View allAll Photos Tagged commandline

Prima che sulle scrivanie degli uffici arrivassero i PC con Windows, Word, Excel e Outlook, le funzioni di ufficio tipo agenda (anche condivisa tra utenti), invio posta con allegati, elaborazione di testi formattati con tanto di stampa unione, etc. erano disponibili in modalità carattere su terminali come questo. Era possibile sospendere un attività e mandarla in background per fare altro senza dover uscire dalla funzione in corso, così come segnala la nota sopra la linea di comando.

 

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The Type-24 is an irregular hexagon in plan, the rear wall is the longest at about 14ft this has the entrance with a Pistol Loophole on either side, the other walls vary between 7ft and 8ft each having a single Loophole. These are suitable for both Rifles and Light Machine Guns. Internally, there is a Y-Shaped Anti-Ricochet Wall, the top of the Y is nearest to the entrance, the internal wall also helps support the roof. The Type-24 Pillbox was always built to at least Bullet-Proof standard of 12in thick, but was often was thicker.

A thick-walled variant was introduced to a Shellproof standard, it was larger externally and had walls 36in to 50in thick. (This thick-walled variant is sometimes called a Type-29 by pillbox researchers but this is not an official designation) The Type-24 Pillbox is the most common type of pillbox, with more than 1,724 recorded as being extant.

Near the five-ways roundabout is a Type-28 Gun House which is well hidden underneath this thick foliage, no access, but I could make out some of the outer brickwork shuttering, which is a lighter coloured brick often seen around Suffolk and Essex. Positioned on one of three Eastern Command Corps Stop Lines, this one running from the River Colne in Essex via Wakes Colne and Bures, along the River Stour to Sudbury and Long Melford, and thence to Bury St. Edmunds and the River Lark at Mildenhall. Its final stretch (known now as the Command Line) was via Littleport along the line of the River Great Ouse to King's Lynn.

Recent Fedora 14 updates via yum.

Positioned along track to Church Farm, this FW3/28 Type 28 anti-tank gun house is sited facing north to defend the river crossing at Jude's Ferry Bridge. The gun emplacement was fitted with a pedestal and nine-bolt holdfast for a 6-pounder anti-tank gun.

  

The FW3/28 Type 28 is a rectangular shellproof gun house designed to house either a 2pdr or 6pdr Hotchkiss anti-tank gun. The smallest Type 28 gun house, is a single chamber design built to a shellproof standard, with external walls approximately 3ft 6in thick whilst the roof is 12in thick. Overall it approximately measures 20ft by 19ft and internally the chamber measures 13ft by 12ft. At the front of the Type 28 gun house is the low and wide embrasure for the 2pdr or 6pdr anti-tank gun. With the 2pdr gun in position the shield of the gun would have covered most of the embrasure, which measures 2ft 6in internally, stepping out to 3ft 2in by 11ft 6in on the outside, the maximum traverse of the 2pdr gun was limited to a 60° sweep.

 

Getting the 2pdr gun inside the gun house was through a rear opening of 6ft wide, which would be closed in with sandbags as there were no doors fitted. The large unobstructed entrance did allow the 2pdr gun to maintain it’s mobility, by allowing the gun to be moved in and out rapidly. Below the gun embrasure are three recesses in the floor, the 2pdr gun, would have been wheeled into position, then its wheels removed and the trail legs unfolded and located into the floor recesses. In cases were the Hotckiss quick fire anti-tank gun was used a pedestal with a nine bolt holdfast was added to mount the gun, in a more permanent position adding sandbags around the embrasure for added protection.

