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uyA9zcX2nyiRqRW+@example.com
|
[
"I'm trying to implement mod_auth_cas on Solaris 9.\nEnvironment: mod_auth_cas v 1.0.6\nhttpd v 2.2.4 with mod_ssl (runs fine without mod_auth_cas)\nopenssl v 0.9.8g\nThis command seems to install the .so file fine, but trying to restart\napache yields this error:\n\nI have tried various things, including:\nto no avail. Any help would be appreciated.\n\n",
"I see your point, I went in and made it a single value, \n\nbut alas,.... still the same result.\n\n"
] |
v+mLICUX/CdqgCD4@example.com
|
[
"Защити свою идею!\n Товарные знаки \n Полезные модели \n Промышленные образцы \n Изобретения \n Авторские права \n Программы для ЭВМ и БД \n Лицензионные договора \n Договора уступки прав на патенты и товарные знаки \n Договора франчайзинга \n Бесплатные консультации \nТел. (495) 629 9611\n"
] |
h/vOzBtJEMl8zAoH@example.com
|
[
"Tengo 2 HD, en el primario tengo dos particiones una con Windows Xp y otra\ncon datos y en el secundario Suse 9.2, ahora no me arranca el ordenador me\ndice que No Boot. Entro con disco de arranque y al parecer se ha perdido la\ntabla de particiones del primer disco.\n\n\n\nHe cambiado los discos de posición de manera que el primario tiene Suse y el\nsecundario windows, pongo el DVD de Suse, arranco en modo Arrancar sistema,\npara poder entrar en el Suse pero el sistema solo arranca en modo cónsola, y\nno sé como debo arrancar el sistema gràfico para poder llegar al Yast y\nponer grabar el Gestor de arranque en el disco con Suse. Si pongo startx me\ndá un error.\n\n\nGracias por adelantado.\n\n",
"Tengo la Catix 1.2 (deribada de Debian) he actualizado el kernel a 2.6.16,\npero no me funciona el ratón, es un USB pero conectado al PS/2 pues con el\nUSB con el kernel anterior 2.6.13 tampoco funcionaba. ¿Por donde empiezo a\nmirar? Gracias.",
"Ya me funciona, era problema del modulo ehci_hcd, si lo descargo\nentonces me funciona el pendrive. Ahora tengo que ver como lo hago\npara que no se me cargue durante el arranque. Alguna ayuda en ese\nsentido?\n\n 6MMJuDjLumUtrHLX@example.com\nun mensaje a:\n",
"No sé exactamente que he hecho en el centro de control de kde que ahora el\npropio menú del centro de control y en otros programas, kmail por ejemplo,\nme salen una linea con el fondo negro y otra con el fondo blanco, claro la\ndel fondo negro, las letras casi no se ven. ¿Alguien sabe como arreglarlo?\n",
"Tengo Catix 1,2 (deribada de debian), he actualizado el kernel a 2.6.16,\npero ahora tras arrancar me deja en la pantalla para introducir el usuario,\nlo pongo con la password y me devuelve a la pantalla de arrancar las X\n(pantalla gris) y vuelve a salir la pantalla del usuario. ¿Qué puedo mirar\npara saber que pasa?\n\n",
"A ver si me ayudais en esto, pues ando loco.\n\nTengo un pendrive, que me funcionaba perfectamente. De repente ha\ndejado de hacerlo, lo conecto en cualquier puerto USB y nada. Hago\nlsusb y no siquiera contesta, se queda el cursor pensando.\n\nEn la misma máquina con Windows tampoco funciona, en cuanto lo enchufo\nse cuelga todo el sistema.\n\nHe probado varias distribuciones y solo me funciona con Knoppix 4.0 live.\n\nEn otros ordenadores funciona perfectamente.\n\nLo he probado en todos los puertos usb de mi maquina y pasa lo mismo.\n\n¿alguna ayuda?\n\nun mensaje a:\n"
] |
7FLmM4LP5uOy2Cyx@example.com
|
[
"I am trying to control (turn on and off) the \"General-purpose diagnostic\nLED's\" of my iMX51 EVK board programatically using C. I am developing under\nLinux (u-boot). Any help appreciated.\n\n"
] |
+rRxTgc+AiftNbA0@example.com
|
[
"OK, that's interesting.\n \nI only suggested that as a hack. (The hack would be to do something like\n\"J:7 N:4 K:2\" as the comment.)\n \nVery cool. Did you/do you use it?\n\nI hadn't thought about that... I don't think I'm worried about it. By the\ntime my kids are that sophisticated I hope to not be censoring them any\nmore. We'll see if it works out that way.\n\nI see. \n\nThat would be a smart start.\n \nIs it handy? I'm interested.\n\n",
"I'm a total newbie here, how do I turn on d_http? I think I can easily\nreproduce it.\n\n",
"I have this output, whoever wants it let me know. (Or I can send it to the\nlist if you like.) For me, hitting reload seems to be sufficient to\nactivate this bug.\n\nI also did the experiment of loading \"playlist.html\" directly after looking\nat the frame's source - that seems to render fine.\n\n"
] |
TENY/tjvkMx6sQBP@example.com
|
[
"I have a 1-Wire net with a number of weather instruments on it. Recently I have been getting counter errors on both the rain gauge and lightning detector. Earlier I was getting false positives with the lightning detector. Thanks to some suggestions on this list I was able to resolve that by relocating the detector. None of the other instruments on the net seem to have any problems.\n\nI am not getting false counts, but rather I am seeing invalid reads of the counter. The log file (see sample below) will show normal values, then suddenly show an unbelievably high count, then go back down to its previous normal count. Occasionally, the count may go down and then back up again.\n\nThe rain gauge seems to do this about once per day, not at any particular time. The lightning detector does so maybe a half dozen times per day.\n\nI can't say for certain whether it is a hardware or software problem. I had been running a 32 bit binary of owwnogui on a 64 bit CPU. I recently recompiled with a 64 bit compiler and have observed that the erroneous values are now MUCH larger. That makes me suspicious of an uninitialized storage issue, but this also seems unlikely as I know lots of people are using this software and probably are not seeing this. \n\nSystem logs do not show any errors related to these problematic values.\n\nAny suggestions or insights would be appreciated.\n\n",
"I run owwnogui on Suse 10.1 with a ds9490r USB adaptor. owwnogui was built from source. I don't recall having any dependency issues. The device entry in the OWW devices file is:\n\ndriver USB:0\nHave a burning question? \nGo to www.Answers.yahoo.com and get answers from real people who know.",
"My Hobby-Boards RainWise rain gauge clogged recently. While cleaning the funnel I noticed mention made on the RainWise web site about the presence of the pin. But no mention was made of the purpose for it.\n\nBesides catching debris, what is the purpose of this pin?\n\nBe a better pen pal. \n"
] |
344L/NQuu8beu3hD@example.com
|
[
"I'm working on an iOS app that allows people to turn specific channels on\nor off while playing videos with surround audio tracks. I'm using kxmovie (\nhttps://github.com/kolyvan/kxmovie) as the base for it.\n\nThe render callback on the audio unit is currently calling swresample,\nwhich is remixing sound to match the 2-ch output of the Apple remote I/O.\nAs you probably know, different audio codecs encode their channels in\ndifferent orders, so I can't just always ask for the second channel in an\naudio track, for example.\n\nIs there a way for me to get a specific audio channel in mono (e.g. ask for\nsurround left and let ffmpeg figure out which one it is for the selected\ncodec) or to get it to set a default channel order and reorder it if the\nformat doesn't match it (which would then allow me to always point to the\nsame channel number if I want the surround left channel, for example).\n\nRight now this is the code I have for the buffer:\n\nCan you help me out? Thanks!\n\n"
] |
SGTjneVYH9+Ypjzz@example.com
|
[
"I know.\nI have worked with VB about 6 years. I´m using ACCESS, ORACLE, SQL_SERVER, \nXBASE integrated with Visual Basic.\nNow, for my experience, I would like to use PostGresQL with VB6. OK ??!!\n\n http://www.postgresql.org/docs/faqs/FAQ.html",
"I already tried to do that, but it didn't work.\n\nPostGresQL return me a ERROR saying that the syntax was invalidates.\n\n\n\nBut thank you even so for the help.\n\n\nI have never done any of this, but looking at your code, it seems that\nyou would want to change the select in the stored procedure to something\nlike:\n\nThis should only return the full user name as desired, I think. Unless\nyou are wanting something more \"generalized\", so you can do 'SELECT *',\nthen isolate a column (any one of them, however many there are) from the\nresult set - I am certain there is a way to do it, but having never\nplayed around with this, I am unable to offer much more advice.\n\n http://archives.postgresql.org"
] |
t/X8hv0zdP0xuyj3@example.com
|
[
"I reinstalled SuSE8.0 in order to solve my CUPS printing problem. It worked \nbut now I too cannot see my CD-R drive in xcdroast. Has anyone experienced \nand resolved this? Perhaps someone would like to explain how to achieve scsi \nemulation in SuSE 8.0 or where to find sources about doing so. I don't seem \nto be about to find it in the manuals.\n\n",
"In earlier versions of KDE and kmail, I could select one or two folders for \nthreading messages as these folders often contained replies and related where \nI want to follow a thread. However, in other folders it is more useful for me \nto latest received message and sometimes I want to change the sort order and \nperhaps just list them in terms of sender. I notice that now if I change the \ngrouping or sort order in one folder it changes throughout all the folders. \nIs there a way to set the view on a particular folder and not have the new \nsetting taking a global effect on kmail. Currently using KDE 4.4.1) \"release \n228\" and Kmail Version 1.13.1\n\n\n",
"Three machines all use cups (SuSE 8.0) and have lpfilters etc removed. I can \nuse lpr on two of the machine (/usr/bin/lpr). The third reports command not \nfound (ie /usr/bin/lpr doesn't exist). There are times when I need to use \nlpr on the third machine. How can I find out what package it belongs to? \nDoes anyone know where it lives on the SuSE 8.0 distro? Would be very \ngrateful for any help or pointers.\n\n",
"I tried that and it remained changed all for 10 seconds (approximately). Plus \nit would be very tedious change a hundred name or so one by one. Surely, \nthere is a better solution.\n\n",
"I did yet another re-install of windows98 on my system. I used my DVD to boot \ninto linux (SuSE 8.0). Then I ran Yast2 (the bootloader configuration \noption) to reinstall lilo. It completed successfully(?) but nothing was \nwritten to the MBR. I repeated the process with the same result. I remember \nin the past I had the same experience and at that time (not being the \nbrightest spark) I reinstalled my SuSE 8.0 just to get lilo sorted. This \ntime (with a flash of inspiration) I ran lilo from the commandline and it \nworked perfectly.\n\nHas anyone else had this experience? Is this a bug in Yast2, or did I do \nsomething wrong or omit something? Perhaps Yast2 isn't supposed to write to \nthe MBR? I have two drives hda and hdb. Windows98 is loaded on hda and SuSE \n8.0 on hdb.\n\n",
"Are we talking about XP processor or Windows XP? My impression from the \ncontext was MS Windows. Maybe I need to reread that message.\n\n",
"I suspected that this doesn't work. (Sounded like something I had tried \nalready). I noticed that David and Rachel has confirmed my suspicions. Is \nthere a way of getting SuSE to take note of this issue? I get the impression \nthat emails to feedback only get an \"automated\" response about the benefits \nof yast2 without really listening to what is being said.\n\n",
"Check to see if you have the gui module, yast2-ui-qt, is installed.\n\n",
"http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=100093 \n\n\n\n\nI think this may be related. I'm using KDE 3.5.1. Have a remote calendar with write permission on group. However, if anyone other that the owner edits the file the calendar will not save. No crash of the system only a failure to save the file. Other than that is seems the best choice for our purposes. Unfortunately, the need for a calendar to be editable by more than one person is critical."
] |
N/EwCpnDEsLYyOQz@example.com
|
[
"היי גיא,\r\nדיברתי עכשיו עם אייל מ\r\nXLN\r\nM3 10mm\r\nשהוא שבארץ זה עולה 11 אגורות ובחנות בסין זה עולה 9 סנט. \r\nאני מקווה שזה יכול לעזור לך\r\nגיל\r\n\r\n Also isn't is better to keep the shipment cost low to reduce the chances of passing through customs and adding extra % on the price?\r\n\n \n IMHO we do, and I can define the BOM, but even 50$ will be nice. also, maybe some people want to order hardware for their personal use, in which case not all the 200$ will be for TAMI.\r\n\n\r\n\r\n Does TAMI need $200 worth of screws?If we actually do, and some can define a BOM, I'll ante up part of the cost.\n\r\n\n \n I'm in urgent need of a large bunch of standoffs and other screw-type hardware for a project, which are either expensive and/or unavailable locally. Therefore, I'm going to make an order from an AliExpress shop and use express shipping (FedEx / DHL etc). The nice thing is that they provide *FREE* FedEx/DHL shipping for orders above 300$. However, I only need about 100$ worth of stuff. I thought if any of you want to join in, then we can combine orders and enjoy the free shipping. \r\n\n\n\r\nThe particular seller looks quite reputable (although I haven't tried them yet personally) and the prices are good. Here is their store:\r\n\r\nhttp://www.aliexpress.com/store/219903\r\n\n\n\r\nIf you want any stuff, reply (either to the group or to me privately) with a list of links to items and specify qty, plus expected total (disregard the shipping cost).\r\n\r\nI plan to make the purchase in 24-48 hours since it's urgent.\r\n\n\n\r\nalso, if you want to *donate some screws hardware to TAMI*, let me know - either the specific items or just the donation amount, and I'll do that.\r\n\r\nכדי לבטל את הרישום לקבוצה הזו ולהפסיק לקבל ממנה דוא\"ל, שלח דוא\"ל אל Il+9NqQTJAE2iEvd@example.com.\r\n\nכדי לפרסם בקבוצה הזו, שלח דוא\"ל אל hzZls1AlzB+2QJ8/@example.com.\r\n\nלאפשרויות נוספות, בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout.\r\n\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \r\n\n \n \n\n\r\n\n\nכדי לבטל את הרישום לקבוצה הזו ולהפסיק לקבל ממנה דוא\"ל, שלח דוא\"ל אל Il+9NqQTJAE2iEvd@example.com.\r\n\nכדי לפרסם בקבוצה הזו, שלח דוא\"ל אל hzZls1AlzB+2QJ8/@example.com.\r\n\nלאפשרויות נוספות, בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout.\r\n\n\r\n\n\n\r\n\n\nכדי לבטל את הרישום לקבוצה הזו ולהפסיק לקבל ממנה דוא\"ל, שלח דוא\"ל אל Il+9NqQTJAE2iEvd@example.com.\r\n\nכדי לפרסם בקבוצה הזו, שלח דוא\"ל אל hzZls1AlzB+2QJ8/@example.com.\r\n\nלאפשרויות נוספות, בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout.\r\n\n\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \r\n\n \n \n\n\r\n\n\nכדי לבטל את הרישום לקבוצה הזו ולהפסיק לקבל ממנה דוא\"ל, שלח דוא\"ל אל Il+9NqQTJAE2iEvd@example.com.\r\n\nכדי לפרסם בקבוצה הזו, שלח דוא\"ל אל hzZls1AlzB+2QJ8/@example.com.\r\n\nלאפשרויות נוספות, בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout.\r\n \t\t \t \t\t \r\n\r\nכדי לפרסם הודעות בקבוצה זו, שלח דוא\"ל לC9/o2rNXRMCdn5Py@example.com.\nלאפשרויות נוספות בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout.",
"סיפרתי היום לצביקה לגבי יום העיון שמארגנים האיגוד הישראלי לרובוטיקה ביום שלישי. חשבתי שזה יכול לעניין עוד אנשים פה:\r\nhttp://www.ariel.ac.il/sites/shiller/irob/icr2014.pdf\r\n\r\nיש לינק למטה לתוכנית המלאה, ולינק לרישום\r\n\r\nגיל\r\n \t\t \t \t\t \r\n\r\nכדי לפרסם הודעות בקבוצה זו, שלח אימייל לC9/o2rNXRMCdn5Py@example.com.\nלאפשרויות נוספות בקר ב-https://groups.google.com/d/optout."
