Yeppers...that's what the default is to do. From what my boss says though, you can manually install it, somehow. I forgot the exact file name, but I thought it was something along the lines of /etc/internet? that you use to control things. -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us]On Behalf Of Jose Castillo Sent: Thursday, October 05, 2000 10:43 AM To: plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us Subject: Re: RedHat 7.0 Some friends of mine and I loaded RH7 yesterday. There doesn't seem to be an inetd or inetd.conf? Is this right? We loaded it 2x just in case we missed something, the last time doing server and custom and selecting just about everything, no inetd! Weird. On Thu, 5 Oct 2000 11:13:31 -0400 , plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us wrote: > Anyone has the cd set I could copy?? > > The Wolf > > ________________________________________________ > See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > > Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss _______________________________________________________ Say Bye to Slow Internet! http://www.home.com/xinbox/signup.html ________________________________________________ See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss From Don Harrop Thu Oct 5 19:10:09 2000 From: Don Harrop (Don Harrop) Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2000 12:10:09 -0700 (MST) Subject: Years and Years and Years of experience.. Message-ID: That's true about being able to fix a problem in 5 minutes rather than 5 hours if you've experienced it before. How many of us remember everything we've ever done on a computer before though? If there's any one on this list that has ever gone to tackle a problem that they have had before and couldn't remember what they did to fix it the first time, I'd like to know about it. I think that your problem solving abilities is worth more than the "been there done that" approach. I also think that it's really important to have a team because everyone has something to contribute. Nobody knows everything. That's why I'm a member of this list. The only problem with the person employing you is that they wont know for sure what kind of computer wizard you are until they hire you so the "years and years and years of experience" is the only benchmark that they have. My background is pretty broad. I've been into computers professionally for about 10 years now. I've delt with routers, switches, hubs, cabling (coax, cat5, token ring), DOS 3.3 up to Win2k, most of the unicies (no Solaris though) IIS, Apache, DNS, SSH, FTP servers unix/windows, automation using cron (unix) or at (NT) and scripting, disaster/data recovery, yadda yadda yadda... I've contracted for over 2 years now for mostly the City of Mesa and an ISP and eight years before that with other employers. Right now I'd like to find another "GOOD" employer and I'd like the job to be unix based. Yes, all you employers out there need to realize that your being interviewed as well. The last thing I want is to end up with another company that can't even deal with their own management issues which is why they keep loosing techs in the first place! Sorry for the rant guys.. It just sucks when your trying to find a place and people keep telling you that you need X number of years experience as "insert job title here" in order to be conisdered. But hey, who said life was fair.. :-) I think I've found a place running HP-UX that's going to hire me.. With all these Solaris posts maybe I should have them buy a Solaris box for me just to play with and change the job title to HP-UX/Solaris Admin so I can start to develop the years and years and years of experience.. :-) Or maybe I shouldn't be so truthful.. Maybe the fuzzy math theory has a big part in finding a job these days... ;-) j/k Don