On Sat, Jul 03, 2010 at 22:54 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> why. I did an `apt-get install gnome' and restarted the computer, and
You might want to use aptitude as it is the default package manager for
lenny (and subsequent releases) for reasons like better dependency
resolution, interactive depe
On Saturday 03 July 2010 10:28:38 Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Lisi wrote:
> > You have established that the problem is with X not the whole system.
> > Had you considered that your hardware drivers (video card and/or monitor)
> > might have been removed from the kernel?
>
> This is possible. But the c
On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 05:31:22PM -0400, Mike Viau wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> I was just wondering what some of the debian community users has been
> experiencing in regards to the new Western Digital 4K Advanced format
> drives? Has any one tried using one of these drives on the 2.6.26
> (64/32 bi
Camaleón wrote:
> On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:29:36 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>
>> Camaleón wrote:
>>
>
>
>>> RAM is okay but CPU is a bit slow, bus limited, non-multithread, single
>>> core...
>>>
>>>
>> But it did it some months ago with the same Debian, but with an older
>>
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 16:11:04 -0300
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
> On 07/03/2010 12:22 PM, Eric KOM wrote:
> > The external modem don't have the driver for linux.
> > http://www.tp-link.com/in/products/productDetails.asp?class=&content=fea&pmodel=TM-EC5658V
> > May be, I will try with PCI?
> >
>
On Fri, 2 Jul 2010 22:07:03 -0400
Rob Owens wrote:
...
> I think the solution was to use opendns servers in /etc/resolv.conf.
> The reason it works is that, according to the article I read, many of
> these captive portal systems work by not giving you a dns server until
> you enter your credenti
Rob Owens wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 03:47:04PM +0100, Lisi wrote:
>
>> On Friday 02 July 2010 15:14:03 Merciadri Luca wrote:
>>
>>> Rob Owens wrote:
>>>
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 11:26:56PM +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Mark wrote:
>
>>
Rob Owens wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 10:29:36PM +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>
> aptitude install sysv-rc-conf. Run this and you can turn off gdm. This
> way you'll boot to a console even when not using single user mode.
>
> For lightweight desktops / window managers, I recommend you t
Lisi wrote:
> On Friday 02 July 2010 21:29:36 Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>>> Ok, ok, calm down :-)
>>>
>>>
>> A problem of Internet messaging is that, sometimes, messages are totally
>> misinterpreted. Here, I was not angry at all (actually, I'm not often
>> angry).
>>
>
> "Calm down"
On the link
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-4kb-sector-disks/index.html
[snip]
Tip: If you want to dual-boot between Linux and an
older operating system that
requires cylinder alignment, try aligning the starts of all your
partitions on multiples
of eight cylinders. This tran
On the link
http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/linux/library/l-4kb-sector-disks/index.html
[snip]
Tip: If you want to dual-boot between Linux and an
older operating system that
requires cylinder alignment, try aligning the starts of all your
partitions on multiples
of eight cylinders. This tra
No, this post did not just appear out of the ether after 10 years in limbo.
Yes, I do own a Visor. I haven't used mine in ages, but my wife depends on
hers. She has been syncing to her box at work (with that other OS), but it has
been giving increasing trouble with newer versions of the OS.
Hi!
I have written a solution myself, but before replying your mail I noticed
you needed a one-liner and have discarded my e-mail. Since your solution is
not a real one-liner I tought I should send it anyway :)
Here it is:
http://www.pastebin.org/379120
The output differs a bit (and two lines m
LGN Prosperity: LGN Prosperity Solidario
Amigos los invito a unirse al grupo de Apalancamiento de LGNProsperity donde
pueden ingresar con solo 40 dls !
Aprovenchela !
Exitos !!!
Esther
Haz clic en el siguiente vínculo para unirte:
http://lgnprosperitysolidario.ning.com/?xgi
Nuno Magalhães writes:
> Mandarin is closing in [on English as the language of the Internet].
Only on the Chinanet. More people speak English than Mandarin and most
English speakers have unrestricted access to the Internet.
--
John Hasler
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On Sat, Jul 3, 2010 at 22:31, Lisi wrote:
> It is the language of the Internet
Mandarin is closing in.
--
() ascii-rubanda kampajno - kontraŭ html-a retpoŝto
/\ ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail
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with a subject of "uns
On Saturday 03 July 2010 18:05:53 Ron Johnson wrote:
> But then, I also didn't mention the Virgin Islands or,
> further away, Trinidad and Tobago.
