From uakcywewyxj at classifiedtoday.com Tue Sep 19 23:24:28 2006 From: uakcywewyxj at classifiedtoday.com (Janaye Bellamy) Date: Tue Sep 19 23:24:31 2006 Subject: Raking in the dough. Message-ID: <8730221632.InVzgrR-84258-0298856@classifiedtoday.com> HOT ALERT - THIS ONE IS STILL CLIMBING THE CHARTS ALERT -- BREAKING MARKET NEWS REPORT ---- WBRS.PK Company Name: WILD BRUSH ENERGY Lookup: WBRS.PK Current Price: .05 Expected: STEADILY CLIMB FOR THE TOP Breaking News: Wild Brush Acquires Additional Powder River Oil & Gas Lease Wild Brush Energy (PINKSHEETS: WBRS) announces the purchase of an additional Powder River Basin Federal Oil & Gas Lease in the State of Wyoming. The lease is located on the eastern side of the Basin in Weston County. This is the fifth lease the Company now controls in the region. Wild Brush maintains its expansion strategy through acquisition of low risk, high probability oil and gas properties in proven regions such as Powder River basin. Wild Brush will continue to concentrate on the Powder River Basin area, due to the number of lease acre ages it currently controls. The Powder River Basin claims a high probability rate of discoveries and proven production as demonstrated by such companies as Chevron and Western Gas. There are presently over 12,000 gas wells, in addition to nearly 400 new wells monthly, producing over 330 billion cubic feet annually, in an area with an estimated 32 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. About WBRS.PK Wild Brush Energy is a diversified energy company whose primary goal is to identify and develop Oil & Coalbed Methane sites within the State of Wyoming. In addition, Wild Brush Energy continues to evaluate clean air alternative energy producing technologies such as Wind Power. Wild Brush trades in the U.S. under the symbol "WBRS." WATCH THIS STOCK GO HIGHER AND HIGHER -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Once you see you'll know why you cannot afford to be left out of this one Imagine what 300% can do for your portfolio ----------------------- Save it for a rainy day. Survival of the fittest. Waking up with the chickens. Sweet as apple pie. Root it out. Run to seed. Sturdy as an oak. Sitting on the fence. You can't squeeze blood out of a turnip. Your ass is grass. Waking up with the chickens. Which came first, the chicken or the egg. Stand your ground. Weed it out. Rare as walking on water. Your barking up the wrong tree. To gild refined gold, to paint the lily. Spring rain, Fall gold. Slow as molasses in January. You have to separate the chaff from the wheat. Worry often gives a small thing a big shadow. Stop and smell the roses. Shit happens. Wrinkled as a prune. Survival of the fittest. Shit happens. Welcome to my garden. Rough as a cob. Top of the morning. A weed is no more than a flower in disguise. Stir up an ant's nest. Shake like a leaf. A thing of beauty is a joy forever. Salt of the Earth. Schools out for summer. What goes up must come down. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. Speak softly and carry a big stick. A rose is a rose is a rose. The squeaky wheel gets the grease. From jhs at flat.berklix.net Wed Sep 20 01:41:45 2006 From: jhs at flat.berklix.net (Julian H. Stacey) Date: Wed Sep 20 01:41:47 2006 Subject: Point in the right direction In-Reply-To: <58304.134.253.26.6.1154383337.squirrel@godseyfamily.com> References: <58304.134.253.26.6.1154383337.squirrel@godseyfamily.com> Message-ID: <200609200841.k8K8faiZ003394@fire.jhs.private> "David Godsey" wrote: > So I have been combing the internet for information on realtime FreeBSD, > but the information is limited. So there must be some more information > out there, but I do not know where to look. Can someone direct me please? I'd guessed there was also an embedded list but can't see it at http://docs.freebsd.org/mail/current/ Other lists may have related interests, eg freebsd-small & freebsd-ppc NanoBSD (& some other small type keyword I can't remember) may be worth searching on -- Julian Stacey. BSD Unix C Net Consultancy, Munich/Muenchen http://berklix.com Mail Ascii, not HTML. Ihr Rauch = mein allergischer Kopfschmerz. Don't buy it ! Get it free ! http://berklix.org/free-software From smithi at nimnet.asn.au Wed Sep 20 11:43:16 2006 From: smithi at nimnet.asn.au (Ian Smith) Date: