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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Where did you meet UNIX for a first time? Post 302431938 by sparcguy on Wednesday 23rd of June 2010 09:01:27 AM
Old 06-23-2010
started out with sco unix maybe in 93 gradually moved on to AIX 3yrs later my first real unix admin job. Then opportunity of becoming a real field engineer came along later and I grepped it - moved into Sun, here I played with all kinds of solaris flavors, sunos, solaris 2.3-2.4-2.5-2.5.1-2.6-7-8-9 handled all kinds of machines, from squaretop IPC box to pizzabox sparc1-20 sparc1000, ultras-to-enterprises even the clones all except E10ks, I've played with all kinds of cluster softwares, firewall softwares, backup software, all kinds of weird storage systems available to run with a sun server.

I got tired of burnt weekends working in freezing data-centers so I left and joined another company my first end user job in many years. Three years later I got bored, left and join re-joined the industry been working last few years on hpux/mcsg slowly moving into linux.

My crystal ball tells me the next big thing believe it or not is trending towards AIX. If it really comes true maybe I go into it again and start over from scratch. Smilie
 

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clm meet(1)							  USER COMMANDS 						       clm meet(1)

  NAME
      clm meet - compute the intersection of a set of clusterings.

      clmmeet  is not in actual fact a program. This manual page documents the behaviour and options of the clm program when invoked in mode meet.
      The options -h, --apropos, --version, -set, --nop are accessible in all clm modes. They are described in the clm manual page.

  SYNOPSIS
      clm meet [-o fname (output file name)] [-h (print synopsis, exit)] [--apropos (print synopsis,  exit)]  [--version  (print  version,  exit)]
      <file name>+

  DESCRIPTION
      clm  meet  computes the intersection of a set of clusterings, that is, the largest clustering that is a subclustering of all the clusterings
      in the set. It stores the intersection (or meet) in the argument to the -o flag, which must be the first option given.  All remaining  argu-
      ments  are  interpreted  as  names of files containing clusterings in mcl format (see mcxio(5)), which must all pertain to a set of the same
      cardinality.

      This utility can be useful in measuring (in conjunction with clm dist) the consistency of a set of clusterings at different levels of granu-
      larity  -  if  the meet of all those clusterings is close to being a subclustering of each of them, consistency is good. See clm dist for an
      example.

  OPTIONS
      -o fname (output file name)

  AUTHOR
      Stijn van Dongen.

  SEE ALSO
      mclfamily(7) for an overview of all the documentation and the utilities in the mcl family.

  clm meet 12-068						      8 Mar 2012							 clm meet(1)
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