07-03-2010
Using terms like "unix-like" is not based on technology as much as it is trademark rights and inter-corporate money squabbles.
Of course, Linux is "unix-like" as so are all the various flavors of unix, they are "unix-like" as well, which is generally (something like) a pre-emptive multitasking kernel built on top of a C compiler where user-level applications are launched from "shells" which are wrappers on top of the operating system.
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Which is much more powerful as an operating system:
1. Windows 2000
2. Windows 98
3. Windows XP
4. Windows ME
5. Unix
6. Linux
and why is it much more powerful than the other operating systems that i have mentioned.
thanks for your info... (1 Reply)
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Its not stable yet but it is in progress guys (:
Early Access Release Channels ?(Chromium Developer Documentation)? (1 Reply)
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5. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators
For some reason Google Chrome sees unix.com as dangerous and has start to block it. I need to select advanced and continue on own risk.
Can you make an effort to remove unix.com form the list of dangerous site from Google.
IE has not this problem. (5 Replies)
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Hi All,
This is my operating system.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.7 (Tikanga).
This is a64 bit version
# cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.7 (Tikanga)
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Linux oim11gdevlab 2.6.18-274.el5 #1 SMP Fri Jul 8 17:36:59 EDT 2011 x86_64... (2 Replies)
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Am trying to Install Google-Chrome browser from my server to local machine..
I tried..
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Can we know the operating given the IP address or DNS of the host.
All I have is
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Hi Dears
i use UBUNTU 16.04 LTS. I download google chrome .deb package and install it but not work. i remove and purge it and install again but not work. i remove .confi too.
what kind of details you need?
Can help me? (7 Replies)
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LEARN ABOUT OPENSOLARIS
netid
netid(4) File Formats netid(4)
NAME
netid - netname database
SYNOPSIS
/etc/netid
DESCRIPTION
The netid file is a local source of information on mappings between netnames (see secure_rpc(3NSL)) and user ids or hostnames in the local
domain. The netid file can be used in conjunction with, or instead of, the network source: NIS or NIS+. The publickey entry in the nss-
witch.conf (see nsswitch.conf(4)) file determines which of these sources will be queried by the system to translate netnames to local user
ids or hostnames.
Each entry in the netid file is a single line of the form:
netname uid:gid, gid, gid...
or
netname 0:hostname
The first entry associates a local user id with a netname. The second entry associates a hostname with a netname.
The netid file field descriptions are as follows:
netname The operating system independent network name for the user or host. netname has one of two formats. The format used to specify
a host is of the form:
unix.hostname@domain
where hostname is the name of the host and domain is the network domain name.
The format used to specify a user id is of the form:
unix.uid@domain
where uid is the numerical id of the user and domain is the network domain name.
uid The numerical id of the user (see passwd(4)). When specifying a host name, uid is always zero.
group The numerical id of the group the user belongs to (see group(4)). Several groups, separated by commas, may be listed for a
single uid.
hostname The local hostname (see hosts(4)).
Blank lines are ignored. Any part of a line to the right of a `#' symbol is treated as a comment.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 A sample netid file.
Here is a sample netid file:
unix.789@West.Sun.COM 789:30,65
unix.123@Bldg_xy.Sun.COM 123:20,1521
unix.candlestick@campus1.bayarea.EDU 0:candlestick
FILES
/etc/group groups file
/etc/hosts hosts database
/etc/netid netname database
/etc/passwd password file
/etc/publickey public key database
SEE ALSO
netname2user(3NSL), secure_rpc(3NSL), group(4), hosts(4), nsswitch.conf(4), passwd(4), publickey(4)
SunOS 5.11 23 May 1994 netid(4)