> I installed tpb (0.6.4) and osd (xosd-bin and libxosd2 2.2.14-1.2) on my
> etch system with xorg 6.8.2 and KDE 3.3.
>
> Nothing shows up when I use the volume or other keys.
>
> The nvram module is loaded, nvram device is present:
> crw-rw 1 root nvram 10, 144 2005-09-27 07:21 /dev/nvram
>
>
Le 13053ième jour après Epoch,
Bob Alexander écrivait:
> I installed tpb (0.6.4) and osd (xosd-bin and libxosd2 2.2.14-1.2) on
> my etch system with xorg 6.8.2 and KDE 3.3.
>
> Nothing shows up when I use the volume or other keys.
Did you run "tpb -d" from root ?
> The nvram module is loaded, nv
On Mon, 2005-09-26 at 08:32 +1000, John O'Hagan wrote:
> One would think so; but in fact if I modprobe -r psmouse (without
> suspending),
> my touchpad stops working, and modprobe psmouse doesn't restart it, nor does
> restarting X; only a reboot. (X won't restart: "could not find core
> pointe
I installed tpb, no install osd.
Before I install Display Card Drive,nothing show up when use volume keys.
And I install fglrx(My ATI 9600 card' drive), tpb works fine.
On 9/27/05, François TOURDE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Le 13053ième jour après Epoch,
> Bob Alexander écrivait:
>
> > I instal
Hi,
I'm running Debian 3.1 Sarge on a IBM Thinkpad R51 with kernel
2.6.11-1-686. My CPU is a Intel Pentium M 1700 MHz and i'm using
cpufreqd to change the cpu frequency dynamicly.
When i use my notebook with ac cpufreq-info gives me a range from 213 to
1700 MHz, without ac i only get a range fro
On Tuesday 27 September 2005 20:35, marc wrote:
> # /sbin/init: 432: cannot open dev/console: No such file
> # Kernel panic - not syncing: Attempting to kill init!
This can mean 2 things:
- the drivers needed for your disk controller are not available; if your
laptop has SATA, this is pretty lik
On Tue, 2005-09-27 at 20:59 +0200, Frans Pop wrote:
> This can mean 2 things:
> - the drivers needed for your disk controller are not available; if your
> laptop has SATA, this is pretty likely for 2.6.8 and less so for 2.6.12
> - your bootloader config and /etc/fstab refer to /dev/hda (for the 2
Hi!
I'm Trying to install Debian Testing on my Acer Travelmate 4654.
The problem is that the CDROM is connected on the SATA controller and de
HD is connected on the PATA controller.
The Debian-Installer don't recognize my cdrom. Even if I load first of
all ata_piix. It only finds my hard drive.
On Tue, 2005-09-27 at 17:20 -0300, Arlindo Sierra Neto wrote:
> The Debian-Installer don't recognize my cdrom. Even if I load first of
> all ata_piix. It only finds my hard drive.
> It has a ICH6 chipset.
Maybe http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-270763.html helps; it's all I
can offer...
Koen
On Tue, Sep 27, 2005 at 07:00:52PM +0200, Arne Lange wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm running Debian 3.1 Sarge on a IBM Thinkpad R51 with kernel
> 2.6.11-1-686. My CPU is a Intel Pentium M 1700 MHz and i'm using
> cpufreqd to change the cpu frequency dynamicly.
>
> When i use my notebook with ac cpufreq-info
Look into /etc/cpufreq.conf
You will probably have to make some configuration changes.
vlcak
On úterý 27 září 2005 18:00, Arne Lange wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm running Debian 3.1 Sarge on a IBM Thinkpad R51 with kernel
> 2.6.11-1-686. My CPU is a Intel Pentium M 1700 MHz and i'm using
> cpufreqd to cha
David R. Litwin wrote:
>snip
not wroking properly.
>
> When I go to a web site, (say google), it will say loading for a long
> time, then will either come in at the normal DSL speed, or simply will
> not work. Note that Gaim will often not connect (or it takes MANY
> attempts) and that apt-get (
What you describe sounds like a dns related problem. And the "long time" you
talk about is probably the the 30 sec time-out peiod of the dns system.Don't those set your IP to a certain nuber; or do they give you a name? Either or, i do not believe that I have this. How can I check to be sure?
chec
Hi All,
I'm just looking for a Wireless monitor.
Thanks,
Bruno
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Bruno Costacurta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi All,
> I'm just looking for a Wireless monitor.
Hi Bruno,
do you know apt-cache(8)?
% apt-cache search wireless monitor
airsnort - WLAN sniffer
[...]
kismet - Wireless 802.11b monitoring tool
[...]
Regards, Frank
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> My routes? What are these and how can I go about checking them?You can check routing using netstat, this must give something like this (when ethernet (eth0) card is used):
# netstat -atrKernel IP routing tableDestination Gateway Genmask Flags MSS Window irtt Iface192.168.0.
gnome applet has a simply Network Monitor if you use gnome
On 9/28/05, Frank Terbeck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Bruno Costacurta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi All,
> > I'm just looking for a Wireless monitor.
>
> Hi Bruno,
>
> do you know apt-cache(8)?
>
> % apt-cache search wireless monitor
I've heard wlassistant is good. But I'm not sure if you can get it via apt-get.
Cheers,
ChrisOn 9/27/05, H jj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
gnome applet has a simply Network Monitor if you use gnomeOn 9/28/05, Frank Terbeck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> Bruno Costacurta <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> > H
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