These are not in the USA. If we are looking world wide there are also:
England [it is, after all, called English ;-)], Wales, Scotland, Ireland,
la
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Camaleón writes:
> On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:34:25 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>> Booting in `user-mode' (once chosen in the GRUB) and entering in
>> `maintenance' says `Login incorrect' but this is actually `Incorrect
>> password' that should be sai
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Lorenzo Beretta writes:
> Il 03/07/2010 12:50, Camaleón ha scritto:
>> On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:34:25 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>>
>>> Booting in `user-mode' (once chosen in the GRUB) and entering in
>>> `maintenance' says `Login incorrect' but this
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I solved the problem. Actually, there was no GNOME environment at all
on the machine! The installer had not installed it. I don't understand
why. I did an `apt-get install gnome' and restarted the computer, and
everything loaded smoothly. Weird!
Thank
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 11:40:32 -0700, Robert Holtzman wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 03, 2010 at 04:00:57PM +, Camale�n wrote:
>> On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 16:11:03 +0200, lee wrote:
>
> .snip.
>
>> > And who would buy a car that comes with a certificate that only the
>> > ppl name
Ron Johnson put forth on 7/3/2010 2:36 PM:
>> This is unrelated. FS block size != sector size.
>
> It is when you use a 4KB drive
Not according to man on Stable:
mkfs.xfs [ -b block_size ] ... [ -s sector_size ] [ -L label ] [ -N ] device
-b block_size_options
This option specifies
>The gigabit ethernet might be an issue., not sure about that board , earlier
>versions had the RealTek 8111/8168. Not supported in Lenny, or Squeeze.
have a look at /etc/udev/rules.d/70*persistent-net* see if the network
adaptor for RealTek is properly described. That was the issue when I
start
On 07/03/2010 02:20 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Ron Johnson put forth on 7/3/2010 12:01 PM:
I think that the partitioning tool (fdisk, cfdisk, parted, ...) is what
is really important.
It is. The first partition must be created on an even 4k sector aligned
boundary to avoid the performance hit o
On 07/03/2010 01:40 PM, Mike Viau wrote:
> On Sat, 3 Jul 2010 12:01:40 -0500 wrote:
>
> I think that the partitioning tool (fdisk, cfdisk, parted, ...) is
> what is really important. That is because filesystems already use
> 4KB block sizes.
>
> Possibly also fsck.
>
> There was a recen
Ron Johnson put forth on 7/3/2010 12:01 PM:
> I think that the partitioning tool (fdisk, cfdisk, parted, ...) is what
> is really important.
It is. The first partition must be created on an even 4k sector aligned
boundary to avoid the performance hit of unaligned access. However, from all
I've
On 07/03/2010 12:22 PM, Eric KOM wrote:
> The external modem don't have the driver for linux.
> http://www.tp-link.com/in/products/productDetails.asp?class=&content=fea&pmodel=TM-EC5658V
> May be, I will try with PCI?
>
External modems do not need drivers. That's why they are so useful under
Li
iceweasel is experiencing crashes when i upgraded to adobe flash 10
about week ago.
And some web sites that uses flash iceweasel crashes
I have ran iceweasel from the CLi and I get
Illegal instruction when it crashes
I have removed flashplayer-nonfree and installed it again Iceweasel
still cr
On Fri, Jul 2, 2010 at 14:31, Mike Viau wrote:
> Hello List,
>
> I was just wondering what some of the debian community users has been
> experiencing in regards to the new Western Digital 4K Advanced format
> drives? Has any one tried using one of these drives on the 2.6.26 (64/32
> bit) kernel sh
Il 03/07/2010 12:50, Camaleón ha scritto:
On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:34:25 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
Booting in `user-mode' (once chosen in the GRUB) and entering in
`maintenance' says `Login incorrect' but this is actually `Incorrect
password' that should be said, as `root' is the (default) mai
On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 01:52:47PM -0500, Arthur Machlas wrote:
> I just recently setup encrypted mail for my personal mail account,
> using icedove and enigmail. I'm curious about a general feature of
> "signing" the email. Why can't I just copy the "signature" portion of
> the email, which many p
> On Sat, 3 Jul 2010 12:01:40 -0500 wrote:
>
> I think that the partitioning tool (fdisk, cfdisk, parted, ...) is
> what is really important. That is because filesystems already use
> 4KB block sizes.
>
> Possibly also fsck.
>
> There was a recent IBM DeveloperWorks article on this very top
On Sat, Jul 03, 2010 at 04:00:57PM +, Camale�n wrote:
> On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 16:11:03 +0200, lee wrote:
.snip.
