Sponsored Content
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.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

port not listening..

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?

What are you listening to right now?

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

What prot is a process listening on?

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

Apache2 No listening Sockets available

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

No process ID for listening ports

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

Listening for textbox clicks

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

Process running but not listening

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

PID of listening ports

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

Is my Socket Free or Listening

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
APT-CDROM(8)								APT							      APT-CDROM(8)

NAME
apt-cdrom - APT CD-ROM management utility SYNOPSIS
apt-cdrom [-rmfan] [-d=cdrom_mount_point] [-o=config_string] [-c=config_file] {add | ident | {-v | --version} | {-h | --help}} DESCRIPTION
apt-cdrom is used to add a new CD-ROM to APT's list of available sources. apt-cdrom takes care of determining the structure of the disc as well as correcting for several possible mis-burns and verifying the index files. It is necessary to use apt-cdrom to add CDs to the APT system; it cannot be done by hand. Furthermore each disc in a multi-CD set must be inserted and scanned separately to account for possible mis-burns. Unless the -h, or --help option is given, one of the commands below must be present. add add is used to add a new disc to the source list. It will unmount the CD-ROM device, prompt for a disc to be inserted and then proceed to scan it and copy the index files. If the disc does not have a proper .disk directory you will be prompted for a descriptive title. APT uses a CD-ROM ID to track which disc is currently in the drive and maintains a database of these IDs in /var/lib/apt/cdroms.list ident A debugging tool to report the identity of the current disc as well as the stored file name OPTIONS
All command line options may be set using the configuration file, the descriptions indicate the configuration option to set. For boolean options you can override the config file by using something like -f-,--no-f, -f=no or several other variations. --no-auto-detect, --cdrom Do not try to auto-detect the CD-ROM path. Usually combined with the --cdrom option. Configuration Item: Acquire::cdrom::AutoDetect. -d, --cdrom Mount point; specify the location to mount the CD-ROM. This mount point must be listed in /etc/fstab and properly configured. Configuration Item: Acquire::cdrom::mount. -r, --rename Rename a disc; change the label of a disc or override the disc's given label. This option will cause apt-cdrom to prompt for a new label. Configuration Item: APT::CDROM::Rename. -m, --no-mount No mounting; prevent apt-cdrom from mounting and unmounting the mount point. Configuration Item: APT::CDROM::NoMount. -f, --fast Fast Copy; Assume the package files are valid and do not check every package. This option should be used only if apt-cdrom has been run on this disc before and did not detect any errors. Configuration Item: APT::CDROM::Fast. -a, --thorough Thorough Package Scan; This option may be needed with some old Debian 1.1/1.2 discs that have Package files in strange places. It takes much longer to scan the CD but will pick them all up. -n, --just-print, --recon, --no-act No Changes; Do not change the sources.list(5) file and do not write index files. Everything is still checked however. Configuration Item: APT::CDROM::NoAct. -h, --help Show a short usage summary. -v, --version Show the program version. -c, --config-file Configuration File; Specify a configuration file to use. The program will read the default configuration file and then this configuration file. If configuration settings need to be set before the default configuration files are parsed specify a file with the APT_CONFIG environment variable. See apt.conf(5) for syntax information. -o, --option Set a Configuration Option; This will set an arbitrary configuration option. The syntax is -o Foo::Bar=bar. -o and --option can be used multiple times to set different options. SEE ALSO
apt.conf(5), apt-get(8), sources.list(5) DIAGNOSTICS
apt-cdrom returns zero on normal operation, decimal 100 on error. BUGS
APT bug page[1]. If you wish to report a bug in APT, please see /usr/share/doc/debian/bug-reporting.txt or the reportbug(1) command. AUTHORS
Jason Gunthorpe APT team NOTES
1. APT bug page http://bugs.debian.org/src:apt APT 1.6.3ubuntu0.1 30 November 2013 APT-CDROM(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:49 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy