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Re: ::scr Internet Explorer - Danger in numbers?
> > This is what "man chmod" produces, and to get this far, you have to
> > know that the commands "man" and "chmod" exist and that you need
> > chmod to change your file security.
>
> Yes, and this will be noted in the handy-dandy Beginners' Guide To Unix
> that your vendor or sysadmin will supply <cough>.
Which brings closure because we're obviously back to where
I started out this morning - no matter how easy a system
is to learn or use, someone has to point out very clearly
WHY you're supposed to use it and its various features.
> Then your system is set up wrong. That is the C library documentation.
Not my system, it's evil IDA. To be fair, man <anyothercommand>
works much better and you do get several pages of complete, useful
text - at least as good as anything in the Windows help system.
I just thought it was a nice example that there was so little
info on chmod, since the thread started out on security vs.
usability. TkMan works though.
Oh, how I love X forwarding.
Oh, how I hate that the proxy server running on my
girlfriend's computer can't handle X forwarding.
Oh, how I hate that I don't have a spare ISA network
card so I could use my old 486 as a router instead.
Oh, how I hate that I have an exam in language
technology on Saturday and that I haven't started
studying yet.
- Arvid