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Full Discussion: 65 thousand dollar question
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? 65 thousand dollar question Post 84817 by IM-DUMB-HELP! on Wednesday 28th of September 2005 09:01:34 PM
Old 09-28-2005
Quote:
Originally Posted by Neo
Large corporations need a "safety valve" for operations liability. If they purchase expensive servers with full support by large companies, and production operations fail, they can blame, or "turn to", the platform provider, who was under contract to provide hardware, software, and service. If they use "cheap free UNIX" and there is a failure, corporations have no "scapegoat" to point to. This is standard, risk management operations, in large organizations.

see like im only 12 i have no clue what this stuff is about so if someone could add me on msn or send me an email saying that theyll help me that'd be great : ...

Last edited by Ygor; 09-28-2005 at 10:27 PM.. Reason: Remove email address
 

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WRITE(1)							   User Commands							  WRITE(1)

NAME
write - send a message to another user SYNOPSIS
write user [ttyname] DESCRIPTION
Write allows you to communicate with other users, by copying lines from your terminal to theirs. When you run the write command, the user you are writing to gets a message of the form: Message from yourname@yourhost on yourtty at hh:mm ... Any further lines you enter will be copied to the specified user's terminal. If the other user wants to reply, they must run write as well. When you are done, type an end-of-file or interrupt character. The other user will see the message EOF indicating that the conversation is over. You can prevent people (other than the super-user) from writing to you with the mesg(1) command. Some commands, for example nroff(1) and pr(1), may disallow writing automatically, so that your output isn't overwritten. If the user you want to write to is logged in on more than one terminal, you can specify which terminal to write to by specifying the ter- minal name as the second operand to the write command. Alternatively, you can let write select one of the terminals - it will pick the one with the shortest idle time. This is so that if the user is logged in at work and also dialed up from home, the message will go to the right place. The traditional protocol for writing to someone is that the string `-o', either at the end of a line or on a line by itself, means that it's the other person's turn to talk. The string `oo' means that the person believes the conversation to be over. SEE ALSO
mesg(1), talk(1), who(1) HISTORY
A write command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. AVAILABILITY
The write command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/. util-linux March 1995 WRITE(1)
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