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712 - Why reinvent the wheel
1. Because you feel you can do better. 2. Because you've nothing else to do and you want to be busy when your boss walks by. 3. Because it's so much more fun re-inventing the wheel than using someone else's. 4. Because you can learn from your experience. 5. Because you didn't realise that someon ....

711 - THE home directory or MY home directory
When a user logs in to a Linux system, the user is taken to their home directory (folder) - a place where their personal work is kept in files and a further structure of sub-directories as appropriate. Configuration files are also kept in their home directory - files like .my.cnf for their MySQL def ....

710 - Linux training Glasgow, Python programming course Dundee
We run training courses so often in Scotland that I don't even need a map anymore, except perhaps a streetmap page showing the roads in the immediate vicinity of the training venue. But how do we reach our potential client base? How do they find out about us? Firstly, we have good and tailored we ....

709 - Handling huge data files in PHP
I've handled files up to 2 GBytes in size with PHP ... but there are a number of issues to consider. 1. The size of the PHP "footprint" in memory - when you have a huge data file, you cannot simply read it all in with file or file_get_contents (nor with fread, trying to read the file all at once). ....

708 - Linescapes of Mull
On Monday, Dad and I sailed on the paddle steamer Waverley on her annual cruise from Oban to the island of Iona, where St. Columba set up his monastery in the 7th Century - the first such Christian place in Great Britain, said to have been chosen because on a clear day he could see Ireland. Waverley ....

707 - A story of goldfish
Lisa put five goldfish in our pond the summer before last. We looked at the pond the day after they were introduced and we could see three - but there was plenty of pondweed to hide the others. A day or two later we could only see one fish, and even that was nowhere to be seen a week later. Rec ....

706 - May day away
I'm away for a short break this long weekend - Hi from a wet, wet Oban - passing through on the way to the Isles. COuldn't resist nipping in to this Internet Cafe. ....

705 - Disc Partitioning
When installing Linux, you're able to choose how to split up (partition or slice) your disc(s) and which part of the file system to put on each. Here's a partitioning algorithm that we came up with for an organisation that has a variety of servers. WHAT do you want on separate partitions? / - du ....

704 - Erin Brent - rest in peace
"Come as a student, leave as a friend" we say on our coffee mugs. And so it was with Erin Brent, who came to us on a Tcl course 3 or 4 years back. Lisa and I stayed subsequently with Erin and Richard in Oxford, and they visited us in Melksham for a weekend. She returned to Australia early last year ....

703 - Copying files and preserving ownership
If you're copying a file on a Unix / Linux / OS X operating system, use the cp command. Use cp -r to copy a directory and all its contents - the -r means "recursive". If you use the cp command to copy files that you have read access to, but do not own, then you'll be made the owner of the new cop ....

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