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.
9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
Hi..
I am using HPux11.0
i want to know if server not listening to a tcp port what should we do to resolve the problem....
in /etc/services tcp port 7108/tcp is mentioned for some perticular application..
while starting that application error is coming could not establish
listening address... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Prafulla
1 Replies
2. What is on Your Mind?
This is has been posted many times before... It is not in this forum as of now, so I have decided to put it here :D
I'm listening to The Outsiders (AKA Hell is for Heros Part I) by Modern Life is War.... what about ya'll? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Mars8082686
4 Replies
3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hi,
Bit of a newbie question . . .
How can I detrimine what TCP port a particular process is listening on?
TIA. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Le Badger
2 Replies
4. SuSE
I installed Apache2 and Gadmin-Httpd on Suse after installation I got a error message no listening sockets available when start apache.
Please advise, I check lot of forums but unable to find solution (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: real-chess
4 Replies
5. Red Hat
How can I have ports that are listening without processes being associated with them?
root@ldv002 # netstat -ltnup
Active Internet connections (only servers)
Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State PID/Program name
tcp 0 0... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Padow
2 Replies
6. Ubuntu
Hi everyone.
Apologies if I am posting in the wrong area.
I would like to find out a bit about how ubuntu/linux handles text boxes. In particular I would like to develop an application that launches another application (on screen keyboard) when any text box is clicked. The goal is to get... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Huss
4 Replies
7. AIX
Hello guys
I am experiencing a very strange behavior on one of our AIX servers. We have an application with several processes that listen on several port numbers. Sometimes we receive complains that people cannot connect to the server on a specific port that is used by one the application... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: abohmeed
6 Replies
8. Ubuntu
I ran 'sudo netstat -ntpl' and got the following without PID
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:2049 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN -
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:38977 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN -
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:34253 ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: tt77
3 Replies
9. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hi,
bash-3.2$ uname -a
Linux mymac 2.6.18-409.el5 #1 SMP Fri Feb 12 06:37:28 EST 2016 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
bash-3.2$ telnet 10.12.228.40 13900
Trying 10.12.228.40...
telnet: connect to address 10.12.228.40: Connection refused
bash-3.2$ telnet 10.12.228.40 23900
Trying... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mohtashims
2 Replies
NcdT(1) General Commands Manual NcdT(1)
NAME
ncdt - directory tree printer with extended capabilities
SYNOPSIS
ncdt [-db?] [--dirs] [--bitrate] [--prefix text ] [--help] [ directory [ name ]]
DESCRIPTION
ncdt is a small utility for printing directory trees. It has some additional features not found in tree(1). Additional capabilities are:
- size field for directories displays the summary size of directory subtree instead of the size of the special file (which is somewhat
more useful)
- sizes are displayed in a more readable format (that's a minor improvement, but it helps a little)
- MP3 files are detected; additional info is displayed for them (which is probably the nicest thing about NcdT) The info is displayed
in a compact form, like <2:53 v168JR+> where 2:53 is play time, v (if present) means the file is encoded using VBR, 168 is bitrate
(average bitrate for VBR files), J describes channel encoding (Mono, Stereo, Joint-Stereo, Dual channel), R (if present) means the
file has a RIFF header at the beginning, + (if present) means the file has ID3v2 tag attached - (if present) means there's no ID3
tag at all (none of these means there's only ID3v1 tag present).
NcdT is particularily nice for indexing CDs.
OPTIONS
-d --dirs
Print only directories, omit files. This mode is a rough equivalent of du(1).
-b --bitrate
Print bitrate info for directories. Bitrates are displayed both for ordinary files and directories. If all MP3 files in a given
directory subtree have the same bitrate only one number is printed, if they have various bitrates the range is printed.
--prefix text
Prefix listing with given text. This option is not intended for general use. It might be used by programs using NcdT to index CDsor
doing similar operations to record additional information.
-? --help
Display usage summary.
USAGE
When called without any parameters ncdt displays directory tree for current directory (.).
When called with one parameter ncdt displays directory tree for specified directory.
When called with two parameters ncdt displays directory tree for the directory specified as its first parameter. Second parameter is used
as directory label for the top level directory (instead of directory name from parameter 1).
EXAMPLES
ncdt prints directory tree for the current directory. It will be labeled .
ncdt /usr
prints directory tree of /usr. It will be labeled /usr
ncdt /cdrom 'CD #21'
prints directory tree of /cdrom. It will be labeled CD #21
ncdt -db /cdrom
lists directory sizes, play times and bitrate ranges
SEE ALSO
tree(1), du(1)
BUGS
NcdT uses quite a lot of memory. It's also not very fast, but on a decent CPU it should not be noticeable.
There are no real bugs I'm aware of. I don't think there are any now.
AUTHOR
Pawel Wiecek <coven@vmh.net>
NcdT(1)