, they spent most of their time in August working on: "Analysis, Preparation and Execution of Restructuring Plan", 19.5 hours, $6,157.50.
There's a restructuring plan?? And they're *executing* it?
Actually, all kidding aside, they define restructuring on page 4 of the filing as "headcount reductions and non-payroll expense rationalizations." That's one of the saddest parts of the SCO story, all the employees whose lives have been impacted negatively. I gather from the bill, most of the headcount reductions in August were in the foreign subsidiaries. The August SCO story was shrinkage. It must be so depressing to work for SCO in 2010.

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hosts.equiv(5)							File Formats Manual						    hosts.equiv(5)

Name
       hosts.equiv - list of trusted hosts

Description
       The file resides in the directory and contains a list of trusted hosts.	When an or request from a host listed in the file is made, and the
       initiator of the request has an entry in further validity checking is not required.  Thus, does not prompt for a  password,  and  completes
       successfully.  When a remote user is in the local file, that user is defined as equivalenced to a local user with the same user ID.

       The format of is a list of names, as in:
       host1
       -host2
       +@group1
       -@group2

       A  line	consisting  of a host name means that anyone logging in from that host is trusted.  A line consisting of a host name preceded by -
       means that anyone logging in from that host is not trusted.  A line consisting of a single + means that all hosts are trusted.	Placing  a
       line consisting of a single + in your file poses substantial security risks and is not recommended.

       The  +@ and -@ syntax are specific to Yellow Pages (YP).  A line consisting of +@group means that all hosts in that network group (which is
       served by YP) are trusted.  A line consisting of -@group means that hosts in that network group (which is served by YP)	are  not  trusted.
       Programs  scan  the  file sequentially and stop when they encounter the appropriate entry (either positive for host name and +@ entries, or
       negative for -@ entries).

       The file has the same format as the file.  When a user executes or the file from that user's home directory is concatenated onto  the  file
       for  permission	checking.  The host names listed in the and files may optionally contain the local BIND domain name.  For more information
       on BIND, see the Guide to the BIND/Hesiod Service.  If a user is excluded by a minus entry from but included in	that  user  is	considered
       trusted.  In the special case when the user is root, only the file is checked.

       It  is  possible to have two entries on a single line.  Separate the entires with a space.  If the remote host is equivalenced by the first
       entry, the user named by the second entry is allowed to specify any name to the option (provided that name is in the file).  For example:
       suez john
       This entry allows John to log in from suez.  The normal use would be to put this entry in the file in the home directory for  bill.   Then,
       John can log in as bill when coming from suez without having to supply a password.  The second entry can be a netgroup.	For example:
       +@group1 +@group2
       This entry allows any user in group2 coming from a host in group1 to log in as anyone.

Files
       /var/yp/domain/netgroup
       /var/yp/domain/netgroup.byuser
       /var/yp/domain/netgroup.byhost

See Also
       rlogin(1c), rsh(1c), netgroup(5yp)
       Guide to the BIND/Hesiod Service
       Guide to the Yellow Pages Service

																    hosts.equiv(5)