In Feburary 2016 28,
Make sure the host's server provides a sufficiently fast connection to the Internet. A T3 connection is optimal, but a T1 will work for most Web sites. A dial-up connection is usually much too slow.
Find out how many machines will be sharing the server with you. You don't want to be slowed down by traffic from other sites. Compare this number with other hosting services to give yourself negotiating room.
Investigate limits on bandwidth and hits. Make sure you won't be charged severely if a lot of traffic goes through your site. Look for reasonable flat monthly rates as opposed to rates based on use.
Find out what kind of customer support the host offers. Twenty-four hour support and speedy replies aren't unreasonable demands. Try to avoid paying for customer support.
Plan ahead when thinking about Web space. The amount of space you need depends on the nature of your site, but be sure to give your site room to grow.
Look for a company that offers virtual hosting. This will allow you to use your own domain name (www.yoursite.com) as your URL as opposed to a directory within the host's domain (www.host.com/yoursite). If you don't feel that you need your own domain name, save money and stick with the host's URL.
Make sure the host provides adequate CGI-bin access if you'll be using forms, and that the CGI bin can support your scripts. You should have your own CGI-bin directory with unlimited access.
Opt for Web-based administration if you're unfamiliar with Web programming. This will provide a Web-based interface for the maintenance of the site.
Look for a host that offers FTP and Telnet access to facilitate uploading files and editing CGI scripts.
Evaluate your e-mail needs. Some servers offer POP mailboxes, while others simply offer aliases that reroute mail to existing mailboxes. Some hosts put limits on the number of allowed aliases. Make sure you fully understand the host's e-mail services.
In Feburary 2016 28,
Showing posts with label limits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label limits. Show all posts
Sunday, 28 February 2016
Thursday, 18 February 2016
How to Organize a Fishing TournamentIn Feburary 2016 18,
In Feburary 2016 18,
Determine the purpose and scope of the tournament. It might be to promote sport fishing, to test the skills of the participants, to provide fellowship and camaraderie among the participants, or something else. Will this be a small one-time event, or part of something bigger?
Develop an organization to oversee the tournament, dividing the duties of planning and promotion among the group's members.
Choose the tournament date and location, and the species of fish that will be targeted by fishermen. Most freshwater tournaments focus on one species, such as largemouth bass or walleye.
Contact the state agency that oversees fishing regulations in the state where the tournament will be staged for both the state's bag limits, as well as to obtain any necessary permits to conduct the tournament.
Draft the contest rules and post them on the tournament website. Rules should cover entry fees and prize structure, scoring methods (total weight or point system), limits on number and size of fish (especially if more restrictive than state regulations), and rules on the handling of fish. Many fishing tournaments support bringing fish in alive and releasing them after weigh-in.
Organizational Responsibilities
Appoint a coordinator to oversee the efforts of all of the people assigned to tasks.
Pick someone responsible for promoting the event through posters, newspaper advertising, radio, television and the Internet.
Have someone serve as the liaison with the state agency that oversees fishing and fishing tournaments.
Get a mailing list of possible contestants from local fishing clubs or the like and send each prospective contestant an entry form and complete rules.
Arrange for lodging for all the fishermen competing in the tournament. This can be as simple as booking a campsite or as sophisticated as securing rooms in a nearby hotel.
Provide food for all of the anglers. Lunch can be sandwiches and soda given to each fisherman before he sets out, because the anglers will probably spend lunch hour on the water, while breakfast and dinner should be sit-down meals.
Contact local organizations as well as fishing equipment manufacturers to be sponsors and to provide prizes for the event.
In Feburary 2016 18,
Determine the purpose and scope of the tournament. It might be to promote sport fishing, to test the skills of the participants, to provide fellowship and camaraderie among the participants, or something else. Will this be a small one-time event, or part of something bigger?
Develop an organization to oversee the tournament, dividing the duties of planning and promotion among the group's members.
Choose the tournament date and location, and the species of fish that will be targeted by fishermen. Most freshwater tournaments focus on one species, such as largemouth bass or walleye.
Contact the state agency that oversees fishing regulations in the state where the tournament will be staged for both the state's bag limits, as well as to obtain any necessary permits to conduct the tournament.
Draft the contest rules and post them on the tournament website. Rules should cover entry fees and prize structure, scoring methods (total weight or point system), limits on number and size of fish (especially if more restrictive than state regulations), and rules on the handling of fish. Many fishing tournaments support bringing fish in alive and releasing them after weigh-in.
Organizational Responsibilities
Appoint a coordinator to oversee the efforts of all of the people assigned to tasks.
Pick someone responsible for promoting the event through posters, newspaper advertising, radio, television and the Internet.