] |
6Oe1SaPUMKtTy+te@example.com
|
[
"My display slowed down dramatically when I moved from a 1024x768 screen\nto a new display with 1280x1024 resolution (both with ME).\n\n"
] |
gnyu0wUUTyhadZW8@example.com
|
[
"Thank you, Simon for fixing the bug ORCHESTRA-13, but this takes me to my next problem:\n\nI explain a situation that is not the normal case, but it can happen:\n\nFirst, a user should not try to edit more than one product in the same conversationContext, because a conversationContext can only include one conversation of the same type. Right?\n\nmyfaces-orchestra-examples-project - PetStore:\nIf a user open a new browser tab or window e.g. by clicking \"open link in new tab\" he gets two windows with the same conversationContext, then\n1. Tab1: press edit \"product A\"\n2. Tab2: press edit \"product B\"\n3. Tab1: save \"product A\"\n\nFinally the object \"product B\" gets all the attributes of object \"product A\". Bad!\nWhat options are there to prevent this?\n\nI have two solutions: \n\n1. Using the separateConversationContext Tag\n2. Using a pageFlowScope to store the objects\n\nWhat do you think?\n \n(do a SVN check-out)\n\n"
] |
EgFIbuPya57R12Ll@example.com
|
[
"*index.dart*\n\n<html>\n"
] |
ijRL+EPycQfv9tAz@example.com
|
[
"Hi Karl. Very thorough IR! I have several edits and a few comments below, mostly minor stuff. \n\nOur policy is to upload the html version of each report to the Test folder at BGT.org and provide a link so the monitor can also look at the html version. I would appreciate it if you would send me an e-mail with the link when you have it uploaded to the Test folder. Thanks! Will.\n\n I also\ncompared it to the light coming from my other headlamp with suprising\nresults.\nEDIT: surprising\n\n\n I was initially intruiged and impressed by the\nquad. \nEDIT: intrigued\n\n\nThe clips and folds that allow the headband to\nbe adjusted for diferent head sizes seemed overdone, as if the\nmanufacturer wanted to ensure that it would be wearable long after it\nstopped functioning.\nUpon further\nexamination, Every setting was brighter than the same relative\nsetting on my other headlamp. \nEDIT: every (unless you mean for it to be emphasized with the capitalization).\n\n\nWhile being worn, the large clips on\nthe band were intially annoying, digging into my skull but I knew\nfrom experience that it was a temporary sensation and quickly\nsubsided as predicted.\nIt was my belief that if any activity\nwas good at testing the effectiveness of a headlamp it would be\nscavanging.\nThe wide scope of the bright field of vision is far superior to my\nother headlamp, and all the other headlamps that were at the campsite\nthat night, but the projected beam was not at focused as a hand held\ntorch that another hiker had brought that night. \nEDIT: as focused\n\n\nWhen looking at\nobjects about 1 to 2 m away, I found the beam to illuminate\neverything I could see, even those out of the very corner of my eye.\nQ: How easy is it to turn on and off, and change the brightness\nsetting?\nA: relatively easy. all functions are routed through a single button\non the top of the housing, covered in bright orange/yellow rubber. \nEDIT: All functions\n\n\nQ: If the headlamp is worn for long periods in heat, the elastic band\nwill absorb sweat and retain body odor. Given that the housing is\nwaterproof to 1 m and impact resistant, can it be safely washed in a\nstandard washing machine? If not, can the band be removed from the\nhousing so the band can be washed?\nEDIT: Need English equivalent\n\n\nQ: Does headlamp light reflect off the lamp at close range to see it?\nA: Somewhat. A significant amount is absorbed by it's black/grey\ncolour, but if the on/off/setting button is in a visible position the\norange rubber is quite visible. Also, the L.E.D. cavity is reflective\nsilver with a clear plastic cover, both of which can be very\nreflective.\n\n\nQ: Does headlamp light reflect off the material at a distance to spot\nit?\nA: Somewhat. See above. I will attempt to determine the range at\nwhich it can be seen in different positions.\n\nQ: How easily are they to see in the dark from a distance?\nA: Impossible. The material does not glow in the dark, or create or\nemit its own light of any kind when turned off.\nCOMMENT: In these three questions, it is not clear what you are talking about. Could you re-phrase to make it clearer?\n\n\nThe Quad is also lighter thanother headlamps of similar design, but\nthe shape and size could be redeveloped. \nEDIT: than other\n\n\nI expect it will gradually wear to the point where\nthe slightest movement will cause the housing to fall on my forehead,\naway from the band. \nCOMMENT: This is projecting, suggest you delete this sentence and let the previous sentence suffice.\n\n\nEasy to put on and take off\nEDIT: repeated statement\n\n\nLess than spectacular reputation\nCOMMENT: This seems to jump out of the blue. I suggest that you limit your report to your experiences and your observations.\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Chuck. Here are a few edits and a comment for you to consider. Your html version looks great and the photos really enhance the report. Go ahead and upload when ready and be sure to delete your report in the test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nI have continued to wear the Tifosi Q3 sunglasses\nalmost on a daily basis. I have worn them on several\nrecent day hiking trips and a morning trail run. Not\nmuch has changed since my field report.\nCOMMENT: Could you estimate the actual number of day hikes you wore them on? It would be nice to be a little more specific on the amount of actual use.\n\n\nOccasionaly I would have a drop of sweat drip on the\nlens and I simply wipe the lenses with the micro-fiber\ncleaning bag and continue my run. \nI decided to insert the AC Red\nlenses for better visability. The red tint really\nmakes it easy to see in foggy weather and it appears\nto make objects more clear and bold. The mist from the\nfog tended to build up on the lenses and I basically\nwipe them with my finger which made the visability a\nlittle bit more obscure. This didn't cause too much\nof a problem as I could still see where I was going\nand again the tint helped the obscured visability.\nEDIT: visibility (3 places)\n\n\nThey also stayed snug to my face and never felt to\ntight or gave me a headache from wearing them during\nlong periods of time. \nEDIT: .felt too tight.\n\n\nI actually wrecked on my bike\nand the glasses stayed in teh original position and\nnever came off.\nEDIT: .glasses stayed in their original position.\n\n\nI can't stress enough how much the Tifosi Q3's have held\nup in durability and have comfortable they have been.\nEDIT: ...and how comfortable they have been.\n\n\nThe great thing is that the lightweight of the glasses\nlets the user have continuous eye protection from the\nsun's UV rays and not feel the glasses on the face\nfeel any fatigue from them.\nEDIT: .glasses on the face or feel.\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Coy, looks like you got to use the Volt in some cool weather before it got hot. I have a number of edits below for you to consider. I also looked at your html version in the Test folder; nice format, and thanks for including some photos. When you upload, be sure your hyperlinks work, and delete your FR in the Test folder. Thanks! Will\n\n\n* 1/2 Zippersloft\nEDIT: Zipper\n\n\nField Testing Locations and Conditions\nI used the Volt with my hammock the first five nights and the\nremaining one night inside a 2-man tent. I used the Volt the first\ntwo nights in the woods here in Northeast Alabama. The next three\nnights were during 4 day, 36-mile (58 km) hike on the Appalachian\nTrail in Georgia. \nEDIT: This is not very clear, and doesn't add up. Is it 5 or 6 nights? Suggest you re-write this.\n\n\nField Test Test Results\nEDIT: Word repeated.\n\n\nMy first night in the Volt was uneventful. It dropped down to 52 F\n(11 C) but I was neither to hot nor to cold (think Goldie Lock's\npotage). \nEDIT: too hot\n\n\nA few nights later I was pleased but not surprised that the Volt\nkept me warm on the coolest nigh I had opportunity to use it (44 F\n(7 C). \nEDIT: night, an opportunity\n\n\nAs I planed a hike to the mountains of North Georgia I was\nhoping for cooler testing weather and just missed sub-freezing\nweather by two weeks. \nEDIT: planned\n\n\nAs a result I cannot really comment on how\nthe Volt will perform in cold weather and obviously not down around\nthe temperature it is rated for, ie 15 F (-9 C).\nEDIT: i.e., \n\n\nThis plus the slight opening the hammock creates at the\nhead end probably allowed me to stay reasonable cool.\nEDIT: reasonably\n\n\nOn the 3 nights on the AT when the lows were around 58 F my head stayed outside the\nsleeping bag (the hood was actually hanging below me). \nEDIT: we usually spell out numbers under 10 (you do elsewhere), need metric equivalent\n\n\nI even noticed that occasionally I had both arms outside the bag but with most of the bag pulled up to my about my neck otherwise. \nEDIT: delete \"my about\"\n\n\nOn advantage of using the Volt over my hammock is my bag never\nreally touches the ground. \nEDIT: One advantage\n\n\nI have stored it in the generously sized storage sack between trips but it did\nspend 4 days in the provided stuff sack which by the way is sized\nlarge enough to make stuffing it a reasonably easy chore. \nEDIT: four days\n\n\nDislikes so Far\n*None really, other than the fact that I was warmer on the last\nnight than was comfortable. Again, this was not the bags fault.\nEDIT: bag's\n\n\nAs a result, I will just use the bag, leaving it open as much as possible, and hope the foot ventilation allow me the make it. \nEDIT: This is an awkward sentence. How about \"As a result I will use the bag with it open as much as possible, and hope the foot ventilation allows me to stay comfortable.\"\n\n\n\n\n",
"I finally got a response to my e-mail to Bushnell tech support, and got the following response: \"Thank you for contacting Bushnell. Our software engineers are aware there is an issue with the elevation reading in yards instead of feet. They are working on a software update that you will be able to load off of the www.bushnellgps.com\".\n\nLooks like we should be able to keep our present units and update the software when they have software update.\n\n",
"Hi Ben, I posted my edits to your LTR on the BD Enduro trekking poles \non Sept 9 (msg 23250) and I notice that you have not reposted your \nrevised LTR as I requested. Your report was missing some required \nsections and you did not upload your html report to the Test folder. \nPlease repost asap so we can complete this test. Thanks, Will Rietveld \nTest Monitor.\n\n\n\n\n\n \n",
"Hi Sam. Sorry for the delay, I have been gone on a trip for 9 days and just got back home. Nice job on your report, and great photos. I have a few simple edits for you below. Go ahead and upload when ready and be sure to delete your report from the test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nListed Size: 1 9/16\" x 9/16\" (4cm x 1.4cm)\nEDIT: Add a space between the number and the unit. (easier to read)\n\n\nI fill\nthat this was a brilliant move on Nite Ize part.\nEDIT: feel\n\n\nFirst time trying the S-Biner was very uneventful. I took it out of\nthe package, clipped it on my backpack, clipped my hat on to the\nother side and was finished with my fist test. Very simple and\nsatisfying to use. \nEDIT: My first time.\nEDIT: .finished with my first test - very simple and satisfying.\n\n\nI took the Figure 9 out of the package,\nopened the package and followed the clearly printed instructions. \nEDIT: Took it out of the package twice? How about: \"I took the Figure 9 out of the package and followed.\"\n\nI\nwas able to follow the instructions the first time through and was\nsuccessful in tightening a rope with out any knots. \nCan I use them in various ways as\neasily as it looks on the manufactures website?\nEDIT: manufacturer's\n\n\n",
"Hi. Here is my IR for editing. The html version is in the TEST folder at: http://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/test/TESTS/IR--Spenco%20Backpacker%20Footbeds--Will/ Thanks in advance for editing my report. Will\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 47 years. I am retired and backpacking is my passion. During the summer I backpack nearly every week. During the fall, winter, and spring I backpack, day hike, snowshoe, or ski every week. I backpack in wilderness areas in Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, Arizona, and occasionally in other western states. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for 30 years, an ultralight backpacker for six years, and have been experimenting with super ultralight backpacking for three months. My wife and I give presentations on ultralight backpacking in our local area, and have developed a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nPRODUCT INFORMATION (photo)\nAccording to the Spenco website, \"the Spenco® Outdoor Adventure Series is a new line of footbeds that are designed specifically for the needs of outdoor enthusiasts. The unique combination of stability and cushioning provides the outdoor enthusiasts with the benefits needed to experience more - more comfortably.\" The Spenco® Backpacker model \"is for outdoor enthusiasts that are carrying heavy packs over unpredictable terrain for multiple days at a time. This intensity of outdoor participation needs a footbed with extra cushioning, support and the additional benefit of motion control to help you experience more - more comfortably.\"\n\nProduct features are (according to information on the box the footbeds came in):\nOAST Stabilizer-a raised area on the inside edge of each footbed helps provide better support and stability.\nCool DryT Technology-the wicking fabric on the top side helps to keep feet dry, to reduce hot spots and blisters.\nPolySorb ShoxT-raised foam pads on the underside provide extra cushioning to absorb shock and help prevent over-pronation.\n\nINITIAL IMPRESSIONS-The Spenco Backpacker model is indeed a heavy-duty footbed compared to the footbeds that came with my boots (Dunham Terrastryders) and the Superfeet Performance Insoles (green) that I have been using for some time (right photos). The Spenco Backpacker Footbed is clearly thicker. It has a lot of extra foam cushioning on the top and bottom and more lateral support on the inside edge. The thicker footbeds will probably affect how my boots fit, mostly in terms of volume. Their stiffness is much greater than the original insoles and about the same as the Superfeet. It definitely appears that the Spenco Backpacker Footbeds will make a difference in how my boots fit, feel, and perform.\n\nWEIGHT-The Spenco Backpacker Footbeds are a bit on the heavy side, 6.1 oz (173 g) per pair, compared to 3.5 oz (99 g) per pair for my Superfeet insoles, and 1.3 oz (37 g) per pair for my original insoles. For ultralight backpackers, who try to minimize boot weight, the extra weight of the Spenco Backpacker Footbeds is a significant factor. Interestingly, the left footbed weighed 0.3 oz (8.5 g) more than the right one.\n\nINSTALLATION-The directions on the box say to remove the old insoles and replace them with the Spenco Footbeds, trimming them with a scissors if necessary. I found that I needed to trim about ¼-inch (6 mm) off of each footbed to get a good fit.\n\nCLEANING INSTRUCTIONS-\"Hand wash with warm water, air dry.\"\n\nTEST LOCATIONS AND CONDITIONS-I backpack nearly every week, so the Spenco Footbeds will see a lot of trail days in the next four months. Between backpacking trips I do numerous day hiking trips in the local Colorado Mountains. This fall I will be backpacking and day hiking in the canyonlands country of Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico.\n\nI am an ultralight and super ultralight backpacker. My total pack weight is usually 10-20 pounds (4.5-9.1 kg), so the Spenco Backpacker Footbeds will not be used for real heavy-duty hiking conditions, in terms of weight. However, I do a lot of off-trail backpacking in really rough, steep conditions, so the footbeds will be subjected to some challenging conditions from that standpoint.\n\nThe testing environments will consist of: badlands desert, canyon country, forests, and high elevation alpine country. Expected extreme conditions include: snow storms, strong winds, dust/rain storms, heavy rain, intense sun, low temperatures, and high elevations with strong UV and intense thunderstorms. Terrains will be forest and desert trails, slickrock hiking, off-trail bushwhacking, scrambling, walking in water and mud, and hiking in snow.\n\nHOW THE FOOTBEDS WILL BE USED-The Spenco Footbeds will be in my hiking boots every time I go out, which averages 3-4 days a week. I will put hundreds of miles on them in all types of terrains and conditions. \n\nOn each trip I will take a thermometer with me to measure the actual temperature so I can relate it to my comfort level while using the Spenco Footbeds. In my notes for each trip, I will record the following data in relation to my comfort wearing the Spenco Footbeds: 1) temperatures, 2) estimated wind speed, 3) estimated humidity, 4) altitude, 5) precipitation (including what form), 6) trail (or no trail) conditions, 7) how the Spenco Footbeds were worn (boots used, type and number of socks, with or without gaiters, chaps, or rain pants), 7) my exertion level, 8) my comfort level in terms of how warm/cold, wet/dry, or cramped/comfortable my feet feel while using the Spenco Footbeds, and 9) any foot problems (blisters, hot spots, foot fatigue) that I had on each trip.\n\nFACTORS EVALUATED-The specific factors I will be evaluating the Spenco Footbeds for are as follows: \n\nMATERIALS, QUALITY AND CONSTRUCTION: Do the footbeds use high quality materials, and are they well constructed? \n\nFIT: How do they fit in my wide boots? How much do they change how my boots fit, in terms of roominess in the toe box, actual width, heal counter width and support, and lack of heel lift? How good is the arch support? How do they affect boot volume?\n\nCOMFORT: Are the footbeds adequately padded for comfort? Are the footbeds adequately contoured and supportive? How do they work with pronated feet? How comfortable are they on different terrains, eg on rocky trails? How well do they maintain foot comfort and avoid blisters or other foot problems on high mileage days? (Note that most any footbed is comfortable for a \"normal\" 6-8 hour trail day, but hiking 12+ hours and 20+ miles/day is a different story.) Are they comfortable to wear in hot weather? Do the Spenco Footbeds provide better support and cushioning to make off-trail hiking in rocky terrain and steep downhills and sidehills easier on my feet?\n\nUSABILITY AND PERFORMANCE: Do the footbeds need trimming before I can use them? Are they easy to put in/take out? How do they affect boot stiffness, arch support, and heel cup snugness? On performance the main issues are foot comfort, and avoidance of foot fatigue or foot injuries (blisters, hot spots, etc). This will be a great comparison, because I am now having foot problems after high mileage days in the Terrastryders. Will the Spenco Footbeds eliminate these problems? \n\nDURABILITY: I do a lot of bushwhacking and off-trail hiking. How well do the footbeds hold up under constant rough use? Are there places where they come apart? How well do they hold up with repeated wetting and drying? What is their expected life span? \n\nI will test the Spenco Footbeds to determine whether the following expectations are met or not.\n\n1) The Spenco Footbeds will be high quality and will not show any excessive wear, de-lamination, or other deterioration during the four-month test period.\n\n2) The Spenco Footbeds will readily fit in my boots, and will not significantly change the sizing of my boots. If it does change the sizing, I can readily adjust for it by using thinner socks or other means.\n\n3) The Spenco Footbeds will provide noticeably better foot comfort over a variety of terrains and conditions. I will not have any discomfort or fatigue that is caused by the footbeds.\n\n4) The Spenco Footbeds will improve the performance of my boots, by means of better arch support, better lateral support, and proper stiffness. Better performance can be measured in terms of better foot support on steep slopes and rocky terrain.\n\n5) The Spenco Footbeds will minimize foot fatigue from hiking on rocky trails and on high mileage days.\n\nI would like to thank the Spenco Corp. and the Backpackgeartest Group for selecting me to participate in this test.\n\n",
"Hi Chuck. Here are your edits, mostly just clarification issues. I also looked at your report in the Test folder. Make the revisions and you are good to go. Thanks. Will\n\n\n\nPole: 8 oz (227g)\nEDIT: Need a space before g\n\n\nField Report\nEDIT: These links to previous reports are helpful, but 2 paragraphs below it you again use the term \"Field Report\", which is confusing. Shouldn't the latter (2 paragraphs below the hyperlinks) be \"Long-Term Report\"?\n\n\nHowever, on the other trip, I experienced high temperatures, rain and high humidity.\nEDIT: For clarity, need a comma after rain.\n\n\nThis trip was in the valley of the Caesars Head state\npark. \nEDIT: Valley of the Caesars State Park. Needs to be capitalized because it's a proper name.\n\n\nThe elevation in the valley was 4285 ft. (1306\nm) and the temperature was 87 F (30 C) after a nasty\nthunderstorm that night. \nEDIT: I Suspect that the elevation had nothing to do with a thunderstorm, so for clarity split this into 2 sentences.\n\n\nI did get some seepage of rain under the edge of the tent. \nEDIT: Change \"rain\" to \"water\". Suggest re-wording to \"I did not get any water seepage under the edge of the tent.\"\n\n\nSince there is not a floor in this tent, it is almost impossible not to get any rain running under the edge with this much rain. \nEDIT: Change \"not a\" to \"no\". Change \"rain running\" to \"water running\".\n\n\nI did have a portion of my pad and bag on a piece of Tyvec\nso they wouldn't get wet if this was to occur. \nEDIT: Tyvek\n\n\nThis is when the evaporation of the rain that made it into my tent started to heat up the inside of the tent. \nEDIT: Change \"rain\" to \"water\". Change \"heat\" to \"steam\". Evaporation does not produce heat; it actually absorbs heat.\n\n\nI opened up the top vent and the entry door to let some of the\nheat out and hopefully cool off the inside. \nCOMMENT: Suggest you say \"let heat and humidity out\".\n\n\nGood material construction\nEDIT: Not clear.\n\nGreat shelter in the colder months\nCOMMENT: Did you test this so you know it to be true, or are you assuming that? If you're speculating on this, you should state it as such.\n\n\nFor my area, it was too hot for temperatures above 70\nF (21 C)\nCOMMENT: It would be clearer to say \",the tent was too hot.\".\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Heather. Nice report. I have several comments below for you to consider. Looks like BGT.org is back up, so go ahead and upload when ready. Best regards, Will.\n\nLong Term Report Spectrum Brands Advanced Insect Repellant\nCOMMENT: You may want to add the word \"Cutter\" into the title, as the other testers have. \n\n\nFor further product information please read my [link] initial report, and for further anecdotal information please read my [link] field report.\n\nCOMMENT: I believe the LTR should contain product information and testing conditions. I checked this in the Survival Guide, and the following required information is listed: \n\nProduct information: Manufacturer, Year of manufacture, URL of top level manufacturer web site (not the item at the site), Listed weight, Weight as delivered\n\n\nHow well does it work?\nCOMMENT: You provide a lot of information in this section about the amount and frequency of use and the amount of bugs, but I did not see anything about how it works on different kinds of bugs. Can you comment on how well it worked for mosquitoes, flies, ticks, and chiggers? In Andrew's report he said it did not work on flies in Australia; how did it work to repel flies in the Southeast US? Also, readers would be interested to know if it works to repel chiggers.\n\n\nIt is odorless, colorless, does not affect fabrics adversely, did not\ncause me any skin reactions, containers did not spill or break, the\nrepellant did not feel heavy or greasy, and above all: the repellant\ndid keep insects from biting me. \nCOMMENT: You said above that the product had NO effect on fabrics, so I suggest you take out the word \"adversely\" (which implies it has some effect).\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Andy, looks like you have mastered the new report format. My comments are few. In three places I suggest you break it up the narrative into separate paragraphs for easier reading. Also, there are two places where you need a space between paragraphs so its consistent with your IR. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the test folder. Thanks. Will Rietveld, test monitor.\n\n\nI've also worn this jacket on several ice\nclimbing trips. While it's much too warm to actually climb in, it's\nproven invaluable while belaying. Even after standing outside in 15°\nF (-9° C) temperatures for several hours, I stayed quite warm.\nWhenever I did start to get chilled, I just flipped the hood up and\nquickly thawed out. I was very impressed by how well the hood fit\nover my climbing helmet. The only reason that I don't regularly\nbelay with the hood up is because the noise created by the helmet\nrubbing on the liner material prevents me from hearing my climbing\npartner well.\nSUGGESTION: Suggest you make this a separate paragraph, since it's a separate use of the jacket.\n\n\nI also used the Flurry one day while resort\nskiing. The temperature was hovering around 10° F (-12° C), and the\nFlurry kept me plenty warm on the windy lift rides. It proved to be\ntoo warm for the descents, however. I had to ski with the jacket\npartly or mostly unzipped, which still wasn't enough to keep me from\nsweating.\nSUGGESTION: Same suggestion, make this a separate paragraph.\n\n\nBased on my experiences so far, I would feel comfortable\nwearing this jacket for an extended amount of time in temperatures\ndown to 10° F (-12° C) when inactive. Frankly, I don't ever see\nmyself wearing this jacket while very active. I personally pump out\nway too much body heat to justify it. Even while ski touring in -20°\nF (-29° C) temperatures I simply didn't need to wear an insulated\njacket. Maybe I'm just a freak. That said, I would feel comfortable\nwearing this jacket in -10° F (-23° C) temperatures while moderately\nactive (such as walking without a pack, short bike rides across town,\netc).\n\nSUGGESTION: Same suggestion, make this a separate paragraph. It's a separate idea, and would make the report easier to read.\n\n\n\nAs a synthetic insulation jacket, it's fairly bulky when\nstuffed. It takes up more room that I would like, but I found that\nit actually conforms and packs better when it's not zipped into the\ninternal stuff sack pocket. \nEDIT: .more room than I would like.\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Richard. Sorry I didn't see your post back in early August. I wasn't looking for it I guess. After the long wait, I have only one edit for you below, easy to fix. Your html version looks great. Go ahead and upload when ready and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks, and have a great trip. Will\n\n \n\n\nI have used the Tablets in the fields on two trips. \nEDIT: field\n\n\n\n",