> > And who would buy a car that comes with a
> > certificate that only the ppl named in the certificate are allowed to
> > use it and that otherwise the c
On 07/03/2010 01:27 PM, Greg Madden wrote:
On Saturday 03 July 2010 02:36:48 Ron Johnson wrote:
On 07/02/2010 07:52 PM, Greg Madden wrote:
On Friday 02 July 2010 08:45:41 H.S. wrote:
I am thinking of getting this one. It appears to be a new one from Asus
and I am wondering if Linux supports it
On Saturday 03 July 2010 02:36:48 Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/02/2010 07:52 PM, Greg Madden wrote:
> > On Friday 02 July 2010 08:45:41 H.S. wrote:
> >> I am thinking of getting this one. It appears to be a new one from Asus
> >> and I am wondering if Linux supports it in all ways (networking, sound,
On 07/03/2010 01:09 PM, brownh wrote:
Ron Johnson writes:
On 07/01/2010 08:42 AM, brownh wrote:
Ron Johnson writes:
On 07/01/2010 06:11 AM, brownh wrote:
4. Antiword-for-Office is a perl script, but when I tried to compile,
found I was missing the perl Archive::Zip module. Not knowing wh
Ron Johnson writes:
> On 07/01/2010 08:42 AM, brownh wrote:
>> Ron Johnson writes:
>>
>>> On 07/01/2010 06:11 AM, brownh wrote:
4. Antiword-for-Office is a perl script, but when I tried to compile,
found I was missing the perl Archive::Zip module. Not knowing what to
do about that
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 13:05:53 -0400 (EDT), Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/03/2010 11:49 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
>>
>> You forgot Hawaii!
>
> That's true. But then, I also didn't mention the Virgin Islands or,
> further away, Trinidad and Tobago. IOW, you've got to set practical
> limits somewhere
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 12:05:53 -0500
Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/03/2010 11:49 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
> > On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 12:02:01 -0400 (EDT), Ron Johnson wrote:
> >> On 07/03/2010 10:34 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Q: What do you call a man who speaks only one language?
> >>> A: An
my own solution: http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=kqQXCpD5
> input:
> http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=MqPXZwc3
>
> output:
> http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=8QCkp4yv
>
> it will be a long day.. :D
>
> could someone please help with it?
>
> i have to make a "one liner" that get's the input, and gives
On 07/03/2010 11:49 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 12:02:01 -0400 (EDT), Ron Johnson wrote:
On 07/03/2010 10:34 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
Q: What do you call a man who speaks only one language?
A: An American. :-)
We speak the primary language of the [US] from Nome AK to Mia
I think that the partitioning tool (fdisk, cfdisk, parted, ...) is
what is really important. That is because filesystems already use
4KB block sizes.
Possibly also fsck.
There was a recent IBM DeveloperWorks article on this very topic.
On 07/03/2010 11:36 AM, Mike Viau wrote:
Does this mkfs
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 12:02:01 -0400 (EDT), Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/03/2010 10:34 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
>>
>> Q: What do you call a man who speaks only one language?
>> A: An American. :-)
>>
>
> We speak the primary language of the [US] from Nome AK to Miami FL (7200
> km) and San Diego CA
Does this mkfs work around work to preserve the performance of the drive? By
using the -b 4096 (to signify the 4k sectors) when creating partitions such as:
mkfs -t ext4 -b 4096 /dev/sda1
Is there any implication for mounting a partition formatted with the above
command (e.g: mounting in other
On Sat, Jul 3, 2010 at 06:39, lee wrote:
>
> USB sucks for keyboard connections : The one I had to use before
> was an USB keyboard, and the responses to keystrokes were a hell of a
> lot slower than they are now with the PS/2 connection. It might be due
> to the keyboard, but I think it's an
On 07/03/2010 10:34 AM, Stephen Powell wrote:
[snip]
Q: What do you call a man who speaks only one language?
A: An American. :-)
We speak the primary language of the from Nome AK to Miami FL (7200
km) and San Diego CA to St. John's NL (5550 km).
Thus, there is little pressure for "us" to
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 16:11:03 +0200, lee wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 01, 2010 at 07:10:58PM +, Camaleón wrote:
>>
>> So... when something goes wrong, you need to debug it, whatever it is
>> (hibernation or something else). And debugging usually requires some
>> "sacrifices" >:-) (meaning, trial and e
On 03/07/10 11:28 AM, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/03/2010 09:52 AM, H.S. wrote:
>> On 03/07/10 06:36 AM, Ron Johnson wrote:
>
>>
>> Next up is the audio:
>> Audio: VT1818 High Definition Audio 8-Channel CODEC
>>
>
> That I don't know. Google and grep are no help either.
