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#12
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On Fri, 19 Dec 2003 05:11:23 GMT, "Brian Goldsmith"
wrote: "Jim Flanagan" wrote I wondering if I am the only one having trouble accessing the BAMA ftp site for schematics. I haven't been successful for some time. Is it me or the site? I just accessed it. It was a bit slow and operated in bits and jumps. I tried again and received the error , "Maximum number of users connected, try again later", or at least something to that effect. Apparently the site is receiving some very heavy use. I tried both Mozilla and Internet Explorer and both worked although it took a few tries. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com Return address modified due to dumb virus checkers ftp://bama.sbc.edu/downloads/ *** Try http://bama.sbc.edu/ Brian Goldsmith. |
#13
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![]() "Mike Knudsen" wrote in message ... In article , "Kenneth D. Grimm, K4XL" writes: Web browsers are designed primarily to read html code and have ftp capability tacked on as an afterthought. A few, such as Mozilla, Netscape and Opera, got it right. Internet Explorer seems to have a few problems! Well, Explorer does tend to download a file not to your normal hard drive space, but to its own Temporary file space, and then try to display it immediately on your screen if it's graphics, play it if sound, etc. There should be a button to just download it to disk and leave it. Right-click, Save As...? Ed |
#14
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Mike Knudsen wrote:
Also, Explorer lacks an "Upload" button -- I went to upload a file to RTSI.com and couldn't -- there was no way to "manually" start an upload, since the screen page didn't have a button. Use the Force, Luke.... Or more particularly, use Bill's Desktop Metaphor. Simply drag and drop anything you want to upload (files, folders) into the directory you are looking at with the IE browser in FTP mode. This isn't prominently explained anywhere in the HELP files because everybody just *knows* it. (Yeah, right!) Jim, K7JEB Glendale, AZ |
#15
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![]() "Ed Price" wrote in message news:Y6VFb.12988$7D3.1169@fed1read02... "Mike Knudsen" wrote in message ... In article , "Kenneth D. Grimm, K4XL" writes: Web browsers are designed primarily to read html code and have ftp capability tacked on as an afterthought. A few, such as Mozilla, Netscape and Opera, got it right. Internet Explorer seems to have a few problems! Well, Explorer does tend to download a file not to your normal hard drive space, but to its own Temporary file space, and then try to display it immediately on your screen if it's graphics, play it if sound, etc. There should be a button to just download it to disk and leave it. Right-click, Save As...? That's the way I usually do it, although you can just double-click on the file and wait for the dialogue box to open. jak Ed |
#16
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In article TkXFb.21712$J77.20557@fed1read07, "K7JEB"
writes: Or more particularly, use Bill's Desktop Metaphor. Simply drag and drop anything you want to upload (files, folders) into the directory you are looking at with the IE browser in FTP mode. This isn't prominently explained anywhere in the HELP files because everybody just *knows* it. (Yeah, right!) Wow! I never would have thought that the drag-n-drop would work over the Net like that. In my case, too much knowedge was a bad thing -- I knew how much was involved, and just never thought that this might work. I've used drag-n-drop for some pretty weird things. Didi you know that when a digital camera is hooked up via USB, and appears as a "removable device" on your desktop, that you can drag and drop any kind of file into your camera's memory card? Nice emergency backup trick. --Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. |
#17
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In article Y6VFb.12988$7D3.1169@fed1read02, "Ed Price"
writes: Right-click, Save As...? Sometimes that works -- if you're clicking on a link phrase, it will. If someone has left you a complete URL path to the file, and you Go to that, it will do a "left button" load to its temp file, no way to override. --Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. |
#18
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On 24 Dec 2003 04:24:04 GMT, r (Mike Knudsen)
wrote: In article Y6VFb.12988$7D3.1169@fed1read02, "Ed Price" writes: Right-click, Save As...? Sometimes that works -- if you're clicking on a link phrase, it will. If someone has left you a complete URL path to the file, and you Go to that, it will do a "left button" load to its temp file, no way to override. So... Let it save it to it's temp file, then select save, save page, or save page as. One should work. It will not go through another download. It's will just copy the temp file to where you want it and you can name it , or use the original. Or in the case of a true ftp as has been mentioned, just drag and drop. Explorer treats most files as if they were on the computer. So, you treat them the same way. In XP it's difficult to tell , unless looking at the address whether the address is on the net, or a local folder and just as easy to move. But as has also been mentioned, they never bother to tell the user that. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair?) www.rogerhalstead.com --Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. |
#19
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I've used drag-n-drop for some pretty weird things. Didi you know that when a
digital camera is hooked up via USB, and appears as a "removable device" on your desktop, that you can drag and drop any kind of file into your camera's memory card? Nice emergency backup trick. --Mike K. Now *that* is totally bizarre! But a very logical extension of the desktop metaphor. Jim, K7JEB |
#20
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The problem that BAMA has with Internet Explorer is that it doesn't
return accurate and informative error messages. Where Mozilla and Opera will tell you that the maximum number of connections have been made to the ftp site and to try again later, IE just says "The page cannot be displayed" and then gives you some very misleading information, "The page you are looking for is currently unavailable. The Web site might be experiencing technical difficulties, or you may need to adjust your browser settings." There are no difficulties with the web site and there's nothing wrong with your browser settings. It's just that there are 10 users connected to BAMA, that's all that's allowed, and you are number 11! While the methods described here all work, including "drag and drop," there are occasionally other problems that seem to plague IE users that Opera and Mozilla (Netscape) users don't complain about. While BAMA started out on my office PC, it is now on a much larger and much faster box. Four Pentium-4 Xeon Processors at 2.4 GHz under one Gigabyte of RAM and 100+ Gigs of hardware RAID - vs. the older 400 MHz Pentium II with 128 megs. So that we don't lose anything again, (once is enough!) BAMA is backed up nightly on a 4-terabyte capacity robotic tapeloader on site as well as the backups that I keep locally. Currently, BAMA takes up almost 7GB of storage space containing 25,946 files in 2,515 folders...and still growing! So, suitable mirror sites are probably few and far between. Ken K4XL - Replace "invalid" with "net" to reply. *** BoatAnchor Manual Archive *** On the web at http://bama.sbc.edu or FTP site info: bama.sbc.edu login: anonymous p/w: youremailadr |
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