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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? So... What are you listening to? Post 52857 by rhfrommn on Monday 28th of June 2004 12:04:00 PM
Old 06-28-2004
I just went to the KISS concert in Somerset WI this weekend. Amazing!

BUT, the part that is most relevant to a tech forum like this is they had a new thing I'd never seen before. A company called Instant Live was there. They sell a voucher for $25 at the show. After the concert you line up near their trailer and pick up your copy of that very concert! The sound quality is very good - not quite as good as a store bought CD but vastly better than any bootleg I've ever heard. And it was only about 20 minutes from the end of the show till I got my double CD of the concert.

They were bringing out boxes of about 50 CDs ever 5 minutes or so. They must have a pretty decent CD duplicating machine to get them to us that fast. The packaging was not bad either. It wasn't quite professional record label quality, but the cover had pictures in full color and the CDs had real labels not just printing on the silver disc. I was extremely impressed with the whole thing.
 

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TALK(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   TALK(1)

NAME
talk - talk to another user SYNOPSIS
talk person [ ttyname ] DESCRIPTION
Talk is a visual communication program which copies lines from your terminal to that of another user. If you wish to talk to someone on you own machine, then person is just the person's login name. If you wish to talk to a user on another host, then person is of the form : host!user or host.user or host:user or user@host though host@user is perhaps preferred. If you want to talk to a user who is logged in more than once, the ttyname argument may be used to indicate the appropriate terminal name. When first called, it sends the message Message from TalkDaemon@his_machine... talk: connection requested by your_name@your_machine. talk: respond with: talk your_name@your_machine to the user you wish to talk to. At this point, the recipient of the message should reply by typing talk your_name@your_machine It doesn't matter from which machine the recipient replies, as long as his login-name is the same. Once communication is established, the two parties may type simultaneously, with their output appearing in separate windows. Typing control L will cause the screen to be reprinted, while your erase, kill, and word kill characters will work in talk as normal. To exit, just type your interrupt character; talk then moves the cursor to the bottom of the screen and restores the terminal. Permission to talk may be denied or granted by use of the mesg command. At the outset talking is allowed. Certain commands, in particular nroff and pr(1) disallow messages in order to prevent messy output. FILES
/etc/hosts to find the recipient's machine /var/run/utmp to find the recipient's tty SEE ALSO
mesg(1), who(1), mail(1), write(1) BUGS
The version of talk(1) released with 4.3BSD uses a protocol that is incompatible with the protocol used in the version released with 4.2BSD. 4.2 Berkeley Distribution November 27, 1996 TALK(1)
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