>
> Note that I as the OP was using dpkg -V, not --verify. Might their be a
> difference?
>
> Cheers, Gene Heskett.
Gene always check the -h vs --help or man page
dpkg --help
-V|--verify [...] Verify the integrity of package(s).
package is optional and if not provided would check all
Gunnar Wolf wrote:
> I ran it on a clean Debian, on my Raspberry p400 (using one of the
> Bullseye images from https://raspi.debian.net/), and got:
>
> root@rpi-p400:~# dpkg -V
> ??5?? c /etc/fuse.conf
> ??5?? c /etc/default/raspi-firmware
> root@rpi-p400:~#
I do not think it has to do w
Gene Heskett wrote:
> It night "sound interesting" if it had sound, but thats the quietest
> movie I've watched in months. No audio buttons to be found.
sound appears to be muted. In the latest and greatest firefox it worked
after unmuting
--
FCD6 3719 0FFB F1BF 38EA 4727 5348 5F1F DCFE BCB0
John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
> John Paul Adrian Glaubitz
I just checked you on Google and found your essay
http://users.physik.fu-berlin.de/~glaubitz/mnses9100_essay.pdf
"While it was very natural in the post-war era, that sophisticated consumer
products like television setsand stereo equipm
John Paul Adrian Glaubitz wrote:
> So, why should laws protect the intellectual property of software
> companies but not the IP of hardware companies?
>
Are patents not enough?
> What supporters euphemistically call a "right to repair" is in reality an
> initiative against the right of companie
Ryutaroh Matsumoto wrote:
> crw-rw+ 1 root video 226, 0 Mar 24 16:35 card0
and you are in this video group?
martin wrote:
> How do I boot into graphics mode?
systemctl set-default graphical.target
Ryutaroh Matsumoto wrote:
> 2 and 3 can be worked around by module_blacklist=vc4 in the kernel comand
> line. Because of 4, I am using self-compiled upstreadm kernel 5.9.16...
> Another intel laptop also becomes very unstable with kernel 5.10,
> and I am staying away from 5.10.
>
> Best regards,
Rick Thomas wrote:
> Is it possible to install Debian Bullseye on a Raspberry Pi 4 (4GB) from a
> CD/DVD or USB Flash stick or uSDcard?
>
> If so, where would I look for instructions for doing so?
is the aarch64 bullseye kernel working on the RPI?
The buster does not work, so I copied the raspbe
Alan Corey wrote:
> You don't actually need most upgrades, I have a Jessie machine
> running, haven't updated it in a couple years.
this would be stupid advise if your machine were on directly connected to or
would access the internet, but assuming you use it behind a firewall at
home and it is i
Christoph Biedl wrote:
> this story isn't new: Older boxes with rather small memory. In my case,
> DockStar with 128 Mbyte RAM. They still serve a job as e.g. a router,
> but that limitation becomes more and more a problem. The biggest issue,
> at least for me, is apt although it's just the bringe
Phil Endecott wrote:
> The bottom of the Crowd Supply page you linked to lists
> some similar products. But "thinking outside the box",
> here are a couple of other interesting 8-core ARM64
> systems, available now:
Sorry to reply, but I couldn't resist. You mean the interesting thing is
that the
Gene Heskett wrote:
> But wouldn't that be only if the phones were going to be used on the pi?
> I made no attempt to pair them since that is not where the phones will
> be used when they arrive at the rest home 40 some one way miles away
> from that pi.
I must admit, I did not understand all you
Alan Corey wrote:
> My phone has lots of subdevices, I don't know how to connect to any of
> them yet either
what make/model is your phone, because I see you have OBEX FTP and I have
not seen this in recent phones?
Reco wrote:
> Proper Debian does not provide this package, and a certain popular
> GNU/Linux distribution for Raspberry Pi is an off-topic here.
may be we have to move to the raspberry-pi list, agreed, gut I think you
know Gene :)
Alan Corey wrote:
> bluetoothctl's info feature can be useful to see what states devices
> are in even if you're not pairing with them. Especially devices with
> few buttons.
>
> Yes there's a time limit because being discoverable is considered
> vulnerable.
Actually you can set up the discover
Gene Heskett wrote:
> Can anyone else contribute here?
for the audio you may need the pulse bluetooth module package.
pulseaudio-module-bluetooth
Gene Heskett wrote:
> Can anyone else contribute here?
What specification of BT hardware does your keyboard implement?
The current linux version bluez5 seem to be working well with BT HW version
4, but not always with BT HW v2.
Perhaps post make and model.
Also do you have BT HID installed/confi
basti wrote:
> It seems that the uboot is not build properly. The Serial console show a
> lot of � (Replacement character).
I was thinking it is because of the terminal type on the serial being vt100
or vt102 here. It shows not only on the RPi4
deloptes wrote:
>
> So what can the community rule out here. Is it aarch64 and arm64 the same
> or not?
I think this is the answer
https://wiki.debian.org/Arm64Port#Nomenclature_and_defines
If your package does architecture-specific things explicitly then you will
need to unders
Tixy wrote:
> Don't know what this has to do with Apple, unless it's an LLVM arch
> naming thing?
Yes LLVM.
I was planning to build our favorite desktop on arm64 for fun, but being
preoccupied now, could move forward, so this topic is intrigueing me as to
what architecture to start and build unde
Tixy wrote:
> AArch64 is the abbreviation used by ARM for their 64-bit ISA, and is
> also used used by projects like GCC.
I read this, but it said that the naming was merged to arm64 which initiated
from Apple. I am confused, cause the article said you can use both in GCC
for same thing
basti wrote:
> can please someone share a minimal image to boot aarch64 on rpi4?
Why using the term aarch64 and what is wrong with kernel8.img? I was told it
is the arm64 one and I think I tried it
Alan Corey wrote:
> Can't be a real program, it doesn't have a man page. I just installed
> it (on a Pi under Raspbian) because I'm looking for a way to put
> Buster or Bullseye on my Pinebook Pro SSD. Which is going to need
> drivers and firmware. The best thing I've seen is
> https://github.c
Pete Batard wrote:
> That's because it uses Device Tree, and the DT based version of the
> Genet driver has been in the kernel for a while, so it should be mostly
> okay.
>
> But we have to use ACPI in UEFI for various reasons. The Pi 4 has a few
> quirks, especially when it comes to DMA and USB,
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
> Is there a preferred debian arm that people here use basically trouble
> free?
>
> This is for Pi3B
many suggest 32bit for the Pi3 incl. raspbian.
Uwe Kleine-König wrote:
> I don't know the capabilities of the vendor U-Boot, but I already
> installed Debian successfully on some machines by just starting the
> installer via tftp.
unfortunately tftp and usb boot are not (yet) officially working on RPI 4
Diederik de Haas wrote:
> (afaik). Disk access will be
> through the USB (3) port, so that's not ideal.
I don'T recall they changed the pin layout, so this should work
https://www.antratek.de/4x-sata-hat-for-nanopi-m4?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIpunswe785gIVicmyCh3MJwhvEAQYBCABEgK5vPD_BwE
Nigel Sollars wrote:
> You might want to run make menuconfig after copying the config ..
> perhaps do the same with the 4.19 kernel also and do a compare of
> 'what is' and 'what is not' there in the 5.5 perhaps things have been
> moved around a bit in the kconfig stuff.
>
Not sure if this is st
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