= --- === --------------------------------------------------------------------- ======= -L- -I- -B- -E- -R- -E- -T- -T- -O- APRIL 1998 ========= ======= The iMatix Newsletter Volume III Issue 4 --- === --------------------------------------------------------------------- = Copyright (c) 1998 iMatix Corporation - distribute freely Back issues at http://www.imatix.com Comments to: editors@imatix.com Programming -- Technology -- Finite State Machines -- News -- Other Stuff == COMMENT ---...-.-...-.--...-.--...-.-...-.....---..-....--.--..-.-.---.-- Today's date is something to remember, because it's the day that one of the most popular and significant pieces of software ever distributed - the Netscape web browser - changes from commercial product into Free Software, in a daring (or desperate) attempt by Netscape to find a way to compete with the Microsoft Machine. This is of course a vindication for companies like iMatix, which have based their business model on this approach from the start. Whether Netscape will make money by doing this is not clear at all. But the wartime tactic of burning your crops before the enemy can use them has a long history. The other day I was talking, well, e-mailing, to Eugene Eric Kim, of Dr Dobb's Journal. Eugene was writing about free software, and he asked me the question which I guess is the first thing that most people ask about iMatix, namely: how do you guys make money when you give it all away for free? This became a pretty long discussion about how and why iMatix was constructed, and mechanics of free software, and its role in today's world of software. The Netscape Manoeuvre may go down as an interesting footnote in the history of the Internet Wars, but its relevance is profound. Free software is no longer the realm of the student hacker or the dedicated (but misguided) believer. Rather, it's a serious alternative (perhaps the only alternative) to Microsoft's approach, and a pointer to a new commercial model, in which the actual binary or source code packages are not the product, but a means of reaching new clients, who will pay for services based on those packages. When one puts software on the Internet, even protected by a lock, it becomes free software. One could ignore this, or, like iMatix and now Netscape, embrace it and use it. And no, we don't make money by giving away our free software. But we do meet a lot of interesting new people! Pieter Hintjens Antwerpen 1 April 1998 == NEWS -..--.-.-.-..--.-.-....----.-.---...---..-.-.-----...-.---.-.-.-.--- iMatix Corporation's Web Site Hits 7Gb Monthly!! If you have difficulty imagining what 7Gb looks like, imagine the entire set of National Geographic magazines (six hundred and thirty volumes, not including fold-out maps, but including all the photos). The impressive yellow stack is about as high as a house. This is the size of Internet Explorer 4.0, unless you go for the 'full' kit, in which case you need two houses. Now imagine the full set of Liberettos, which do not come with fold-out maps, though we're working on the educational photographs. This impressive bundle is about the height of a single floppy disk, which is considerably cheaper than the average house, and much handier. Try sticking a house in your shirt pocket, for instance. Now imagine five thousand houses, which is a small town, roughly equivalent to fifty imperial blocks. This, finally, is what 7Gb looks like. Horror Shock Probe! "Manoeuvre" Finally Spelt Correctly!! Yes, after several searches in assorted dictionaries, including the unpublished-but-leaked-from-the-website volume V of "Schruberger's Dictionary of Multilingual Insults", we found the correct spelling of 'manoeuvre'. Schruberger V tells us that this word is a deadly