This Weeks Lottery - Jackpot Now 219,500 Bits


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? This Weeks Lottery - Jackpot Now 219,500 Bits
# 1  
Old 05-28-2009
This Weeks Lottery - Jackpot Now 219,500 Bits

If you want to win some Bits, the jackpot for tomorrow's drawing is up to 219,500 Bits

Lottery tickets are only 100 Bits Smilie
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Lottery number checker

hi , Let me put it in a different way with words. Assume the lottery have numbers from 1-50. Out of this 50 numbers, I am going to pick up only 35 numbers randomly. so, my total numbers would be 35 numbers shuffled from nos. I have list of winning numbers in file. Now, the... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: gsiva
9 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Lottery result checker

So, i made a simple lottery number generator like this: for i in `seq 10`; do seq 1 35 | shuf -n 7 | sort -g | tr '\n' ' ' ;echo; done i've file with winning numbers: Eg:1 10 15 20 25 30 35 2 6 10 14 18 22 26 My problem here is how to compare or check if my generated numbers are match... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: PuLPi
10 Replies

3. What is on Your Mind?

Place Bits & Win Bits!!! - 17th Annual Satellite Awards

Ten movies have been nominated as best motion picture by the International Press Academy, presentation of the 2012 Satellite Awards will be held on 16th December at Los Angeles, CA. Place your bits here on one of the below nominated movie of your choice:- Argo ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Yoda
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Check Character matching from pos 7-15 to pos 211-219 if True then replace 211-219 with spaces

Script for if characters from positions 7-15 are matching with characters from position 211-219 then replace all char from 211-219 with 9 space. Total length of record is 420. Here is the specification of the data in file. Position Field Data Type... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: lancesunny
5 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Fill the values between -500 to 500 -awk

input -200 2.4 0 2.6 30 2.8 output -500 0 -499 0 -488 0 .......... .......... .... -200 2.4 .... ... 0 2.6 (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: quincyjones
6 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

32 bits procesaor with 64 bits Solaris

people i have a problem i have a 32 bits sparc processor, and solaris 64 bits processor, i install a oracle data base 64 bits, but my oracle will not run because my processor is from 32 bits this is ok??, i know if i have x86 i cannot install a 64 bits operatin system in a 32 bits processor. ... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: enkei17
0 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
PNGINFO(1)						      General Commands Manual							PNGINFO(1)

NAME
pnginfo - display information on the PNG files named SYNOPSIS
pnginfo [-t] [-d] [-D] <filenames> DESCRIPTION
This command dumps information about the PNG files named on the command line. This command's output is based on the output of the tiffinfo command, which is part of the libtiff distribution. Each line output by the command represents a value that has been set within the PNG file. The -t command line option forces pnginfo to use libtiff tiffinfo style lables, instead of the more relevant png names. The -d command line option dumps the bitmap contained by the image to standard out, whilst the -D command merely checks that the image bitmap could be extracted from the file. If nothing is reported by -D, then there was no error. The format for the output bitmaps is hexadecimal, with each pixel presented as a triple -- for instance [red green blue]. This means that paletted images et cetera will have their bitmaps expanded before display. RETURNS
Nothing. EXAMPLE
pnginfo -t toucan.png basn3p02.png basn6a16.png toucan.png... Image Width: 162 Image Length: 150 Bits/Sample: 8 Samples/Pixel: 1 Pixel Depth: 8 Colour Type (Photometric Interpretation): PALETTED COLOUR with alpha (256 colours, 256 transparent) Image filter: Single row per byte filter Interlacing: Adam7 interlacing Compression Scheme: Deflate method 8, 32k window Resolution: 0, 0 (unit unknown) FillOrder: msb-to-lsb Byte Order: Network (Big Endian) Number of text strings: 0 of 0 basn3p02.png... Image Width: 32 Image Length: 32 Bits/Sample: 2 Samples/Pixel: 1 Pixel Depth: 2 Colour Type (Photometric Interpretation): PALETTED COLOUR (4 colours, 0 transparent) Image filter: Single row per byte filter Interlacing: No interlacing Compression Scheme: Deflate method 8, 32k window Resolution: 0, 0 (unit unknown) FillOrder: msb-to-lsb Byte Order: Network (Big Endian) Number of text strings: 0 of 0 basn6a16.png... Image Width: 32 Image Length: 32 Bits/Sample: 16 Samples/Pixel: 4 Pixel Depth: 64 Colour Type (Photometric Interpretation): RGB with alpha channel Image filter: Single row per byte filter Interlacing: No interlacing Compression Scheme: Deflate method 8, 32k window Resolution: 0, 0 (unit unknown) FillOrder: msb-to-lsb Byte Order: Network (Big Endian) Number of text strings: 0 of 0 SEE ALSO
pngchunkdesc(1), pngchunks(1), pngcp(1), AUTHOR
pnginfo was written by Michael Still <mikal@stillhq.com>. This manual page was written by Nelson A. de Oliveira <naoliv@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others). Tue, 31 Jul 2007 17:55:51 -0300 PNGINFO(1)