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Guide to dual-booting. Dual-booting refers to the concept of installing two operating systems on the same computer, and having the option to choose which one to boot into when the computer is rebooting. Dual-booting is actually a special case of multi-booting, or installing more than one operating on a computer. This is a very common practice in the Linux and BSD communities. If you are coming from the Windows world and want to install a Linux or BSD distribution while maintaining your Windows installation, dual-booting is one means of accomplishing that. When dual-booting, you may choose to install both operating systems on the same hard drive, or on separate hard drives – if your computer has more than one. Unless you have installed an extra hard drive on your computer, you are most likely going to be installing the second operating system on the same drive as the first one. So here are a few things to keep in mine when you are attempting to set up a dual boot configuration:

Linux Classes. SSH Tutorial for Linux - Support Documentation. This document covers the SSH client on the Linux Operating System and other OSes that use OpenSSH. If you use Windows, please read the document SSH Tutorial for Windows If you use Mac OS X or other Unix based system, you should already have OpenSSH installed and can use this document as a reference. This article is one of the top tutorials covering SSH on the Internet. It was originally written back in 1999 and was completely revised in 2006 to include new and more accurate information. As of October, 2008, it has been read by over 473,600 people and consistently appears at the top of Google's search results for SSH Tutorial and Linux SSH. What Is SSH? There are a couple of ways that you can access a shell (command line) remotely on most Linux/Unix systems. One of the older ways is to use the telnet program, which is available on most network capable operating systems. An unencrypted telnet session An encrypted ssh session Getting Started OpenSSH can be obtained from.

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Hack Your Life! | Tools for survival… Lisp: Common Lisp, Scheme, Clojure, Emacs Lisp - Hyperpolyglot. A side-by-side reference sheet grammar and invocation | variables and expressions | arithmetic and logic | strings | listsarrays | dictionaries | functions | macros | execution control | file handles | file buffers | files | directoriesprocesses and environment | libraries and namespaces | objects | reflection | java interop General version used Versions used to verify data in the cheat sheet. show version How to determine the version. compiler racket Compiling a.ss creates the byte-code compiled file a_ss.zo, which will be used by mzscheme in preference to the source code if it encounters making a standalone executable common lisp A standalone executable is created by the sb-ext:save-lisp-and-die function.

In order for code to be compiled as a standalone executable, it must be packaged as a module. #lang scheme (define hello (printf "Hello world! A standalone executable can be created with DrScheme using Scheme | Create Executable… emacs Building Emacs shebang emacs lisp #! An implementation of echo: #! Installera BankID på din dator med 64-bitars Fedora 13 - Att äga sin egna dator.