In article <[email protected]>, Monte Milanuk <[email protected]> wrote: >On 6/6/10 9:46 AM, Aahz wrote: >> >> but I prefer to rely on someone else's sysadmin and I >> really don't want to allow remote connections into my home network. > >To each their own... while Panix is fairly relaxed as a shell host, I >prefer to not have someone else telling me what I can and can't install >or use, especially when I'm paying. To be honest I can't SSH out from >work anymore, so the remote connections / static IP is somewhat of a >moot point.
And that is one reason why Panix is helpful (assuming your work does simple port blocking and they don't have a formal policy banning SSH): starfury:~> ssh -p 80 panix1.panix.com [email protected]'s Password: >What I was trying to say was I don't get the point of paying for >an account on a provider clear across the country simply for the >sake of getting Usenet access... especially when more and more large >institutions are shutting theirs down (i.e. the death knoll for usenet >as others have pointed out). Perhaps it would count for 'geek' points, >but I'm not too worried about that ;) Obviously, I don't use Panix only for Usenet, but Usenet is still a large part of my social life. I have no idea what I'll do when Usenet really starts dying. -- Aahz ([email protected]) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/ "If you don't know what your program is supposed to do, you'd better not start writing it." --Dijkstra -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