"Here is my IR for editing. The html version is in the Test folder. Thanks in advance for your edits. Will\nI don't see this item in the database or the BGT.org website yet.\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 48 years. Backpacking is my passion. In the fall, winter, and spring I backpack in UT, AZ, and NM, and snow camp in the Colorado mountains. In the summer I backpack in several wilderness areas in southern Colorado, and occasionally backpack in the central and northern Rockies. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for many years and an ultralight backpacker for 7 years. My wife and I give workshops on ultralight backpacking and lightweight food and cooking in our local area, and maintain a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nThe Montbell Alpine series is their lightest and most compressible sleeping bags. The Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 is a down-filled sleeping bag rated at 32 F (0 C). Its features are as follows (taken from the Montbell website):\n\n** 725 fill power goose down is hypoallergenic and resistant to moisture. \n\n** Shell and lining are 15x24 denier Ballistic AirlightT hollow fiber calendared nylon with DWR treatment on the outside. \n\n** Vertical baffles maintain the even distribution of down while allowing the down to loft completely.\n\n** Gathered Quilt System draws the insulation closer to the body and keeps heat in the bag.\n\n** Full length zipper for easy entry and double sliders for temperature regulation.\n\n** Draft tube prevents cold air from entering the bag through the zipper.\n\n** Double compression stuff sack allows the bag to be compressed to a very small size.\n\n** Bottom Adjustor System is a drawcord at the foot that allows the length of the bag to be adjusted to the user's height, and allows the user to create a \"bootie\" around the feet for extra warmth.\n\n** Cotton bag provided for longer-term storage\n\nThe Alpine Ultralight Down Hugger #3 is impressive to look at. The shell is very lightweight, soft to the touch, and apparently downproof. The bag has quite a few features, including a full-length zipper, despite its light weight. When I got inside the bag, I found it has plenty of length and girth to accommodate my frame, plus a few extra clothes for extra warmth when needed. The bag does not have a lot of loft for its temperature rating, and the fact that it is 0.85 oz (24 g) underweight concerns me. I held the bag up to a strong light and discovered that some chambers in the chest area have little or no down. I shook the bag vertically and horizontally and that helped some to distribute the down better.\n\nTEST PERIOD-The test will run from mid-April to mid-August 2006.\n\nTEST LOCATIONS-Southwestern US (Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona).\n\nTESTING CONDITIONS-The testing environments will consist of: canyon country, forests, and alpine terrains. Elevations will range from 5000 to 12,500 feet (1524 to 3810 m). Expected extreme conditions include: strong winds, dust/rain storms, heavy rain, low temperatures, and high elevations with strong UV and intense thunderstorms. I expect to test the bag at temperatures both above and below its temperature rating, and in wet and dry conditions.\n\nACTIVITIES-The Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag will be tested in the following activities: 1) backpacking, 2) car camping.\n\nSPECIFIC TESTS-I will determine how well the shell's DWR treatment repels moisture and keeps the down dry. I will also test the bag while sleeping under a minimal poncho tarp in rainy weather, again to determine if it sheds surface moisture and stays dry inside. Further, I will sleep in a damp meadow under the stars to determine how well it sheds dew. During the four month test I will use the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag in several different shelter systems, including a bivy, poncho/tarp, single wall tent, and double wall tent.\n\nDATA-On each trip I will record the following data in relation to my comfort sleeping in the Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag: 1) temperature in my shelter and outside, 2) estimated wind speed, 3) estimated humidity, 4) altitude, 5) precipitation (including what form), 6) sleeping system the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag was used in, 7) clothing worn inside the bag, and 8) how well it performed in terms of warmth, utility, and comfort.\n\nBelow are the specific factors on which I will evaluate the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag. As the test progresses, I will answer the questions I raised in my test application, and update information as needed. \n\n1) MATERIALS, QUALITY, AND CONSTRUCTION: The Ballistic AirlightT hollow fiber calendared nylon shell is very lightweight and has a soft feel, yet seems to be durable and downproof. I looked over the quality of the sewing and other details, and found that it is very well made. \n\n2) SIZING: According to Montbell, the size Long bag will fit users up to 6 feet 4 inches ( cm), and I agree. I am 6 feet tall (183 cm) and there is plenty of length to spare. Montbell specifies that the shoulder area will stretch out to a girth of 64 inches (163 cm). I got into the bag while wearing a down jacket and pants and found the girth ample to accommodate extra clothing. So far I have not noticed any down compression from the bag is too tight.\n\n3) FEATURES: Although this is an ultralight sleeping bag, it still has several useful features. The main features are: full-length zipper with double sliders, down-filled draft collar behind the zipper, hood with drawcord closure, elastic seams that draw the sleeping bag around the body, and a drawcord closure at the foot. The bag does not have an interior pocket or a neck draft collar.\n\n4) INSULATION AND LOFT: To measure the bag's loft I thoroughly shook the bag vertically and horizontally, then laid it on a table for 24 hours to allow the down to fully expand. Then I held a yardstick horizontally over the bag at several locations and measured its double-thickness loft with a ruler. The average double thickness loft was approximately four inches (10 cm). Dividing by two, the single thickness loft is approximately two inches (5 cm).\n\nAs a rule of thumb, it requires about 2.5 to 3 inches (6 to 7.5 cm) of single layer loft to achieve a comfortable temperature rating of 32 F (0 C). The Montbell Alpine #3 only has two inches (5 cm) of loft, so its temperature rating may be optimistic. I found the bag to be underweight by 0.85 oz (24 g), and that amount of extra down would certainly increase the loft significantly. Also, for an expensive ultralight sleeping bag, 725 fill-power down is low by today's standards. Montbell should consider using at least 800 fill-power down. \n\n5) CONVENIENCE: The horizontal seams have an elastic stitching that causes the bag to hug my body when I am inside. I found it easy to move inside the bag, with the bag easily expanding to accommodate my movements. \n\nIn my opinion, the stuff sack provided with this bag is too small. It takes a lot of effort to stuff the sleeping bag into the small sack, and then there is a second drawcord to pack it down even smaller! Montbell promotes the compressibility of this bag, so it takes up little space in a backpack. However, I personally feel that too much compression damages the down, and prefer to use a larger stuff sack that the bag easily packs into (however it does take up more space in a pack). \n\nThe shoulder girth of this bag expands to 64 inches (163 cm), which is very roomy and will allow lots of space to wear additional clothes inside the bag to extend its warmth. The \"hugger\" feature appears to be a good approach to offer a sleeping bag with plenty of girth to accommodate people of different sizes, yet pull the down close to the user's body for extra warmth.\n\nHow smooth is the zipper to operate? Does the zipper snag easily? How easy does the hood tighten and loosen? \n\n6) COMFORT/WARMTH: Does the bag meet its 32 F (0 C) temperature rating, i.e., is its rating optimistic or conservative? Is the hood adequately insulated? Does the bag have sufficient draft collars to seal out drafts? Does the shell fabric breathe well, so body moisture is not retained in the bag? Are the zipper and hood draft free? Does the down stay evenly distributed in the baffles, or do cold spots develop?\n\n7) USABILITY AND PERFORMANCE: How well does the bag perform in the field under a variety of sleeping systems and weather conditions? Is the shell fabric adequately down-proof? How does the top/bottom distribution of down effect its warmth? How well do its elastic \"hugger\" cords improve the bag's warmth by decreasing the volume I have to heat? Is the bag's girth large enough to wear clothing inside the bag to extend its warmth? Is the stuff sack lightweight and the right size for the sleeping bag?\n\n8) WATER RESISTANCE: How well does it shed dew or a light shower? Does the Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag's DWR treatment eliminate the need to also carry a bag cover or bivy sack when sleeping a poncho/tarp?\n\n9) BREATHABILITY: How breathable is the shell; does it readily allow water vapor to pass through? Under very humid conditions - such as in an extended rainstorm - does the bag's down absorb some moisture? Does the bag readily dry out if it gets damp inside?\n\n10) DURABILITY: Is the bag's shell fabric durable enough for normal backpacking conditions, i.e., does it snag or puncture easily? How does the bag hold up long-term under responsible but constant use? Does the bag lose any loft after repeated use and many stuffings? How does the stuff sack hold up, i.e., no failed seams?\n\n11) SUITABILITY FOR ULTRALIGHT BACKPACKING: the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag is in the normal weight range for an ultralight 32 F sleeping bag; is its warmth and utility comparable with other bags in the same range? How much can I extend its temperature range?\n\nI would like to thank Montbell and the BackpackGearTest Group for selecting me to participate in this test.\n\n",
"GPS arrived Th evening. I registered it online, along with my life\nhistory. Will",
"Here is my LTR for editing. Thanks in advance. The html version is in the test folder at: http://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/test/TESTS/Montbell%20Alpine%20Down%20Hugger%203%20Sleeping%20Bag%20LTR/\n\nLocation for Testing: Southwestern US (Colorado, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico).\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 48 years. Backpacking is my passion. In the fall, winter, and spring I backpack in UT, AZ, and NM, and snow camp in the Colorado mountains. In the summer I backpack in several wilderness areas in southern Colorado, and occasionally backpack in the central and northern Rockies. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for many years and an ultralight backpacker for 7 years. My wife and I give workshops on ultralight backpacking and lightweight food and cooking in our local area, and maintain a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nPhoto caption: MontBell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag \n(photo from MontBell website).\n\nThe Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 is a \"mixed bag\", so to speak. At 21.2 ounces (600 g), it is definitely light for a 32 F (0 C) rated bag. And that weight includes several useful features, like a full-length zipper, drawcord at the foot, and a well-proportioned hood. Its lightweight Ballistic Airlight shell fabric is soft, downproof, and very water-resistant. However, the bag has only 2 in (5 cm) of single layer loft and is chilly to sleep in when the temperature drops to near its temperature rating. In my opinion, the bag needs a little more down or higher lofting down, to bring it to its claimed temperature rating.\n\nThe Montbell Alpine series is their lightest and most compressible sleeping bags. The Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 is a down-filled sleeping bag rated at 32 F (0 C). Its features are as follows (information taken from the Montbell website):\n\n** 725 fill power goose down is hypoallergenic and resistant to moisture. \n\n** Shell and lining are 15x24 denier Ballistic AirlightT hollow fiber calendared nylon with DWR treatment on the outside. \n\n** Vertical baffles maintain the even distribution of down while allowing the down to loft completely.\n\n** Gathered Quilt System draws the insulation closer to the body and keeps heat in the bag.\n\n** Full length zipper for easy entry and double sliders for temperature regulation.\n\n** Draft tube prevents cold air from entering the bag through the zipper.\n\n** Double compression stuff sack allows the bag to be compressed to a very small size.\n\n** Bottom Adjustor System is a drawcord at the foot that allows the length of the bag to be adjusted to the user's height, and allows the user to create a \"bootie\" around the feet for extra warmth.\n\n** Cotton bag provided for longer-term storage\n\nTEST PERIOD-Mid-April to September 2006.\n\nTEST LOCATION-Southwestern US (Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona).\n\nTESTING CONDITIONS-The testing environments consisted of: canyon country, forests, and alpine terrains. Elevations ranged from 5000 to 12,500 feet (1524 to 3810 m). Extreme conditions included: strong winds, dust/rain storms, heavy rain, low temperatures, and high elevations with intense thunderstorms. I tested the bag at temperatures both above and below its temperature rating, and in wet and dry conditions.\n\nACTIVITIES-The Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag was tested while backpacking.\n\nUSE TO DATE-During four months of testing I have used the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag on 14 backpacking trips totaling 42 days (28 nights) and two car camping trips totaling 4 days (2 nights). Nighttime temperatures ranged from 22 to 65 F (-5.6 to 36 C). The shelters I slept in were a single-wall tent, a poncho-tarp, and a double-wall tent.\n\nPhoto caption: The Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag was mainly used as part of an ultralight backpacking system including a plastic groundsheet, torso-length sleeping pad, and poncho-tarp type shelter (Six Moon Designs Gatewood Cape).\n\nDATA-On each trip I recorded the following data in relation to my comfort sleeping in the Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag: 1) temperature in my shelter and outside, 2) estimated wind speed, 3) estimated humidity, 4) altitude, 5) precipitation (including what form), 6) sleeping system the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag was used in, 7) clothing worn inside the bag, and 8) how well it performed in terms of warmth, utility, and comfort.\n\nMy four-month evaluation of the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag is broken down into ten specific factors.\n\n1) MATERIALS, QUALITY, AND CONSTRUCTION: The Ballistic AirlightT hollow fiber calendared nylon shell is really impressive. It's very lightweight and has a soft feel, yet is durable and downproof. I looked over the quality of the sewing details, and found that it is very well made. Calendering is a heat treatment that strengthens the nylon fabric (similar to tempering steel), but it also makes it less breathable.\n\n2) SIZING: According to Montbell, the size Long bag will fit users up to 6 feet 4 inches (193 cm), and I agree. I am 6 feet tall (183 cm) and there is plenty of length to spare. Montbell specifies that the shoulder area will stretch out to a girth of 64 inches (163 cm). I slept in the bag while wearing either a down jacket or a synthetic jacket and found the girth ample to accommodate extra clothing. I did not experience any down compression from the bag being too tight.\n\n3) FEATURES: Although this is an ultralight sleeping bag, it still has several useful features: full-length zipper with double sliders, down-filled draft collar behind the zipper, hood with drawcord closure, elastic seams that draw the sleeping bag around the body, and a drawcord closure at the foot. The bag does not have an interior pocket or a neck draft collar.\n\n4) USABILITY: The horizontal seams have an elastic stitching that causes the bag to contract and hug my body when I am inside. The bag easily expanded to accommodate my movements inside the bag, and it did not inhibit my movements in any way.\n\nIn my opinion, the stuff sack provided with this bag is too small. It takes a lot of effort to stuff the sleeping bag into such a small sack, and then there is a second drawcord provided to compress it down even smaller! Montbell promotes the compressibility of this bag so it takes up little space in a backpack. However, I personally feel that too much compression damages the down. After using the provided stuff sack a few times, I refused to use it any longer for fear of damaging the sleeping bag. Henceforth I used a larger stuff sack that the bag more easily packed into (however it did take up more space in my backpack). \n\nThe shoulder girth of this bag expands to 64 inches (163 cm), which is very roomy and provided lots of space to wear additional clothes inside the bag to extend its warmth. The \"hugger\" feature appears to be a good approach to offer a sleeping bag with plenty of girth to accommodate people of different sizes, yet pull the down close to the user's body for extra warmth.\n\nThe full-length zipper operates fairly smoothly for getting in and out of the bag. It easily snags on the shell fabric (especially on some labels midway), but no more than other ultralight bags I have used. There is a small Velcro tab at the top of the zipper to keep the zipper from opening from my body movements. However, I found on many occasions (especially when wearing an insulated jacket inside the bag) that the tab does not hold and the zipper opened when I turned over. It helped to squeeze the tab to make the Velcro grip better.\n\nI personally feel that a full-length zipper is overkill on an ultralight sleeping bag. For my backpacking conditions (western mountain and desert camping, usually in cool weather) I would be perfectly happy with a half-length zipper or no zipper. However, on one warmer 65 F (36 C) night I completely unzipped the sleeping bag and used it as a quilt.\n\nThe hood is ample sized and covers my face down to my mouth when drawn, so it kept my face warm. There is plenty of room inside to accommodate wearing a warm hat. The drawcord does not operate as smoothly as I would like. I suggest using a slightly smaller diameter and smoother cord for the mini-cordlock that is used.\n\n5) INSULATION AND LOFT: When the bag was new I measured its loft by thoroughly shaking the bag vertically and horizontally, then laying it on a table for 24 hours to allow the down to fully expand. Then I held a yardstick horizontally over the bag at several locations and measured its double-thickness loft with a ruler. The average double thickness loft was approximately four inches (10 cm). Dividing by two, the single thickness loft was approximately two inches (5 cm).\n\nI repeated the loft measurement (using the same procedure) at the end of the four-month test to see if the bag's loft had changed from my use. I could not detect any change in loft.\n\nWith only 10.6 ounces/301 g of down (for size Long) and two inches (5 cm) of loft, in my opinion, the temperature rating of this bag is somewhat optimistic. The bag has vertical baffles to hold the down in place, so it does not have any capability to re-distribute the down (as with continuous baffles) to increase the loft on top. When I held the bag up in front of a strong light I discovered that several compartments (especially in the torso area) contained very little down. In my opinion, this bag would benefit significantly from the addition of another ounce (28 g) of down, or higher lofting down. For an expensive ultralight sleeping bag, 725 fill-power down is low by today's standards. Montbell plans to upgrade to 800-fill power down in their sleeping bags in 2007, however it is uncertain if the amount (weight) of down in the bag will remain the same.\n\nWhen I weighed the bag, I found it to be 0.85 oz (24 g) lower than specified, and reported in my Initial Report that it was underweight. I subsequently figured out that the stuff sack weighs exactly 0.85 ounces (24 g), so I conclude that the manufacturer's specified weight is the weight of the bag plus the stuff sack. \n \n6) COMFORT/WARMTH: In the field, I slept in the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 on 16 backpacking and car camping trips, for a total of 45 days and 30 nights. Temperatures ranged from 22 to 65 F (-5.6 to 36 C), with four nights (22, 28, 29, and 30 F/-5.6 to -1 C) below the bag's 32 F/0 C temperature rating. \n\nWhile sleeping in a well-ventilated shelter I found the bag to be warm (for me) down to about 38-40 F (3-4 C), while wearing long johns and a warm cap inside the bag. On cooler nights down to freezing I was chilly below about 38 F (3C) and found it necessary to also wear a synthetic insulated jacket and pants inside the bag. On the coldest night I wore a down insulated jacket and pants inside the bag to stay warm. I am generally a warm sleeper, meaning I don't get cold easily.\n\nI found the bag seals up very well to trap heat, and did not detect any drafts around the zipper or hood. The thinly insulated areas in the torso area contributed to an overall chilly feeling when the temperature dropped below 38-40 F (3-4 C). From my experience over four months of use, I conclude that the Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3's minimum comfortable temperature (for me) is around 40 F (4 C), and that the bag is overrated by about 8 degrees F (4 degrees C). However, as I noted above, because of the bag's roominess, it is easy to wear additional insulated clothing inside the bag to extend its warmth down to about 25 F (-4 C) or so. \n\n7) WATER RESISTANCE: The bag's shell fabric has a Durable Water Repellent (DWR) treatment that really repels water. I put some water in a small depression on the bag and let it stand for an hour and it did not soak through. However, the seams are not seam sealed, so water will soak through the stitching. \n\nOn several backpacking trips, it rained in the evening, then cleared overnight allowing the temperature to drop to freezing (32 F/0 C) or below. I had lots of frost on the outside and inside of my shelter (especially the single wall tent and poncho-tarp), and the Montbell bag was quite damp on the outside. One another occasion I slept in a tent that leaked badly during a rainstorm, which resulted in puddles of water in the tent and on the bag. On another occasion a nighttime thunderstorm blew rain in from the open side of my Gatewood Cape. The rain hit the backside of the sleeping bag and drained down on my sleeping pad. In the morning I was sleeping in a puddle of water. In all cases the bag's surface DWR treatment did a superb job of keeping the moisture from soaking into the bag. The bag retained its loft and I stayed warm. \n\n8) BREATHABILITY: In spite of its calendaring, the shell fabric appears to be adequately breathable to allow moisture to pass out of the bag in response to the thermal gradient created from my body heat. I did not detect any tendency for the bag to accumulate moisture under high humidity conditions. However, periods of wet weather were followed by periods of dry weather, so there were ample opportunities for the bag to dry out.\n\n9) DURABILITY: I found the bag's shell fabric to be adequately durable for normal backpacking conditions, with no snags or punctures whatsoever. I have repeatedly stuffed the bag in a stuff sack and its loft springs back to original proportions each time. The shell fabric is also very downproof; I had very few instances of down penetrating the shell.\n\n 10) SUITABILITY FOR ULTRALIGHT BACKPACKING: The Montbell Ultralight Alpine Down Hugger #3 at 21.2 oz (600 g) is definitely compatible with ultralight backpacking. It is roomy enough to wear additional clothing inside to extend its warmth. However, I would readily give up the full-length zipper in exchange for an extra ounce of down. Also, I would prefer a higher grade of down (800 fill power) for a high-end ultralight sleeping bag.\n\nI would like to thank Montbell and the BackpackGearTest Group for selecting me to participate in this test.\n\n",
