±Û¾´ÀÌ: Noah (nogood87@yahoo.com)
ȨÆäÀÌÁö: http://burnfund.org/lopid-cost/ 2014/9/25(¸ñ) lopid-cost( Load:59) | |
EyjezeTJoabvi What university do you go to? <a href=" http://burnfund.org/generic-levothyroxine/ ">levothroid vs synthroid</a> Hosts takes care of all the DNS refreshing, so as soon as you’ve finished editing a hostname entry, it’s active (or disabled, as the case may be)—you can verify this by using Terminal or OS X’s Network Utility to ping the new hostname. Hosts also makes backups of your hosts file before and after you make edits, just in case something goes wrong. (These are stored in ~/Library/Application Support/Hosts. If you need to restore, you’ll need to do so manually—it would be nice if Hosts could do this for you, since it involves deleting and moving system-owned files.) And to prevent you from mucking up your network connections, Hosts hides OS X's default hosts-file entries. |
|