Have someone serve as the liaison with the state agency that oversees fishing and fishing tournaments.
Get a mailing list of possible contestants from local fishing clubs or the like and send each prospective contestant an entry form and complete rules.
Arrange for lodging for all the fishermen competing in the tournament. This can be as simple as booking a campsite or as sophisticated as securing rooms in a nearby hotel.
Provide food for all of the anglers. Lunch can be sandwiches and soda given to each fisherman before he sets out, because the anglers will probably spend lunch hour on the water, while breakfast and dinner should be sit-down meals.
Contact local organizations as well as fishing equipment manufacturers to be sponsors and to provide prizes for the event.
In Feburary 2016 18,
Labels:
bag,
conduct,
Draft,
largemouth,
limits,
obtain,
oversees,
permits,
regulations,
staged
Monday, 8 February 2016
What Is the PHP Mail Character Limit?In Feburary 2016 08,
In Feburary 2016 08,
The PHP 'mail' function takes three required and two optional parameters, all of which are strings. The first parameter contains the email address of the recipient. The second has the subject of the message. The third parameter is the email message itself. The fourth parameter contains extra headers such as 'From,' 'Cc' and 'Bcc.' The last parameter contains any flags that should be passed on the command line. The function returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the message was successfully relayed to the mail server. For example:$result = mail($to, $subject, $message, $headers);
Email Size
PHP does not impose any special limits on the size of an email message. It does, however, establish the maximum amount of memory that a single script can consume. This setting is called 'memory_limit' and can be modified in the 'php.ini' setup file, usually found in '/etc/php5/apache2/.' The default setting is 8 MB for PHP versions prior to 5.2 and 128MB in PHP 5.2 and later. Since an email message is a string passed to a function, that string cannot cause the script to exceed the 'memory_limit' parameter. This limit is not affected by email attachments because the contents of an attachment are not passed in memory to a PHP function.
Character Limits
PHP imposes a limit of 70 characters for each line in the text of an email message. This means that you have to insert the line feed character '\n' to break an email message into multiple lines if the message is more than 70 characters long. The PHP 'wordwrap' function will do this for you by passing it the message string and the maximum width of 70, for example:$result = mail($to, $subject, wordwrap($message, 70), $headers);
PHP Relay
PHP does not send an email message. It relays a message to a mail transport agent, or MTA, such as Exim, Microsoft Exchange, Postfix, qmail or Sendmail. The MTA sends the email to the recipient. The return value from the PHP 'mail' function indicates the success of the relay to the MTA, not of the delivery to the recipient. If an MTA imposes restrictions on the size of an email, including attachments, and the message exceeds that limit, the PHP 'mail' function will return a successful result and the message will fail with the MTA. The MTA will typically send an email to the sender indicating that the message was not sent because it exceeded the maximum size permitted.
In Feburary 2016 08,
The PHP 'mail' function takes three required and two optional parameters, all of which are strings. The first parameter contains the email address of the recipient. The second has the subject of the message. The third parameter is the email message itself. The fourth parameter contains extra headers such as 'From,' 'Cc' and 'Bcc.' The last parameter contains any flags that should be passed on the command line. The function returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the message was successfully relayed to the mail server. For example:$result = mail($to, $subject, $message, $headers);
Email Size
PHP does not impose any special limits on the size of an email message. It does, however, establish the maximum amount of memory that a single script can consume. This setting is called 'memory_limit' and can be modified in the 'php.ini' setup file, usually found in '/etc/php5/apache2/.' The default setting is 8 MB for PHP versions prior to 5.2 and 128MB in PHP 5.2 and later. Since an email message is a string passed to a function, that string cannot cause the script to exceed the 'memory_limit' parameter. This limit is not affected by email attachments because the contents of an attachment are not passed in memory to a PHP function.
Character Limits
PHP imposes a limit of 70 characters for each line in the text of an email message. This means that you have to insert the line feed character '\n' to break an email message into multiple lines if the message is more than 70 characters long. The PHP 'wordwrap' function will do this for you by passing it the message string and the maximum width of 70, for example:$result = mail($to, $subject, wordwrap($message, 70), $headers);
PHP Relay
PHP does not send an email message. It relays a message to a mail transport agent, or MTA, such as Exim, Microsoft Exchange, Postfix, qmail or Sendmail. The MTA sends the email to the recipient. The return value from the PHP 'mail' function indicates the success of the relay to the MTA, not of the delivery to the recipient. If an MTA imposes restrictions on the size of an email, including attachments, and the message exceeds that limit, the PHP 'mail' function will return a successful result and the message will fail with the MTA. The MTA will typically send an email to the sender indicating that the message was not sent because it exceeded the maximum size permitted.
In Feburary 2016 08,
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)