Founding principle of economics from my econ101 class:
Human desires are unbounded, but the resources to fulfill those desires are limited. So there must be some system to ration resource allocation
Rationing systems:
Planned and managed economy (communist)
Free market economy (capitalist)...
IBM's Zap and Wipe will kill partitions. Zap zero-fills the first 128 sectors (partition tables) and Wipe zero-fills the first 8 gigs. They will remove every partition though, I don't know if you want to do that, or selectively remove them.
I would add to that a simpler reason... factorial represents the number of times that a set of size n can be permuted.
A set of 0 things has 1 permutation... the permutation of nothing.
so 0! = 1
see: Factorial
0/0 is undefined.
0 divides 0, by the definition of division.
But any real divided by zero is undefined since
lim y->0+ x/y = +infinty and lim y->0- x/y = -infinty do not converge, and therefore is NotANumber.
see: Division By Zero
I don't want to start a flame war ro anything, but I don't think that more Mhz will solve the problems in these technologies. Whenever the media reviews these things, they always say the "current computers aren't fast enough" and "more speed is needed to increase accuracy" -- these statements...
Why? I have shipped many WDs and only seen a few failures.
I also find Maxtor (by sheer number of shipped drives) and Fujitsu to be very reliable. I have only had one Fuji failure... and I suspect that it was misshandled.
I have only seen one dead Fujitsu. A couple of Maxtors, WDs, and Quantums. Many IBMs. No Seagates... but I dont use them.
The worst, IMHO, is Samsung. They ran very hot a 5400 RPM. I remember a box that was full of 20 brand new, and dead 6.4GB 5400s.
This is operating at a much higher level than assembly language. You don't know how the OS mapps addresses. The address that you see will not be the real one (the one in physical memory).
Have a look at this program. It uses an array and offsets, and is well documented. Notice addi r3...
Netterm is just a terminal app isn't it?
It just makes external connections on port 23, right?
It should "just work".
Or does it expect connections to come back from the outside?
Do other net apps work?
That is correct.
But it deponds on where the firewall is. If the firewall is deployed at the gateway, then what you described is true. If one is deployed per machine, then none of them can access each other, unless you poke holes in the wall.
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