>From google I have got a
On Sat, 03 Jul 2010 09:39:53 -0400 (EDT), lee wrote:
>
> Well, I changed the keyboard setting in xorg.conf:
>
> Section "InputDevice"
> Identifier "Keyboard0"
> Driver "kbd"
> Option "XKBOptions" "ctrl:nocaps"
> Option "XkbModel" "pc102"
> Option
> On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 10:53:55AM +0200, Eric KOM wrote:
>> Thank you for your response
>>
>> The problem is, to get the right PCI device isn't easy.
>> TP Link device is too popular.
>
> An external modem isn't a PCI device. It's connected to a serial port
> on your computer.
>
> And I complet
On 07/03/2010 09:52 AM, H.S. wrote:
On 03/07/10 06:36 AM, Ron Johnson wrote:
[snip]
An RTL8111C works fine on my Sid system running 2.6.32-3, so why
wouldn't it work in Squeeze?
Wonderful! That was my main concern. Thanks for confirming that it
works. BTW, the mobo says it has RTL8111E. Doe
> On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 10:53:55AM +0200, Eric KOM wrote:
>> Thank you for your response
>>
>> The problem is, to get the right PCI device isn't easy.
>> TP Link device is too popular.
>
> An external modem isn't a PCI device. It's connected to a serial port
> on your computer.
>
I didn't say th
On 03/07/10 06:36 AM, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/02/2010 07:52 PM, Greg Madden wrote:
>> On Friday 02 July 2010 08:45:41 H.S. wrote:
>>> I am thinking of getting this one. It appears to be a new one from Asus
>>> and I am wondering if Linux supports it in all ways (networking, sound,
>>> etc.). It
On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 10:53:55AM +0200, Eric KOM wrote:
> Thank you for your response
>
> The problem is, to get the right PCI device isn't easy.
> TP Link device is too popular.
An external modem isn't a PCI device. It's connected to a serial port
on your computer.
And I completely agree that
On Thu, Jul 01, 2010 at 09:08:26PM +0100, Alan Chandler wrote:
> On 01/07/10 18:43, lee wrote:
> >Just to be curious, what is the thinking/idea/advantage behind
> >disallowing connections by firewall rules instead of denying the
> >relaying or blacklisting the originating IPs through exims
> >confi
On Thu, Jul 01, 2010 at 07:10:58PM +, Camaleón wrote:
>
> So... when something goes wrong, you need to debug it, whatever it is
> (hibernation or something else). And debugging usually requires some
> "sacrifices" >:-) (meaning, trial and error tests).
Insofar such testing involves eventual
On Thu, Jul 01, 2010 at 01:34:54PM -0400, Stephen Powell wrote:
> On Thu, 01 Jul 2010 13:15:58 -0400 (EDT), lee wrote:
> >
> > Thanks! I got it to work after configuring the keyboard. Though the
> > keyboard worked fine, it wasn't set up correctly, but since it is, I
> > can switch again.
> >
>
Stephen Powell wrote:
>>> What's the easiest way for a shell script to tell if grub version 1
>>> is installed? It is important to distinguish grub version 1 from
>>> grub version 2. For example, can I just do this?
Anand Sivaram wrote:
> grub2.0
> grub-setup --version
> grub-setup (GRUB) 1.98
Watch some videos. Mark your calendar. Invite your friends.
Join in on IRC or Voice. Join the mailing list, say "Hi. :)"
= 1) 2010.7 Videos:
Motorola Droid Metro PCS Apps, makeitcricket.com
How to write VOIP client in less then 2 minutes, rpdammu
Open Wonderland virtual worlds platform, Ni
On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:29:36 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Camaleón wrote:
>> RAM is okay but CPU is a bit slow, bus limited, non-multithread, single
>> core...
>>
> But it did it some months ago with the same Debian, but with an older
> kernel! How could it be unable to do it now?
We still
On Fri, 02 Jul 2010 22:34:25 +0200, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Booting in `user-mode' (once chosen in the GRUB) and entering in
> `maintenance' says `Login incorrect' but this is actually `Incorrect
> password' that should be said, as `root' is the (default) maintenance
> user. Or that could be under
On 07/02/2010 07:52 PM, Greg Madden wrote:
On Friday 02 July 2010 08:45:41 H.S. wrote:
I am thinking of getting this one. It appears to be a new one from Asus
and I am wondering if Linux supports it in all ways (networking, sound,
etc.). It is an AMD Socket AM3 motherboard: Asus M4A87TD EVO.
An
input:
http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=MqPXZwc3
output:
http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=8QCkp4yv
it will be a long day.. :D
could someone please help with it?
i have to make a "one liner" that get's the input, and gives the
mentioned output.
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