Re: Window and desktop switching trouble
On Fri, Jun 18, 2004 at 02:58:01PM +0200, Adeodato Simó wrote: > * Adeodato Simó [Fri, 18 Jun 2004 14:46:39 +0200]: > > * Michael Schuerig [Fri, 18 Jun 2004 14:39:03 +0200]: > > > > This last step has changed. Now, after releasing Alt (Win), the > > > selection window stays and only after pressing yet another key it > > > disappears. I can only avoid this behavior by pressing the Alt(Win)-Tab > > > sequence so quickly that the window does not become noticably visible. > > > I'm experiencing this behavior too. > > I forgot to say that I'm also using experimental 3.3 QT packages. Is > anybody with 3.2 having the same problem? actually yes. ii libqt3-compat- 3.2.3-3Qt 1.x and 2.x compatibility includes ii libqt3-headers 3.2.3-3Qt3 header files ii libqt3-i18n3.2.3-3i18n files for Qt3 library ii libqt3-mt-dev 3.2.3-3Qt development files (Threaded) ii libqt3c102-mt 3.2.3-3Qt GUI Library (Threaded runtime version) --
Re: HTTPS KIOSlave dies
On Friday 18 June 2004 20:25, Marcus Thiesen wrote: > Hi, > > I know this is maybe to much a fuzzy problem, but it really kills me at the > moment. Fixed, I just made a "apt-get --reinstall install libwww-ssl0 libssl0.9.7 libssl-dev openssl". The undefined symbols warnings still appear, but the HTTPS slave works again. Have fun, Marcus -- :: Marcus Thiesen :: www.thiesen.org :: ICQ#108989768 :: 0x754675F2 :: I create nice things...because it pleases the Author of my story. Larry Wall pgphhHUrj0uMq.pgp Description: signature
Adding Debian
Hi, I have Suse 9.1 pro installed with GRUB as the loader. I have the Debian CD's I purchased (Woody 3.0r1) and would like to add it as a separate system to see how it works. If I install it to a separate disk will I have any problems or are there specificate things I should look out for. The system is Linux only, NO MS$. Thanks for any suggestions. Tom Atkins
Re: Adding Debian
On Saturday 19 June 2004 11:50 am, Thomas S. Atkins wrote: > Hi, > > I have Suse 9.1 pro installed with GRUB as the loader. I have the Debian > CD's I purchased (Woody 3.0r1) and would like to add it as a separate > system to see how it works. If I install it to a separate disk will I have > any problems or are there specificate things I should look out for. The > system is Linux only, NO MS$. > > Thanks for any suggestions. > > Tom Atkins Polite reminder: This mailing list is really for discussing KDE in Debian. debian-user or debian-testing would be more appropriate. That having been said, I believe that you edit /etc/grub.conf to have a section for the new distro.
Re: Adding Debian
Let's move this over to [EMAIL PROTECTED] where it's on-topic. "Thomas S. Atkins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I have Suse 9.1 pro installed with GRUB as the loader. I have the > Debian CD's I purchased (Woody 3.0r1) and would like to add it as a > separate system to see how it works. If I install it to a separate > disk will I have any problems or are there specificate things I should > look out for. The system is Linux only, NO MS$. I would start by reading the manual, where this is explained. There's a link in the navigation column on the debian.org front page to the installation manual, as well as a copy of it on the installation CD, and probably a dead-tree copy that came with your CDs if it's a boxed set (someone else will need to confirm this as I have never actually seen a Debian boxed set). I *strongly* recommend following along in the manual if you start getting stuck, so get some way to view it other than on the system you're installing on with any Debian installer at this time[1]. Relevant to this conversation, however, is Chapter 3. http://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/ch-preparing.en.html#s-non-debian-partitioning If you need a repartitioning tool, go hit up knoppix.net for a bootable CD and use parted (the GNU partitioning tool, roughly the same functionality as the non-free and proprietary (boo, hiss!) PartitionMagic, but in a nice, clean ncurses interface) or qtparted (the KDE front end reminiscent to PartitionMagic). Keep that Knoppix disk around, even if you don't use Debian: You never know when you'll need something to boot from to get a system back up (and I think we both know a DOS disk isn't going to cut it). [1] However, the new debian-installer[2] is definitely going to be a huge improvement over boot-floppies[3] by the looks of beta4, I haven't looked at TC1 yet. [2] http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-installer/ [3] That's the installer that comes with woody (even if you got it on a CD, CD support for boot-floppies is a more recent thing) -- Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Linux. You can find a worse OS, but it costs more. pgpMEWexXzaWR.pgp Description: PGP signature