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Full Discussion: What Came First?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What Came First? Post 302135435 by porter on Sunday 9th of September 2007 10:23:11 PM
Old 09-09-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by jimmyc
With such close care need to successfully hatch an egg there is no way for an egg to mature with out a "chicken" providing care to the egg.
Certainly the hatchling's parents would have had very similar DNA to Mr Chicken the First, and would have provided the same due care, nuturing and egg-tending activities. They just wouldn't have been actual chickens.
 
in.talkd(1M)                                              System Administration Commands                                              in.talkd(1M)

NAME
in.talkd, talkd - server for talk program SYNOPSIS
in.talkd DESCRIPTION
talkd is a server used by the talk(1) program. It listens at the UDP port indicated in the ``talk'' service description; see services(4). The actual conversation takes place on a TCP connection that is established by negotiation between the two machines involved. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWrcmds | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
svcs(1), talk(1), inetadm(1M), inetd(1M), svcadm(1M), services(4), attributes(5), smf(5) NOTES
The protocol is architecture dependent. The in.talkd service is managed by the service management facility, smf(5), under the service identifier: svc:/network/talk Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). Responsibil- ity for initiating and restarting this service is delegated to inetd(1M). Use inetadm(1M) to make configuration changes and to view config- uration information for this service. The service's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command. SunOS 5.10 31 Jul 2004 in.talkd(1M)
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