This guide will show you how to Unbrick the LG Venice. This can also be used to upgrade the LG Venice to JellyBean (May 20th, 2013). Whether you are unbricking or upgrading you WILL loose root access and everything on the device besides the files in the external SD card. As of May 20th, 2013 the LG Venice has NO root for JellyBean.
I have a Premium SSL Cert with a provider and they sent me chain.cer, site.pem and site.cer.
Hi everyone. I'm new to the site (well, as a member, searching site for 2-3 years now). Still a newb at all this but glad to be here. :)
I have nginx with the following setup:
server {
listen 80;
server_name site.com www.site.com;
root /home/site/public_html;
listen 443;
#server_name site.com www.site.com;
#root /home/site/public_html;
ssl_certificate /root/site.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /root/site.key;
However, when I view the SSL connection I
Updated.
I am looking for some hardware recommendations on an upcoming virtualization project. We are a small company (80 users - 25 in site 1, 55 in site 2) currently using Windows Server 2003 - no VM servers yet. Our AD is setup where site 1 is the root domain and site 2 is a subdomain/subnet - connected by T1 and VPN for failover.
Hello my dear friends!
Im having quite a hard time figuring out this problem and i need your help. Here's the scenario:
I have a sharepoint 2010 web application on my port 80. This has 2 site collections, the root, and the /sites/official.
I remember a few monts ago, I visit a high quality web site. If I remember, I learned that site from github.
In the site, you can build your own linux server with all featers like Ram, HDD, CPU etc.
It was very expensive site but; when you select minimal feature for all, it was free.
And this site not for just a host site. The site was like some kind of a developer site.
I have a situation whereby there are 3 sites.
Site a - User site
Site b - User site
Site c - datacentre
Site a can talk to site c fine
Site b can not talk to everything in site C
In particular, workstations in site b are struggling to communicate properly with site c.