Bazsites.com Free Shells
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On the Web
- Free Shell Accounts - A list with reviews of more than 20 free shell account providers.
- Free Linux Shells - Free Redhat Linux shells, bots and IRC permitted. Requires registration with advertisers.
- Oceanius Free Shells Project - Debian and Tinysofa ES shell accounts for beginner programmers and others interested in open source. Background processes, IRC, compilers. Eggdrop provided but no tech support. No IRCd, no BNC. Participation required.
- Bur.st - Free Linux shells for Australian residents. IRC, mail and web hosting.
- Nic.Nac.Project - Free Debian Linux shells. IRC without bots or BNC on a DSL connection with full compiler access. Postcard-ware.
- rootshell.be - Free Linux shell accounts. No IRC traffic, no background processes, no compiling allowed.
- nyx.net - Free SunOS shells with IRC, compilers. No bots permitted. Requires verification of user's identity.
- Cyberspace Communications (Grex) - Offers conferencing and chat in addition to traditional free shell services. Governed by a cooperative of its users. Currently not accepting new accounts, since May 2005.
- Silence Is Defeat - Public access unix system facility offering free shells to the general public. IRC clients, vhost, e-mail, web space.
- Fastshell - Free Debian Linux shells. IRC enabled with bots and BNC permitted. Requires registration with advertisers.
Wikipedia Articles
- Vermetidae - Vermetidae is a family of marine gastropod molluscs of the order Sorbeoconcha. They are elongated tubular shells, moulded to the surface of attachment, and with the apertural part usually free, the opening directed upward.
- Bethe lattice - A Bethe lattice or Cayley tree, introduced by Hans Bethe in 1935, is a connected cycle-free graph where each node is connected to z neighbours, where z is called the coordination number. It can be seen as a tree-like structure emanating from a central node, with all the nodes arranged in shells around the central one.
- Sea angel - Sea angels are small pteropod mollusks of the suborder Gymnosomata. Their feet have developed into wing-like appendages (parapodia) and their shells have been lost, both adaptations made to suit their free-swimming oceanic lives.