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On Tue, 2005-07-12 at 11:10 +0800, Senectus . wrote:
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<FONT COLOR="#000000">On 7/12/05, Ante Karamatić <<A HREF="mailto:ivoks@grad.hr">ivoks@grad.hr</A>> wrote:</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> On Tue, 2005-07-12 at 10:28 +0800, Senectus . wrote:</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> > Can you explain why this is a "bad thing" when it's setup on a single</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> > person's home PC with no expectation or desire for anyone else to log</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> > onto it?</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> </FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> Linux is multiuser system. There isn't "single person's home PC". Check</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> your /etc/passwd. There are plenty users. I understand that most of you</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> still think in Windows way (operating system that still isn't full</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> mutliuser system). Per user settings are managed in user's ~, not on the</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">> level of administrator - that's how it's done on UNIX/Linux for decades.</FONT>
<FONT COLOR="#000000">Yeah that was the answer I was expecting, thanks for clearing it up.</FONT>
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Kind Regards Russell<BR>
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www.windsorcycles.com.au<BR>
bikes.no-ip.info<BR>
Linux user #369094<BR>
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