 

Normally each side wall has an infantry embrasure, to provide some limited protection from the enemy. However, the lack of all-round small arms fire meant that the gun house would be very vulnerable to enemy attack. The lack of forward-firing Infantry embrasures meant that it would not be possible to support the 2pdr gun with small arms fire. So to overcome the problem of the limited infantry fire support the FW3/28 gun house design was modified to produce the FW3/28a. This modification consisted of a second chamber being added to the anti-tank gun chamber, the second chamber was an infantry chamber with up to three infantry embrasures, firing to the front, rear and side. Generally, the gun houses were positioned to allow the gun to fire along fixed lines, such as enfiladingss an anti-tank ditch or a bridge. In these positions the limited traverse of the gun creates no real disadvantage and the small size of the embrasure provides greater protection for the gun and its crew.

  

Eastern Command: Corps and Command Stop Lines – One of three Eastern Command Corps stop lines, this one running from the River Colne in Essex via Wakes Colne and Bures, along the River Stour to Sudbury and Long Melford, and thence to Bury St. Edmunds and the River Lark at Mildenhall. Its final stretch (known now as the Command Line) was via Littleport along the line of the River Great Ouse to King's Lynn.

Simple command prompt program designed to demonstrate the Single Responsibility Principle.

 

Source code will eventually be avaiable at architecture.codeplex.com

 

Part of the presentation I am working on to explain "SOLID Development Principles" at Microsoft Store in Oarkbrook Sunday March 6th, 2011 Presented to the Software Development Community in Conjunction with the (CNUG) Patterns & Practices Special Interest Group.

 

Registration is free Pizza will be served.

www.meetup.com/SoftDev/events/16428210/

  

Command line mistake!

A revamped Flavonoid configuration console. This allows easy configuration over USB. There'll be a few more commands in here for other features and crap, especially extracting the recorded data. This harkens back to the old school VT100 style terminal controls. There's no drag-and-drop here, just words and commands. (Evocative of Don Norman's bit on what he sees as a revival of the command line user interface. I wouldn't say that this here in particular is a breakthrough, except in being retro.)

 

I like this mode of interaction. There are commands with parameters and that's basically that. And output in a bottom area "annunciator" area. It makes the Flavonoid pretty much platform agnostic — anything that has a USB "COM port" and can obey VT100 terminal commands can interact here. And a keyboard.

 

This uses Pascal Stang's cmdline library from his great avrlib for Atmel 8-bit MCUs.

Simple command:

Shows a calendar

I can't recall my desktop looking like that since 2000 or so. I must admit that i am a little rusty now and lost all proper reflexes, trained during more than seven years of work with various Unix (and alike) environments.

 

But my current job presents me with challenges; i found that i can actually do things faster when actually force myself

to skip the fancy GUIs and go down to the command line level.

Output di DIR/FULL. Il filesystem di OpenVMS è ricchissimo di funzionalità. In particolare supporta nativamente file a record, sequenziali e indicizzati a chiavi, oltre naturalmente ai classici file stream di molti altri sistemi.

 

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an abortive attempt at getting Grub to co-exist with a WinXP install

Non gli sfugge nulla...

 

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Questa forse è una delle foto più significative di tutto il set: dimostra l'esistenza di una vera rete DECnet geografica! :-)

 

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Macro shot of my iBook running Terminal, ssh'ing into my Linux box.

Been hacking away at the twitter api. have a pice of code that grabs my current friends & my own postings via the twitter api. It's currently using the ' list of your friends and their current update' (http://twitter.com/statuses/friends.xml) call.

 

The code uses the python httplib to extract the file, and the xml.dom.minidom api to parse the file. The format for the returned xml is something like this ...

 

*status*

created_at

id

text

relative_created_at

*user*

id

name

screen_name

location

description

profile_image_url

url

 

Why they decided to whack the 'user' details in a lower node level I do not know. Finally got it to work by

  

* extracting the xml file

* parsing the xml file

* stuffing the values into a list of dictionaries

* looping through the list & extracting the values

 

I could have saved myself all the drama by using the RSS file. But the adantage is I can get the instantaeous state of twitter at any time & process it at my will.

 

Here we see the python program being called on the commandline. I can redirect the results to a file then cat them.

