lol A date-command would be nice. ;-)
I just wanted to let everyone know that Ben is working on updating the script he uses to pull in the NASA FDN files. You know it goes, I expect.. A site reworks it's sites, links ip addresses or whatever,Sometime the nasa-apod site is a bit very 'different'. I've fixed the problem some months ago, since they announce some videos as well.
etc. which turns your previous methodology out the door <g> Just a
heads up that he's working on it :)
Take care,Bye/2 Torsten
Janis
My script uses rexx and wget, because of this my script just works on OS/2. Feel free to connect.
lol A date-command would be nice. ;-)My script uses rexx and wget, because of this my script just worksGreat minds think alike Lol.. Yes, my script also uses wget, the date command and lynx. :)
on OS/2. Feel free to connect.
I wrote the original script for Ben years ago, he has since updated/modified it. Works well :)Well I've written the script, because I couldn't connect to Ben via binkd. This
Thank you for sending the location of yours as well :)Ahm, it was an example of the nightly nasa-apod announcement of my system.
Take care,Bye/2 Torsten
Janis
Hello Torsten,
13 Apr 18 20:35 at you wrote to Janis Kracht:
lol A date-command would be nice. ;-)
Get JDeBP's 32-bit command line utilities package for OS/2. It has a real "date" command that doesn't prompt you; it just shows the date.
That's how Ubuntu's date command works... the command with no flags
just displays the date:
OS/2's shell has some definite quirks. That package I mentioned fixes many of
those quirks and adds some serious functionality.
I love the date command in bash. I use it a lot in BBS-related scripts.
Sysop: | digital man |
---|---|
Location: | Riverside County, California |
Users: | 1,042 |
Nodes: | 15 (0 / 15) |
Uptime: | 54:54:36 |
Calls: | 500,379 |
Calls today: | 1 |
Files: | 95,208 |
D/L today: |
649 files (68,754K bytes) |
Messages: | 464,512 |