View Full Version : IP address for Berkeley uploads/downloads.
chawken
11-06-01, 09:33 AM
I have a tbird and a PIII system, at work, that are sitting idle right now. I want them to crunch, but they are on an internet filter. I can open up the internet filter to allow upload and downloads, but I need the actual Web or IP address of where the completed results go. Does anyone have that?
Sir-Epix
11-06-01, 11:13 AM
Couldn't you use a program like NeoTrace to get the ip address? I will see if I can't find those ip address for you.
Try Ober - I think he had that posted somewhere pertaining to seti cache.
chawken
11-06-01, 03:11 PM
Originally posted by TC
Try Ober - I think he had that posted somewhere pertaining to seti cache.
Thanks TC - I emailed him this morning and he did respond with the web addy's. One of the machines that I was going to bring up, in taking off the stock HSF, my screwdriver slipped and kind of stripped off a few IC's and their decouplers. Oh well, get the info to get the machines up and running and I end up trashing the machines.
Originally posted by chawken
Thanks TC - I emailed him this morning and he did respond with the web addy's. One of the machines that I was going to bring up, in taking off the stock HSF, my screwdriver slipped and kind of stripped off a few IC's and their decouplers. Oh well, get the info to get the machines up and running and I end up trashing the machines.
Ouch! That's a bummer. You know I did the same thing one time, actually twice with the old slot1 style platform. On one occasion I was trying to manually wire the Asus P3CD to adjust core voltage since the bios option was absent. I did a mountain of fine soldering on the back of the board, got it all hooked up to a dip switch, fired it up and it made no difference. In a fit of rage I yanked one of the cpu's out and threw it across the room. It hit the wall and promptly broke up in several pieces. The funny thing is I walked over and picked up the pieces, and believe it or not the plastic shell that you had to remove to put an aftermarket heatsink on had broken off cleanly leaving the cartridge and core in perfect shape. Another time I was taking the shell off and slipped with a screwdriver. It broke one surface mount resistor off. I figured the cpu was dead for sure, but I was amazed when it ran perfectly for another 3 or 4 months until I replaced it. A few weeks ago I fried a brand new 1800XP when I failed to notice my thermalright SK6 was partially resting on the raised edged of the socket. I know that bummed out feeling all too well.
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