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Full Discussion: Find Computer Location
Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Find Computer Location Post 302711475 by DukeNuke2 on Saturday 6th of October 2012 12:33:22 PM
Old 10-06-2012
as sorry as i am, but this is against our rules... trying to catch a hacker by his ip is also hacking. i've to close this thread.
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GOMOKU(6)							 BSD Games Manual							 GOMOKU(6)

NAME
gomoku -- game of 5 in a row SYNOPSIS
gomoku [-bcdu] [-D debugfile] [inputfile] DESCRIPTION
gomoku is a two player game were the object is to get 5 in a row horizontally, vertically or diagonally on a 19 by 19 grid. By convention, black always moves first. With no arguments, gomoku will display a playing board and prompt for moves from the user. Valid moves are a let- ter for the column and a number for the row of an empty board location. Entering ``quit" or ``resign" will end the game. You can save the current state of the game by entering ``save" and supplying a file name when prompted. The optional file inputfile can be used to restore a saved game. The options are: -b This option sets background mode. Input moves are read from standard input, the computer picks a move, and prints it to standard output. The first input line should be either ``black" or ``white" to specify whether gomoku has the first move or not respectively. This option was intended for game tournaments where a referee program handles the board display and pits one program against another. -c Computer versus computer. gomoku will play a game against itself. This is mostly used for testing. -d Print debugging information. Repeating this option more than once yields more detailed information. -D debugfile Print the debug information to debugfile instead of to the standard output. -u User versus user. This is mostly used for testing. AUTHOR
Ralph Campbell ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The board display routines were based on the goref program written by Peter Langston. BSD
August 4, 1994 BSD
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