On Sat, 18 Aug 2001 12:41:29 +0100 (BST) "D.I. Redhouse" wrote:
> On 16 Aug 2001, MJ Ray wrote:
>
> > Mark Elliss <mark.elliss(a)btinternet.com> writes:
> >
> > > Ok I'll stop lurking and introduce myself too.
> >
> > Hooray! Oh, and hello too.
>
> Ooohhh, OK.
>
> My name is David. I provide computing support to a humanities department
> at a University somewhere in south-east England.
Hello, welcome, from your cam.ac.uk address I am assuming you are from
Cambridge Uni.
> I administer Netware, NT/95/98/2000, Solaris, Linux, OpenBSD and
> Macintrash boxen. None of them very well. Also, anything with a plug on
> it.
Cool, Netware still lives, just out of interest which of the above is
your favourite?
> I am a big fan of Oracle Applications, NT Roaming Profiles, and IIS.
<fx action="shudders">
> A long, long time ago in a galaxy far, far away I was a Field
> Archaeologist, and have been responsible for introducing 22 tonne tracked
> excavators to some of Britain's less interesting Scheduled Ancient
> monuments.
I'm not going to ask.
> Possibly my least interesting experience to date was trying to work out
> why `the internet isn't working' via mobile phone whilst standing on top
> of a Bronze Age barrow somewhere in the Fens.
Have you tried using a real networking technique, if you can get a little
bit of height and some big twigs yoy could use 1-11Mbps wireless ethernet
to connect these up, we have had success with over 8 miles per link!
> On occasion I work in central (i.e. the sticks of) Sicily. I /was/ going
> to use this experience as the basis of an article on computing in the
> field. I /was/ expecting to do some nifty juggling with English modems,
> the Italian phone system and NAT/IP Masquerading, but when I arrived a
> very nice man just connected me to his 100Mbps switched network. Which was
> nice.
Perhaps you can lend advice to a poor student who has be accused of being
a wireless network expert and given the task of connecting a field
somewhere in the bottom left hand corner of belguim a network connection
for a week so a large quantity of geeks in various states of soberness
can connect to the web! bugger!
Thanks
D
> --
> David Redhouse
>
--
"Your house sounds like a
fire hazard" Peter Clarke