insult with blood-feud implications in at least seven regions (their investigators did not return from four more), but we have no fear!! Xitami Rumours Denied, Hotly! iMatix Spokesperson Mandy today hotly denied rumours that the next release of Xitami would be released with full source code. "Just because Netscape do this does not mean everyone has to follow suit". Meanwhile, press reports that the full source code for this server is available freely from www.imatix.com continue to circulate. Liberetto Celebrates Its 25th Birthday!! The Liberetto editorial staff (Pixel and Snoekes, when they're not playing Tomb Raider) today hotly celebrated the glorious 25th issue of Liberetto, also known as the Mother of All Serious Journals. If you've managed to collect all 25 issues, then you should probably consider getting a job that demands more of you! DOs and DON'Ts for 1998 DON'T try to install Linux RedHat on top of a Windows NT system unless you feel lucky. We tried it, and fried our system disk, bad. If you managed to install Linux RedHat on top of a Windows NT, DON'T push your luck and try to install OS/2 on top of that. We tried that too, and fried another system disk. Wow, that hurt! DON'T try downloading the Netscape Communicator 5 sources unless a 45Mb source code packet (4000 files) seems like a good start. DO consider using Opera, a nice fast shareware web browser (Windows only) from www.operasoftware.com. == FEEDBACK -..-.-.-.--....-.-.-.--..-...-.--.-....-.-.--...-.-.-.----.-.--- >From: Jim Bowlin >Subject: Xitami suggestions > >I got the new Liberetto. It was short but sweet. Thanks. > >It reminded me that I had a couple of Xitami suggestions >for you. I ended up not using Xitami on the server I put >together. Instead I am running IIS (a real big pain) and >Apache (still very beta) and Serv-U for FTP service. > >I think I could have used Xitami if it had the following two >features: >1) the ability to have aliases with "/" in them so I could >make virtual directories such as >/faculty/teacher -> /user/faculty/teacher/web >/faculty/cgi-bin/teacher -> /user/faculty/teacher/cgi-bin > >2) the ability to run the FTP service as a different user >than the HTTP service. Since you allow me to have detailed >user control inside the FTP service, it has to run with fairly >generous permissions. For example it must be able to write >to all the directories that any person using the FTP service >can write to. On the other hand, if I allow the HTTP server >to have this same write access, then someone can easily write >a CGI script that will (for example) erase all the files that >the FTP service has access to. > >I really appreciate all the wonderful software you have so >generously made freely available. Your code is beautiful! >I also appreciate the high quality of information in Liberetto. >It is such a refreshing change from the standard drivel that >comes through my modem. > >Thanks, Jim Bowlin Thanks, Jim, for the useful suggestions. Well, these have all been on our wish list for some time, and will one day be supported in Xitami. The advantage of writing portable software is that you can take your time... You do not need to finish it before your OS is made redundant. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - >From: Jimi T Joergensen >Subject: Re: Xitami 2.2d is now available > >Do you remember I told you some 2 or 3 months ago that I did >implement Xitami on our end-user system ? The case is really simple >- I had an NT box with IIS4, but the IIS4 is not stable when is't >exposed to excessive load over many directories and hundreds or >thousands of files. So I just disbled the W3SVC (IIS4) and installed >Xitami with the FTP part disabled and I haven't touched the box since >(except to remotely disable some users who had porn at their homepage) >and it's still serving some 120.000 hits a day, sending approx. >1,2 Gig of data and not using more than 15% CPU - pretty impressive.. >Have a nice weekend.. > >Cheers >Jimi How much is 1.2 Gig? About 2600 times more than the full collected Liberetto, including the lousy jokes. Makes you wonder... We're glad to hear that it's running like it should. If only everything was this simple. