< :the previous in number
^ :the list in numerical order
> :the next in number
P :the previous artilce (have the same parent)
N :the next (in thread)
|<:the top of this thread
>|:the next thread
^ :the parent (reply-to)
_:the child (an article replying to this)
>:the elder article having the same parent
<:the youger article having the same parent
---:split window and show thread lists
| :split window (vertically) and show thread lists
~ :close the thread frame
.:the index
..:the index of indices
Chad Fowler wrote:
> On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 00:08:22 +0900, Richard Kilmer <rich / infoether.com> wrote:
>
>>We are going to have my buddy's audio mixing board, a wireless mic, and a
>>pre-amp. We can run the board into a camera also directly into a laptop to
>>record directly to MP3. I am gonna try and confirm borrowing a projector,
>>since my company does not own one itself. So, we will be set this year re:
>>getting solid recordings of the talks and be able to post things up quickly.
>>Actually, getting a list of sites before hand that would host these MP3's of
>>the conference would make it far easier to post quickly.
>>
>
>
> We can obviously put them on the rubyconf website, though I'm thinking
> this is a good bittorrent-only kind of thing.
>
> Chad
>
Does anyone have, or know of, snake-simple instructions on how to host
large files in a public server, making them available only through
bittorrent.
I poked around, and can see how to make a torrent file, and then get
that torrent file to a tracker, but I gather from this that the target
file is expected to be available form my PC, and only when I run a
bittorrent client. I want to serve the files form ruby-doc.org, not my
home box.
I expect that I will need to run a tracker on the server hosting the
files. Is this what RubyForge does?
This is off-topic for Ruby in general, but handy info as large
Ruby-related files become available.
Thanks,
James