 

next >>>

Output dinamico del comando MONITOR

 

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Simple command:

Shows date and time

Tutto quello che si può voler sapere riguardo a un disco (output di SHOW DEVICE/FULL)

 

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This is me, booted into Single User Mode on my Powerbook. I finally isolated the problem to a stick of bad RAM, which was basically like my laptop sticking an icepick into its brain. I ended up doing a complete clean reinstall of OS X. I was extremely grateful to have had a recent full backup of my laptop.

 

There were some files that weren't backed up yet -- over 1,000 pictures -- (I had just returned from a 3 week trip to China) that I needed to get off my computer, and some MySQL database files.

 

This is how I managed to get most of them successfully copied off using SSH in Single User Mode: How I got networking working on my Powerbook using Single User Mode in OS X

Finch (a command-line/ncurses interface to the Pidgin Instant Messenger program) running in jLime Linux on my Jornada 720.

Photos from previous visit – 02.12.2015 www.flickr.com/photos/139375961@N08/shares/6375D6V9q9

  

Positioned at the edge of a field and set into bank, east of the Holmes River, is a World War II Type 28a shellproof anti-tank gun emplacement. Constructed with poured concrete into brickwork shuttering with chamfered corners and roof edges, the thick walled construction makes it a shellproof standard. Overlooking the meadow towards the railway crossing and road junction, the large embrasure is narrower for a Hotchkiss quick fire anti-tank gun attached to a 9 bolt holdfast mounted on a pedestal for a Hotchkiss quick fire anti-tank gun, and a smaller chamber with rifle or light machine gun embrasures for close defence. The Type 28a gun house is part of the Command Line running from Littleport to King's Lynn along the line the River Great Ouse, section of the GHQ Line from Cambridgeshire to Peterborough.

  

The FW3/28 Type 28 is a rectangular shellproof gun house designed to house either a 2pdr or 6pdr Hotchkiss anti-tank gun. The smallest Type 28 gun house, is a single chamber design built to a shellproof standard, with external walls approximately 3ft 6in thick whilst the roof is 12in thick. Overall it approximately measures 20ft by 19ft and internally the chamber measures 13ft by 12ft. At the front of the Type 28 gun house is the low and wide embrasure for the 2pdr or 6pdr anti-tank gun. With the 2pdr gun in position the shield of the gun would have covered most of the embrasure, which measures 2ft 6in internally, stepping out to 3ft 2in by 11ft 6in on the outside, the maximum traverse of the 2pdr gun was limited to a 60° sweep.

 

Getting the 2pdr gun inside the gun house was through a rear opening of 6ft wide, which would be closed in with sandbags as there were no doors fitted. The large unobstructed entrance did allow the 2pdr gun to maintain it’s mobility, by allowing the gun to be moved in and out rapidly. Below the gun embrasure are three recesses in the floor, the 2pdr gun, would have been wheeled into position, then its wheels removed and the trail legs unfolded and located into the floor recesses. In cases were the Hotckiss quick fire anti-tank gun was used a pedestal with a nine bolt holdfast was added to mount the gun, in a more permanent position adding sandbags around the embrasure for added protection.

 

Normally each side wall has an infantry embrasure, to provide some limited protection from the enemy. However, the lack of all-round small arms fire meant that the gun house would be very vulnerable to enemy attack. The lack of forward-firing Infantry embrasures meant that it would not be possible to support the 2pdr gun with small arms fire. So to overcome the problem of the limited infantry fire support the FW3/28 gun house design was modified to produce the FW3/28a. This modification consisted of a second chamber being added to the anti-tank gun chamber, the second chamber was an infantry chamber with up to three infantry embrasures, firing to the front, rear and side. Generally, the gun houses were positioned to allow the gun to fire along fixed lines, such as enfiladingss an anti-tank ditch or a bridge. In these positions the limited traverse of the gun creates no real disadvantage and the small size of the embrasure provides greater protection for the gun and its crew.

