Re: [CentOS] [SOLVED] Suspend Failure on Toshiba Portege R935

2013-11-17 Thread EGO.II-1

On 11/17/2013 02:46 AM, Michael B Allen wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 2:12 AM, Michael B Allen  wrote:
>> The problem is USB. I have an external keyboard+mouse connected by USB
>> and if I remove it I can successfully suspend and resume. If I plug in
>> a USB MIDI keyboard, again, I cannot suspend. So it seems any USB
>> connection breaks suspend.
> It seems I have fixed the problem!
>
> If I disable the following things in the BIOS, suspend / resume works:
>
>USB Legacy Emulation: disabled
>Bluetooth: disabled
>Web Camera: disabled
>Internal USB3.0 Controller: disabled
>
> I don't know which one was responsible. My guess would be USB 3.0. But
> it's 3 AM and I have to give up and declare victory.
>
> Hopefully someone finds this useful. Otherwise, sorry for the noise.
>
> Mike
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No problem here Mike! Glad to hear about your fix, I was thinking the 
Bluetooth was the only culprit, until you posted that bit about the KB & 
mouseI'll be saving this for future reference "Just In Case"!


EGO II
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[CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Michael Hennebry

Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
I took the default desktop: gnome.
Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
That gets rather annoying,
especially when I have to drill down several levels.
Is there around that behaviour?
If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.
Eventually I expect to change desktops.
Until then, any ideas?

-- 
Michael   henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu
"On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class,
whom I teach not to run with scissors,
that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword."  --  Lily
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[CentOS] maximum number of mounts

2013-11-17 Thread Rita
What is the maximum number of NFS mounts per client? I have an instance
where there are over 400 mount points using autofs. I was wondering if
there is a downside to that.



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Re: [CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Fred Smith
On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 11:55:27AM -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote:
> 
> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
> I took the default desktop: gnome.
> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
> That gets rather annoying,
> especially when I have to drill down several levels.
> Is there around that behaviour?
> If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.

Look under edit/preferences/behavior. Check the checkbox for 
"open in browser windows"


-- 
 Fred Smith -- fre...@fcshome.stoneham.ma.us -
   But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: 
 While we were still sinners, 
  Christ died for us.
--- Romans 5:8 (niv) --
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Re: [CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Amit Joshi
Its rather simple. There is an option to choose open all new folders in a 
browser window. That will do the trick. 



-Original Message-
From: "Michael Hennebry" 
Sent: ‎17-‎11-‎2013 20:56
To: "CentOS mailing list" 
Subject: [CentOS] file managemen


Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
I took the default desktop: gnome.
Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
That gets rather annoying,
especially when I have to drill down several levels.
Is there around that behaviour?
If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.
Eventually I expect to change desktops.
Until then, any ideas?

-- 
Michael   henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu
"On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class,
whom I teach not to run with scissors,
that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword."  --  Lily
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Re: [CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Johan Vermeulen
Maybe you're opening files via Locations".
Try Nautilus  Applications - System Tools - Filemanager.

Greetings, J.

Amit Joshi schreef:

>Its rather simple. There is an option to choose open all new folders in a 
>browser window. That will do the trick. 
>
>
>
>-Original Message-
>From: "Michael Hennebry" 
>Sent: ‎17-‎11-‎2013 20:56
>To: "CentOS mailing list" 
>Subject: [CentOS] file managemen
>
>
>Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
>I took the default desktop: gnome.
>Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
>That gets rather annoying,
>especially when I have to drill down several levels.
>Is there around that behaviour?
>If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.
>Eventually I expect to change desktops.
>Until then, any ideas?
>
>-- 
>Michael   henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu
>"On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class,
>whom I teach not to run with scissors,
>that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword."  --  Lily
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Re: [CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Michael Hennebry
On Sun, 17 Nov 2013, Fred Smith wrote:

> On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 11:55:27AM -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote:
>>
>> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
>> I took the default desktop: gnome.
>> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
>> That gets rather annoying,
>> especially when I have to drill down several levels.
>> Is there around that behaviour?
>> If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.
>
> Look under edit/preferences/behavior. Check the checkbox for
> "open in browser windows"

Thanks.
I'd thought it was telling me it would open directories in Firefox.
Not that I could think of any reason it should think I wanted to do that.

-- 
Michael   henne...@web.cs.ndsu.nodak.edu
"On Monday, I'm gonna have to tell my kindergarten class,
whom I teach not to run with scissors,
that my fiance ran me through with a broadsword."  --  Lily
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[CentOS] Saving Workspace State

2013-11-17 Thread Michael B Allen
Is there a way to save the position and workspace locations of at
least terminals on logout?