Wed Sep 20 11:43:19 2006 Subject: Point in the right direction In-Reply-To: <200609200841.k8K8faiZ003394@fire.jhs.private> Message-ID: Wow, traffic on -realtime .. On Wed, 20 Sep 2006, Julian H. Stacey wrote: > "David Godsey" wrote: > > So I have been combing the internet for information on realtime FreeBSD, > > but the information is limited. So there must be some more information > > out there, but I do not know where to look. Can someone direct me please? > > I'd guessed there was also an embedded list but can't see it at > http://docs.freebsd.org/mail/current/ > Other lists may have related interests, eg freebsd-small & freebsd-ppc > NanoBSD (& some other small type keyword I can't remember) may be > worth searching on nano, pico, tiny .. There was a flurry of embedded activity in -small a while ago. Though -small is usually pretty quiet, the embedded folks hived off a separate list, called -embedded IIRC. I's suggest checking the -small archives over the last few months to see if there's anything of interest there. Cheers, Ian From andrew-freebsd at areilly.bpc-users.org Wed Sep 20 21:35:45 2006 From: andrew-freebsd at areilly.bpc-users.org (Andrew Reilly) Date: Wed Sep 20 21:35:47 2006 Subject: Point in the right direction In-Reply-To: <200609200841.k8K8faiZ003394@fire.jhs.private> References: <58304.134.253.26.6.1154383337.squirrel@godseyfamily.com> <200609200841.k8K8faiZ003394@fire.jhs.private> Message-ID: <20060921043423.GA83407@duncan.reilly.home> On Wed, Sep 20, 2006 at 10:41:36AM +0200, Julian H. Stacey wrote: > "David Godsey" wrote: > > So I have been combing the internet for information on realtime FreeBSD, > > but the information is limited. So there must be some more information > > out there, but I do not know where to look. Can someone direct me please? > > I'd guessed there was also an embedded list but can't see it at > http://docs.freebsd.org/mail/current/ > Other lists may have related interests, eg freebsd-small & freebsd-ppc > NanoBSD (& some other small type keyword I can't remember) may be > worth searching on The fine-grain locking and preemption in 6- and -current *should* be most of what is required to move towards realtime. Perhaps throw in a different scheduler for good measure. Having said that, I don't think that anyone is busy doing any characterisation of worst-case path lengths and lock-holds, which is the other side of the equation. -- Andrew From dave at godseyfamily.com Thu Sep 21 07:17:00 2006 From: dave at godseyfamily.com (David Godsey) Date: Thu Sep 21 07:17:04 2006 Subject: Point in the right direction In-Reply-To: <20060921043423.GA83407@duncan.reilly.home> References: <58304.134.253.26.6.1154383337.squirrel@godseyfamily.com> <200609200841.k8K8faiZ003394@fire.jhs.private> <20060921043423.GA83407@duncan.reilly.home> Message-ID: <56166.134.253.26.10.1158848198.squirrel@godseyfamily.com> Thanks to all who have replied. I was asking because I was reading about the 6.x kernel and how the big mother of kernel locking was removed in this kernel, so I assumed realtime FreeBSD would be ramping up. Sadly, not a lot of activity in the realtime yet. > On Wed, Sep 20, 2006 at 10:41:36AM +0200, Julian H. Stacey wrote: >> "David Godsey" wrote: >> > So I have been combing the internet for information on realtime >> FreeBSD, >> > but the information is limited. So there must be some more >> information >> > out there, but I do not know where to look. Can someone direct me >> please? >> >> I'd guessed there was also an embedded list but can't see it at >> http://docs.freebsd.org/mail/current/ >> Other lists may have related interests, eg freebsd-small & freebsd-ppc >> NanoBSD (& some other small type keyword I can't remember) may be >> worth searching on > > The fine-grain locking and preemption in 6- and -current > *should* be most of what is required to move towards realtime. > Perhaps throw in a different scheduler for good measure. > Having said that, I don't think that anyone is busy doing any > characterisation of worst-case path lengths and lock-holds, > which is the other side of the equation. > > -- > Andrew > A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort. If there are no stupid questions, then what kind of questions do stupid people ask? Do they get smart just in time to ask questions? David Godsey