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David Stephen Miller (born November 26, 1974) is an American software developer working on the Linux kernel, where he is the primary maintainer of the networking subsystem [1] [2] and individual networking drivers, [3] the SPARC implementation, [4] [5] and the IDE subsystem. [6]
David Neil Cutler Sr. (born March 13, 1942) is an American software engineer. He developed several computer operating systems , namely Microsoft Windows NT , and Digital Equipment Corporation 's RSX-11M , VAXELN , and VMS .
David is one of the founders of the Oxygen Project, which is the default icon theme on the KDE flagship desktop. In 2005, Vignoni graduated from the University of Bologna with a B.S. degree in computer science. [3] He has worked as a consultant for SuSE Linux, as an independent graphic designer, and at Meebo.
Voice of America republishes reporting from the Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and others. Always check the credit; such content is not in the public domain. Occasionally, a wire photo will be originally published with Voice of America watermarks and later corrected updated with the correct attr
To enable swsusp, the following should be selected during kernel configuration: Power management options → <*>Power management support (CONFIG_PM) Power management options → <*>Software Suspend (CONFIG_SOFTWARE_SUSPEND) Power management options → [/dev/resume_partition]Default resume partition (CONFIG_PM_STD_PARTITION)
When a file is cached, the server makes a note of this and promises to inform the client if the file is updated by someone else. Callbacks are discarded and must be re-established after any client, server, or network failure, including a timeout. Re-establishing a callback involves a status check and does not require re-reading the file itself.
Besides Tanenbaum and Torvalds, several other people joined the debate, including Peter MacDonald, an early Linux kernel developer and creator of one of the first distributions, Softlanding Linux System; David S. Miller, one of the core developers of the Linux kernel; and Theodore Ts'o, the first North American Linux kernel developer. [1]