"Hi Larry. \"Hi Rick-\"; you have the wrong monitor, its Will not Rick. I have only edit for you, and your html version looks good, nice photos. I'm concerned that you have used the cookset in the field on only one day hike, but I note that you intend to use it a lot in the next two months. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks, and happy testing. Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nTo get some additional\ncooking experience with the set, I have also done some cooking at\nhome with them, both on a stovetop and on my camping stove. \nEDIT: ., I have also done some cooking at home with it. (needs to agree with \"set\". I suggest saying \"cookset\" instead of \"set\".\n\n\n\n\n",
"I'm back from my trip. I have one more Ryders Eyewear to edit, if its\nposted, and I will post my GoLite Adrenaline LTR asap. Will.\n\n\n",
"Hi all, We will be backpacking 8/27-29, back online Tu evening 8/29. \n",
"Hi Rick. This seems like a great concept, if they can overcome the breakdown problems. I have only one edit, go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\nI first suspected it was due to the snowmelt source water, which I\nallowed it to warm, but while the mÜV would begin its cycle it\nnoticeably dim within a few seconds, winking out completely after\nperhaps half a minute. \n",
"Thanks Leesa, Roger and others pointed that out to me too. Now I know \nand its a good reminder for everyone. I think its good to include a \nphoto to show the product, and a mfr photo seems ok is credit is \ngiven. Will\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Pam. Good thorough report, and your photos really help the reader see what the product looks like. I have just 3 small edits. Go ahead and upload when ready. Thanks, Will.\n\nI had originally planned to also use my top burning homemade\nbeverage can stove, but haven't done so yet due to needing to buy or\nmake a stove support for it. \nCOMMENT: It's not really a \"stove support\", rather it's commonly called a \"pot support\".\n\n\nThe inner raised rim of the primer\npan fits the AntiGravityGear stove's concave bottom and holds in\nsecurely in place. \nEDIT: \".holds it securely in place.\"\n\n\n",
"Please consider my application to test the OR Zenith Glove. \n\nI have read the Survival Guide and Bylaws v. 0609 (especially Chapter 5 &\n6 which focus on test and report requirements) and agree to comply with all requirements. My signed Tester Agreement is on file with BGT.\n\nI have completed extra owner reviews, and am a BGT monitor.\n\nI have participated in 33 BGT tests so far. I am currently testing one item and have applied for the Jetboil Helios test. \n\n Thanks for your consideration, and thanks for all the good work you do for BGT.\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 50 years. I am retired and backpacking is my passion. In the fall, winter, and spring I backpack in UT, AZ, and NM. In the summer I backpack in several wilderness areas in southern Colorado. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for many years and an ultralight backpacker for 9 years. My wife and I give presentations on ultralight backpacking in the local area, and have developed a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nI have participated in 33 BGT tests so far and am very enthusiastic about the Group. I use the items I am testing on numerous trips (28 multi-day trips so far this year, plus many day trips), my evaluations are thorough, and my reports are always well written and on time. To view examples of my work, see my recent reports (URL's at the bottom of my application). If I am selected to participate in this test, I can assure you that the OR Zenith Glove will receive a lot of testing.\n\nTEST LOCATIONS-Southwestern US (CO, AZ, UT, NM). The test will run approximately Dec - Mar. This is perfect timing because I can test the OR Zenith Glove in a variety of activities, environments, and conditions.\n\nThe testing environments and conditions will consist of: high elevation alpine country, desert, canyon country, and forests. Expected extreme conditions include: rain, strong winds, snow storms, low temperatures, and high elevations. Elevations will range from 5,000 to 12,500 feet and temperatures will range from subzero to 50 F.\n\nThe OR Zenith Glove will be tested doing the following activities: 1) late fall and winter car camping, 2) winter snow camping, 3) backcountry skiing and snowshoeing, and 4) ice fishing. In late fall and winter, I will be winter car camping in remote southern Utah backcountry, and will wear the gloves on cold evenings and mornings. Snow camping will be in an igloo hut system my wife and I will construct each winter. I will use the Zenith glove a lot for day and overnight backcountry skiing and snowshoeing trips. Finally, the Zenith glove will provide needed dexterity (over mitts) for ice fishing in very cold temperatures.\n\nAMOUNT OF USE-I am retired and live in an area surrounded by millions of acres of public lands. I go on outdoor trips every week, often several times a week. The Zenith gloves will receive a lot of use during the four month test.\n\nMEASUREMENTS-On each trip I will record the following data in my log book so I have accurate records: 1) temperatures, 2) wind speed, 3) humidity, 4) altitude, 5) activity, 6) how the OR Zenith Glove was used, and 7) how well it performed in different conditions.\n\nFACTORS EVALUATED-Specific factors I will be evaluating the OR Zenith Glove for are as follows: \n\n1) CONSTRUCTION, QUALITY, AND FIT-Are construction and workmanship good? Do they fit well (tightness/looseness, length)? \n\n2) PERFORMANCE (COMFORT)-How does the lining feel against my skin? Do they readily wick moisture away from my skin and dry quickly? How comfortable are they at different exertion levels? Do they have a broad comfort range? \n\n3) PERFORMANCE (WARMTH)- How warm are they? How warm are they in various cold weather activities and exertion levels-like snowshoeing, ice fishing, winter camping, and winter hiking? Can I layer gloves inside them or wear gloves of different types in them to produce a versatile hand warming system?\n\n4) PERFORMANCE (WATER-RESISTANCE)-How well do they resist getting wet in rainy or snowy weather? Do they dry out quickly if they do get wet? A really good test of waterproofness for gloves is igloo building, especially with wet snow, because the gloves are used to pack snow in a form for several hours.\n\n5) PERFORMANCE (ARTICULATION/DEXTERITY)-How much can I move my hands inside the gloves? How much dexterity do I have with the gloves on - can I pick up things, change outer clothes, or get into my pack with the gloves on, or do I have to take them off? Does the AlpenGrip surface grip things well, like ski poles or snowshoes?\n\n6) DURABILITY-How durable are the Zenith Gloves? Are they adequately reinforced in wear zones? I wear out gloves rather quickly while bushwhacking; how well do the Zenith Gloves stand up to handling rock and brush? What is their life span likely to be under the conditions I am using them? How durable are the liner gloves? \n\n7) VERSATILITY-What is its versatility for different outdoor activities? How much layering can I do with these gloves, ie wearing two or more liners inside or wearing a heavier glove inside than the one that comes with the Zenith? If the liner gloves wear out, can I readily replace them with other gloves?\n\n1) Western Mountaineering Highlite Sleeping Bag\n2) Safewater Anywhere Personal Water Filter\n3) GoLite Breeze Pack\n4) Oware 8x10 Flat Silnylon Tarp\n\n1) Montbell Ex Light Down Jacket\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Clothing/Jackets/MontBell%20EX%20Lite%20Down%20Jacket/Test%20Report%20by%20Will%20Rietveld/\n\n1) SealSkinz Gloves and Socks\n2) GoLite Trek Backpack\n3) Tarptent Squall\n4) Brasslite Turbo II-D Alcohol Stove \n5) Hot Chillys Bio-Silver Bi-Ply Baselayer\n6) Therm-a-Rest Prolite 3 Short Sleeping Pad\n9) Ex Officio Buzz Off Lite LS Shirt \n10) Ex Officio Buzz Off Convertible Pant\n11) Equinox Rainsuit\n12) Ibex Guide Lite Pant\n13) ULA Fusion Pack\n14) Dunham Waffle Stomper Terrastryder Mid-Height Boot\n15) Ibex Scull Cap\n16) Integral Designs eVENT Rain Pant\n17) Integral Designs eVENT Shortie Gaiters\n18) Spenco Backpacker Footbeds\n19) Teko Socks\n20) Ibex Scout ½ Zip Shirt\n21) OR Talon Gloves\n22) Duofold Varitherm Silkweight Baselayers\n23) Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag\n24) National Geographic State TOPO Software\n25) Xyflex Thermals\n26) Black Diamond Cosmo Headlamp\n27) Montbell Alpine Light Down Pant\n28) Bushnell ONIX 200CR GPS\n29) GoLite Diablo Parka\n30) Hot Chillys Chamois Zip T\n\n31) GoLite Adrenaline 20 Sleeping Bag http://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Sleep%20Gear/Sleeping%20Bags/GoLite%20Adrenaline%2020%20Sleeping%20Bag/Test%20Report%20by%20Will%20Rietveld/\n\n32) Integral Designs Penguin Reflexion Bivy http://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Shelters/Tarps%20and%20Bivys/Integral%20Designs%20Penguin%20Bivy/Test%20Report%20by%20Will%20Rietveld/\n\n1) Nite Ize Biners and Figure 9s\n2) Buff Cyclone Hat\n\n",
"Hi Andre, thanks for posting your FR close to on-time in spite of your work load and whining. I noted a few small items. Go ahead and upload when ready. Regards, Will.\n\nAll right, here's FR number five for this year. Weren't the All\nTerrain ones supposed to be spaced a little so they wouldn't all be\ndue on the same day? With less than six FRs due on the same day, I\nthink I could have had all of them in on time even with being sick\nand all... Enough whining, here's my:\nYou're right, enough whining!\n\n\nAll Terrain Hiker's Wonder Wash\nField and Final Report by André Corterier\nmeasured dimensions:\nEDIT: Needs caps\n\n",
"Hi Kurt. Excellent report and great photos! I have only a few small edits \nfor you. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report \nin the Test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nMy principle use of the small Figure 9s was to tie down my tarp guy\nlines for my hammock to the stakes.\nEDIT: principal\n\n\nObservations: one of the things I noticed was the the Figure 9's are\nnot easy to slide up and down on a rope in the fixed end\nconfiguration, particularly when wearing gloves in cold weather.\nEDIT: delete second \"the\"\n\n\nI could not just pull on the loose rope and and slide it up or down.\nEDIT: delete second \"and\"\n\n\nOnce again the small Figure 9's did their typical great job of tyeing\ndown my hammock tarp.\n",
"Hi Leesa, I just have a few smaller edits. The html version looks fine. Be sure to check hyperlinks when you upload, and delete your review in the Test folder. Thanks. Will.\n\nEDIT: In your spec table, Shoulder \n\n\nI have been able to use the Glow Sleeping bag of 13 occasions during the last two months. \nEDIT: on 13 occasions\n\n\nAlthough this bag is rated at 15 F (-9 C), I found it useful even in the summer, here in northern New England. \nEDIT: Extra space after (-9C),\n\n\nIts nice to wake up in the morning, still on the sleeping pad.\nEDIT: It's\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Leesa, thanks for posting your FR. I only have one edit. The html version looks good, go ahead and upload when ready. Will\n\n\nIt was 28 degrees F (-2 C) and the wind speed was about 10 mph\n(16 kmh). \n",
"Hi all. I'm off on a 3-day backpack with my wife and friends. Number 16 \nfor the year. Love it!! Will",
"Hi Jo Ann. Thanks for the edits. I have revised my IR and uploaded it to its\nfolder. Best, Will.\n\n\nThank you for your review! Just a few edits and you can upload to the\nappropriate folder here:\n\nhttp://snipurl.com/20uqj\n\nSee you in a couple of months!\n\nEdit: The body of your HTML contains at least two different fonts. If\nthis was intentional ok, but it would look more consistent if it was\nall in one font.\n\nEDIT: Your entire Product Description is copied directly from the\nmanufacturer's website. The information from the website can easily be\nobtained by our readers by navigating to the manufacturer's page.The\nportion where you have the Features listed in a bulleted format is\nfine, but the rest of it will have to be put into your own words from\nyour experience with viewing the item in your hands. Please and thank\nyou.\n\nEDIT: As well here, the information you have on the SympaTex excerpt\nfrom Wikipedia reads well, like an encyclopedia. :) Very little of\nthe Initial Impressions section is actually your impressions. It is ok\nto use Wiki to research the information, but please minimize the\ninformation you are quoting directly from their website.\n\nEDIT: 'Long' need not be capitalized as it is not the beginning of a\nsentence, a pronoun, place, title, noun, or name. You have two\ninstances of this in the paragraph above.\n\nEDIT: You need punctuation at the end of this paragraph. A colon would\nbe most suitable.\n\n",
"Hi Coy. I have only one edit. Nice report, short and to the point. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your file in the Test folder. Thanks. Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\nI asked, which on is that? \nEDIT: one\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Curt, I just wanted to mention that my FR (and 2 others) are on the list and ready for editing. Mine is msg #21735, posted July 23. I know that its easy to miss something on the list, so I thought I would re-post since it has been over a week. Thanks! Will\n\n",
"Hi Karl. Thanks for posting your revised FR. However, BGT policy is\nfor the tester to upload the html version to the Test folder and\nprovide a link to it in a post here for the convenience of the test\nmonitor (see the BGT Bylaws and Shane's recent reminder). Please\nupload your html version (as I requested before) then repost your FR.\nI will be happy to look at it again when its ready. Thanks. Will\n\n\n\n",
"Please consider my application to test the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns. If selected, I would need a men's size Large, color Stone.\n\nI have read the new BGT Bylaws v. 0609, and have a signed Tester Agreement on file. I agree to follow all BGT tester requirements.\n\nI have completed extra owner reviews, and am a BGT monitor and mentor.\n\nI have participated in 27 BGT tests so far, and I am testing one item right now.\n\n Thanks for your consideration, and thanks for all the good work you do for BGT.\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 48 years. I am retired and backpacking is my passion. In the fall, winter, and spring I backpack in UT, AZ, and NM. In the summer I backpack in several wilderness areas in southern Colorado. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for many years and an ultralight backpacker for 7 years. My wife and I give presentations on ultralight backpacking in the local area, and have developed a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nI have participated in 27 BGT tests so far and am very enthusiastic about the Group. I am retired, in good physical condition, and I get out several times a week. I use the items I am testing on numerous trips, my evaluations are thorough, and my reports are always well written and on time. To view examples of my work, see my recent reports (URL's at the bottom of my application).\n\nIf I am selected to participate in this test, I can assure you that the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns will receive a lot of testing. Specifically, testing will be done:\n** Every week, usually several times a week. (I'm retired, and get out a lot.)\n** In the Southwestern US\n** In alpine, forest, canyon, and desert environments.\n** Under cold, wet, dry, humid, and windy conditions.\n** In a variety of outdoor activities.\n\nTEST LOCATIONS-Southwestern US (CO, AZ, UT, NM). The test will run approximately mid-Nov to mid-Feb. This is perfect timing because I can test the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns in a variety of activities, environments, and conditions.\n\nThe testing environments and conditions will consist of: high elevation alpine country, desert, canyon country, and forests. Expected extreme conditions include: rain, strong winds, snow storms, low temperatures, and high elevations. Elevations will range from 5,000 to 12,500 feet and temperatures will range from subzero to 60 F.\n\nI know the emphasis in BGT is backpacking, but long johns are suited for a variety of activities, and it is more difficult to backpack in the wintertime. \n\nThe Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns will be tested doing the following activities: 1) backpacking, 2) backcountry winter car camping, 3) snow camping, 4) cold weather day hiking, 5) snowshoeing, 6) backcountry skiing, and 7) ice fishing. \n\nI will be going on several backpacking trips in southern Utah, and Arizona in late fall. This winter I will be winter car camping and day hiking in the southern Utah backcountry. Snow camping will be in an igloo hut system my wife and I will construct this winter. Once we have a good snowpack in the mountains I will be snowshoeing or backcountry skiing every week, often staying out overnight. Also, starting around December 15, I will go ice fishing weekly with my brother. \n\nAMOUNT OF USE-I am retired and live in an area surrounded by millions of acres of public lands. I get out several times a week. On my previous tests, I used the gear about 40 days during the four month test period. From the time the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns arrive, they will go with me every time I go out, which averages 2-3 days a week. \n\nMEASUREMENTS AND DATA-On each trip I will record the following data using a Kestrel 4000 Pocket Weather Meter and take notes in my log book so I have accurate records: 1) weather conditions: precipitation (type and amount), temperature, wind speed, relative humidity, dewpoint, and wind chill; 2) altitude, 3) activity, 4) how the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns were worn (clothing system), 5) my comfort level wearing the baselayers, and 6) how well the baselayers worked in different activities.\n\nFACTORS EVALUATED-The specific factors I will be evaluating the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns for are as follows: \n\n1) CONSTRUCTION, QUALITY, AND FIT-Are construction and workmanship good? Do they fit well (tightness/looseness, sleeve length, body length, leg length) Are they non-binding?\n\n2) PERFORMANCE AS A BASE LAYER-How do they feel against my skin? Do they readily wick moisture away from my skin and dry quickly? Do they hold body heat well? If I wear them while hiking, how comfortable are they at different exertion levels? Do they have a broad comfort range? Are they sufficiently warm (or too hot) for cool/cold weather hiking? Are they comfortable over a wide temperature range, e.g. days that start out below freezing and warm up into the 50's or 60's?\n\n3) PERFORMANCE IN COMBINATION WITH OTHER PERFORMANCE CLOTHING-For example, how well do they perform in rainy weather and moderate to high exertion? How comfortable are they to wear with various outside layers in cold weather activities-like winter backpacking, snow camping, snowshoeing in the alpine country, and ice fishing? Does other clothing slip over them easily?\n\n4) PERFORMANCE IN A SLEEPING SYSTEM-Do the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns provide a lot of warmth for their weight when worn in a sleeping bag to extend its warmth?\n\n5) ODOR MANAGEMENT-How effectively do they restrain or eliminate odors? Does washing completely remove odors?\n\n6) DURABILITY-How durable are the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns? Does the material pill in wear zones? What is its life span likely to be under the conditions I am using them?\n\n7) VERSATILITY-What is their versatility for different outdoor activities? In my evaluation, I will assess their utility for various uses, including ultralight backpacking.\n\n9) CLEANING-How easily and well does the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns clean following the label instructions?\n\n10) SUITABILITY FOR ULTRALIGHT BACKPACKING-How does the Gramicci Flash Tech Henley and Long Johns compare with similar products as far as warmth and weight?\n\n1) Western Mountaineering Highlite Sleeping Bag\n2) Safewater Anywhere Personal Water Filter\n3) GoLite Breeze Pack\n4) Oware 8x10 Flat Silnylon Tarp\n\n1) Montbell Light Alpine Down Jacket (item received, will write IR soon)\n\n1) SealSkinz Gloves and Socks\n 2) GoLite Trek Backpack\n3) Tarptent Squall\n4) Brasslite Turbo II-D Alcohol Stove \n5) Hot Chillys Bio-Silver Bi-Ply Baselayer\n6) Therm-a-Rest Prolite 3 Short Sleeping Pad\n9) Ex Officio Buzz Off Lite LS Shirt \n10) Ex Officio Buzz Off Convertible Pant\n11) Equinox Rainsuit\n12) Ibex Guide Lite Pant\n13) ULA Fusion Pack\n14) Dunham Waffle Stomper Terrastryder Mid-Height Boot\n15) Ibex Scull Cap\n16) Integral Designs eVENT Rain Jacket\n17) Integral Designs eVENT Shortie Gaiters\n18) Spenco Backpacker Footbeds\n19) Teko Socks\n20) Ibex Scout ½ Zip Shirt\n21) OR Talon Gloves\n22) Duofold Varitherm Silkweight Baselayers\n23) Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag\n\n24) National Geographic State TOPO Software\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Software/Topographic%20Mapping/National%20Geographic%20TOPO%20State%202006/Will%20Rietveld/Long%20Term%20Report/\n\n25) Xyflex Thermals\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Clothing/Underwear/Zyflex%20Thermal%20Shirt%20and%20Pants/Will%20Rietveld/Long%20Term%20Report/\n\n26) Black Diamond Cosmo Headlamp\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Lighting/Headlamps%20-%20LED/Black%20Diamond%20Cosmo/Will%20Rietveld/Long%20Term%20Report/\n\n1) Princeton Tec Quad Headlamp\n\nOne person-helping him complete his OR's\n\n",
"I will be on a rafting trip April 10-15, back online April 15 evening.\n",
"Hi Richard. Lots of testing and a thorough report, just what we like to see. Great photo!\n\nI have only a couple of edits for you. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nTemperatures from 50-85 F (10-29 C), with one\nbrief rain shower but no sustained precipitation and low humidity.\nEDIT: Not a complete sentence; suggest: Temperatures ranged from.\n\n\nA small price to\npay for a highly functional pair of sunglasses, however.\nEDIT: Not a complete sentence; suggest: That's a small price to pay.\n\n\n",
"Hi Tim. Here are your edits. Another test done. Go ahead and upload. How's your mom doing?\nWill\n\nParkview 2\nEDIT: I recommend putting the word \"Tent\" in the title.\n\n\n4 lb 6 oz (2.0 kg) - Fast Fly weight\nComment: This is the first of 15 uses of the term \"Fast Fly\". In 10 of the uses you have them capitalized and in 5 you don't (3 under Measured Weight and 2 in the first paragraph under My Thoughts on the Parkview). For consistency, you might want to make them all capitalized. \n\n \n\n\nAlthough many of the places I hike in the warm weather are bug infested. \nEDIT: This is a sentence fragment. You could delete the \"Although\" at the beginning to make it a standalone sentence.\n\n\nThe rain fly (aka Fast Fly) was really too much protection for me in the summer months. \n\nComment: I like how you equated Fast Fly with rain fly, but suggest that instead of doing here, put in (aka rain fly) after the first use of the words Fast Fly (under Published Weight). \n\n \n\n\nIt's is in this versatility that I found the Parkview really shined.\nEDIT: Delete either \"..'s\" or \"is\".\n\n\nAs I mentioned in my Field Report, I extended the size of the footprint by adding Tyvec to cover the areas defined by the vestibules in the Fast Fly mode, and in essence transformed the Parkview into a three-man tent. \nEDITS: Change \"Tyvec\" to \"Tyvek\". Also, I recommend \"three-person\" instead of \"three-man\".\n\n\nI would like to see it shortened up a bit so the whole package took on a more rigid shape. \nEDIT: Change \"took\" to \"takes\". \n\n\n\n\nIt's roominess.\n\nEdit: Change \"It's\" to \"Its\"\n\n\n\nThe Parkview II is a great tent. \nEDIT: BA lists it as the \"Parkview 2\" on their website, and you list it that way in your title and introduction.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n",
"Does anyone know the status of the Grammici tests? I was selected for \nthe Grammici Highline Trail Pant a long time ago and have not received \nanything. Also have not seen anything on the list of anyone receiving \nGrammici products. Thanks! Will\n\n\n\n \n",
"",
"Hi Sam. Good test and report. I have a few edits and one comment on your LTR. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\n I found the Buff make comfortable to\nwear and easy to take on and off.\nEDIT: I believe \"make\" should be \"very\".\n\n\nDuring the field testing I found that Buff Cyclone to be extremely\nwarm and block the wind very well. \nEDIT: I believe \"that\" should be \"the\"\n\n\nI have stuffed it my\npocket and backpack, it has been dropped on the ground many time and\neven stepped on after it ended up on the floor of my car for a week.\nEDIT: .stuffed it in my pocket.\n\n\nI used a damp cloth on it to spot clean it until it finally fell into\na mud puddle. I put it through the washing machine and it came out\nlooking new and does not show any sign of losing its shape or color.\nCOMMENT: The first sentence is confusing. Perhaps you could re-write this to be more clear.\n\n\n",
