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On Wed, 20 Jun 2007, Kristian Hermansen wrote: > On 6/18/07, Tom Metro <blu-5a1Jt6qxUNc at public.gmane.org> wrote: >> OK, thanks for the clarification. I guess the exception here is the LTS >> version, which by its "long term" nature, at any given moment, may be >> based on a version that's one or more releases old. > > RIght. Well, a certain release may be labeled as LTS. Ubuntu Dapper > 6.06 is the only release thus far. The next will probably be Ubuntu > ?????? 9.04... > >> I wouldn't recommend a GUI on a server either, but David has previously >> explained that his main machine needs to be a compromise of desktop and >> server. My suggestion of using a VM for the server portion would have to >> be combined with (preferably hardware) firewall rules that permit only >> the server VM to receive inbound connections from the WAN. It also is >> far more practical to run SELinux with highly restrictive rules on a VM >> that has only a few specific functions, rather than on a general purpose >> desktop. > > Good point. Yes, it is better to isolate a server's functionality > from a security mindset... > -- > Kristian Hermansen Has anyone tried a server version on a laptop? As I think I'd mentioned before, I'm using may laptop at home as a server. The only way I've been able to prevent the hard drive, and maybe the NIC, from powering down, is to establish a cron job every 12 hours - 1100 for an updatedb, and 2300 for an ntp query. I wonder if the server-based 7.04 would view my laptop (Compaq Armada m700) differently and NOT spin down the drive and power off the nic? Or, even if it was a different laptop, having the same events occur? Thanks for insights. Scott -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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