
Geek
Get flash to fully experience Pearltrees
Renosite
RepRap
Bpo
BÉPO la disposition de clavier francophone, ergonomique et libre Un agencement optimisé Fréquences d’utilisation des rangées et des mains en azerty et en bépo. les lettres les plus fréquentes sont placées sur la rangée de repos… … en tenant compte des séquences de lettres les plus courantes ; les voyelles, sous la main gauche, facilitent l’alternance des mains ; les paires () {} <> «» [] “” ‘’, placées côte à côte, sont plus accessibles. Une typographie soignée toutes les lettres du français, y compris les capitales Ç, Œ, Æ, É, È, À, Ù, Ÿ ; les guillemets : « » “ ” ‘ ’ ; l’ apostrophe typographique « ’ » ; les points de suspension « … » et les différents tirets , dont le tiret quadratin « — » et le tiret demi-quadratin « – » ; l’ espace insécable et l’espace insécable fine.Validate Email
The code makes extensive use of regular expressions to check email address components for RFC compliance: Local Part (preceding the last '@' symbol; ASCII hex value 40) Domain Part (following the last '@' symbol; ASCII hex value 40) IP Address Literal (if used instead of a domain name) IP v4 Address Literal IP v6 Address Literal (full & compressed) IP v6 v4 Address Literal (full & compressed) RFC Requirements An email address must consist of a local part and a domain part separated by an @ symbol (x40) with a combined length of no more than 256 characters. - RFC 3696 - 3 & errata , RFC 2822 - 3.4.1 Local Part: A non-quoted local part may consist of alpha (a-z) (x61-x7A) (A-Z) (x41-x5A), numeric (0-9) (x30-x39) and the following characters: !LibreJS
CeroWrt is a project built on the OpenWrt firmware to resolve the endemic problems of bufferbloat in home networking today, and to push forward the state of the art of edge networks and routers. Projects include proper IPv6 support, tighter integration with DNSSEC, and most importantly, reducing bufferbloat in both the wired and wireless components of the stack. The CeroWrt 3.7 series of builds include the following features and capabilities: Linux 3.7 kernel.
Cerowrt
The CoDel AQM algorithm by Kathie Nichols and Van Jacobson provides us with an essential missing tool to control queues properly. This work is the culmination of their at three major attempts to solve the problems with AQM algorithms over the last 14 years. Eric Dumazet wrote the codel queuing discipline (based on a quick prototype by Dave Täht, who spent the last year working 60 hour weeks on bufferbloat) which landed in net-next a week or two ago; yesterday, net-next was merged into the Linux mainline for inclusion in the next Linux release. Eric also implemented a fq_codel queuing discipline, combining fair queuing and CoDel (pronounced “coddle”), and it works very well.