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - >From: "Kobus Jooste" >Subject: Thanks. Libero is number one. > >Hi. I downloaded Libero 2.30 source and compiled it on Linux. (No >sweat.) Next I printed out your fine documentation. Little more sweat, >had to make fonts smaller and alter linespacing to save a few trees. >(100 pages is a LOT of paper) >Just finished a small telnet client using Libero and I'm checking out >SMT next. ;) >Thanks for the great tool! >Please put me on the Libero mailing-list. > >cheers, >kobus Unless things went terribly wrong (floods, fires, earthquakes, or your copy of Liberetto getting lost), you're reading this. Telnet clients, yes, this is the kind of thing Libero loves to get its teeth into. But be very careful not to feed it after midnight, or it will mutate into a fully Java-based object-oriented 5GL GUI application server component that will chew-up your system and spit it out, brutally, in little wet pieces. (PureJava 1.2 required; may not run on all systems; monitor not included.) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - >From: Rob Judd >Subject: XIC3222D > >You may be surprised to learn, as I was, that the 32-bit console version >of Xitami works on my DOS/Win 3.11 machine!! > >In some ways this version works better than the standard 16-bit version. >It's noticeably faster for one thing, albeit much larger. I have >to reboot to shut it down or restart, but this isn't much of an >inconvenience for testing. I now correctly get error messages using the >http://localhost/error?xxx format, which didn't work on xiw1621c at all. > >There you go, isn't that amazing? >Rob This is the kind of story that makes our day. After struggling for at least several minutes with the pathetic memory scheme imposed by the 16- bit Windows model, Rob discovers that the 32-bit console version will run pretty well on a Win3.x system. Okay, CGI acts a little bizarre, where 'bizarre' can be defined as launching background processes that do nothing, for a long time, creating several dozen empty, randomly-named files, issuing small noises somewhat akin to the noise a cat makes when you sit on it (ignoring the noise *you* then make), and so on. But, with Win32s, you can use the browser-based admin console, LRWP and WSX plugins, and FTP. The server also flies (where 'flies' is defined as running fast, very fast). Manic laughter as we dance around a bonfire of diskettes marked 'Win 3.x Xitami source code - do not burn or recharge'. == FOCUS ON TECHNOLOGY -..-.---..---..-.---..-...-.---.....-.-.---...-..-.-- XML... Wake up and smell the bacon!! Time for coffee and croissants, or that famous New York equivalent, 'co-affee and bagels'. XML is being hyped as the successor to HTML, but it's more than that. We'll explain what XML is, why it will be important, and how iMatix will exploit it mercilessly. HTML is a markup language, an instance of a language defined using SGML, which is a meta-language. No-one understands how SGML works, not even the people who use it, since it was invented largely by IBM. This is a slight barrier to world-wide acceptance, so people have decided to try again. SGML lets you specify a specific markup language using something called a DTD (document template description). This specific markup language can