"Hi Rick. The text of your LTR looks good. I hope you can overcome the problems with the Report Writer so your photos come through when you upload to the folder. Your photos in your IR and FR are excellent, and I assume the ones in your LTR are just as good. By far, you have had the most problems with this product, but both the mfr and you remain upbeat, so that's a good testament to the value of the product (when debugged). Go ahead and upload to the folder when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\n",
"Hi Leesa. I have several edits and comments for you to consider. Html version looks good. Go ahead and upload when ready. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nJanuary 8, 2008\nOver the last two months, I used the cookset on 2 - two night trips and\nthree day trips. \nSUGGESTION: This is a little confusing. How about \".I used the cookset on two 3-day trips (2 nights) and three 1-day trips.\"\n\n\nThe weather had turned much colder\nwith night time temperatures in the 10 - 15 degree F range (C) and day time\ntemperatures hovering around freezing. \nEDIT: Need metric equivalent.\n\n\nThis was just a\nminor issue that required me to adjust my planning, but didn't effect the\noverall quality of the food. \nEDIT: affect\n\n\n I used it the set to heat both soup and water for hot chocolate. \nEDIT: I used the set. (delete the extra \"it\")\n\n\nIt shouldn't effect future use - and it doesn't appear like it\nwill spread. \nEDIT: affect\n\n\nI had reservations in\nthe begining about the handle being sturdy enough to hold the pots if they\nwere full of hot liquid. \nThank you to Backpackgeartest.org and Optimus for the opportunity to test\nthis cookset.\n",
"Hi Karl, the html version of your field report looks good, go ahead\nand upload to the folder created for this headlamp when you're ready.\nBe sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will\n\n\n\n",
"Hi Thomas. I have several edits for you. Html version looks good and thanks for including photos. Go ahead and upload when ready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\n\nMaterials: 100% microfiber polyester, elastic banding, WIndstopper, Polartec\n100 microfleece.\nThis was an intriguing idea to me since I could\nput a multipurpose cold weather head covering to pretty good use. \nEDIT: Extra space after \"I\"\n\n\nThe Cyclone Buff is a tube of clothe that can be worn in many different\nconfigurations. \nEDIT: cloth\n\n\nThe top 12 inches (30 cm) of the Cyclone is made from two\nlayers of Buff Fabric (99% polyester and 1% PTFE) that designed to trap warm\nair between the layers. \nThe the next section of the Cyclone is made up of\n3/4 GORE WINDSTOPPER fabric and another panel of what seems to be elastic\nfleece which makes up up about 1/4 of this section. \nEDIT: delete extra \"the\" and extra \"up\"\n\n\nAll of these materials are assembled into one continuos tube of\nfabric. \nEDIT: continuous\n\n\nThe Buff Cyclone is much heavier (I did not know exactly what Gore Wind\nStopper Fleece was) than I expected and it isn't made up of just one fabric.\nThe combination of Buff fabric, GORE Windstopper, and elastic fleece\ncombines to make what is hopefully a truly multi function piece of gear.\nEDIT: Gore\nEDIT: multi-functional\n\n \n\n\n",
"Hi Richard. I have just one comment on your IR and no edits. The html version looks good. Go ahead and upload when ready and be sure to delete your report in the test folder. Thanks! Will Rietveld, Test Monitor.\n\nI first used a Tablet on a one-liter Nalgene bottle of tap water to\ntest for discoloration or taste. I popped a pill into this about 11\npm and left the bottle on my kitchen counter. Early the next\nmorning there was no color to the water and no noticeable taste.\nCOMMENT: You should specify the conditions. If you are on a municipal water supply, the tap water probably already has chlorine dioxide in it, so this would not be a good taste test. However, if you live in the country and are using well water, this would be a good taste test. \n\n\n\n",
"I will be out elk hunting from Sat Oct 15 through Wed Oct 19. Will\n\n",
"Please consider my application to test the Tarptent Double Rainbow Tent. If selected I would like to test the Double Rainbow with sewn-in floor.\n\nI have read and re-read the BackpackGearTest Survival Guide version 1202, especially Chapter 5, and have a signed Tester Agreement on file. I agree to follow all BGT tester requirements.\n\n Thanks for your consideration, and thanks for all the good work you do for BGT.\n\nI have been an avid backpacker for 48 years. Backpacking is my passion. In the fall, winter, and spring I backpack in UT, AZ, and NM. In the summer I backpack in several wilderness areas in southern Colorado. \n\nBackpacking Style-I have been a lightweight backpacker for many years and an ultralight backpacker for 7 years. My wife and I give presentations on ultralight backpacking in the local area, and have developed a website called Southwest Ultralight Backpacking (http://home.bresnan.net/~swultralight) to share information.\n\nI have participated in 26 BGT tests so far and am very enthusiastic about the Group. I use the items I am testing on numerous trips, my evaluations are thorough, and my reports are always well written and on time. To view examples of my work, see my recent reports (URL's at the bottom of my application).\n\nIf I am selected to participate in this test, I can assure you that the Tarptent Double Rainbow Tent will receive a lot of testing. Specifically:\n** I am retired and backpack nearly every week in the summer and fall.\n** My wife and I backpack and car camp together and will share the tent.\n** My wife is an expert seamstress, and will evaluate the sewing quality\n** I will have friends use the tent and give me their input.\n** Testing will be in the Southwestern US\n** I will test the tent in alpine, forest, canyon, and desert environments.\n** I will test the tent under hot, cold, wet, dry, humid, and windy conditions.\n\nTEST LOCATIONS-Southwestern US (CO, AZ, UT, NM). The test will run approximately Aug-Nov. This is perfect timing because I can test it in alpine environments in Aug and early September during our monsoon season (intense thunderstorms with lots of wind), then in canyon country during the fall.\n\nThe testing environments will consist of: high elevation alpine country, badlands desert, canyon country, and forests. Expected extreme conditions include: heavy rain, strong winds, snow storms (in the mountains any time after Sept 15), dust/rain storms, intense sun, low temperatures, and high elevations with strong UV and intense thunderstorms. Elevations will range from 5,000 to 12,500 feet and temperatures will range from 20 to 85 F.\n\nNote: During August and early September I will be testing the tent in the alpine zone (above timberline), where it will be exposed to intense thunderstorms with heavy rain and strong winds. Nighttime conditions are usually calm and cool, which are conducive to heavy condensation inside a single-wall tent.\n\nThe Tarptent Double Rainbow Tent will be tested doing the following activities: 1) backpacking, 2) car camping. \n\nTEST PLAN-From the time the Tarptent Double Rainbow Tent arrives, it will be my primary tent every time I go out, which averages one trip a week. \n\nOn each trip I will record the following data: 1) nighttime temperature, 2) estimated wind speed, 3) estimated humidity, 4) altitude, 5) precipitation (including what form), 6) site where the tent was used, 7) ground surface conditions, and 8) condensation inside the tent.\n\nFACTORS EVALUATED-The specific factors I will be evaluating the Tarptent Double Rainbow Tent for are as follows: \n\n1) MATERIALS, QUALITY, AND CONSTRUCTION: Is the tent made of high quality materials, and is it well designed and constructed? \n\n2) SIZING: Is the size adequate for the entries, vestibules, floor, and headroom? How well would this tent work for a tall person?\n\n3) SETUP: How easy is the Double Rainbow to set up compared to other Tarptents and other tents? \n\n4) CONVENIENCE: Is the tent easy to enter? Do the doors secure well? Can the doors be easily secured open when more ventilation is desired? How easy is it to close the vestibules from the inside?\n\n5) USEFUL FEATURES: Is there adequate stowage options (pockets, etc) inside the tent? How useful is the bathtub floor suspended by clips? Can I see outside very well through the top vents? Are there tie loops inside the tent to hang a clothes line?\n\n6) VENTILATION: The tent has what appears to be two small vents at the top of the vestibules. Are the mesh vents at the bottom and the top adequate to get good high/low ventilation when the doors are closed? Is there too much ventilation when its windy?\n\n7) CONDENSATION: Condensation is a fact of life in a single-wall tent. The difference between tents is how well condensation is minimized by good ventilation and fabric porosity. Since the silnylon walls of this tent are not porous, the tent is completely dependent on good ventilation to minimize the condensation issue. So, how well is the Double Rainbow designed to minimize condensation? Does the condensation curtain designed for this tent really work? Under what conditions does condensation occur, and how must the tent be used to avoid or minimize condensation?\n\n8) WIND STABILITY: How secure does the Double Rainbow pitch for wind stability? Are there an adequate number of staking points and guylines to adequately secure the tent in a strong wind? How does the tent do in a strong side wind? (Note: with its monopole design, the Rainbow may be very susceptible to side winds.) \n\n9) STORM RESISTANCE: Does the Double Rainbow stay dry inside during a heavy or prolonged rain, or wind-driven rain? This assumes adequate seam sealing with silicone (all Tarptents need to be seam sealed by the user).\n\n10) BUG PROTECTION: We have lots of mosquitoes and flies at certain locations, which will provide and adequate test of the tent's bug protection. Does the tent completely seal out bugs?\n\n11) DURABILITY: How well does the Double Rainbow hold up under a wide variety of terrains and weather conditions? Are there any weaknesses in the design that need improvement? Is there adequate reinforcement in stress areas? How does the silnylon floor hold up on rough ground?\n\n12) SUITABILITY FOR LIGHTWEIGHT BACKPACKING: The Tarptent Double Rainbow will be one of the lightest 2-person backpacking tents around; how does it compare to similar tents in terms of weight, protected area, features, and ease of use?\n\n1) Western Mountaineering Highlite Sleeping Bag\n2) Safewater Anywhere Personal Water Filter\n3) GoLite Breeze Pack\n4) Oware 8x10 Flat Silnylon Tarp\n\n1) Montbell Alpine Down Hugger #3 Sleeping Bag \nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/test/TESTS/IR%20-%20Montbell%20UL%20Alpine%20Down%20Hugger%203%20Sleeping%20Bag/\n\n2) Xyflex Thermals \nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Clothing/Underwear/Zyflex%20Thermal%20Shirt%20and%20Pants/Will%20Rietveld/Initial%20Report/\n\n3) National Geographic State TOPO software\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Software/Topographic%20Mapping/National%20Geographic%20TOPO%20State%202006/Will%20Rietveld/Initial%20Report/\n\n4) Black Diamond Cosmo Headlamp\nhttp://www.backpackgeartest.org/reviews/Lighting/Headlamps%20-%20LED/Black%20Diamond%20Cosmo/Will%20Rietveld/Initial%20Report/\n\n1) SealSkinz Gloves and Socks\n 2) GoLite Trek Backpack\n3) Tarptent Squall\n4) Brasslite Turbo II-D Alcohol Stove \n5) Hot Chillys Bio-Silver Bi-Ply Baselayer\n6) Therm-a-Rest Prolite 3 Short Sleeping Pad \n9) Ex Officio Buzz Off Lite LS Shirt \n10) Ex Officio Buzz Off Convertible Pant \n11) Equinox Rainsuit \n12) Ibex Guide Lite Pant\n13) ULA Fusion Pack\n14) Dunham Waffle Stomper Terrastryder Mid-Height Boot\n15) Ibex Scull Cap\n16) Integral Designs eVENT Rain Jacket\n17) Integral Designs eVENT Shortie Gaiters\n18) Spenco Backpacker Footbeds\n19) Teko Socks\n20) Ibex Scout ½ Zip Shirt\n21) OR Talon Gloves\n22) Duofold Varitherm Silkweight Baselayers\n\n1) Black Diamond Enduro Carbon Fiber Trekking Poles\n2) Sierra Designs Volt/Glow Tent\n3) Rail Riders Extreme Adventure Pants\n\nOne person-helping him complete his OR's\n\n",
"Hi Andrew. Glad to see you back participating in the group. Your IR is \ndefinitely worth waiting for; it looks great, with excellent photos to show \nthe products. I have a few edits for you below. Go ahead and upload when \nready, and be sure to delete your report in the Test folder. Thanks! Will \nThe S-Biners and Figure 9's are NOT to be used for climbing or where\nbodily injury could happen.\nEDIT: Extra space after \"injury\"\n\n\nThe items I am testing below are two hooks that Nite Ize refer to as\nfigure 9's which will allow me to do away with knots and be able to\ntie off cords a lot quicker and with a lot more ease.\nEDIT: refers\n\n\nThis means I can clip one end to my pack\nfor example and then be able to clip something else onto the other\nend\nEDIT: needs a period at the end of the sentence.\n\n\nThe S-Biners are attached to a card which has the size marked on\nit with the load limit and inside the card a little fold out piece of\ncard showing other products from Nite Ize.\nEDIT: Run-on sentence. Suggest: The S-Biners are attached to a card which \nhas the size marked on it, along with the load limit. Inside the card a \nlittle fold out piece of\ncard shows other products from Nite Ize.\n\n\nI wrapped the cord over the small\nhook, pulled tight and then around the back and through the serrated\nv section of the nine.\nEDIT: 9 instead of \"nine\", to be consistent\n\n\nThe small S-Biner I clipped onto the zipper pull of my bum bag, I use\nthis bag for work every day and so it should get a lot of use during\nthe test period.\nCOMMENT: This might be Aussie talk, but for clarity I suggest the following: \nI clipped the small S-Biner onto the zipper pull of my bum bag that I use\nfor work every day, so it should get a lot of use during the test period.\n\n\n My measurements below are almost identical (within 2 mm) to\nthe manufactures measurements.\n"
] |
q37/C3XvR3qslJt+@example.com
|
[
""
] |
sr+EaJ5OvNf4fBj8@example.com
|
[
"",
"",
""
] |
LpF3aaNb8RdO9jiS@example.com
|
[
"Thanks Powell for the links.\n\nFrom what I've found it seems that there are no technical reasons not to\nrun ZK in a VM other than perhaps running all or some VMs on the same host\nmachine.\n\n"
] |
xrtFQN9GAbYTB4UA@example.com
|
[
"Dear friends : Nearly Christmas , May the joy and warmth of Christmas fill your home with happiness.\r\nI have the pleasure of contacting with you today.\r\nWe get your inquiry in internet and now we would like to have a brief introduction about our product for your understanding.\r\nHandbag set free women’s desire.A handbag represent more than functionality.Then you can’t miss Gucci handbags . Interlock GG logo is the most traditional character of Gucci, no matter where you are, you can find this outstanding symbol. Not only Gucci handbags are sought-after, but also Louis Vuitton, Chanel, Fendi, Marc Jacobs, Dior and other designer handbags are popular in our website http://replica-china.net. How fabulous they are! What is timeless and what is posh? No need to say too much, designer handbags can fulfill all your need,\r\n Your orders are also warmly welcomed, it is our commitment to satisfy your requirement, please trust that we will be your reliable business partner for our good reputation, good quality and competitive price!\r\nIf you are interested, please feel free to contact us or visit our website: http://replica-china.net. \r\n"
] |
9Vie7QWUEEUThW8l@example.com
|
[
"How does the DNS service poller work exactly? Does it try to resolve a\ngiven address on the internet? Or just check to see if the port is\nopen? \n\n \n\nWe have a T-1 circuit that is showing a DNS outage but the vendor says\nthe DNS service should be running. They are asking questions on what\nexactly it tries to resolve and I wasn't sure as to the answer to that\nquestion. \n\n \n\n"
] |
o/ra6qgy36xzlkAh@example.com
|
[
"Aparentemente, te valdría con lanzar la excepción y añadir un método\nmarcado como\n\n\nTienes más info aquí:\nhttp://gustavoringel.blogspot.com/2009/02/unhaddins-persistence-conversation-part_08.html\n\nDe todas formas, estoy con Nestor, eso no es un visitor :-)\n\n\n"
] |
70gPF/7R5Ayj3t8m@example.com
|
[
"ati\n\n"
] |
evoLItluqDBckS1p@example.com
|
[
"We've done RNA-seq on polysome fractionation samples across three different\ngenotypes. We collected Rnp (free mRNA's) and Polysome (actively\ntranslating mRNA's) fractions as well as input mRNA from the samples before\nfractionation.\n\nThe idea of collecting input is not only so that we can look at\ntranscriptional changes but to normalize to something that would be free of\nthe technical variation and RNA loss that polysome fractionation can\nproduce.\n\nThis is my current idea for a workflow:\n\nTophat/Bowtie => htseq-count => divide poly/rnp counts by input counts per\ngene/feature => edgeR differences between genotypes across\npolysome/rnp/input categories\n\nMy question is thus: Is there a way to tell edgeR to normalize to the\ninput? Am I mucking things up my manually normalizing the read counts\nbefore giving them to edgeR?\n\n"
] |
Abqnrwb/1cnuAoZR@example.com
|
[
"My install attempt was a litle different:\n\n- Installed on a new VM running Windows Server 2008\n\n- Install CSE 1.3 (includes Python 2.5)\n- Install Genshi 6\nI don't have good notes on apache errors, but I do from just trying to\nrun Trac via tracd.exe:\n\nlog for more information.\nAfter that I got a different error:\n\n- Warning: Can't synchronize with repository \"(default)\" (Unsupported\nlog for more information.\nAt that point I gave up and installed BitNami's Trac Stack.\n\n"
] |
G/AuYMlVCOknJz2B@example.com
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[
"I know this is a long message, so I'll summarize my questions here:\n- Should I release the iterated solution in the same files as their\ncurrent equivalents or separate them out?\n- After the iterated solution is done, would you rather see SIMD\nextensions or a verlet integrator for particles (cloth, water, etc) next?\n- If SIMD (slightly ahead of the verlet integrator in my mind), then\nwhat's the best way to get cross-platform/compiler assembly into the\nproject?\n- Plus a few internals questions below.\n\nAnd now the long version.....\n\nI'm not sure how close what I came up with is to PP, but it's working\ngreat! I switched over to LDLT and got immediate improvements from just\nthat switch, I'm guessing because of all the loop unrolling and not having\nto do Sqrt's. Then I clamped x's that are outside of lo and hi\n(calculated dynamically if findex > -1), remove their rows and columns\nfrom A with a slightly modified dRemoveLDLT (A didn't use row pointers),\nupdate rhs, and resolve until no more constraints go out of range (usually\nonly once), and voila! a 150% speed increase over dSolveLCP (and should\ngive the exact same results 95% of the time). I know this algorithm will\nmost likely slow to a crawl with larger systems where it may have to\nresolve several times, but it works great when it doesn't, and since I'm\ndoing only one joint at a time, it will usually be either impossible or\nreally weird to do more than one resolve. One thing I need to do is\nchange the contact joint so the hard contact constraint is at the end of J\ninstead of the beginning, since it seems more likely that a contact would\nbe limiting penetration rather than friction, and limits at the end are a\nlot easier to remove than limits at the beginning. Would this do anything\nto mess up the current algorithm?\n\nNow the major bottleneck (takes 4 times as long as any other operation) is\ncomputing A. I did find an optimization for that, but I was surprised it\nwasn't already implemented, since it would help the old version too. So I\nwanted to ask about it to see if I should make this a change to the\noriginal function or make a new one. Here it is:\n\nCorrect me if I'm wrong, but I believe A is always symmetric (as well as\npositive definite). This means that A's top right triangle mirrors it's\nlower left, and possibly (I don't know about this one) every block has\nmirrored top and bottom triangles...? However, in the step where A is\ncalculated (JinvM * J') a call is made to Multiply2_p8r for each block. \nMultiply2_p8r calculates every entry in the block, top and bottom half,\nseparately. Shouldn't it calculate the top half and copy the results to\nthe bottom half as it goes (or when it's done)? I know that would work for\nthe diagonal blocks in the current matrix, but I'm not sure about the\nothers. Should I change the current function, or write another version\nthat exploits the symmetry, and change the current algorithm to use that\none for the diagonal? The real question is whether every block in A is\nsymmetric or only the ones along the diagonal.\n\nAnother question: how do you want this integrated into ODE? Right now I\nhave it integrated into the current source files, so you just replace 4 or\n5 files and you can start calling dWorldStepFast(world, stepsize,\niterations). I've made a few changes to the body class, to store it's\ninertial tensor and Mass matrix in the global frame. That way I don't\nhave to recalculate it for each joint that is connected to it, only once\neach iteration. So that file will have to be replaced (or at least those\n2 lines). Other than that, I can take the rest of the code out and put it\nin separate files (and figure out where to change the makefile) if you'd\nrather it be separated. Just let me know.\n\nI guess my next bought of hacking will be SIMD :) What's the most\ncross-platform/compiler way to get assembly into the project? I guess I\ncould just write it once for gcc inline and once for vc++ inline, but that\nleaves out the compilers I don't have or care to learn. So what does that\nleave, GAS and NASM? Anyone have a preference (I'll have to learn either\none.... which is \"best\")?\n\nThen I could do a verlet integrator.... anybody interested in cloth and\nother particle effects (seen some cool water demos)? There's only two\nconstraints: distance (also known as stick constraints) and the angle\nbetween 2 sticks. It shouldn't be too difficult to implement them as\ninequality constraints. The integrator and the collision detection are\nreally integrated, so a simloop would call normal collision and step\nroutines, then the particle engine, and the particles would \"flow\" around\nthe rest of the bodies. There's a paper on the Hitman game and an article\non Gammasutra that explain the concept better, I'll find the links if\nyou're interested. The basic concept is that you just make a particle at\neach of the vertices of a mesh, and then the mesh would act like cloth and\ndrape over anything it came in contact with, or you could make it\nweightless and move one particle up and down to make a rippling water\neffect. You could attach particles to a point on a rigid body. The hard\npart is going to be getting the rigid bodies to interact with the\nparticles (i.e. if you have a couple boxes sitting on a table cloth, they\nshould move with it if you start dragging the cloth around). The\nalgorithm itself is an iterated one, but the less general constraints make\nthe computations required to integrate a step much faster.\n\nSo which do y'all want first, more optimization or more functionality?\n\n",
"I posted some documentation on the StepFast1 algorithm on my website at\nhttp://www.csworkbench.com/stepfast-doc.html . All constructive criticism\nis welcomed. Let me know if you want more or less explanation, graphics,\nor anything. Hmmm, I should probably say a little more about the\nstepsize/iterations/autodisablethreshold relationship.\n\nRuss, I came up with just post-fixing SF1 on the stepfast-1 specific\nfunctions.... it's a few characters shorter anyway. Let me know if that\nwill/won't work.\n\n",
"That makes sense. But since ODE will 'put the brakes on' (apply a\nnegative force/torque) if inertia is carrying your joint faster than the\nset velocity, this is yet another proof that the D term is not needed.\n\nI agree.\n\n",
"You would probably need to sync position, orientation, linear and angular\nvelocity, and joint velocity to cover all your bases.... and joint fmax if\nyou adjust that dynamically. I think some people actually do that in the\nnetwork games where they need to dynamically adjust stepsize to keep up\nwith the computer's speed.\n\n",
"Doh! I knew I'd miss one of those. <goes off grumbling something about\n",
"Yeah, I realize there will be a lot of special case functions that will\nhave to be written to handle the cases where some macros take an\noperator.... but I think it would probably be better to get away from\nmacros and move towards inline functions anyway, just so improvements like\nthese can be made.\n\n",
"Just remember to choose base units such that, for your particular\nsimulation, all the values are as close to 1.0 as possible to reduce\nnumerical inaccuracies. From my somewhat limited knowledge of fpu\ncalculations, you could probably choose another range, as long as all the\nnumbers are close to *each other*, but the standard advice is to keep it\naround 1.0.\n\n",
