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<DL> <DT><A NAME="80">...simple.</A><DD>There are some people who <EM>do</EM>
call it that, but that's just because they have never
read this manual, poor things.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="75">...chapter.</A><DD>If you happen to be reading a version that
has a chapter on backups, that is.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="79">...work</A><DD>A comparison between the xia and ext2
filesystems, the device list and a description of the
ext2 filesystem. These aren't part of the book any
more.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="112">...Rhyme</A><DD>The author
wishes to remain anonymous. It was posted to the
LDP mailing list by Matt Welsh.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="126">...system</A><DD>In fact, it is often mistakenly considered to be the
operating system itself, but it is not. An operating system
provides many more services than a plain kernel.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="232">...these</A><DD>Well, at least
there can be many. Network bandwidth still being a scarce
resource, there is still some practical upper limit to the
number of concurrent logins via one network connection.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="296">...printer.</A><DD>Instead,
they form a new queue <em>at</em> the printer, waiting for their
printouts, since no one ever seems to be able to get the queue
software to know exactly when anyone's printout is really finished.
This is a great boost to intra-office social relations.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1028">...<b>platters</b>,</A><DD>The platters are made of
a hard substance, e.g., aluminium, which gives the hard disk its
name.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1045">...BIOS</A><DD>The BIOS is some built-in software
stored on ROM chips. It takes care, among other things, of the
initial stages of booting.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1047">...track</A><DD>The numbers are
completely imaginary.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1067">...disk</A><DD>That is, the surface inside the disk, on the
metal disk inside the plastic coating.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1070">...similar</A><DD>But completely
different, of course.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1120">...primary</A><DD>Illogical?
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1299">...everyone.</A><DD>It requires several seconds of hard
thinking on the users' behalf.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1275">...magic.</A><DD>For more
information, see the kernel source or the Kernel Hackers'
Guide.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1431">...NAME="1651"></A></A><DD>It should of course be
<tt>unmount</tt><A NAME="1653"> </A>, but the <TT>n</TT> mysteriously disappeared in
the 70's, and hasn't been seen since. Please return it to Bell
Labs, NJ, if you find it.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1409">...disk.</A><DD>Sic transit discus mundi.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1835">...2 GB.</A><DD>A gigabyte here, a gigabyte there, pretty soon
we start talking about real memory.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1868">...disk</A><DD>Except a RAM disk, for obvious
reasons.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="1960">...loaded</A><DD>On early computers, it wasn't enough
to merely turn on the computer, you had to manually load the
operating system as well. These new-fangled thing-a-ma-jigs do
it all by themselves.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2099">...right,</A><DD>This is called
the <b>power on self test</b>, or <b>POST</b> for short.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2107">...NAME="2151"></A></A><DD><tt>sync</tt><A NAME="2153"> </A> flushes the buffer cache.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2219">...it.</A><DD>Good Linux distributions do this out
of the box.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2382">...microcomputers.</A><DD>It might be quite embarrassing
if my sister could read my love letters.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2468">...password.</A><DD>Yes, this means
that the password file has all the information about a
user <em>except</em> his password. The wonder of development.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2432">...accounts</A><DD>Surreal users?
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2450">...alias.</A><DD>The
user's name might change due to marriage, for example, and
he might want to have his username reflect his new name.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2470">...work.</A><DD>But they can be <em>so</em> fun, if you're
a BOFH.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2560">...disasters.</A><DD>The fifth reason is ``something else''.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2561">...work.</A><DD>Don't laugh. This has happened to several people.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2562">...work.</A><DD>Been there, done that...
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2646">...reinstalled,</A><DD>You get
to decide what's easy. Some people consider installing from
dozens of floppies easy.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2661">...drive.</A><DD>If a tape
drive doesn't data fast enough, it has to stop; this makes backups
even slower, and can be bad for the tape and the drive.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2758">...round,</A><DD>According to
recent research.
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</PRE><DT><A NAME="2802">...time.</A><DD>Beware of the <tt>time</tt><A NAME="2812"> </A> command, which does
<em>not</em> show the current time.
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</PRE> </DL>
<P><ADDRESS>
<I>Lars Wirzenius <BR>
Sun Jun 29 13:31:22 EEST 1997</I>
</ADDRESS>
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