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Full Discussion: What is your age? (Part 2)
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What is your age? (Part 2) Post 302100804 by jimmyc on Friday 22nd of December 2006 12:36:02 PM
Old 12-22-2006
Quote:
Originally Posted by Perderabo
And I see no reason that I could not be a contributing member of this forum past age 100 (umm, well, ...assuming the forum survives that long).
Tooo funnny Smilie

I've never been much with programming. The syntax crap just drives me up the wall. Machine language was interesting. I can do it, and will write what I need to but don't really enjoy it. First job (while going to school) in late 70's was with E-Systems working with EE's building/testing antenna in the GHZ range. Cool stuff, really black box. I always enjoyed working with my hands so I ended up in the customer support end of the field. Liked working with people and helping them. Sun in the late eights build a box called 386i. When you pulled off the side cover everyone who worked on the project had their names signed on the inside cover (Won't see any of that now days). When PC's started entering the market I moved over to networking. Did a lot of backbone taps for TI's network. Finally ended up in the automated data transfer arena. Interesting, pays the bills and lets me do my hobby....
 

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WALL(1) 							   User Commands							   WALL(1)

NAME
wall -- write a message to users SYNOPSIS
wall [-n] [-t TIMEOUT] [file] DESCRIPTION
Wall displays the contents of file or, by default, its standard input, on the terminals of all currently logged in users. The command will cut over 79 character long lines to new lines. Short lines are white space padded to have 79 characters. The command will always put carriage return and new line at the end of each line. Only the super-user can write on the terminals of users who have chosen to deny messages or are using a program which automatically denies messages. Reading from a file is refused when the invoker is not superuser and the program is suid or sgid. OPTIONS
-n, --nobanner Supress banner -t, --timeout TIMEOUT Write timeout to terminals in seconds. Argument must be positive integer. Default value is 300 seconds, which is a legacy from time when people ran terminals over modem lines. -V, --version Output version and exit. -h, --help Output help and exit. SEE ALSO
mesg(1), talk(1), write(1), shutdown(8) HISTORY
A wall command appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. AVAILABILITY
The wall command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux April 2011 util-linux
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