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Jeff V. Merkey

Main Quotes Index

Issue #284, Section #1 (17�Nov�2004:�Linux 2.6.9 Released)
Issue #283, Section #7 (6�Nov�2004:�A Little Bit Of SCO Status)
Issue #184, Section #29 (15�Sep�2002:�Timpanogas Sells Intellectual Property To Canopy Group)
Issue #166, Section #3 (12�May�2002:�Discussion Of Hard-Disk Maximum Size)
Issue #143, Section #7 (26�Nov�2001:�Weird Developer Interaction)
Issue #143, Section #8 (26�Nov�2001:�Status Of NTFS Support)
Issue #135, Section #11 (1�Oct�2001:�U.S. Anti-Terrorism Laws)
Issue #131, Section #4 (3�Sep�2001:�Timpanogas Frees Sources To Netware Tools)
Issue #125, Section #4 (9�Jul�2001:�NWFS Needs A New Maintainer)
Issue #119, Section #8 (21�May�2001:�Linux Support For Microsoft Dynamic Disks)
Issue #116, Section #8 (30�Apr�2001:�NWFS Glitches In 2.4.3)
Issue #106, Section #21 (9�Feb�2001:�Linux NTFS Project Announced)
Issue #99, Section #5 (25�Dec�2000:�Read-Write NTFS Support Broken And Should Not Be Used)
Issue #98, Section #1 (18�Dec�2000:�Licencing Discussion)
Issue #98, Section #6 (18�Dec�2000:�False Detection Of PS/2 Mouse In Recent Stable Kernels)
Issue #98, Section #14 (18�Dec�2000:�Kernel Documentation)
Issue #97, Section #3 (11�Dec�2000:�Linux Distros Making Incompatible Changes To System Tools)
Issue #96, Section #4 (4�Dec�2000:�Approaching 2.2.18)
Issue #95, Section #7 (27�Nov�2000:�Using Oracle On Latest Development Kernels)
Issue #94, Section #8 (20�Nov�2000:�Getting Started With Kernel Code)
Issue #92, Section #3 (6�Nov�2000:�Cleaning Up Internal Data Structures)
Issue #92, Section #9 (6�Nov�2000:�Possible GPL Violations In Kernel Source)
Issue #91, Section #8 (30�Oct�2000:�Proposal To Speed Up Release Cycle)
Issue #91, Section #12 (30�Oct�2000:�Minor Problems With 'linux-kernel')
Issue #89, Section #7 (16�Oct�2000:�Previously Used Filesystem Algorithms Patented By Vendor?)
Issue #88, Section #11 (9�Oct�2000:�Microsoft Withdraws Linux NTFS Threats)
Issue #87, Section #1 (2�Oct�2000:�Possible GPL Violations By Microsoft; Kernel Debugger In Official Sources)
Issue #87, Section #4 (2�Oct�2000:�More Kernel Debugger Advocacy)
Issue #86, Section #9 (25�Sep�2000:�Using Netware Elevator Ideas In Linux)
Issue #86, Section #13 (25�Sep�2000:�Possible Microsoft Litigation Over NTFS Support In Linux)
Issue #85, Section #3 (18�Sep�2000:�Positive Reports On The Latest VM Patches)
Issue #84, Section #1 (11�Sep�2000:�Posix Threads (pthreads) In Linux)
Issue #79, Section #2 (7�Aug�2000:�Status Of Asynchronous I/O)
Issue #77, Section #2 (24�Jul�2000:�Status Of NTFS Support)
Issue #76, Section #9 (17�Jul�2000:�Spinlocks Broken In Some Distributions)
Issue #74, Section #9 (3�Jul�2000:�Maintaining Buildable Ports)
Issue #73, Section #1 (26�Jun�2000:�SPX Unfinished In Stable Series)
Issue #72, Section #7 (19�Jun�2000:�To Do List For Next Unstable Series)
Issue #69, Section #3 (29�May�2000:�Status Of Asynchronous I/O)
Issue #67, Section #3 (15�May�2000:�Modularizing Elevator Code)
Issue #67, Section #4 (15�May�2000:�NTFS Troubles; Windows Partition Formats)
Issue #64, Section #3 (24�Apr�2000:�Cornering A Slowdown)
Issue #63, Section #1 (17�Apr�2000:�NetWare Filesystem Sources Published)
Issue #59, Section #3 (20�Mar�2000:�64-bit Linux)
Issue #59, Section #7 (20�Mar�2000:�Scheduling Difficulties Under Linux)
Issue #58, Section #4 (13�Mar�2000:�ext3 Status And Discussion)
Issue #57, Section #8 (6�Mar�2000:�fdisk Partition Ordering For Windows 2000)
Issue #55, Section #7 (21�Feb�2000:�Development Process And Corporate Politics)
Issue #47, Section #1 (20�Dec�1999:�spin_unlock() Optimization On Intel)
Issue #45, Section #3 (6�Dec�1999:�Microsoft Historical Digression)
Issue #44, Section #4 (22�Nov�1999:�Possible GPL Conflicts In Reiserfs License)
Issue #43, Section #5 (15�Nov�1999:�Mirroring Via The Buffer Cache)
Issue #25, Section #7 (1�Jul�1999:�FENRIS Source Available)
Issue #24, Section #2 (24�Jun�1999:�Ooooooo!)
Issue #21, Section #2 (3�Jun�1999:�XFS Going Open Source)

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Kernel Traffic is grateful to be developed on a computer donated by Professor Greg Benson and Professor Allan Cruse in the Department of Computer Science at the University of San Francisco. This is the same department that invented FlashMob Computing. Kernel Traffic is hosted by the generous folks at kernel.org. All pages on this site are copyright their original authors, and distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2.0.