"The transformed geom stores it's positional and rotational *offset* from\nthe geomTransform. So you have to get position and orientation of the\ngeomTransform, rotate the position of the transformed geom by the\norientation of the geomTransform and add this position to the\ngeomTransforms position to get the transformed geom's actual position. \nYou also need to rotate the transformed geom's orientation by the\ngeomTransform's orientation to get the transformed geom's actual\norientation. But you're in luck, the code to do all that is in the\nsimLoop function of test_boxstack. I don't have the code right in front\nof me right now, but it should be in the section that starts with\nsomething like \"if (cls == dGeomTransformClass)\".\n\nAh, but if you hit reply all, I get two copies anyway... but that's\n",
"You have 2 choices here. For the general case, there's the tri-collider\nin the contrib directory. It uses OPCODE to do the collision and then\nconverts it's output to ODE contacts. Then, and this would probably work\nbetter for your app, there's a heightfield collider in the works. I'm not\nsure what the status is on that project.\n\nAlso, there was a dxTriangle class released recently, but it seems like it\nwas more of a tutorial or reference on implementing your own collision\nclass, which is yet another option. Finally, you don't have to use ODE's\ncollision system at all. The collision system in ODE is actually a\ncompletely separate entity that exists for the sole purpose of filling in\ncontact joints before every timestep. If you want to fill in your own\ncontact joints without ever calling dCollide, that is completely up to\nyou.\n\n",
"Of course, it seems as if AMD is abandoning 3dnow, since the Athlon\nMP/XP's have SSE and the Hammers will have SSE 2...\n\n",
"Not sure about this one.\n\nSet the dContactApprox1 flag in your contact mode parameter if you want\nfriction to act more Coulomb-ish.... i.e. more mass = more friction. \nWithout dContactApprox1, friction opposes motion in a direction\nperpendicular to it's normal by a max of mu. So heavier objects would\ntake longer to slide to a stop than lighter ones.\n\nThere's no easy way to \"invert\" a geom that I know of. You probably just\nwant to define each side of the box with it's own plane.\n\n",
"Here's an idea that might be interesting to add to the collision toolbox:\nprimitive-mapped heightfields. For example, you have a mesh of an arm\nthat kinda halfway looks like a capped cylinder but not really. So you\ntake a capped cylinder, make a function to map it's surface to 2D (i.e.\nthe long axis is x and degrees around it is y). Then you could specify\nheights in terms of 0 = directly on the surface of the primitive, negative\nmeans that many units towards the center, and positive means that many\nunits away from the center (all in body coordinates if I'm clear as mud). \nNothing would happen until an object collided with the surface of the\nprimitive, then the collision system would query the heightfield at that\nx,y coordinate (or you could just do it yourself). This should be a lot\nfaster than generic mesh collisions while still being able to define the\nexact same shape in many instances.\n\nJust a thought,\nP.S. in other news, I would have released the iterative algorithm today if\nI had not have discovered a strange small amount of torque creeping in to\nthe system, seemingly in the friction approximation. I'll try to track\nthis down tomorrow and see if I can get it released. I may release it\ntomorrow anyway so I can get some help finding the problem if it doesn't\nbecome apparent rather quickly.\n\n",
"Right, but as soon as that external force is applied, those bottom joints\nwould become crushed under the weight of the wall.... unless you disabled\ngravity until the wall crumbles, but that has its own problems.\n\nWell, I'll have to think on this one for a while (and get a verlet\nintegrator running at some point), but I see a few problems.... a particle\nmesh is 2D, so you simulate the face of the wall, and have to have\nsomething to stabilize it. There is no feedback for how much force\n(strain) is being placed on this particular constraint, other than how far\noff it is at the end of the iterations, but you could still use that as a\nbreak parameter. I kind of have a feeling that you would end up ripping a\nseam straight up from the impact point, then the rest of the bricks on\neither side would flap around like.... cloth. But I don't know without\ntrying it, and I want to get the iterative solver completed, optimized,\nand integrated before I start on the next tangent.\n\nhttp://graphics.ethz.ch/~muellerm/publications/fracture.pdf if you're\ninterested... Theirs is probably the method I would use at first glance,\nsince deformable bodies are modeled as rigid bodies until they need to\ndeform (or fracture). It would be interesting to be able to shatter glass\nand warp plastic in ODE... There's just not enough hours in a day.\n\n",
"Did you press 'b' to drop a box (plus some other things that get printed\nto the console window after the graphics window starts up)? I know it can\nbe easy to miss those...\n\n"
] |
yICch1slLGWTs4N9@example.com
|
[
"After kernel upgrade, changing brightness takes some seconds and causes system\nslowdown if i try to change more than one level at a time. This problem does\nnot happen in the other kernel packages i have installed(3.16, 4.3). I'm using\nGnome desktop, the problem happens when i try the change through the menu at\nthe top bar and especially if i try using fn keys to do it. If a hold fn+f5 or\nf6 all the way to minimum or maximum, the action causes severe slowdown in the\nsystem making it unusable for some time. I have theses modules installed in all\nthe kernel packages as can be seen below the result of \"dkms status\" command.\n\nbbswitch, 0.8, 3.16.0-4-amd64, x86_64: installed\niosf_mbi\nx86_pkg_temp_thermal\nintel_powerclamp\ncoretemp\nkvm_intel\nkvm\nirqbypass\ncrct10dif_pclmul\nuvcvideo\ncrc32_pclmul\nvideobuf2_vmalloc\nvideobuf2_memops\nvideobuf2_v4l2\nvideobuf2_core\nv4l2_common\nvideodev\nsha256_ssse3\nasus_nb_wmi\nmedia\niTCO_wdt\nasus_wmi\ndrbg\nmxm_wmi\niTCO_vendor_support\nansi_cprng\nefi_pstore\nsnd_hda_codec_hdmi\narc4\nsnd_hda_codec_realtek\nsnd_hda_codec_generic\naesni_intel\nglue_helper\nablk_helper\nath9k\npcspkr\nath9k_hw\nath3k\nevdev\nath\nbtrtl\nbtbcm\nbtintel\nserio_raw\nbluetooth\ni915\nsnd_hda_intel\ni2c_i801\nsnd_hda_codec\nsnd_hda_core\ncfg80211\nsnd_hwdep\nrtsx_pci_ms\nsnd_timer\nrfkill\nmemstick\ndrm\nsnd\nlpc_ich\nmei_me\nsoundcore\ni2c_algo_bit\nshpchp\nint3403_thermal\nwmi\nint3402_thermal\nint3400_thermal\nbattery\nac\nint340x_thermal_zone\nvideo\nacpi_thermal_rel\ntpm_tis\ntpm\nbutton\nprocessor\nfuse\nparport_pc\next4\ncrc16\nmbcache\ncdrom\nsd_mod\nrtsx_pci_sdmmc\nscsi_mod\nmii\nfan\n",
"Everytime i try to see the log of my local development mysql-server through\nmysql-workbench, the app freezes and i have to kill it to close it. mysql-\nserver configuration is the default where the error log is sent to syslog and\nthe other logs are inactive.\n\n\n\nVersions of packages mysql-workbench suggests:\n-- no debconf information"
] |
GjYRkkdErKY650Tu@example.com
|
[
"My apologies if this question has been addressed before:\n\nI'm setting up an IPfilter/NAT router configuration for a Solaris 10\nsystem (192.168.0.1) where hme0 is the internal interface and hme1 is\nthe external Internet interface. I want only one system (192.168.0.5)\nSolaris 10 via ssh however all internal systems need to pass traffic\npass in quick on hme0 from 192.168.0.0/24 to any keep state\n for internal systems Internet access\n\n for a specific system ssh access to the Solaris router\n\nIt seems that by including the first rule that ALL internal systems\nwould have ssh access to the Solaris router which would make the\nsecond rule pointless.\n\nIs there a way to permit all internal systems access to the external\nnetwork but only give one internal system ssh access to the router?\n\n",
"Hey! Thank you very much; that worked!\n\nI honestly thought that the lines\n\nBindsTo=sys-subsystem-net-devices-net1.710.device\nAfter=sys-subsystem-net-devices-net1.710.device\n\nwhich were automatically generated by netctl, would do just that.\n\n",
"Exactly\n\n\nMukund: We use Splunk to analyze the querylogs and we use a regex to drop\nunnecessary data. I had to make the change in our regexes to avoid\nlicensing issues. I did not file a bug report because now that I've made\nthe Splunk config changes, changing it back in the querylog format will\nonce again invalidate my regex.\n\nMy criticism was not with the addition of the new data, but rather it's\nlocation. It seems to me that right after the word \"client\" should come\nclient data (like an IP address or host name), not the memory location for\nthe running process.\n\nThank you, though, for your work on a fantastic piece of software.\n\n"
] |
tSLzLNB7I8qpk+v1@example.com
|
[
"I installed Suse 9.2 Pro 64 bit version and as\nexpected the fonts looked horrible. Then I followed\nthe usual drill: (1) installed freetype2 srpms,\nenabled bytecode interpreter, rebuild the rpm and\nreinstalled it, (2) installed Microsoft true type\nfonts via Yast online update. Everything went fine, I\nhave gorgeous fonts that rival even MS Windows which I\nsee at some people's PCs. However, when I call a 32bit\napplication eg Eclipse, Thunderbird 32bit etc ugliness\ncomes back. But only with the 32 bit applications. The\n64 bits applics are always fine.\n\nI looked into the freetype2 srpm searching for a clue\nas to how to uptade 32bit freetype2 libs with bytecode\nenabled to no success. As a last resort I downloaded\nfreetype2 sources, enabled bytecode and compiled it on\na 32bit machine. Then I copied the directory and\ninstalled the binaries on my 64 bit Suse thereby\nupdating the 32bit freetype2 libs under /usr/lib.\nHowever, this was not successful. But to my surprise\nit did not screw up anything either. \n\nAny suggestions would be greatly appreciated. \n\n\n\t\t\n",
"I ran into the following difficulties when debugging in Eric.\n\n1) I start debugging, all the debugger control buttons become active (step, stop etc..). I select continue and the debugger runs until the first breakpoint. While the debugger runs, the control buttons disappear, and I have to wait until it hits the next breakpoint.\n\nHowever, sometimes a particular code segment takes long to run (by design), and I may want to stop the debugger and start over, or I may want to check some variables in the meantime. I cannot do that as it is. My only option to stop the debugger is to kill the process from the shell.\n\nIf there is a way to do this within eric3 please let me know. Otherwise , I would like to add this to the wish list.\n\n2) Often times during debugging I need to isolate a few variables and follow their progress as I step through the code. As it is I can only filter out the variables I do not want to follow in the debug browser. In order to achieve what I want, I have to devise devilishly clever (or complicated) regular expressions to filter out all but the few I am interested.\n\nIs there a way to negate a regular expression in the debug window ? If so please let me know how I can accomplish that. Otherwise here is another feature request.\n\nPlease add another tab to the debug browser. In this new tab, I should be able to set the name of a variable (say as a regular expression) to add it to an isolated watch list. So the set function would work in the opposite way compared to the current one.\n\nThis feature would be very useful.\n\nThanks for developing this great piece of software.\n\n\t\t\t\n"
] |
tHkOrjZ22jMx6yV6@example.com
|
[
"I just installed the Feb-12 SC7 (Windows)\n\nOn a PC with 2.26 GHz processor and 1GB ram:\n\nMusic Scan Details\nMerge Various Artists (5596 of 5596) Complete 00:01:59 \n\nArtwork Scan (6479 of 6479) Complete 01:34:50 \n\nSqueezeCenter has finished scanning your music collection.02:32:17\nThis was with every other program shut down. The PC was completely\nunresponsive the whole time, with the CPU pegged at 100%. I've got\nartwork imbedded in each file.\n\nAlso, the controller could not fine SqueezeCenter during the\nscan...actually, it still cannot find SC7, so that's probably not a\nscan issue\n\n\n"
] |
wO6ly9hxKVHrWPaV@example.com
|
[
"Thanks. With any luck I'll eventually make something where it does matter.\n\nAh, see it now.\n\n",
"I'm trying to make an html message formatter along the lines of the one in the docs. I've\ngot it working for the most part. One builder is returning back utf-8 encoded logs that\nare causing the formatter to raise an exception when it sets the 'body' in the return dict:\n\nexception.UnicodeDecoderError: 'ascii' codec cant decode byte 0xe2 in position 55: ordinal\nnot in range(128)\n\nI tried making the \\n unicode: u\"\\n\", but that makes no difference. Ideas?\n\n",
"I need a some advice on constructing the tests. On the CVS side of things, my\nbuildbot-cvs-mail script is executed by CVS. Its passed some command line args, forks,\nreads from stdin, and sends a mail via a smtplib.SMTP() connection.\nMaking a full test that goes through the mail server is a bit problematic. I could make\nsimple mock for the 3 smtplib methods that are used and send the results to stdout when\ntesting. I've got driver script sends fake CVS output, though it does not read the mail\ngenerated.\n\nThe buildbot side is more difficult for me. I created a new subsclass of MailDirSource\ncalled BuiltbotCVSMaildirSource. It just implements the parse method.\n\nAt the top of mail.py, I see:\n\n# -*- test-case-name: buildbot.test.test_mailparse -*-\n\nbut don't see a test_mailparse anywhere. Is that just a placeholder?\n\n",
"\tThanks. I worked it out eventually. I'm made a patch to docs. I'm not sure how I should\nsubmit them. I've Attached a diff. This is against 0.8.1\n\nhttp://clk.atdmt.com/CRS/go/247765532/direct/01/\n",
"Should I expect the 'ovals' for the previous builds to be colored in?\n\nHere is what I see:\n\nhttp://imagebin.ca/view/hsS64bH.html\n\nThe top line updates the color to indicate the build status, but the previous builds do not.\n\n",
"\tThat makes sense. I've that while traveling to tunnel into my network. I've found that \nssh can hang or drop the connection fairly regularly. For a long running application like \na buildbot slave, that could make reliability an issue.\n\n\n",
"Thanks. That did it!\n\n"
] |
vrboaNK4eYWNMSB+@example.com
|
[
"Thank yu for the fast answers,\n\nis this \"colour_block_bg\" variable the bit im looking for?\n",
"for a recent project i made a grades file (based on the BCRE-example in \ntherion distribution) for UISv1 specifications (see attachment).\nIt would be a pleasure for me if it is useful to somebody; it would also be \nvery nice if i could get some feedback on it.\n\n\nWith the naming i had the intention that exporting from databases is easily \ndoable. The prefix is \"UISv1_\" followed by the actual grades number.\nI included all the grades to faciliate documentation inside the th-files, so \none can stright export \"-1\" surveys too.\n\n\nFor better archiving and searchability, here is the code reproduced:\ngrade \"UISv1_-1\" -title \"UISv1 ungraded survey without map\"\n# Grade 1: sketch from memory, not to scale\n # 95.44% of readings are within 1.0 degrees (2 S.D.)\n # 95.44% of readings are within 0.25 degrees (2 S.D.)\n# Grade 1: sketch from memory, not to scale\n # 95.44% of readings are within 1.0 degrees (2 S.D.)\n # 95.44% of readings are within 0.25 degrees (2 S.D.)\n",
"Thank you for the fadt reply.\nIf i understand and interpret correctly, the behavior unfolds in the \nfollowing way:\n- when i detect inproper morphing of walls compared to lrud data\n- i place \"extra\" points on my traced wall signature.\n- the extra point position is approximately where the lrud point is assumed \nto be on the wall.\n- when rendering, therion morphes the wall to match the extra point position \nto the corresponding lrud position for that point (which is the nearest \nstation).\n\nThat would imply:\na) there is no use for extra points without lrud data.\nb) extra points reference l+r positions of lrud data of the nearest station, \ntherefore it is not possible to set more than two extra points per station.\n\nIs the above true?\n\n\n\n"
] |
PLybQB+J+yGgvxpX@example.com
|
[
"I'm on the latest firmware, and have also updated to the SC 7.3\nrelease...\n\nThis problem has happened pre and post updating though...\n\n\n"
] |
HbomByVLbCStFkGk@example.com
|
[
"https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=320874\n\nThis bug is confirmed on a second system.\nAlways reproducible!\n\nUsing \"Mark all as read\" in gmail crashes the browser\n\nKubuntu 13.04 +\nKubuntu updates PPA +\nKubuntu backports PPA\n\n",
"https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=304876\n\nafter a fresh install:\n* On the main window, touch the + icon in the Welcome activity\n\nThe window does not respond to touches. It is unclosable. You need to reboot\nthe device to close the window\n\nbehaviour appears related to bug 304875\nbut i reported against the 2 different components\n\n"
] |
n0KFHJZcErcx+yHz@example.com
|
[
"Debian install of what? I thought we were talking about player firmware\n(Radio or Touch).\n\nI guess you mean either LMS or desktop Squeezeplay.\n\nFor Squeezeplay the git revision is in the package filename:\nsqueezeplay_7.8.0~*22901ff*_all.deb.\n\nFor LMS the revision used, in both the filename and as reported via the\nWebUI, etc., is the Unix timestamp of the revision:\nlogitechmediaserver_7.8.0~*133664662*_all.deb. It is not trivial to\ncorrelate this with the git revision-id but it should also not be that\ndifficult.\n\n\n"
] |
92I26RsvnKSSP3Ao@example.com
|
[
"Hope this email find you in best of good health.\n\nWe introduce ourselves as Business Development Manager's a Sub-Company Of quastels Ltd in Uk.We are looking to get a new suppliers on some of your product but first we need to know if you .....\n\n1.You Can ship to United Kingdom or Kingdom of saudi Arabia?\n\n2. Advice on payment terms warranty.\n\n3. Delivery time for F.O.B.\n\nAlso kindly send us your latest catalog and price list as attachment for our study and immediate placement of our Purchase Order.\n\nNote: Pls reply asap direct to my email: (O+FPyrHlo3/H+hVd@example.com) Waiting for your s\n'wift response. \n\nYour early reply will be highly appreciated. \n\n"
] |
dEUS5E7voAayj0fs@example.com
|
[
"Found the problem...the issue that I had was the following: I didn't\nrealize that the webapp that I was trying to change was using a redirect\nservlet in a different project (which didn't implement CometProcessor).\nOnce I disabled the redirect servlet, things started to work...\n\nSo that brings me to my next Comet noob question...the redirect servlet\nin this other project extends HttpServlet and only has an init and\nservice method defined...how do I integrate that with CometProcessor? Do\nI still implement CometProcessor and leave the event method empty? I'll\nstart with trying that first, but wanted to know what people recommend\nbefore I just hack at it...\n\ntry the simplest thing first, upgrade to 6.0.16,\nin terms of your config, you have tcnative-1.dll in your PATH, but you \nhaven't configured the APR connector, you have configured NIO (which \nworks for comet) and the regular blocking (which doesn't work for comet)\n\n\n",
"Just have a quick clarification for those who have done this...if I have\nan xml object that looks like this:\n\n<batch>\n\nI'm trying to parse over this xml and based on the tag and x I want to\ncall a specific function passing it y...\n\n \n\ne.g. if (foo && blee) createObject(2)\n\n \n\nto decode this, would this work? Or am I misunderstanding it?\n\nfor (var tag in parsedNode.batch[0])\n\nI feel as though I am not accessing things correctly...mind sheding some\nlight on how I would parse the info out properly?\n\n\n"
] |
HISkiAcp2i1Vv7qv@example.com
|
[
"This has been solved!\n\nThe fields on the insert must be in caps. Once I did that features now are\ninserting just fine.\n\n"
] |
Ni0xgvp4dBzzPi8w@example.com
|
[
"1. In PPC MMU_init sets up kernel page table for all\nthe physical pages available(say size is A) to the\nvirt address starting from PAGE_OFFSET to\n(PAGE_OFFSET+A).\n\nQuestion: does the linux ever touch this section of\npage table(virt address from PAGE_OFFSET to\nPAGE_OFFSET+A) again? like remove or modify one of the\nentry?\n\n2. In VMALLOC, say we have virt address\nB(B>PAGE_OFFSET+A), sets up the page table entry for\nthis B to any one of the physical pages.\n\nQuestion: For every physical page, it should already\nbe mapped in #1, but vmalloc maps it again to a virt\naddress higher. Does it mean in kernel page table, we\nmay have two PTE entries pointing to the same physical\npage, even their virt addresses are different?\n\nLast question:\nIf this is true, is this platform implemention\nspecific? Does i386 implemention have same situation?\n\n"
] |
wzmYdAxtLWyS6bWy@example.com
|
[
"I am looking for a replacement for MS Visio? I want to be able to do \nsome box drawings and basic maps and designs similar to what visio can do!\n\nWith my move for a linux desktop rather than what I was used to in the \npast for just servers, I am having to see if I can source some \nalternatives for some fairly handy software packages.\n\n"
] |
p/BrV2uLdIt2wOq6@example.com
|
[
"Try setting the -appConnTimeout and -startDelay options. \n\nI have few lengthly processes in my application, and I'm getting fastcgi\ntimeout after 30 seconds.\n\n From apache log:\n\nFastCGI: comm with (dynamic) server\nI tried to set timeout in apache conf by:\n\n<IfModule>\nbut nothing changes.\n\nWhat I,m missing?\nWhere could I set fastcgi timeout to be a little longer?\n\n",
"Thank you for this great work. I have just tried the acts_as_taggable\nlib with the just released gem but I encounter a problem with\nPostrgesql. The generated SQL code when using find_tagged_with :all is\nsimilar to this:\n\n\tSELECT bookmarks.* FROM tags_bookmarks, bookmarks, tags\n WHERE tags_bookmarks.tag_id = tags.id\nThis code is rejected under Postgres with the cause being that GROUP BY\nforces the SELECT part to only reference columns that appear in the\nGROUP BY clause or columns with an aggregate function applied. Here, we\ntry to select all columns but only the bookmark.id column appears in the\nGROUP BY.\nThis code would also be invalid under Oracle.\n\nA valid version in Postgres/Oracle would be something like this:\n\t\n\tSELECT bookmarks.*\nI hope this helps.\n"
] |
BOI+YzF+v9vKRIqj@example.com
|
[
"For me, *THE* benefit to using dbpoweramp's converter is that it allows\nyou to delete the original file after the conversion. When converting\na large number of files like this, this can be important unless your\nSHN files are only filling up half your disc.\n\nIt's not exactly intuitive - you add a DSP action to the conversion\nwhich is called \"delete\" or something like that.\n\nIn order to get this capability, you have to pay for the base\ndbpoweramp package, which is quite reasonable. Short of writing a\nscript to do the conversion, this is the only tool that I could find\nthat would allow you to delete the files as they are being converted.\n\nYou may feel you shouldn't have to pay for a conversion program, but\nfor a small amount of money, you get a really great program. It is\ntruely the swiss army knife for managing digital music files of all\ntypes.\n\n\nSqueezeCenter 7.2.1 (7.3 had dropouts for me) and SqueezeSlave. \nMusicIP has been turned off temporarily while I move to a lossless\nversion of my library.\nhttp://www.last.fm/user/maggior\n"
] |
1kbgvaJC2iTzFwvl@example.com
|
[
"I'm using the URL Fetch api to connect to webservice in my app.\nWhen configuring the connection, I'm doing this :\nHttpURLConnection conn = ...\nA timeout of 0 is infinite with the standard HttpURLConnection of Java, but \nhow is it used in appengine ?\n\nDoc say the timeout use is the connect timeout + the read timeout.\nSo, is it 60000+0 = 60s, or 60000+infinite = max timeout = 60s ?\nIf I set the connect timeout to 40000 and the read timeout to 0, the total \ntimeout is 40s or 60s ?\n\n",
"I opened the issue 6603 for that problem : \nhttps://code.google.com/p/googleappengine/issues/detail?id=6603\n\n"
] |
HmA97NC7OMgh71Yq@example.com
|
[
"Express herbals promise you an increase in your size or money back http://www.oiejena.com/\n\n\n"
] |
fwa8jnRrbJUqAHCw@example.com
|
[
"android does not support C++ iostream, string and STL\n\n",
"in development/pdk/ndk, i found that android support repack the apk\nfile manually. shall we support to do it automatically?\n\nfor example, developer can make a new dir in res/ with the name which\nandroid can not identify, such as abc/. once the application passes\nthe compilation and apk is made, that dir will appear in /data/data/\npackagename/ after the apk is installed. that is /data/data/\ncurrently, we can repack the apk file with our jni lib, if the lib is\nput into lib/armeabi. i hope this process could be automatically.\n\nanother issue: can android support put the armeabi and x86 lib into\none apk? i hope 1 apk can support arm or x86 system simultaneously.",
"maybe google does not like gstreamer's license...\n\nand i do not like glib either.\n\n"
] |
3e3kCjmhNrzwfBA+@example.com
|
[
"For safe drinking water project we are doing investment of 50 lac per district in Rajasthan, M.P and Maharastra. Any one belonging to following states can get in touch for details if intersted to put water purification plants. \n\n\n"
] |
Q6INWU7qteupYSGU@example.com
|
[
"Clear. w.w.w-e.x.d.i.s.p.l.a.y.k.i.t.c.h.e.n.s.1-c.o-u.k. .£ \n5.9.5. Each with appliances."