 

Sourced from www.pillbox-study-group.org.uk/types-of-pillbox/type-28-p...

 

Output del tool di sistema AUTHORIZE utilizzato per gestire i profili utente

 

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Photos from previous visit – 02.12.2015 www.flickr.com/photos/139375961@N08/shares/6375D6V9q9

  

Positioned at the edge of a field and set into bank, east of the Holmes River, is a World War II Type 28a shellproof anti-tank gun emplacement. Constructed with poured concrete into brickwork shuttering with chamfered corners and roof edges, the thick walled construction makes it a shellproof standard. Overlooking the meadow towards the railway crossing and road junction, the large embrasure is narrower for a Hotchkiss quick fire anti-tank gun attached to a 9 bolt holdfast mounted on a pedestal for a Hotchkiss quick fire anti-tank gun, and a smaller chamber with rifle or light machine gun embrasures for close defence. The Type 28a gun house is part of the Command Line running from Littleport to King's Lynn along the line the River Great Ouse, section of the GHQ Line from Cambridgeshire to Peterborough.

  

The FW3/28 Type 28 is a rectangular shellproof gun house designed to house either a 2pdr or 6pdr Hotchkiss anti-tank gun. The smallest Type 28 gun house, is a single chamber design built to a shellproof standard, with external walls approximately 3ft 6in thick whilst the roof is 12in thick. Overall it approximately measures 20ft by 19ft and internally the chamber measures 13ft by 12ft. At the front of the Type 28 gun house is the low and wide embrasure for the 2pdr or 6pdr anti-tank gun. With the 2pdr gun in position the shield of the gun would have covered most of the embrasure, which measures 2ft 6in internally, stepping out to 3ft 2in by 11ft 6in on the outside, the maximum traverse of the 2pdr gun was limited to a 60° sweep.

 

Getting the 2pdr gun inside the gun house was through a rear opening of 6ft wide, which would be closed in with sandbags as there were no doors fitted. The large unobstructed entrance did allow the 2pdr gun to maintain it’s mobility, by allowing the gun to be moved in and out rapidly. Below the gun embrasure are three recesses in the floor, the 2pdr gun, would have been wheeled into position, then its wheels removed and the trail legs unfolded and located into the floor recesses. In cases were the Hotckiss quick fire anti-tank gun was used a pedestal with a nine bolt holdfast was added to mount the gun, in a more permanent position adding sandbags around the embrasure for added protection.

 

Normally each side wall has an infantry embrasure, to provide some limited protection from the enemy. However, the lack of all-round small arms fire meant that the gun house would be very vulnerable to enemy attack. The lack of forward-firing Infantry embrasures meant that it would not be possible to support the 2pdr gun with small arms fire. So to overcome the problem of the limited infantry fire support the FW3/28 gun house design was modified to produce the FW3/28a. This modification consisted of a second chamber being added to the anti-tank gun chamber, the second chamber was an infantry chamber with up to three infantry embrasures, firing to the front, rear and side. Generally, the gun houses were positioned to allow the gun to fire along fixed lines, such as enfiladingss an anti-tank ditch or a bridge. In these positions the limited traverse of the gun creates no real disadvantage and the small size of the embrasure provides greater protection for the gun and its crew.

 

Sourced from www.pillbox-study-group.org.uk/types-of-pillbox/type-28-p...

 

Combine:

List the content of user home directory.

Output del tool Digital FTSV (File transfer Services for VMS). Per la copia di un file da un nodo all'altro è sufficiente il comando COPY al prompt dei comandi. Questo tool dispone di funzionalità aggiuntive come il retry e la schedulazione delle copie.

 

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GeekTool is a fun control panel for OS X that lets you display things overlayed on your desktop. Here I have two log files, which are updated in realtime.

 

Both useful and fun!

 

Get it here:

projects.tynsoe.org/en/geektool/

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