12-21-2018
Yes... it also has been clear at the unix.com forums for 20 of those 30 years.
We do not support "hacking" which means "illegal activity of any kind including software piracy, breaking into systems without authorization, yadda yadda yadda...)\
Doing "creative legal things" is not "hacking"... hacking is illegal or unethical related activity; and has been that way for unix.com in our rules since 2000.
5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. What is on Your Mind?
I have updated the backend hosting for UNIX.COM and would appreciate feedback either in the form of a vote in the poll or a post so that we can plan for more changes if any are needed.
In particular let me us know if you see any strange behavior from the site as there may still be some... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: reborg
8 Replies
2. IP Networking
Setup a site to site VPN between two cisco routers.
One of the site locations is unable to access ports such as https://example.com:9001
How do I let them go into port 9001?
They can ssh, ftp, telnet and everything else.
Is this a VPN issue or ACL access issue?
I put
permit ip host... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: photon
0 Replies
3. IP Networking
Hi,
I am trying to establish vpn between my linux server and cisco asa at client side.
I installed openswan on my cent os.
Linux Server
eth0 - 182.2.29.10
Gateway - 182.2.29.1
eth1 - 192.9.200.75
I have simple IPtables Like
WAN="eth0"
LAN="eth1" (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ashokvpp
0 Replies
4. IP Networking
Q: "Does Cisco 1921 router support,, act as an endpoint for, site to site VPNs using IPSec? If so, how many? "
A: If you get the Cisco 1921/k9 with the security services bundle then it will have built in security features. Cisco, typically includes IP Sec tunnels I believe as part of that... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ayaerlee
0 Replies
5. IP Networking
Hi @all,
I try to connect 2 LANs with IPSec/Openswan
LAN 1: 192.168.0.0/24
LAN 2: 192.168.1.0/24
This is my Config:
conn HomeVPN # # Left security gateway, subnet behind it, nexthop toward right. left=192.168.1.29 ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: bahnhasser83
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
ppmntsc
PPMNTSC(1) General Commands Manual PPMNTSC(1)
NAME
ppmntsc - Make RGB colors legal for NTSC or PAL color systems.
SYNOPSIS
ppmntsc [ --pal ] [ --legalonly ] [ --illegalonly ] [ --correctedonly ] [ --verbose ] [ --debug ] [ infile ]
Minimum unique abbreviations of options are acceptable.
DESCRIPTION
This program makes colors legal in the NTSC (or PAL) color systems. Often, images generated on the computer are made for use in movies
which ultimately end up on video tape. However, the range of colors (as specified by their RGB values) on a computer does not match the
range of colors that can be represented using the NTSC (or PAL) systems. If an image with "illegal" colors is sent directly to an NTSC (or
PAL) video system for recording, the "illegal" colors will be clipped. This may result in an undesirable looking picture.
This utility tests each pixel in an image to see if it falls within the legal NTSC (or PAL) range. If not, it raises or lowers the pixel's
saturation in the output so that it does fall within legal limits. Pixels that are already OK just go unmodified into the output.
Input is from the file named input. If input is -, input is from Standard Input. If you don't specify input, input is from Standard
Input.
Output is always to Standard Output.
This program handles multi-image PPM input, producing multi-image PPM output.
OPTIONS
--pal Use the PAL transform instead of the default NTSC.
--verbose
Print a grand total of the number of illegal pixels.
--debug
Produce a humongous listing of illegal colors and their legal counterparts. NOTE: This option may produce a great deal of output.
--legalonly
Output only pixels that are already legal. Output black in place of pixels that are not.
--illegalonly
Output only pixels that are illegal (and output them uncorrected). Output black in place of pixels that are already legal.
--correctedonly
Output only pixels that are corrected versions of illegal pixels. Output black in place of pixels that are already legal.
SEE ALSO
ppm(5), ppmdepth(1), ppmdim(1), ppmbrighten(1)
AUTHOR
Wes Barris, Minnesota Supercomputer Center, Inc., Bryan Henderson
4th Berkeley Distribution April 19, 2000 PPMNTSC(1)