then be processed by tools like SGML parsers, or (more usefully), a web browser. (Main difference: an SGML parser takes several minutes to parse a document, then says 'Invalid tag caused continuity failure at entry point 23 in sub document 2'. A web browser just shrugs its shoulders and shows the page anyhow.) XML does exactly the same, but since it was not invented by IBM, it's easy to use and understand. I do hope you're following this. The main reason why browser vendors are pushing XML is that it will end all that useless discussion about the value of the tag and the names for colours. Each browser can define its own 'HTML', why staying perfectly XML-compliant. Happy days. And you thought that JavaScript was a compatability problem! The main reason why everyone else is pushing XML is that it puts an end to the endless discussions about data formats. How do you store a structured data object - a cheque, an invoice, a tax bill? You define your preferred XML language ('tax bill markup language') and off you go... The nice thing about standards is that there are so many to choose from. We like XML because it provides a way to store information like project descriptions, database table definitions, and such, in a portable and standard way. You'll find that the latest release of the SFL library contains functions to read and write XML files. But our intentions go further than that. At this moment, deep in the iMatix Corporation Headquarters Research and Frisbee department, we're working on an XML-driven code generator that will eventually replace the code-generation engine inside Libero, and many of our other tools (some of which are so arcane that we don't even allow them to wander outside the laboratory) (or is that lavoratory?) == WEB SITE STATISTICS -..-..--..-..----...-.-...---.-..-.-..-..----..-..--- For our regular readers... Program started at Sun-Mar-29-1998 02:38 local time. Analyzed requests from Sat-Feb-28-1998 23:55 to Sat-Mar-28-1998 23:55 (28.0 days). Total successful requests: 250,447 (54,107) Average successful requests per day: 8,944 (7,729) Total successful requests for pages: 62,628 (13,498) Average successful requests for pages per day: 2,237 (1,928) Total failed requests: 1,848 (446) Total redirected requests: 175 (39) Number of distinct files requested: 834 (789) Number of distinct hosts served: 15,425 (3,754) Number of new hosts served in last 7 days: 3,079 Unwanted logfile entries: 121 Total data transferred (in bytes): 7,267,376,601 (1,481,532,069) Total data transferred (in Megabytes): 6930.710 Mb (1412.899 Mb) Average data transferred per day: 259,542,727 bytes (211,647,438 bytes) (Figures in parentheses refer to the last 7 days). Daily Summary day: #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: --- ----- ------ ---------- ------ Sun: 32154: 12.84%: 1012802580: 13.94%: Mon: 41134: 16.42%: 1165508828: 16.04%: Tue: 40695: 16.25%: 1114352086: 15.33%: Wed: 38449: 15.35%: 1186055222: 16.32%: Thu: 39058: 15.60%: 1091896475: 15.02%: Fri: 34171: 13.64%: 949179469: 13.06%: Sat: 24786: 9.90%: 747581941: 10.29%: Daily Report date: #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: --------- ----- ------ --------- ------ Mar/ 1/98: 11314: 4.52%: 431291542: 5.93%: Mar/ 2/98: 13046: 5.21%: 436171747: 6.00%: Mar/ 3/98: 11618: 4.64%: 346211323: 4.76%: Mar/ 4/98: 11630: 4.64%: 401425734: 5.52%: Mar/ 5/98: 10536: 4.21%: 330084570: 4.54%: Mar/ 6/98: 8495: 3.39%: 251001037: 3.45%: Mar/ 7/98: 6305: 2.52%: 212990619: 2.93%: Mar/ 8/98: 6867: 2.74%: 201993903: 2.78%: Mar/ 9/98: 10702: 4.27%: 279541129: 3.85%: Mar/10/98: 10698: 4.27%: 293535507: 4.04%: Mar/11/98: 9190: 3.67%: 262658341: 3.61%: Mar/12/98: 11201: 4.47%: 308494666: 4.24%: Mar/13/98: 9739: 3.89%: 260823310: 