Bug#504217: [Fwd: Bug#504217: tree: Current locale not used to display file names]

2008-11-21 Thread Steve Baker
  I've updated the source.  It should be in 1.5.2.3 whenever that is released.

- Steve



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Bug#482142: [Fwd: Bug#482142: tree: Add option to sort with natural order algorithm]

2008-06-04 Thread Steve Baker
You wrote:
> JFYI, this idea just came in to the Debian Bug Tracking System at
> .

  Thanks for the heads-up.  I've incorporated it into 1.5.2 which I will
release today or tomorrow.

- Steve



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Bug#492570: [Fwd: Bug#492570: tree: -v overrides --dirsfirst]

2008-07-28 Thread Steve Baker
Florian Ernst <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote"
> FYI, this just in to the Debian BugTrackingSystem at
> 
...
> if you specify -v and --dirsfirst, -v will override the --dirsfirst-option,
> so that dirs and files are mixed.

  The sorting options have always been mutally exclusive.  --dirsfirst is
just a sorting option, like -r and -t are, which will override each other
depending on where they are located on the command line.  I suppose I'll have
to make --dirsfirst a meta-sort option modified by -v, -r and -t.

- Steve



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Bug#292888: Apple Quicktime Pro

2008-09-08 Thread Steve Baker
#The following titles and more are now available for pcs and macs#

Photo shop CS4
Office 2008 Special Media Edition
AutoCAD 2009
Apple Quicktime Pro
Native Instruments Absynth 4
Neuratron Photoscore Ultimate 5.5

# summersoftsale  .com #

System Requirements
# For PC:
# Intel Pentium 4 (1.4GHz processor), Intel Centrino, Intel Xeon Native 
Instruments Absynth 4 or Intel Core Duo (or Native Instruments Absynth 4) 
processor; SSE2-enabled processor required for AMD systems & Microsoft Windows 
XP with Service Pack 2 or Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium, Business, 
Ultimate, or Enterprise (certified for 32-bit editions)
# 512MB of RAM or more
# 1GB of available hard-disk space (additional free space Native Instruments 
Absynth 4)
# Microsoft compatible sound card (multichannel ASIO-compatible sound card 
recommended)
# 1,024x768 monitor resolution with 32-bit color adapter recommended
# CD-R or DVD-ROM drive

# For MAC:
# PowerPC G4 or G5 or multicore Intel processor
# Mac OS X or similar
# 512MB of RAM or more
# 1GB of available hard-disk space
# Core Audio compatible sound card
# 1,024x768 monitor resolution with 32-bit color adapter
# DVD-ROM drive# DVD+-R burner required for DVD creation

Hurricane Ike, expected to make landfall in the U.S. this week, has already 
caused havoc in Cuba and the Caribbean. In Haiti, at least 58 people have been 
killed. The port city of Gonaives, hit hard last week by Tropical Storm Hanna, 
has been flooded again, and aid agencies are having trouble delivering supplies.



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Bug#562971: [Fwd: Bug#562971: Wrong unit when using -h [patch]]

2009-12-30 Thread Steve Baker
Florian Ernst  wrote:
> Hello Steve,
>
> FYI, this just in to the Debian BugTrackingSystem at
> .
>
> Cheers,
> Flo
...
> From: Ulrich Eckhardt 
...
> Actually there are several aspects to this bug, which is also related 
> to #556186[1]:
>
> 1. The prefix for thousand is "k", not "K", all others are correctly 
> capitalized.

  The behavior conforms to the behavior of 'ls'. I am not going to change
this.  A capital K has been standard to denote 1024 bytes for as long as I've
been computing.  If he wishes to be asinine about it, it conforms to the JEDEC
Standard 100B.01 defining the "prefix to units of semiconductor storage
capacity".  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JEDEC_memory_standards).

> 2. The prefix k means one thousand. Abusing it for 1024 is just that - 
> abuse[2].

  Again the behavior conforms to 'ls' (and many other Unix utilities.)  If he
wants an --si option (ala ls) then he is welcome to code it.

>  Note that the manpage 'documented' this bug using the 
> offensive wording reported in #556186. This IMHO doubly asinine phrase 
> was removed in one of the newer releases, but without replacing it 
> with some honest explanation of the prefix abuse.

  This is why people stop making free software.

- Steve



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