I want to have many workspaces with 2-3 terminals each for editing
code and scripts and ssh and so on.

The System > Preferences > Startup Applications > Options >
Automatically remember running applications when logged out doesn't
work. And gnome-session-save doesn't work either.

I used to use Fedora 14 and it saved the session state fine. But now I
cannot recall how to do it. I know GNOME 3 removed that code (the
GNOME developers now believe that the applications should remember
their own state) but I was hoping CentOS still has this capability.

Is it possible to save GNOME desktop session state in CentOS 6?

Mike
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Re: [CentOS] Saving Workspace State

2013-11-17 Thread Michael B Allen
Wait! It does work. I tried it before and it did not. Not sure if it
was checking said option or $ gnome-session-save on the commandline
but it just worked.

Mike

On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 3:05 PM, Michael B Allen  wrote:
> Is there a way to save the position and workspace locations of at
> least terminals on logout?
>
> I want to have many workspaces with 2-3 terminals each for editing
> code and scripts and ssh and so on.
>
> The System > Preferences > Startup Applications > Options >
> Automatically remember running applications when logged out doesn't
> work. And gnome-session-save doesn't work either.
>
> I used to use Fedora 14 and it saved the session state fine. But now I
> cannot recall how to do it. I know GNOME 3 removed that code (the
> GNOME developers now believe that the applications should remember
> their own state) but I was hoping CentOS still has this capability.
>
> Is it possible to save GNOME desktop session state in CentOS 6?
>
> Mike



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http://www.ioplex.com/
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[CentOS] Emacs 24 on CentOS 6.4

2013-11-17 Thread Carson Chittom
I'm fairly new to CentOS, so please excuse my ignorance.

I've installed CentOS 6.4, for which Emacs 23 is available; but I'd like
to have Emacs 24.  I've looked at rpmforge and epel, but neither seem to
have Emacs 24 already packaged; and I've searched for every combination
of emacs +  24 + centos without success.

While I could, of course, just do the ./configure && make && make
install dance, I don't like having software installed that's not in the
packaging system.  I'd appreciate any pointer to a prepackaged Emacs 24,
or failing that, a good tutorial on how to package software correctly
for CentOS.


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Re: [CentOS] Emacs 24 on CentOS 6.4

2013-11-17 Thread Frank Cox
On Sun, 17 Nov 2013 14:12:33 -0600
Carson Chittom wrote:

> While I could, of course, just do the ./configure && make && make
> install dance, I don't like having software installed that's not in the
> packaging system.  I'd appreciate any pointer to a prepackaged Emacs 24,
> or failing that, a good tutorial on how to package software correctly
> for CentOS.

In some/several cases you can simply recompile the Fedora srpm on your Centos 
system.

I don't know about Emacs, (don't use it myself) but there's nothing lost by 
trying it.

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Re: [CentOS] Emacs 24 on CentOS 6.4

2013-11-17 Thread Carson Chittom
On Sun, 2013-11-17 at 14:37 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Nov 2013 14:12:33 -0600
> Carson Chittom wrote:
> 
> > While I could, of course, just do the ./configure && make && make
> > install dance, I don't like having software installed that's not in the
> > packaging system.  I'd appreciate any pointer to a prepackaged Emacs 24,
> > or failing that, a good tutorial on how to package software correctly
> > for CentOS.
> 
> In some/several cases you can simply recompile the Fedora srpm on your Centos 
> system.
> 
> I don't know about Emacs, (don't use it myself) but there's nothing lost by 
> trying it.

That's a good idea, which I should have thought of.  :)

I'll give it a whirl and report back for the archives.



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Re: [CentOS] file managementttttttttttt

2013-11-17 Thread Fred Smith
On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 01:50:02PM -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote:
> On Sun, 17 Nov 2013, Fred Smith wrote:
> 
> > On Sun, Nov 17, 2013 at 11:55:27AM -0600, Michael Hennebry wrote:
> >>
> >> Last week, I installed CentOS 6 yet again.
> >> I took the default desktop: gnome.
> >> Whenever I open a directory, I get a new window.
> >> That gets rather annoying,
> >> especially when I have to drill down several levels.
> >> Is there around that behaviour?
> >> If it's in edit->preferences, I didn't find it.
> >
> > Look under edit/preferences/behavior. Check the checkbox for
> > "open in browser windows"
> 
> Thanks.
> I'd thought it was telling me it would open directories in Firefox.
> Not that I could think of any reason it should think I wanted to do that.

Yeah, I find it confusing, too, it's just that I've learned by
experiment that that's what it does.


-- 
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Do you not know? Have you not heard? 
The LORD is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. 
  He will not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom.
- Isaiah 40:28 (niv) -
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