3.59%: Mar/14/98: 7231: 2.89%: 186115417: 2.56%: Mar/15/98: 7034: 2.81%: 190367958: 2.62%: Mar/16/98: 9286: 3.71%: 232647856: 3.20%: Mar/17/98: 8843: 3.53%: 253497677: 3.49%: Mar/18/98: 8854: 3.54%: 250367911: 3.45%: Mar/19/98: 9947: 3.97%: 243670816: 3.35%: Mar/20/98: 7853: 3.14%: 227949379: 3.14%: Mar/21/98: 5411: 2.16%: 167874866: 2.31%: Mar/22/98: 6939: 2.77%: 189149177: 2.60%: Mar/23/98: 8100: 3.23%: 217148096: 2.99%: Mar/24/98: 9536: 3.81%: 221107579: 3.04%: Mar/25/98: 8775: 3.50%: 271603236: 3.74%: Mar/26/98: 7374: 2.94%: 209646423: 2.88%: Mar/27/98: 8084: 3.23%: 209405743: 2.88%: Mar/28/98: 5823: 2.33%: 179947245: 2.48%: Hourly Summary hr: #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: -- ----- ------ --------- ------ 0: 7945: 3.17%: 218103244: 3.00%: 1: 8500: 3.39%: 243719200: 3.35%: 2: 8444: 3.37%: 270075685: 3.72%: 3: 7925: 3.16%: 239948719: 3.30%: 4: 9257: 3.70%: 286814689: 3.95%: 5: 10248: 4.09%: 306625175: 4.22%: 6: 12026: 4.80%: 372864401: 5.13%: 7: 12636: 5.05%: 362612790: 4.99%: 8: 12814: 5.12%: 378980255: 5.21%: 9: 15628: 6.24%: 398116043: 5.48%: 10: 15726: 6.28%: 401773547: 5.53%: 11: 11102: 4.43%: 318781372: 4.39%: 12: 13644: 5.45%: 368950479: 5.08%: 13: 11555: 4.61%: 337510985: 4.64%: 14: 11245: 4.49%: 316070523: 4.35%: 15: 10870: 4.34%: 320661846: 4.41%: 16: 9822: 3.92%: 311923908: 4.29%: 17: 9283: 3.71%: 262023464: 3.61%: 18: 9783: 3.91%: 302600783: 4.16%: 19: 9888: 3.95%: 278082473: 3.83%: 20: 8602: 3.43%: 261839703: 3.60%: 21: 7162: 2.86%: 213734719: 2.94%: 22: 7120: 2.84%: 228419255: 3.14%: 23: 9222: 3.68%: 267143343: 3.68%: Domain Report Printing all domains, sorted by number of requests. #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: domain ----- ------ ---------- ------ ------ 56956: 22.74%: 1459968327: 20.09%: .com (Commercial, mainly USA) 50081: 20.00%: 1514760293: 20.84%: [unresolved numerical addresses] 41046: 16.39%: 1159600650: 15.96%: .net (Network) 12694: 5.07%: 494952617: 6.81%: .de (Germany) 12692: 5.07%: 319561198: 4.40%: .edu (USA Educational) 9085: 3.63%: 238338189: 3.28%: .ca (Canada) 5274: 2.11%: 153329575: 2.11%: .nl (Netherlands) 5175: 2.07%: 149935863: 2.06%: .uk (United Kingdom) 4205: 1.68%: 121984150: 1.68%: .au (Australia) 3731: 1.49%: 205117461: 2.82%: .br (Brazil) 3608: 1.44%: 103571451: 1.43%: .se (Sweden) 3318: 1.32%: 105273333: 1.45%: .no (Norway) 3306: 1.32%: 108731952: 1.50%: .it (Italy) 3228: 1.29%: 94443842: 1.30%: .fr (France) 2962: 1.18%: 51524992: 0.71%: .jp (Japan) 2173: 0.87%: 50261818: 0.69%: .be (Belgium) 1965: 0.78%: 32361439: 0.45%: .kr (South Korea) 1895: 0.76%: 39451810: 0.54%: .fi (Finland) 1736: 0.69%: 50578323: 0.70%: .dk (Denmark) 1692: 0.68%: 45394133: 0.62%: .es (Spain) 1433: 0.57%: 33323542: 0.46%: .org (Non-Profit Making Organisations) 1399: 0.56%: 46706763: 0.64%: .at (Austria) 1273: 0.51%: 39854362: 0.55%: .ch (Switzerland) 1151: 0.46%: 24866509: 0.34%: .us (United States) 1135: 0.45%: 48159083: 0.66%: .ru (Russian Federation) 1049: 0.42%: 35712247: 0.49%: .pl (Poland) 1004: 0.40%: 23428956: 0.32%: .pt (Portugal) 949: 0.38%: 26201040: 0.36%: .nz (New Zealand) 866: 0.35%: 31750817: 0.44%: .th (Thailand) 858: 0.34%: 25542069: 0.35%: .gov (USA Government) 856: 0.34%: 27910761: 0.38%: .sg (Singapore) 835: 0.33%: 24566421: 0.34%: .my (Malaysia) 806: 0.32%: 19426270: 0.27%: .il (Israel) 792: 0.32%: 22622052: 0.31%: .cz (Czech Republic) 742: 0.30%: 28820214: 0.40%: .hu (Hungary) 704: 0.28%: 21896170: 0.30%: .mil (USA Military) 700: 0.28%: 23236614: 0.32%: .gr (Greece) 588: 0.23%: 13695205: 0.19%: .ie (Ireland) 541: 0.22%: 22667757: 0.31%: .hk (Hong Kong) 538: 0.21%: 11435802: 0.16%: .cn (China) 429: 0.17%: 11949242: 0.16%: .za (South Africa) 428: 0.17%: 26684510: 0.37%: .mx (Mexico) 407: 0.16%: 14670310: 