From: gk on
I read this text...

in stateless session beans and Entity Beans server maintains a pool of
instances.whenever server got a request from client it takes one
instance from the pool and serves the client request.


Does that mean statefull session bean does not have instance
pooling ? if that is so , why ?



N.B: how to keep track of My posts ? I am using google group web.
what to do so that I can come back and view my posts ? there is no
View My Post menu in the interface . Could you please let me know how
do I store my posts ?
From: Lew on
gk wrote:
> N.B: [sic] how to keep track of My posts ? I am using google group [sic] web.
> what to do so that I can come back and view my posts ? there is no
> View My Post menu in the interface . Could you please let me know how
> do I store my posts ?

This is Usenet. Many of us use readers other than (and therefore better than)
Google Groups.

Google lets you view your account through your profile, and from there it
links to posts that you've entered. However, this question is best asked in a
Google Groups forum or helpdesk, not a Java Usenet forum.

You can also Google for your Google Groups posts, interestingly.

As for saving them, have no fear. Usenet posts are archived seemingly for
forever. Every embarrassing thing I've posted is out there for the world to
see for as long as there's the Internet.

Why do you wish to keep track of your own posts?

--
Lew
From: gk on
On May 12, 9:08 am, Lew <no...(a)lewscanon.com> wrote:
> gk wrote:
> > N.B: [sic] how to keep track of  My posts ?  I am using google group [sic] web.
> > what to do so that I can come back and view my posts ? there is no
> > View My Post  menu in the interface . Could you please let me know how
> > do I store my posts ?
>
> This is Usenet.  Many of us use readers other than (and therefore better than)
> Google Groups.
>
> Google lets you view your account through your profile, and from there it
> links to posts that you've entered.  However, this question is best asked in a
> Google Groups forum or helpdesk, not a Java Usenet forum.
>
> You can also Google for your Google Groups posts, interestingly.
>
> As for saving them, have no fear.  Usenet posts are archived seemingly for
> forever.  Every embarrassing thing I've posted is out there for the world to
> see for as long as there's the Internet.
>
> Why do you wish to keep track of your own posts?
>
> --
> Lew


Otherwise How do I read the responses posted by other
users ! ....posts are scrolling down in the web and after sometime its
lost.
From: RedGrittyBrick on
On 12/05/2010 07:10, gk wrote:
> On May 12, 9:08 am, Lew<no...(a)lewscanon.com> wrote:
>> gk wrote:
>>> N.B: [sic] how to keep track of My posts ? I am using google group [sic] web.
>>> what to do so that I can come back and view my posts ? there is no
>>> View My Post menu in the interface . Could you please let me know how
>>> do I store my posts ?
>>
>> This is Usenet. Many of us use readers other than (and therefore better than)
>> Google Groups.
>>
>> Google lets you view your account through your profile, and from there it
>> links to posts that you've entered. However, this question is best asked in a
>> Google Groups forum or helpdesk, not a Java Usenet forum.
>>
>> You can also Google for your Google Groups posts, interestingly.
>>
>> As for saving them, have no fear. Usenet posts are archived seemingly for
>> forever. Every embarrassing thing I've posted is out there for the world to
>> see for as long as there's the Internet.
>>
>> Why do you wish to keep track of your own posts?
>>
>
>
> Otherwise How do I read the responses posted by other
> users ! ....posts are scrolling down in the web and after sometime its
> lost.

Try a newsreader client program such as Thunderbird in conjunction with
either your Internet service provider's news-server or with one of the
free (or indeed commercial) news-servers.

A dedicated newsreader will keep track of which messages you have
already read, organise postiongs into conversational threads and take
you to the next unread message in a convenient manner, they can also
higyhlight conversations you have initiated or participated in,
eliminate much spam and nuisance postings - and be beneficial in many
other ways.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newsreader_%28Usenet%29
http://www.google.com/Top/Computers/Software/Internet/Clients/Usenet/
http://www.newsreaders.com/win/clients.html
http://www.teranews.com/clients.html

Thunderbird as a newsgroup client
http://opensourcearticles.com/introduction_to_thunderbird_8

--
RGB
From: gk on
On May 12, 2:04 pm, RedGrittyBrick <RedGrittyBr...(a)spamweary.invalid>
wrote:
> On 12/05/2010 07:10, gk wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On May 12, 9:08 am, Lew<no...(a)lewscanon.com>  wrote:
> >> gk wrote:
> >>> N.B: [sic] how to keep track of  My posts ?  I am using google group [sic] web.
> >>> what to do so that I can come back and view my posts ? there is no
> >>> View My Post  menu in the interface . Could you please let me know how
> >>> do I store my posts ?
>
> >> This is Usenet.  Many of us use readers other than (and therefore better than)
> >> Google Groups.
>
> >> Google lets you view your account through your profile, and from there it
> >> links to posts that you've entered.  However, this question is best asked in a
> >> Google Groups forum or helpdesk, not a Java Usenet forum.
>
> >> You can also Google for your Google Groups posts, interestingly.
>
> >> As for saving them, have no fear.  Usenet posts are archived seemingly for
> >> forever.  Every embarrassing thing I've posted is out there for the world to
> >> see for as long as there's the Internet.
>
> >> Why do you wish to keep track of your own posts?
>
> > Otherwise How do I read the responses posted by other
> > users ! ....posts are scrolling down in the web and after sometime its
> > lost.
>
> Try a newsreader client program such as Thunderbird in conjunction with
> either your Internet service provider's news-server or with one of the
> free (or indeed commercial) news-servers.
>
> A dedicated newsreader will keep track of which messages you have
> already read, organise postiongs into conversational threads and take
> you to the next unread message in a convenient manner, they can also
> higyhlight conversations you have initiated or participated in,
> eliminate much spam and nuisance postings - and be beneficial in many
> other ways.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newsreader_%28Usenet%29http://www.google.com/Top/Computers/Software/Internet/Clients/Usenet/http://www.newsreaders.com/win/clients.htmlhttp://www.teranews.com/clients.html
>
> Thunderbird as a newsgroup clienthttp://opensourcearticles.com/introduction_to_thunderbird_8
>
> --
> RGB- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -


but that needs the ISP settings which I don't have. I'll prefer a web
based access so that I can check it from any machine. is not google
can make it ?