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cyb97

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Posts posted by cyb97


  1. 1st:

    all computers doesn't have to be in the same workgroup, the difference is that everbody have to go the long way by browsing and broadcast for workgroups before getting to the right group.

    2nd:

    You probably doesn't to allow the guest login again. SMB is a slow protocol for filesharing, if you have decided on using SMB you probably want to make accounts for those you want to allow access.. SMB filesharing does slow you computer down a lot on a big network with many users. FTP is a better choice, but you said IPX right? (who uses IPX these days?)

     

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    cyb97


  2. I've set up w2k servers (advanced) as PDC (and DNS since I use it). It doesn't matter if you install a DNS server on your internet connected machine.... There are many ways to make the DNS server not talk to the internet... and even if you don't unbind your dialup interface, it doesn't matter because no other DNS' are talking to yours, so your records won't be thrown out on the net... and I've installed both PDC and AD without any trouble... the onlything that gave me trouble was the telnet service and the remote login service... neither of those was functioning correctly... but this was way back beta 3, I think....


  3. Quote:
    Originally posted by Seldzar on 12-08-1999 06:58 PM
    WHich port? Theres lots of them.


    WarFTPd uses port 21 (of course) and it uses RPC, but that shouldn't matter for the RPC ports are way out in the portlist... Last time I installed warFTPd on a server, it had serv-u (or some other ****, can remember) running and that give us any error at all... this was on NT Server (SBS4.5) and we just set up the server correctly and then we shut down the crap server and up with the good one... about 30 secs. of down time....

  4. Don't know what your issue with serv-u is but it has NEVER crashed on me in win2k nor has it ever had a problem of any kind and it logs everything just fine. Not to mention the fact that it's ease of use and setup is by far more superior than WarFTP. Granted WarFTP is truely kick ass but when it takes me longer to learn the layout and functionality of a FTP server than it takes for me to completely setup servu then there is a problem. WarFTP is jsut too confusing and I know a thing or two about setting up an FTP.

     

    I can agree on the fact that WarFTP is a little harder to learn, but it's not that hard people.

    Serv-u won't handle logins with a username longer than 128*3(I think it was that little) that would make the server crash, ie the logging system would go down with it.

    WarFTP can log to diffrent ODBC datasources, SQL and DAO. And you can remote administer it, which is the best functionallity with WarFTP, it's so easy administrated...

    Let me give you a scenario (I've tried this myself) where Serv-u wouldn't work much at all... Computer-party... 4500~5000 clients, all switched 10MBit with a shared 25Mbit ATM to the internet, we sat up an ftpserver on a dual 333MHz pentium-II, 384MB ECC WinNT (3com card) all SCSI-Server... This thing served constantly for 5 days w/o reboot (and that's good to be NT Server). The thing served at about 96% of theoretical linespeed. WarFTP served the masses with about 5-6% cpuload (with constantly people logging in and out via both shared public and private accounts). We couldn't compile stats out of the textlogfiles because they we're constantly written to, so we had to use SQL... The best thing was that we was even able to burn cds while serving... (the hdd activity lights flickered like strobes)...

    Can anybody tell me another daemon that will do this...


  5. I seriously hope that nobody uses Serv-u (no serv-u bashing here, this is serious) for anything they want to run stable and fast. Serv-u has one of the lowest uptime numbers I've seen, this is because it's so full of buffer-overflows and memoryleaks, not to mention the logging (more the lack of), and user database. Everybody who wants to run their own server, i recommend that you check out warftpd from JGAA's freeware (yes it's freeware, and the best server out for win32). Get it free at www.jgaa.com, and talk to me if you have trouble...

     

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    cyb97 / cyb97@noxtension.com

    Core Member of noXtension


  6. SP6 doesn't contain any dx upgrades (dp is a part of dx)... so you have to install from the AOE, thought I'd just mention this is somebody else tries to install SP6 instead of dp6.1...


  7. Quote:

    Yes! Multiprocessing does really increase your performance. As long as certain conditions are met. 1)OS must be multiprocessor capable 2)The application you work with uses the power of additional CPU.

    True true... but the increase you would see is not even near 80%... you must remember that the 2 CPU's share memory and other i/o buses.... Photoshop would definatly sport from 2 cpu's since it can perform multiple calculations... I recommend going for 2 cpu's... or at least go for a good dual mainboard with one good processor, and then save for the next one....
    And as for the 10K rpm disks... you would benefit from them... (if you can afford it you should use a simple RAID solution). Lower access-time, means less waiting for writing and reading operations, which is alpha-omega when talking about paging and swapping...


    [This message has been edited by cyb97 (edited 22 November 1999).]

  8. This win98 machine you tested it on, it isn't the machine the program was developed on?

    If it is, then you probably forgot to register the dll when you copied the program. regsvr32 blah.dll from the commandline should fix this...

    Try that...


  9. Multiprocessing in Photoshop works perfectly... If you have the money go for a clean SGI solution (www.sgi.com), if not I would recommend getting more RAM, if you can't afford a new motherboard and 1 or two more processors, upgrade the one you have to latest and hottest technology... (of course staying clear of AMD's emulated FPU CPU's (that would be all of them)). P3 and RAM would probably increase your speed more than new harddrives would, given that you have defragged and you have 10k rpm drives...


  10. Guess I don`t have to remind you to check for newer drivers... The Xpert98 cards is based on the RAGE Pro chipset, I know there is good 3d drivers for NT, you have SP4 yeah? And NT isn't exactly the best fullscreen gaming platform around... but then again, who wants a Sega Saturn?

    I would believe that atleast Civ: CTP is NT compatible, or has a patch for it since it's such an serious game. Caesar 3, like it's predecessors probably lacks support for about anything... and probably sucks as much as Caesar 2 did...

     

     

    [This message has been edited by cyb97 (edited 19 November 1999).]


  11. Quote:
    Originally posted by BobOki on 11-12-1999 07:40 PM
    you are right and wrong... right that it does not come with a new dx. but wrong because they broke more than they fixd ;-)

    Let`s not argue about that, but instead condemn you to run WinNT w/o SP`s for a week... not much fun... If you install SP4 you will get a NT version of DX3 which is the only legal DX for NT, microsoft has said that they will not release any further DX upgrades for NT, so you`ll have to run W2K, which is up to DX6 now I think....

  12. Can't find anything about drivers for it from Iomega, and I think the product has been discontinued. So I think it's though luck. write your own drivers...:-)


  13. The reason why nor glide or 3dfx or any similar 3d-acceleration stuff is supported is because Delta Force is fully software rendered polygons. I don't think it supports any 3d-cards at all.

    Delta Force works perfectly well under NT, I can't remember whether it worked on SMP (back to 1 now), but it definately works under NT SP5 single-cpu.

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