Hi,
I have written a PDF that I have blocked for printing, etc. Acrobat
Reader won't print it, because of the restrictions defined on the PDF
file's content. However, KPDF accepts printing it, and extracting
content from it, etc., even if these actions are unauthorized with
acroread. Is it normal?
Hi,
As stated in the title, the light on my Asus EEE 1000HE automatically
and randomly reduces some seconds after I have set it to its maximum
level. Why? That must be for some energy reason, but I would like to
deactivate this feature, or at least to modify the timer between the
action I do, and
On Mon, 19 Apr 2010 15:31:30 +0200
Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have written a PDF that I have blocked for printing, etc. Acrobat
> Reader won't print it, because of the restrictions defined on the PDF
> file's content. However, KPDF accepts printing it, and extracting
> content from it, et
Hi!
I (and some other people) are wondering about the question:
"What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand for?"
It does not mean deamon or default.
Does it maybe mean directory? Probably not, cause there are files named
"x.d" too.
There is no information about t
Neil Williams wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Apr 2010 15:31:30 +0200
> Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>
>
> Anti-features like locking and password protection are not supported
> and, if implemented, could make the free software tools appear non-free
> by restricting the functionality available to the user. In t
I Rattan wrote:
>
>
> On Mon, 19 Apr 2010, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
> yes.
Thanks. I assume that this is for the same reason as Mr. Williams
pointed out. Are _all_ the free PDF viewers running under Debian in
accordance with this principle?
--
Merciadri Luca
See http://www.student.montefiore.ulg.a
Hi!
I (and some othere people) are wondering about the question:
"What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand for?"
It does not mean deamon or default.
Does it maybe mean directory? Probably not, cause there are files named
"x.d" too.
There is no information abou
Hi,
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 03:32:47PM +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> As stated in the title, the light on my Asus EEE 1000HE automatically
> and randomly reduces some seconds after I have set it to its maximum
> level. Why? That must be for some energy reason, but I would like to
> deactivate thi
On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 11:41:03PM +0200, Michael Banck wrote:
> Why are you not using alioth for this?
It's less work for me, I haven't used alioth before.
Regards, Gerrit.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-devel-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact list
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Daigo Moriwaki
* Package name: log4cplus
Version : 1.0.3
Upstream Author : Tad E. Smith
* URL : http://log4cplus.sourceforge.net
* License : Apache, BSD
Programming Lang: C++
Description : C++ logging API modele
Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
--
Merciadri Luca
See http://www.student.montefiore.ulg.ac.be/~merciadri/
I use PGP. If there is a
Twas brillig at 17:32:51 19.04.2010 UTC+02 when
luca.mercia...@student.ulg.ac.be did gyre and gimble:
>> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
ML> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
ML> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
There
On 04/19/2010 03:51 PM, spamfuerda...@gmx.de wrote:
"What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand
for?"
it stands for 'directory'.
--
Address:Daniel Baumann, Burgunderstrasse 3, CH-4562 Biberist
Email: daniel.baum...@panthera-systems.net
Internet:
On 19/04/2010 17:32, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
>> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
If you have free software (ie software you have t
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 03:51:14PM +0200, spamfuerda...@gmx.de wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I (and some other people) are wondering about the question:
>
> "What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand for?"
>
>
> It does not mean deamon or default.
>
> Does it maybe mean director
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 10:39:03PM +0700, Mikhail Gusarov wrote:
>
> Twas brillig at 17:32:51 19.04.2010 UTC+02 when
> luca.mercia...@student.ulg.ac.be did gyre and gimble:
>
> >> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
> ML> And what do you suggest if one wants some
On Mon, 2010-04-19 at 15:52 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Thanks. I assume that this is for the same reason as Mr. Williams
> pointed out. Are _all_ the free PDF viewers running under Debian in
> accordance with this principle?
At least Evince can be convinced to provide this "feature", if you
to
Package: wnpp
Owner: Jonathan Yu
Severity: wishlist
X-Debbugs-CC: debian-devel@lists.debian.org,debian-p...@lists.debian.org
* Package name: libmusicbrainz-discid-perl
Version : 0.03
Upstream Author : Nicholas J. Humfrey
* URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/MusicBrainz
In article <4bcc77a3.9080...@student.ulg.ac.be> you wrote:
> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
It is simply not possible to publish something and protect it. The best
protection in that case is reputation.
Gruss
Bernd
--
Package: debian-policy
Version: 3.8.4.0
Severity: wishlist
Justification: Policy §3.6
X-Debbugs-CC: debian-devel@lists.debian.org
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi
As of today[1], the Java Policy retired the use of the virtual packages
mentioned
in the subject line, which brings
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Sven Arvidsson writes:
> On Mon, 2010-04-19 at 15:52 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>> Thanks. I assume that this is for the same reason as Mr. Williams
>> pointed out. Are _all_ the free PDF viewers running under Debian in
>> accordance with this prin
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Sorry, my last message was actually rejected by the moderation robot
(if this is a robot).
Vincent Danjean writes:
> On 19/04/2010 17:32, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>> Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
>>> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them,
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Bernd Eckenfels writes:
> In article <4bcc77a3.9080...@student.ulg.ac.be> you wrote:
>> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
>> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
>
> It is simply not possible to publish something a
Mikhail Gusarov writes:
> Twas brillig at 17:32:51 19.04.2010 UTC+02 when
> luca.mercia...@student.ulg.ac.be did gyre and gimble:
> >> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
> ML> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
> ML> benefits of
"spamfuerda...@gmx.de" writes:
> I (and some other people) are wondering about the question:
> "What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand for?"
> It does not mean deamon or default.
> Does it maybe mean directory? Probably not, cause there are files named
> "x.d" to
19.04.2010 17:42, derdavid1...@gmx.de пишет:
> "What does .d at the end of some dirctory and filenames actually stand
> for?"
This is for .directory with included files, and nothing else.
/etc/apt/sources.list.d/ extends sources.list .
You can find "include /etc/xinitd.d" in xinetd configuration
Merciadri Luca dijo [Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 05:32:51PM +0200]:
> > Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
Thing is, PDF is a printing-oriented format. It is a cl
Russ Allbery dijo [Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 02:14:21PM -0700]:
> I think people are not understanding why users use this feature in some
> environments.
>
> Yes, sometimes it's a misguided attempt at DRM, but I've more often seen
> it inside a workplace as defense in depth against *mistakes*. One mig
Gunnar Wolf writes:
> Russ Allbery dijo [Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 02:14:21PM -0700]:
>> I think people are not understanding why users use this feature in some
>> environments.
>>
>> Yes, sometimes it's a misguided attempt at DRM, but I've more often seen
>> it inside a workplace as defense in depth
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Neskie Manuel
* Package name: php-ogr
Version : 1.1.1
Upstream Author : Alan Boudreault
* URL : http://dl.maptools.org/dl/php_ogr/
* License : other
Programming Lang: PHP
Description : OGR module for php5
This
Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
>> Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
> And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
> benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
The PDF specification itself recommends using external encryption in
On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 02:20:52PM -0700, Russ Allbery wrote:
[...]
> The most common convention adopted was to permit including a directory
> full of configuration files, where anything dropped into that directory
> would become active and part of that configuration. As that convention
> became m
Zitat von Jay Berkenbilt :
Merciadri Luca wrote:
Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
Pdf "anti-features" are fake security. Don't trust on them, never.
And what do you suggest if one wants some real protection _and_ the
benefits of a format like PDF? Thanks.
The PDF specification itself recommends usi
33 matches
Mail list logo