There were no computers when I had a girlfriend...I used to know a lot about computers before I had a girlfriend too.
What am I? Chopped liver???????? I thought I was your BC girlfriend???????? What the heck am I typing on????????? If you knew my address, flowers would be in order, mister!!!!There were no computers when I had a girlfriend...
What am I? Chopped liver???????? I thought I was your BC girlfriend???????? What the heck am I typing on????????? If you knew my address, flowers would be in order, mister!!!!
I will be in Rochester at the festival this year. I can't wait to get some lilac perfume. I so love lilacs.She likes lilacs. Now step up to the plate, eyeball.
This thread is useless without pictures.
So pretty. I just love them. Thank you, upsguy72.
Your English is very defective.Hi all,
I want to know about UPSes from American Power Conversion
I have a Smart-UPS RT 6000 XL connected with a Linux Server by network cable and a Network Management Card 2 AP9631.
I have too a Smart-UPS 3000 XL connected with another Linux Server by 940-0127E FCI cable (USB).
My whole system is based in Linux OS (Fedora).
My problem is: I want to know how I can, by command line (by terminal, shell), shutdown these two UPSes.
I've tried PowerChute, but PC Server and Console Edition run just in Windows, right?
By the way, i'd want a command that I could turn on the UPSes, after they be shutted down, just pressing the power button(by physical way).
Thank you all!!
(Sorry about my english, its very defective)
(I want to do this for protection's issues)
If you really want to screw things up with linux, start messing with /etc; or, /etc/boot[.d]/; when you can't boot your system anymore from LILO or GRUB, then you know you're on to something; from there, reinstall takes a lot more time.
If you like that sort of thing, try Slackware.
Nah, Hiren's Boot CD or Super GRUB Disc to the rescue! If you're doing a dual boot of Linux/Windows, and you mess up grub, you can even get back into windows without an MBR.
Sadly, you find out these things after you've screwed up so many times.
Slackware is what I tried messing with 12 years ago (along with RedHat and BeOS [Now called Haiku]). Yeah, even today... no thanks. I hear it requires a lot of manual configuration, still.