] |
CAnaVQYC4sbOuCet@example.com
|
[
" I deploy hadoop cluster use two machine.one as a namenode,and the other be used a datanode.\r\n\r\n My namenode machine hostname is namenode1,and datanode machine hostname is datanode1.\r\n\r\n when I use command ./start-all.sh on namenode1,the console display below string,\r\n\r\nand use jps show java processs,display below string,\r\n\r\nand ssh datanode1,use comman jps,display below somethins strings\r\n\r\nso,the datanode can't run,and I find logs \r\n\r\n Next, what should I do to solve this problem。\r\n\r\n\r\n"
] |
1Za7Xbet5PDJllr+@example.com
|
[
"+1\n\n",
"AFAIK UIViewRoot#setTransient(true) is defined in the specs.\nMaybe they implemented more features dependent on this flag, don't know.\nSomeone should check there code :)\n\n",
"the last days i've tried to optimize the startup of our dev environment.\nThe first thing i found to optimize, is to move the annotation scanning to\nCDI and also disable the JSF Managed Bean handling.\nWe could introduce a new flag (o.a.m.DISABLE_MANAGED_BEAN_SUPPORT) to\ndisable Managed Beans and we could improve our performance in 3 parts of\nMyFaces.\n\n\n1) Startup\n\nI already implemented a AnnotationProvider for CDI:\n\nOWB Startup with the new scanning Extension: 3465ms\nOWB Startup without the Extension: 3422ms\n\nMyFaces with default scanning: 3109ms\nAverage Performance improvement on startup: 772ms\n\n\n\n2) Disable PreDestroy handling on Managed beans\n See: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-3250\n\n\n\n3) Skip registering of the ManagedBeanResolver\n\n\n\nWDYT?\nI would take care of it for trunk if there are no objections.\n\n",
"AFAIR mvn clirr:clirr\n\n",
"(OffTopic: if you would like to release today, please give me ~3-4 hours, i\nprobably found a bug but not sure now. Will come back)\n\n",
"all right!\nI would also like to cleanup some code in the new branch (unused stuff,\ncommented very old code and else...)\nCan i do that? What about code in the \"shared\" project? It it also used in\nother projects?\nReally, i like to quality and performance of myfaces but the code really\nneeds a little bit cleanup in some places.\n\nyep, we should consider this in some months.\n\n",
"sounds fine! thanks :)\n\n\n",
"View:\nPF receives the Expression String via:\nIf it should work inside a CC, we must receive \"#{cc.attrs.pdfStream}\"\ninstead of \"#{cc.attrs.pdfStream}\".\n\nHow can get the real expression here?\n\n",
"i did a small review:\n\n1) Why you don't use @Inject for the FlowBuilderCDIExtension in the\nFlowBuilderFactoryBean?\n2) Why do you use CopyOnWriteArrayList? ArrayList should be fine as the\nboth lists are AppScoped and should only be used on startup.\n\n\n\n",
"+1\n\n\n",
"I think we should align myfaces here. A issue + patch would be great.\n\n",
"+1 for a cleanup of the import packages\nAlso the ranges of EL or Servlet needs an update\n\n\n",
"Ok, seems like @PostConstruct of a @ManagedBean isn't called anymore.\n\nSeems like the ManagedBean is instantiated correctly, the\n@ManagedProperty's are resolved but @PostConstruct isn't called.\nManagedBeanBuilder ln213 calls the LifecycleProvider2 to do the\n@PostConstruct but nothing happens.\n\nAny idea why a Tomcat7LifecycleProvider is used when running with\nmvn-jetty? As InstanceManager\nhttp://grepcode.com/file/repo1.maven.org/maven2/org.apache.tomcat/tomcat-api/8.0.12/org/apache/tomcat/SimpleInstanceManager.java\nis used, which really does nothing.\nShould this work? I wonder how did this ever work?\nTried it again and faced the same problem with MF2.2 now....\n\n\n",
"from the performance perspective, it's a great feature. 8% and more are\nreally much.\nOn the other hand, i thought it would be more improvement (like 15-20%).\n\nI don't know about the maintenance effort, maybe it would be better to\nsearch optimizations in other places.\n\n",
"I see Romain. It should work for the first button...\nYou could try to add execute=\"@this\" but it should work without, too.\n\n",
"Feel free to implement something and provide a PR!\n\n<https://www.avast.com/sig-email?utm_medium=email&utm_source=link&utm_campaign=sig-email&utm_content=webmail>\nVirenfrei.\n<#DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2>\n\nVirenfrei.\n",
"+1\n\n",
"",
"thats probably in LocationValueExpression#location\n\n",
"+1\n\nwhat about https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-3587 ?\nAny way to solve this?\n\n",
"1) it's necessary\n2) Just use google... It's a EL Implementation\n\n\n",
"",
"Just replaced the embedded-maven-plugin version now and added a CDI\nExtension to my app:\nhttps://gist.github.com/tandraschko/70ab9fb3c9758ee4a3d7d8a257596ea2\n\nTomEE8:\nTomEE7:\nThe difference is really big.\n\n",
"+1\n",
"JFYI about switching from index-loop to for-each:\nhttps://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-3130\nAs the posted example is a array, there should be no drawback when\nswitching to for-each.\n\n",
"Issue created -> https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/MYFACES-3709\n\n\n",
"we currently have a issue in PrimeFaces Extensions:\nhttps://github.com/primefaces-extensions/primefaces-extensions.github.com/issues/381\n\nLets say, i do a findComponent and i expect a UIInput but the component is\na composite, how can i \"unwrap\" the composite get the UIInput?\nIs there a way to get the referenced component of cc:editableValueHolder?\nIs it possible in the JSF or just via hacks?\n\n"
] |
zCLYgD9k9JmfFCCK@example.com
|
[
"Michael, Do you agree that destroying the ipoib_neighs \nand that there is no need to do that just before calling to unregister_netdev() ?\n\n",
"ib_ipoib can still be unloaded even when bonding is used (it is just that bonding\nshould be removed first).\nAbout hotplug: it is still working well and correct me if I'm wrong but my way to test \nhotplug is to unload ib_mthca which is not affected by the presence of bonding.\n\nAs I said, I would be happy to share the work on bonding and get reviews about it but \nI still think that this patch alone can be a first step.\nWell, what happens with bonding and IPoIB speaks for itself, doesn't it?\nIf I can unload a module that is being referenced from the outside then\nI am not protected by the kernel from doing something wrong.",
"Can you add this patch to kernel_patches/fixes please?\nPlease note that this patch breaks one of the backport patches: ipoib_8111_to_2_6_16.patch.\nI adapted the broken patch so it can be applied after the bonding patch. \nI tested that it works for RH4UP3. You can take it from below.\n\n\n",
"I prefer to postpone it till I submit another version of the patches or\ntill after the patches are merged. Anyway, I've added this to the TODO list.\n\n",
"It seems like a beta of RHEL5. Am I right?\n",
"Roland acked the IPoIB patches. If you haven't done so already can you please apply them?\nI'm not sure when 2.6.24 is going to open and I'm afraid to miss it.\n\n",
"IPoIB uses a two layer neighboring scheme, such that for each struct neighbour\nwhose device is an ipoib one, there is a struct ipoib_neigh buddy which is\ncreated on demand at the tx flow by an ipoib_neigh_alloc(skb->dst->neighbour)\ncall.\n\nWhen using the bonding driver, neighbours are created by the net stack on behalf\nof the bonding (master) device. On the tx flow the bonding code gets an skb such\nthat skb->dev points to the master device, it changes this skb to point on the\nslave device and calls the slave hard_start_xmit function.\n\nUnder this scheme, ipoib_neigh_destructor assumption that for each struct\nneighbour it gets, n->dev is an ipoib device and hence netdev_priv(n->dev)\ncan be casted to struct ipoib_dev_priv is buggy.\n\nTo fix it, this patch adds a dev field to struct ipoib_neigh which is used\ninstead of the struct neighbour dev one, when n->dev->flags has the\nIFF_MASTER bit set.\n\n",
"IPoIB turns on the P_Key membership bit of limited membership P_Keys\nwhen creating a child interface. After that IPoIB looks for the full\nmembership P_key in the table to make the interface \"RUNNING\". This \npatch fixes the pkey lookup in order to match full and partial membership \nkeys that belong of the same partition.\n\n"
] |
UcCfwavj3CgRvjuv@example.com
|
[
"Seu cliente de e-mail não pode ler este e-mail.\nPara visualizá-lo on-line, por favor, clique aqui:\nhttp://cadastros-copa02.tk/display.php?M=1351575&C=f3d456e3e511d4f5c3e6f5833d926dc9&S=23&L=7&N=3\n\n\nPara parar de receber nossos\nhttp://p.sf.net/sfu/hpccsystems\n",
"Seu cliente de e-mail não pode ler este e-mail.\nPara visualizá-lo on-line, por favor, clique aqui:\nhttp://cadastros-copa02.tk/display.php?M=8355462&C=569d6622b65fb505bf5750312aa92f88&S=43&L=35&N=9\n\n\nPara parar de receber nossos\n",
"Seu cliente de e-mail não pode ler este e-mail.\nPara visualizá-lo on-line, por favor, clique aqui:\nhttp://cadastros-copa02.tk/display.php?M=1423546&C=49a0bb8b9f59c0caea88cc882be5b23a&S=11&L=7&N=2\n\n\nPara parar de receber nossos\nEmails:http://cadastros-copa02.tk/unsubscribe.php?M=1423546&C=49a0bb8b9f59c0caea88cc882be5b23a&L=7&N=11\n\n"
] |
NeNaWCmw/GL1PFxx@example.com
|
[
"Aha. You're interpreting the test results incorrectly. (You must be\nthinking that a high percentage is good...in fact a high percentage\nmeans something very different here) The log you posted indicates that\nyou can't distinguish between the lossy and lossess tracks. You would\nwant to see a % (p-value) of, say, 5% or less. But I'd be impressed with\neven 10% or less. bottom line, the results you posted indicate that you\ncan't distinguish between the lossy and lossless file. More info on\ninterpreting the ABX test here:\n\nhttp://www.hydrogenaudio.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=16295 \n\na little on p-values and testing:\nhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P-value\n\n\n"
] |
gGiTi2Ct+W0V+D2b@example.com
|
[
"I solved this only by installing sth. like\nnetfilter or ipchains....\n\n"
] |
fIHXvkSkst5SSapu@example.com
|
[
"Hey, I thought programming was all about the shortcuts ;-)\n\nI'm sorry to not be clear. I've done several excellent python + \npostgresql tutorials, but the one I have not found is wxPython + \npostgresql (or any database).\n\nSpecifically, how would you take your sql results and set the values of \nyour wxTextCtrls and wxListCtrls? For example if the sql select \nstatement returns 20 fields the function would find the wxPython \ncontrols with the same name and set their values.\n\nAnd how would you build a sql statement with only the wxPython controls \nthat have been modified by the user? So if only the address field was \nmodified the sql would be: UPDATE table1 SET address = '123 Easy Street' \nWHERE rec_id = 1\n\n"
] |
ym1Chx+DltvA/zcj@example.com
|
[
"I uploaded ASL <http://asl.org.il> to:\n\nssh://git.debian.org/git/debian-science/packages/asl.git\n\n(for some reason I can't see it on\nhttp://anonscm.debian.org/cgit/debian-science/asl.git/ \n\nI created it once according to Debian-Med guide then removed and created\naccording the Debian-Science guide...)\n\nPlease, let me know, whether it lacks anything...\n\n",
"I have a program that works fine in Linux but has following error in\nWindows: Error: ChoosePixelFormat failed. (see attached screenshot).\nWhat could it be?\n\nthank you in advance!\n\n",
"So maybe we should create the initial package for Debian stable and then\nupgrade it for unstable (probably the diff will be minimal)? I might be\nwrong, but I think that all those problems with indirect dependencies\nmight postpone the upload, but they should not affect the content of the\npackage. Thats why I suggest to create the package for stable (which can\nbe done now) and then wait until the problems with indirect dependencies\nsettle down. Who knows, maybe it will happen in sync with us finalizing\nthe initial package...\n\n",
"I have following thread initialization routine:\n\non the first call of the function that has that code everything works\nok, but on the second call - it enters the else statment and says\nwhat is wrong?"