0.20%: .ar (Argentina) 377: 0.15%: 9660709: 0.13%: .cr (Costa Rica) 302: 0.12%: 8067084: 0.11%: .hr (Croatia) 299: 0.12%: 14801688: 0.20%: .tw (Taiwan) 270: 0.11%: 10455836: 0.14%: .arpa (Old style Arpanet) 261: 0.10%: 7328754: 0.10%: .ua (Ukraine) 233: 0.09%: 14410838: 0.20%: .id (Indonesia) 201: 0.08%: 9207307: 0.13%: .is (Iceland) 187: 0.07%: 7352571: 0.10%: .lu (Luxembourg) 187: 0.07%: 6205739: 0.09%: .si (Slovenia) 181: 0.07%: 9497431: 0.13%: .sk (Slovak Republic) 165: 0.07%: 5418967: 0.07%: .ee (Estonia) 131: 0.05%: 4933669: 0.07%: .yu (Yugoslavia) 129: 0.05%: 5870053: 0.08%: .su (Former USSR) 121: 0.05%: 4466580: 0.06%: .lv (Latvia) 112: 0.04%: 3713847: 0.05%: .in (India) 109: 0.04%: 8396214: 0.12%: .ro (Romania) 108: 0.04%: 351270: : .ke (Kenya) 98: 0.04%: 1622926: 0.02%: .co (Colombia) 85: 0.03%: 1392018: 0.02%: .tr (Turkey) 70: 0.03%: 4506464: 0.06%: .bg (Bulgaria) 64: 0.03%: 2694951: 0.04%: [unknown] 59: 0.02%: 1380284: 0.02%: .cl (Chile) 41: 0.02%: 698018: 0.01%: .py (Paraguay) 34: 0.01%: 2531328: 0.03%: .lt (Lithuania) 34: 0.01%: 3812579: 0.05%: .ph (Philippines) 33: 0.01%: 681465: 0.01%: .by (Belarus) 31: 0.01%: 665684: 0.01%: .do (Dominican Republic) 23: 0.01%: 675216: 0.01%: .om (Oman) 22: 0.01%: 730200: 0.01%: .jm (Jamaica) 22: 0.01%: 834106: 0.01%: .pk (Pakistan) 21: 0.01%: 669708: 0.01%: .tt (Trinidad and Tobago) 20: 0.01%: 96851: : .kz (Kazakhstan) 20: 0.01%: 2858094: 0.04%: .ve (Venezuela) 19: 0.01%: 208533: : .ec (Ecuador) 17: 0.01%: 1302280: 0.02%: .int (International) 17: 0.01%: 53084: : .ni (Nicaragua) 13: 0.01%: 1210180: 0.02%: .am (Armenia) 7: : 286821: : .uy (Uruguay) 6: : 622520: 0.01%: .pe (Peru) 5: : 602480: 0.01%: .bm (Bermuda) 3: : 25831: : .aw (Aruba) 1: : 582803: 0.01%: .ae (United Arab Emirates) 1: : 582803: 0.01%: .eg (Egypt) 1: : 582803: 0.01%: .gb (Great Britain) 1: : 582803: 0.01%: .ge (Georgia) 1: : 477079: 0.01%: .mz (Mozambique) File Type Report Printing all extensions, sorted by number of requests. #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: extension ------ ------ ---------- ------ --------- 156161: 62.35%: 387212752: 5.33%: .gif 49244: 19.66%: 703053967: 9.67%: .htm 13374: 5.34%: 54831881: 0.75%: (directories) 10249: 4.09%: 3961738757: 54.51%: .exe 9475: 3.78%: 21681163: 0.30%: (no extension) 8714: 3.48%: 1880188433: 25.87%: .zip 1509: 0.60%: 17571433: 0.24%: .txt 1255: 0.50%: 236976215: 3.26%: .tgz 188: 0.08%: 561093: 0.01%: .class 52: 0.02%: 1111918: 0.02%: .cob 51: 0.02%: 579249: 0.01%: .pl 49: 0.02%: 597664: 0.01%: .c 39: 0.02%: 227725: : .mod 32: 0.01%: 364904: 0.01%: .cpp 31: 0.01%: 270960: : .bas 14: 0.01%: 112754: : .asm 10: : 295733: : .html Request Report Printing package requests, sorted by number of requests. #reqs: %reqs: bytes: %bytes: file ----- ------ ---------- ------ ---- 6654: 2.66%: 2787913758: 38.36%: /pub/xitami/xiw3222d.exe 1509: 0.60%: 426004114: 5.86%: /pub/xitami/xiw3222d.zip 918: 0.37%: 246003719: 3.39%: /pub/xitami/xic3221c.exe 821: 0.33%: 297142330: 4.09%: /pub/xitami/xic3222d.exe 777: 0.31%: 331389500: 4.56%: /pub/xitami/xis3222d.exe 517: 0.21%: 126772356: 1.74%: /pub/xitami/xic3222d.zip 501: 0.20%: 37565364: 0.52%: /pub/tools/htmlp40b.zip 411: 0.16%: 287560798: 3.96%: /pub/xitami/xswin22d.zip 407: 0.16%: 81895904: 1.13%: /pub/libero/bin/lrmswin.zip 379: 0.15%: 127588172: 1.76%: /pub/libero/bin/libero.exe 371: 0.15%: 86055810: 1.18%: /pub/libero/bin/lrmswins.zip 348: 0.14%: 102999092: 1.42%: /pub/xitami/xis3222d.zip 331: 0.13%: 89657306: 1.23%: /pub/libero/doc/lrhtml.zip 290: 0.12%: 69379250: 0.95%: /pub/xitami/xiw3221c.exe 277: 0.11%: 149880860: 2.06%: /pub/xitami/xiuni22d.tgz 261: 0.10%: 52807452: 0.73%: /pub/libero/example/complete.zip 258: 0.10%: 17912589: 0.25%: /pub/libero/doc/lrfull.zip 257: 