A View From the Ground at WWDC (TechNewsWorld.com)
Each year, WWDC changes in subtle ways. Some changes are driven by growth, and that can be both good and bad. Also, serendipity struck once again. It's taken two days for everything to sink in. I mentioned before that the phenomenal growth of WWDC attendance is causing interesting, even unpleasant problems.
See attached video for a demo on how to move back and forth from the desktop view to the mobile view.
Currently this only works for the home page, but I will work on some new PHP code in the future to make this work with the page we are currently on.
Edit: The issue with making every page ... (2 Replies)
I have a user that runs a menu driven application, is there a way to see what scripts this application is executing in the back ground?
OS=AIX 4.3 (1 Reply)
I have a script "a" running in background. From script "a" i will kick off script "b" which will also be in background. Is this possible. And actually what i want is, In script "b" when i do ps -ef, script "a" should not be seen.
Current "a" script
----
---
----
nohup b
exit
current... (1 Reply)
Hi,
Test1.ksh
#! /bin/ksh
for i in $*
do
#echo "$i"
ksh test2.ksh $i &
done
test2.ksh
#! /bin/ksh
sleep 5s
echo "From Test 1 ==> $1"
exit 0;
I am executing as follows:
ksh test1.ksh a b c (10 Replies)
Does anyone know any good tutorials or books which basically start you off by creating a partition, sticking a Linux kernel on there and then booting it to launch some random binary? Then incrementally adds to it until you have something like a full system?
Essentially I want to see how a Unixy... (2 Replies)
Time::Seconds(3pm) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Time::Seconds(3pm)NAME
Time::Seconds - a simple API to convert seconds to other date values
SYNOPSIS
use Time::Piece;
use Time::Seconds;
my $t = localtime;
$t += ONE_DAY;
my $t2 = localtime;
my $s = $t - $t2;
print "Difference is: ", $s->days, "
";
DESCRIPTION
This module is part of the Time::Piece distribution. It allows the user to find out the number of minutes, hours, days, weeks or years in a
given number of seconds. It is returned by Time::Piece when you delta two Time::Piece objects.
Time::Seconds also exports the following constants:
ONE_DAY
ONE_WEEK
ONE_HOUR
ONE_MINUTE
ONE_MONTH
ONE_YEAR
ONE_FINANCIAL_MONTH
LEAP_YEAR
NON_LEAP_YEAR
Since perl does not (yet?) support constant objects, these constants are in seconds only, so you cannot, for example, do this: "print
ONE_WEEK->minutes;"
METHODS
The following methods are available:
my $val = Time::Seconds->new(SECONDS)
$val->seconds;
$val->minutes;
$val->hours;
$val->days;
$val->weeks;
$val->months;
$val->financial_months; # 30 days
$val->years;
$val->pretty; # gives English representation of the delta
The usual arithmetic (+,-,+=,-=) is also available on the objects.
The methods make the assumption that there are 24 hours in a day, 7 days in a week, 365.24225 days in a year and 12 months in a year.
(from The Calendar FAQ at http://www.tondering.dk/claus/calendar.html)
AUTHOR
Matt Sergeant, matt@sergeant.org
Tobias Brox, tobiasb@tobiasb.funcom.com
BalieXXzs SzabieXX (dLux), dlux@kapu.hu
LICENSE
Please see Time::Piece for the license.
Bugs
Currently the methods aren't as efficient as they could be, for reasons of clarity. This is probably a bad idea.
perl v5.16.2 2012-10-11 Time::Seconds(3pm)