] |
UfuDJ/BBC4qhkx82@example.com
|
[
"TOLDOS FACHADAS E LUMINOSOS\n\nAlign Toldos e Fachadas\n\nGarantia do melhor preço e parcelamos\n\nfoto011.jpg\n\nSaiba mais »\naform.gif\n\nImage - Divider\nGarantia de Menor Preço, Cobrimos a Oferta da Concorrência\n\n\n\nSaiba mais »\n\nImage - Divider\nClique aqui para deixar de receber estes e-mails\n\nClique neste link para ser removido:\nhttp://bomretirotoldos.com.br/unsubscribe.php?M=971090&C=b3be23a1244fa7e0aa0fc41e1d253b04&L=5&N=13\n\n",
"Seu cliente de e-mail não pode ler este e-mail.\nPara visualizá-lo on-line, por favor, clique aqui:\nhttp://bomretirotoldos.com.br/display.php?M=2219101&C=87c9ef508c67000d4a79eeacf8b7ffa0&S=18&L=9&N=4\n\n\nPara parar de receber nossos\nCode Sight - the same software that powers the world's largest code\nsearch on Ohloh, the Black Duck Open Hub! Try it now.\n"
] |
Z3/xS96bKsqvqjpS@example.com
|
[
"What if you redirect to a chrome-extension URL to serve the resource from\nyour extension?\n\nThe API you describe is more heavyweight than what we have currently. I\nworry that relying on the extension that heavily for resources would be\nslow, and unnecessary for most use cases.\n\n",
"Good point, I hadn't considered that. This is similar to Drew's point about\na systray API.\n\nI wonder if read-only access to localStorage will be confusing to authors.\nWould localStorage start off empty (and have no persistence) as it does in\nregular renderers, then? I think read-only access to localStorage is\nideally they would share settings without the extension explicitly\nsupporting it.\n\n",
"IMO, pushing obscure settings into the extension system is a mistake. If we\nwanted to make this a setting, we should find a place in the UI for it.\n\nThere are two arguments against having user configurable settings:\n1. It complicates the code base to have multiple options and requires\nadditional testing. Maintenance burden, etc.\n2. We want simple UI.\n\n#1 is certainly not solved by moving options to extensions. If anything, it\nmakes it worse. Extension-controlled options are more complicated than a\nChrome-controlled user preference.\n\n#2 is solved for the default case, at the cost of making the configured\ncase more difficult and hard to discover (have to know about, find, and\ninstall a separate extension).\n\n",
"nit: I'd prefer getTabs instead of getTabContents.\n\n",
"You need to move your script to a separate file, and use <script\nsrc=\"thatfile.js\"> to source it in your html file. See\nhttps://developer.chrome.com/trunk/extensions/contentSecurityPolicy.html#JSExecution\n\n\n",
"I commented on the code review, but in short, you're right on both counts.\n\n\n",
"I've shared an item with you:\n\nhttps://docs.google.com/a/chromium.org/document/d/1wIKL38oHaprLz_3GmiKWbt9A1T-Kc-C-MLMY18cHsQg/edit\n\nIt's not an attachment -- it's stored online at Google Docs. To open this \ndocument, just click the link above.\n\nThis is a proposal for a new security feature for Chrome extensions. \nFeedback is welcome.\n\n",
"You can't embed Chrome extensions (.crx files). You can only embed NPAPI\nplugins. These are two different\nbeasts. CRX files must be manually installed by the user - embed\nwon't download them for you.\n\n",
"I think the only person that has a definitive answer is on extended leave.\nBut if you're sure the class is never instantiated, and it doesn't break any\ntests* to remove it, then I say give it a shot.\n\n* obviously, tests that explicitly test this class are exempted\n\n",
"This seems like yet another case where we should follow the google3 style\nguide, which allows it. Unless people have Chromium-specific objections.\n\n",
"Currently, no. But we're working on an optional permissions feature. You\ncan track the progress here:\nhttp://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=84507\n\n\n",
"Not so fast :). That part shouldn't matter. The part I'm talking about is:\n\n",
"We only expose the extension bindings for pages with URLs of the form\n\"chrome-extension://*\". See chrome/renderer/render_thread.cc and search for\nRegisterExtension. The (unfortunately named) v8 extension mechanism is how\nthe bindings get added.\n\n",
"I couldn't reproduce the issue. I don't believe the all_frames change has\nmade it to the dev channel yet, so it could still be the frames issue. If\nyou wrap your content script in\ndoes that solve the problem?\n\n",
"I'm not sure whether case #2 should continue to work or not. Could you file\na bug about it? http://crbug.com/ . Include as much detail as you can. CC\nme, and I'll try to route it to someone who would know.\n\n\n",
"I am. I actually do successfully switch between branches and work on\nmultiple different CLs at once (or single changes that span multiple CLs),\nso maybe my setup will be useful to you. I use 2 main tricks that make life\nless painful than the \"obvious\" git workflow.\n\n\nTrick 1: use a separate machine (or at least a separate checkout) as commit\nqueue.\n\nMy configuration:\n- Windows box with Cygwin and git. Single checkout. This is my main dev\nmachine.\n- Linux box with git. Single checkout. This is my commit-queue machine (and\ndev machine for linux-specific work). I send all my reviews and commit the\nfinal result from this machine.\n\n- When I start a new CL, I check out a fresh branch on my windows box based\non the origin:\n- I work on it for a while, committing as I go. When I'm ready to send for\nreview, I log in to my linux box and grab the CL into a clean branch there,\n- Now I have to wait for review, so I can start a new CL on my windows box:\nThe advantage of using a separate machine as a commit queue is that I can\nswitch between branches on the commit-queue without worrying about updating\nfilestamps and having to rebuild on my dev machine. I have to switch\nbranches much more often when sending things up for review and/or\ncommitting. (You could also accomplish the same with a separate checkout on\nthe same machine, but this has the additional advantage that I can test that\nit builds on linux too.)\n\n\nTrick 2: Switching branches on the dev machine.\n\nSwitching branches on the dev machine is tricky. You want to avoid running\ngclient sync as much as possible. You also want to avoid switching to a\nreally old branch, since it'll touch a ton of files that you'll have to\nrebuild. To illustrate my point, consider this workflow:\nbe touched and have to be rebuilt. To avoid that, create a new branch based\non origin and just merge in bar's changes:\nwill be touched, and there will be much less rebuilding. I've set up a git\n",
"I saw this today too. I ran \"cd third_party/WebKit && git fetch && git\nmerge origin\", and that seemed to fix it.\n\n\n"
] |
M5UN6JHGKHzklmCN@example.com
|
[
"Компания \"АДМ\" предлагает Вам услуги по комплексной \nавтоматизации деятельности фирмы на платформе \n 1С :Предприятие 7.7 / 8.0. \n Директору \n\t \n В нашем лице Вы найдете надежного и компетентного партнера в решении вопросов постановки и автоматизации управленческого учета. \n Для решения Ваших задач будут назначены только профессиональные сотрудники, имеющие большой опыт в решении управленческих задач. \n Мы разработаем для Вас комплекс грамотных и понятных отчетов, позволяющих оперативно принимать верные решения. \n Также мы предлагаем Вам решение, позволяющее Вам осуществлять контроль за деятельностью Вашей компании из любой точки планеты, где есть Интернет. \n Руководителю отдела продаж \n\t \n Понимая важность задач, поставленных перед руководителем отдела продаж, мы хотим предложить Вам весь наш опыт в эффективном решении таких вопросов, как: \n учет бонусов и з/ п менеджеров, ценообразования и расчет себестоимости, учет оплат и кредитный контроль, настройка партионного учета, учет взаимоотношений с крупными сетевыми клиентами, учет затрат и дополнительных расходов Бухгалтеру \n\t \n Мы возьмем на себя своевременное обновление Ваших баз данных, у нас всегда есть последние версии отчетности и конфигураций. Система сдачи отчетности в налоговую через Интернет. \n Для облегчения Вашей работы мы разработаем систему переноса документов из торговой базы, тем самым сократив повторный ручной ввод документов. \n Звоните нам: тел. / 4 9 5 / 642 0714, 465 7721\n Мы уверены, что будем полезны Вашему бизнесу. \n С уважением, коллектив \"АДМ Оптима\" \n \n\n"
] |
i72nwfHug88j3mEI@example.com
|
[
"\tThanks for the information. I assume that for changes 2) and 3) you \nimplemented something like:\n\nand that if the column type were int, you could use a numeric index (and \nloop from (say) 0 to a variable called $upper_limit).\n\n http://bio.indiana.edu/~cryo\n\n"
] |
YyUK2xTajiAdzr7I@example.com
|
[
"- an applicaton from 3.0 to 4.0.\n",
"",
"",
"+# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n\n+# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n\n+# You may obtain a copy of the License at\n\n+# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n\n+# distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n\n",
" - \t enabled in the TableColumnModel, and rendering of the table itself is left \n 1.3 +5 -3 jakarta-tapestry/examples/Workbench/context/WEB-INF/Table.page\n \n - <!-- The next two columns are returned by the Java code as ITableColumn -->\n",
"",
"(TAPESTRY-467, TAPESTRY-480, TAPESTRY-484)\n\n",
"",
" Table features.\n \n 1.1 jakarta-tapestry/examples/Workbench/context/WEB-INF/LocaleSelection.properties\n \n",
" ApplicationServlet.could-not-locate-engine=Could not locate an engine to service this request.\n ActionService.context-parameters=Service action requires either three or four service contect parameters.\n 1.1 jakarta-tapestry/framework/src/org/apache/tapestry/util/ContentType.java\n \n * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions\n *\n * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in\n * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the\n * distribution.\n *\n * 3. The end-user documentation included with the redistribution,\n * if any, must include the following acknowledgment:\n * \"This product includes software developed by the\n * Apache Software Foundation (http://apache.org/).\"\n * if and wherever such third-party acknowledgments normally appear.\n * must not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this\n * software without prior written permission. For written\n * permission, please contact pdLfuO6ByYGKZJeM@example.com.\n * name, without prior written permission of the Apache Software Foundation.\n * SUCH DAMAGE.\n * This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many\n * individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more\n * information on the Apache Software Foundation, please see\n * <http://www.apache.org/>.\n * the mime type, the character set, and other parameters.\n * This is similar to a number of other implementations of the same concept in JAF, etc.\n 1.1 jakarta-tapestry/framework/src/org/apache/tapestry/util/LocalizedResource.java\n \n * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions\n *\n * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in\n * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the\n * distribution.\n *\n * 3. The end-user documentation included with the redistribution,\n * if any, must include the following acknowledgment:\n * \"This product includes software developed by the\n * Apache Software Foundation (http://apache.org/).\"\n * if and wherever such third-party acknowledgments normally appear.\n * must not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this\n * software without prior written permission. For written\n * permission, please contact pdLfuO6ByYGKZJeM@example.com.\n * name, without prior written permission of the Apache Software Foundation.\n * SUCH DAMAGE.\n * This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many\n * individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more\n * information on the Apache Software Foundation, please see\n * <http://www.apache.org/>.\n package org.apache.tapestry.util;\n \n 1.1 jakarta-tapestry/framework/src/org/apache/tapestry/util/LocalizedPropertySource.java\n \n * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions\n *\n * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.\n * notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in\n * the documentation and/or other materials provided with the\n * distribution.\n *\n * 3. The end-user documentation included with the redistribution,\n * if any, must include the following acknowledgment:\n * \"This product includes software developed by the\n * Apache Software Foundation (http://apache.org/).\"\n * if and wherever such third-party acknowledgments normally appear.\n * must not be used to endorse or promote products derived from this\n * software without prior written permission. For written\n * permission, please contact pdLfuO6ByYGKZJeM@example.com.\n * name, without prior written permission of the Apache Software Foundation.\n * SUCH DAMAGE.\n * This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many\n * individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more\n * information on the Apache Software Foundation, please see\n * <http://www.apache.org/>.\n * capability of searching for localized versions of the desired property.\n * of more specific to more general and returns the first that has a value. \n while (generator.more())\n",
"",
" - establish default parameter values\n - establish inherited bindings\n and parameters can no longer be both required and have a default value \n \n PR: 26395 Inherited parameters do not pick up default values \n \n",
"and ImageSubmit with a deferred listener parameter 'action'.\n\n",
"",
" rather than the old digester-1.4\n \n 1.18 +3 -2 jakarta-tapestry/eclipse/Tapestry-Vlib.launch\n \n 1.11 +29 -118 jakarta-tapestry/eclipse/Tapestry-Workbench.launch\n \n 1.7 +3 -2 jakarta-tapestry/eclipse/Tapestry-Basic.launch\n \n",
"IE and Firefox do indeed behave stangely with Unicode character\n\nin the range 128-159. Those characters are now quoted as a result.\n\n",
" 1.1 jakarta-tapestry/framework/src/scripts/TestFor.xml\n \n Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the \"License\");\n you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.\n You may obtain a copy of the License at\n \n http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0\n \n Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software\n distributed under the License is distributed on an \"AS IS\" BASIS,\n WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.\n See the License for the specific language governing permissions and\n limitations under the License.\n <mock-test>\n Do not show this\n Do not show this either\n But show this too!\n Do not show form text\n Do not show this form text either\n But show this form text too!\n",
"",
""
] |
66skGr2o51p/5sEY@example.com
|
[
"Szczerze to polecam po prostu gedit, działa szybko, a odpowiedni zestaw\nwtyczek czyni z niego solidny IDE, oczywiście obowiązkowo należy podpiąć\nterminal. \n\n"
] |
4AwTvpG4Gb+thr2g@example.com
|
[
"I am not able to start the openNMS server by running the following command:\n\nOpennms.bat start.\n\nIt is throwing the following exception while starting HTTP server.\n\nAfter the complete startup process if I try to open the URL http://localhost:8980/opennms\n\nI am getting \"SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE\" message.\n\nRequesting your kind help for the resolution of this error.\n\nLooking forward for your response.\n\n"
] |
UfUaB8ShxEEndveo@example.com
|
[
"",
"What is the problem? \n\n",
"I am doing a project to decouple the business domain (entities) from \npersistence mapping, by converting annotations to XML. Doctrine:orm:convert \ngenerally works fine, but I encounter some issues when converting mapped \nsuperclass hierarchies, and I am looking for an answer to a related \nquestion:\n\n1. The resulting XML mapping gets a table attribute defined in the \n<mapped-superclass> element (<mapped-superclass \nname=\"\\Some\\Abstract\\SuperClass\" table=\"SuperClass\" /> This is unexpected \nbecause a mapped superclass is a non-entity\n2. Field mappings defined in annotations in the superclass are not \ngenerated in XML\n\nAre those two issues expected behaviour or bugs? If those are bugs I'll be \nhappy to open tickets for them :)\n\nThe related question I have is what mappings can be defined on the mapped \nsuperclass that will be correctly inherited by the concrete subclasses? I \nhave property mappings (@ORM\\Column), but also @ORM\\UniqueConstraint, \n@ORM\\Index and @ORM\\Id annotations. I'd love to be able to define them in \nthe mapped superclass XML as much as possible so they can be inherited by \nthe subclass entities.\n\n\nSuprisingly enough traits with mapped properties seem to be handled \ncorrectly: the property mappings appear in the generated XML for the \nentities using the traits. This seems to be correct under the assumption \nthat traits cannot have their own XML mapping.\n\n\n",
"I am doing a project to decouple business domain (entities) from \npersistence mapping, by converting annotations to XML. \nwhen converting mapped superclass hierarchies, and I am looking for an \nanswer to a related question:\n\n \n\n1. The resulting XML mapping gets a table attribute defined in the \n<mapped-superclass> element (<mapped-superclass \nname=\"\\Some\\Abstract\\SuperClass\" table=\"SuperClass\" /> This is unexpected \nbecause a mapped superclass is a non-entity\n\n2. Field mappings defined in annotations in the superclass are not \ngenerated in XML\n\n \n\nAre those two issues expected behaviour or bugs? If those are bugs I'll be \nhappy to open tickets for them :)\n\n \n\nThe related question I have is what mappings can be defined on the mapped \nsuperclass that will be correctly inherited by the concrete subclasses? I \nhave property mappings (@ORM\\Column), but also @ORM\\UniqueConstraint, \n@ORM\\Index and @ORM\\Id annotations. I'd love to be able to define them in \nthe mapped superclass XML as much as possible so they can be inherited by \nthe subclass entities.\n\n \n\nSuprisingly enough traits with mapped properties seem to be handled \ncorrectly: the property mappings appear in the generated XML for the \nentities using the traits. This seems to be correct under the assumption \nthat traits cannot have their own XML mapping.\n\n \n\n"
] |
hfawJv1R++Xfcuz5@example.com
|
[
"http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=87436 \nWhen using multicolumn view modem on Konqueror names are always truncated. Seems like option \"WordWrapText\" in .kde/share/config/konquerorrc doesn't affect this as supposed.\n\nAs a note, icon text's \"number of lines\" is set to a value greater than 1.",
"http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=80899 \n\n\n\n\nThe commented workaround in #12 doesn't work when using minimum icon size.\n\nRight now the behaviour is the worst possible I guess... :(",
"http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=79932 \n\n\n\n\nThis new behaviour is a real PITA, maybe adding gui config would be a real overconfigurability. \n\nBut just make a sane default, not this mega wide spacing ;)",
"Just related to konqueror:\n\n- flash doesn't show on konqueror \n- crashes on some webpages, not too much at all ;)\n- some html rendering bugs\n\nIt's cvs (right now in beta stage), but overall it works quite well if\nyou don't mind this little quirks. \n\n",
"http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=63770 \nIt would be fine to have an option for not adding m3u (and other) playlists on my defined directories to the playlist's list. This way I shouldn't have to remove them after restarting the app.\n\nIt's great to have the option of adding dirs for initial scan, but it's a PIA when these m3u files re-appear on the playlists' list every time I restart juk."
] |
lKLw+exxZ0Zof50J@example.com
|
[
"Many thanks for your swift help -I think the mp3tag software will do\nthe trick - it looks quite whizzy! Having known next to nothing about\ntagging a couple of hours ago - that makes it seem quite easy!\nThe other tags are there....just the artist that is missing...so I\nreckon it will be quicker to just go through all of what I've ripped\nalready & add the artist names in the appropriate box...then I can keep\nthe year, genre etc.\nAny ideas how I get EAC/FLAC to add the artist tag for the rest of my\nripping future!!???\nI looked at the EAC link - many thanks - which is how I set it up\noriginally (I think)..except I am using compression 8 rather than 6.\n\n\n"
] |
IkfG4Ylf7enwFGq5@example.com
|
[
"That would be cool!\n\nBye, Ti\"I want it!\"no.",
"Maybe a note should be put onto the voting page - like \"Remember that\nthis splash screen will be shown to a lot of users, many of whon are not\ncomputer freaks or experts. Therefore, the splash screen should be\nworthy a respectable image manipulation app.\". \n\nJust randomize them - use a seed value based on the nickname so that the\npage looks the same every time.\n\nMy k.o. criteria:\n- just a photo\n- screenshot with OS-specifics (e.g. window decoration)\n- advocacy\n\nMirrors, anyone? Votes are easy to add...\n\nACK. The voting pages should close automatically (and communicate this\nclearly).\n\n",
"So it might make sense not to interleave tiles but let each thread start\non another region of the image, like this (for 4 threads)\n\nSo each of the threads works on \"it's own\" memory at first and only when\nit finished it's region, it will get tiles from the remaining work. Some\nbinary-search like algorithm could be used like this:\n\n- figure out largest remaining part of the image (at start, it's the\nwhole image)\n- let x be the number of idle threads\n- if starting up, \n divide into x regions\n divide into x+1 regions\n assign idle threads the x+1st, x-th, x-1st etc. region (this\n leaves the first to the thread currently processing it)\n- start processing the regions\n- if any thread runs out of work, restart algorithm\n\nThis should improve memory locality while distributing work across all\nthreads and making sure that non-uniform workloads are also distributed.\n\nConsider the above example where thread 4 has finished it's tiles:\n\nIt looks like 1 will need the longest time to finish it's region, so we\njump in there and assign part of it's work to 4 (marked y):\n\nLater, 3 finishes:\n\nNow, 2 has the largest region left, so half of it get's assign to 3\n(marked z):\n\nThe state of affairs can be managed easily since there are never more\nregions than threads.\n\nPS: I don't know whether this algorithm works well in practice, I\nactually got the idea while replying Adam's response.",
"Is there a dedicated mailing list for Gimp-Perl? I had troubles\ninstalling this... It doesn't seem to work with the latest\nExtUtils::Depends ... And I'd like to have all these perl plug-ins back!\n\n",
"To get some details into the game - a while ago (just after 2.2 was\nreleased), I tried upgrading to 2.6 (I thought that 2.6 was required,\nbut this doesn't matter here). I ended up with a system where\n\n- gdm crashed (I was unable to get any useful error message - logging\n seems to be broken with regard to this, strace did not help)\n- GIMP 2.2 crashed almost every time I opened the file selector with some\n strange pango message showing up (some assertion failed) - it seems\n that font handling has somehow changed (I did compile a new pango,\n but not a new freetype)\n I found an obscure way to prevent this crash, but I cannot remember \n anymore - it was not really stable either.\n- OpenOffice stopped working with some unresolved symbol\n _XineramaIsActive\n\nI straced a lot but got no real conclusion (apart from that the new file\nselector opens a lot of files which probably kills performance on\nnetworked file systems).\n\nI can give it a try tomorrow and see whether I get some useful error\nmessages. (My earlier message to this list describing my problems has\nsomehow been ignored, there might be some details in there.)\n\n",
"What do you mean by \"apply the alpha again for preview\"? You could also\n\"merge visible layers\" which preserves the alpha channel. Then you only\nneed to remove invisible layers and may convert to indexed with up to\n255 colors, so you get 1 bit alpha.\n\n",
"Ah, then it was probably this limit.\n\nThere's PAE36 or High memory[1]. You only need a kernel compiled with 4GB\nor 64GB support (the machine was Xeon with 6 GB).\n\n[1] Works like EMS from old DOS times. :-|"
] |
aCDLmQ+Pe4BL09ds@example.com
|
[
"là aussi on évite les entrées de menus en surnombre\n\n",
"",
"",
"",
"",
"",
"",
""
] |
kAYLVmC8294IGcBu@example.com
|
[
"im Laufe der Zeit habe ich nun verschiedene \"site.conf\" für Gluon gesehen.\nBei den fastd mesh vpn Part gibt es ein Limit. Einige haben dort 2 und einige 1.\nWas hat welche Vor-/Nachteile?\n\nNach welchem Prinzip sucht sich der Knoten sein Gateway?\n\n",
"Moin, bei uns in Stormarn gab es letzten Monat einige Zeitungsartikel.\nIch meine es war das Hamburger Abendblatt, die hatten zusätzlich noch einen Anwalt befragt, die hat bestätigt, dass das ganze rechtlich völlig ok ist.\n\nSowas ist natürlich für die Öffentlichkeit super. Ein anderes Blatt wird diesen Monat noch mal speziell auf das Thema eingehen und im Zuge dessen vielleicht auch noch mal die rechtliche Seite zusammen mit einem Anwalt beleuchten. Das ist (mit) die beste Öffentlichkeits Arbeit für Personen, die technisch weniger/gar nicht begabt sind.\n\n"
] |
HEkM0BSlLJWYmdKO@example.com
|
[
"Actually I am not computer expert as well. I have just started to work in\nthis area. so I am not able to figure out how to solve this problem. I\nrequest you to elaborate on what you meant in your previous mail.\n\n"
] |
FLofUdpTNJ0OZ6z0@example.com
|
[
"I was wondering how can I switch between screens on my application.\n\nI was using this code:\n...a href=\"form.html\"...\nBut it doesn't do anything.\n\nWant I want to do this: When i click on for example, Setttings it goes\nto the Settings screen.\n\n\nCan anyone help me?\n\n"
] |
lKtJedllfFfwti3l@example.com
|
[
"I'm not even sure MRTG can handle SNMP V2c queries very well... I believe\nthe implementation is buggy.\n\n",
"I don't know how much of the list you follow but the SNMPV2c implementation\nseems a bit buggy...\n\n",
"no, it's not an increasing counter. The text file that holds the output of\ntherefore the curent number of sendmail processes is fed to MRTG, therefore,\nit IS a gauge.\n\nMaxBytes IS very important for threshold checking . No wrapping occurs.\n\nof course it would :)\n\n",
"Should I assume that no-one uses SNMP V2c or that nobody\nwho does, has experienced the problem I've mentioned?\n\nI've also realised that I cannot graph a sonet sub interface\nusing SNMP V2c. I get the same error message.\n\n"
] |
IFGDK9qKPDn0GtTL@example.com
|
[
"",
"Aha! So, here's what messages says:\n\nlibata is given an ATA pass-thru ioctl() then an additional '-d libata' \nAm I correct in my understanding that SATA is not supported, then?\n\n",
"I'm having problems installing FC4 on an Intel 7221BK1-E motherboard. If \nI try to install from the FC4 CD, it panics immediately after loading \nvmlinuz and init, so I used the \"trick\" from http://www.ulkuderner.net \nthat involves using another CD until it asks for \"where to load\", and \nthen switching to FC4 CD. Only problem is that video is recognized as \nVESA generic, and the xserver does not work (it starts correctly, but no \nvideo is shown). If I use Red Hat Enterprise 4, it works. Problem is \nthat I need graphical installation on FC4 to create logical volumes and \nRAID 1 partitions (no logical volumes can be created under text \ninstallation). I tried with noprobe and resolution=640x480, but to no \navail. Any suggestions?\n\n",
"Does anybody know if there's a driver available for the Lexmark P3150 \nPhoto multifunction printer? FC3 detects it fine (the card reader \nincluded in the printer is instantly mounted as a removable drive), but \nI had no success locating a driver for it.\n\nAny help will be appreciated.\n\n"
] |
Mmnd8FhxNkmL/1HI@example.com
|
[
"https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=241344\n\n\n",
"https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=241344\n\n\n\n\n\nJust upgraded to 2.3.1 : change nothing\nI wiped the entire database and .kde/share/apps/amarok : problem solved\n\nVery strange and annoying but yes, it's fixed right now.\n\n"
] |
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