0.10%: 64599388: 0.89%: /pub/sfl/src/sflsrc18.zip 242: 0.10%: 91061393: 1.25%: /pub/xitami/xios222d.zip 232: 0.09%: 55804414: 0.77%: /pub/xitami/xiw1621c.exe 168: 0.07%: 55926506: 0.77%: /pub/sfl/doc/sfldoc18.zip 166: 0.07%: 17225482: 0.24%: /pub/archives/xitamiml.zip Referrer Report Printing non-iMatix referring URLs, sorted by number of requests. #reqs: %reqs: URL ------ ------ --- 1916: 0.86%: http://www.winfiles.com/apps/98/servers-websrv.html 867: 0.39%: http://www.windows95.com/apps/98/servers-websrv.html 393: 0.18%: http://www.winfiles.com/apps/nt/servers-websrv.html 372: 0.17%: http://members.xoom.com/theoutzone/hacker/progs.html 245: 0.11%: http://cws.internet.com/32cwss.html 220: 0.10%: http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Lab/3961/down.html 196: 0.09%: http://serverwatch.internet.com/webserver-xitami.html 191: 0.09%: http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/6460/Downloads.html 186: 0.08%: http://www.download.com/PC/Result/Download/0,21,0-41697,00.html 174: 0.08%: http://nng.simplenet.com/servd32.html 160: 0.07%: http://cws.internet.com/32newapps.html 140: 0.06%: http://www.windows95.com/apps/nt/servers-websrv.html 115: 0.05%: http://reference.perl.com/query.cgi?cgi 107: 0.05%: http://www.davecentral.com/2426.html 100: 0.04%: http://www.softseek.lishing_Tools/Servers/Review_12419_index.html 80: 0.04%: http://webcompare.internet.com/compare/xitami.html 80: 0.04%: http://www.infogoal.com/cbd/cbdtol.htm 73: 0.03%: http://www.freecode.com/cgi-bin/viewproduct.pl?2426 70: 0.03%: http://diego.dgsca2.unam.mx/server/ 63: 0.03%: http://tucows.tierranet.com/server95.html 63: 0.03%: http://www.freecode.com/cgi-bin/viewproduct.pl?4379 58: 0.03%: http://www.xnet.com/~blatura/linapp6.html 57: 0.03%: http://ftp.sunet.se/nonags/servd32.html 53: 0.02%: http://cnyweb.com/nonags/servd32.html 53: 0.02%: http://www.os2ss.com/news/ Browser Report Printing the first 20 browsers, sorted by number of requests. #reqs: %reqs: browser ----- ------ ------- 31256: 12.42%: Mozilla/4.04 [en] (Win95; I) 24579: 9.77%: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.01; Windows 95) 15515: 6.17%: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.0; Windows 95) 12712: 5.05%: Mozilla/4.04 [en] (WinNT; I) 10310: 4.10%: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.01; Windows NT) 7957: 3.16%: Mozilla/3.0 (Win95; I; HTTPClient 1.0) 5137: 2.04%: Mozilla/4.04 [en] (Win95; I ;Nav) 5017: 1.99%: Mozilla/4.03 [en] (Win95; I) 4885: 1.94%: Mozilla/4.04 [en] (Win95; U) 4372: 1.74%: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.01; Windows 98) 3922: 1.56%: Mozilla/2.0 (compatible; MSIE 3.0; Windows 95) 3645: 1.45%: Mozilla/2.0 (compatible; MSIE 3.01; Windows 95) 3520: 1.40%: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 4.0; Windows NT) 3429: 1.36%: Mozilla/2.0 (compatible; MSIE 3.02; Update a; Windows 95) 3350: 1.33%: Mozilla/4.01 [en] (Win95; I) 3320: 1.32%: Mozilla/2.0 (compatible; MSIE 3.02; Windows 95) 2698: 1.07%: Mozilla/3.01Gold (Win95; I) 2688: 1.07%: Mozilla/3.04Gold (Win95; I) 2605: 1.04%: Mozilla/3.01 (Win95; I) 2490: 0.99%: Mozilla/4.03 [de] (Win95; I) == TERMINATE THE PROGRAM -...---...-..----....-.---..---...-...---.-...---.- Well, anything's possible: pigs may fly, Windows NT may live in peace and harmony with OS/2 on the same system, and people may want to get off the Liberetto mailing list. No, we don't really believe any of it either. To get off this list, send a self-addressed and stamped e-mail to our usual address, with a haiku on the subject of post-modern communications based on electrons and cleft sticks. We'll publish the best entries. As we say around here, if in doubt, hit it with a large rock!! If it breaks, it was probably no use anyhow.