Linux Services
Sasha Joseph
Submitted by sasha on Sat, 11/05/2011 - 1:01pm
Dylan Duncan-Wright
Submitted by Dylan on Mon, 01/03/2011 - 1:11pm
HP
Submitted by Hanee Patenaude on Mon, 10/05/2009 - 8:56am
Jeff Plotkin
Submitted by Jeff on Mon, 08/24/2009 - 1:50pm
• I believe there are 4 keys to success (in no particular order): focus, patience, commitment and confidence
• I believe the process for accomplishing any goal is as follows: recursively decompose the proposed goal (into subgoals) until one has only a set of atomic goals. Accomplish each atomic goal first, then accomplish those goals which depend on accomplished goals. Accomplishing means carrying out a task that is intended to actualize the goal and verifying the result of carrying out the task. When the root goal is accomplished work is done and one does "clean up".
• I believe in the Taoist notion: "do your work, then step back, the only path to serenity".
More info on my facebook page: www.facebook.com/plotkin/
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth."
programming, music (listening, playing, composing), internet stuff
Jake Steve
Submitted by Jazzlesaurus on Fri, 03/20/2009 - 12:20amI'm a freshman at Western New England College studying Information Technology.
I love Hardware, especially when it works, caffeine, and going fast!
never gonna give you up
Never gonna let you down
Never gonna run around and desert you
Never gonna make you cry
Never gonna say goodbye
Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you
Driving, tinkering, sticking it to the man, and getting things to work better than intended for free.
River Valley Market Coop
When the River Valley Market Cooperative in Northampton, Ma, planned their April, 2008, opening they chose to depend on Left-click for the hardware behind their network of office and lane computers. Left-click and The River Valley Tech Collective teamed up to meet the software needs of the soon-to-be-bustling market.
Powerful Custom-built Servers
Left-click designed and built two custom, top-of-the-line servers for the market. The "thin client server" is the computational workhorse of the market's office. The office workstations are affordable, bare bones computers which connect to the server and let it do most of the work for them. The market's second server is called the "Lane Server." It's used to manage many of the day-to-day operations of the market, including making sure the lane computers have up-to-date product information and that sales data is properly backed up.
Silas Albrecht
Submitted by silas on Tue, 10/14/2008 - 4:35pmProgramming, writing, traveling.
