On Mon, 2003-11-17 at 11:49, Rodolfo J. Paiz wrote: > You don't need a larger hard drive, but you do need a box running Fedora. I > suggest you find an old P/100 with 64MB of RAM (or you can even install > with 64MB and then reduce it down to 32MB), a 2GB disk, and a network card. > Put it under your desk, install Fedora in text mode only, and ssh to it. > VoilÃ! Personal server on which to learn Fedora. > > You do not need to intercept a darn thing. fetchmail will _check your > Notes mail_ via POP just as though you'd done it from your Winders > computer, no changes required. Then you just check your mail from your > Winders computer using your personal Fedora server as incoming mail server. > Outgoing mail has no need to change. > As the systems administrator for my company, I would have a hard time with users just bringing in PCs and setting them up on my network. I am responsible for all the systems and need to make sure that they are patched properly, no viruses, etc. I have a DHCP server that provides client addresses that I would prefer not to run out of addresses because I've got people installing PCs without authorization. As a matter of fact, company policy forbids such activity and is cause for immediate dismissal. So please Rodolfo, before you make suggestions like these, think them through from the SysAdmin side of things. If his company has a similar policy, he could be fired for setting up a PC like that. With all the issues with hackers, viruses, et al, companies are having zero tolerance for things like this. -- Edward M. Croft Sr. Systems Engineer Open Ratings, Inc. 200 West Street Waltham, MA 02451-1121