On Fri, Apr 11, 2014 at 12:31:18AM -0400, R. Clayton wrote:
> I don't use tk but it is here
> https://packages.debian.org/sid/sound/tkmixer
>
> From what I can tell, that's a unstable package for a motorola
> architecture, while I'm looking for a testing package for an intel
> architecture.
On 11/04/14 14:31, Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 08:30:13PM -0700, Stephen Barr wrote:
>> I have been using Ubuntu for several years now but all of a sudden
>> it has begun locking up, sometimes several times a day. Very
>> annoying, especially when it fouls up file names. I ha
On 04/10/2014 04:56 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
>
> Dist-upgrade installs the NEWER version of a file(s) and its
> dependencies, and removes the OLD version. That is, v1.0 to v2.0.
> Upgrade does v1.0 to v1.1 as well a security and bug fixes. Check the
> versions of what was going to be insta
[Please trim your quotes to just include relevant content, makes it
easier to read.]
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:04:21PM -0700, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> After it went
> Stable, I used just upgrade -- for the most part. So there would be no
> major changes. This also recommended by Debian.
Stable m
On 04/11/2014 12:04 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
>
> Now, if "they" could come up with an efficient and effective way to
> uninstall/purge stuff installed via a metapackage. Or maybe there is
> and I just haven't found it. ;-)
>
apt-get autoremove
> B
>
>
- PaulNM
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On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 08:30:13PM -0700, Stephen Barr wrote:
> I have been using Ubuntu for several years now but all of a sudden it has
> begun locking up, sometimes several times a day. Very annoying, especially
> when it fouls up file names. I have a lot of work to do on my website and
> this i
I don't use tk but it is here https://packages.debian.org/sid/sound/tkmixer
>From what I can tell, that's a unstable package for a motorola architecture,
while I'm looking for a testing package for an intel architecture.
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wi
On 11/04/14 13:30, Stephen Barr wrote:
> I have been using Ubuntu for several years now but all of a sudden it
> has begun locking up, sometimes several times a day. Very annoying,
> especially when it fouls up file names. I have a lot of work to do on my
> website and this is driving me crazy. Can
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> On 10/04/14 04:56 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> > On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> >
> >> On 10/04/14 11:50 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> >>> On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> >>>
> Had a strange problem this morning for the s
I have been using Ubuntu for several years now but all of a sudden it
has begun locking up, sometimes several times a day. Very annoying,
especially when it fouls up file names. I have a lot of work to do on my
website and this is driving me crazy. Can I download Debian, delete
Ubuntu and have
On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>> Thus my question:
>> Is it possible to use debmirror, to mirror stable,testing,sid as well
>> as debian-security for stable and testing, and have them all share the
>> same package pool?
> I guess another way to answer my
On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Thus my question:
> Is it possible to use debmirror, to mirror stable,testing,sid as well
> as debian-security for stable and testing, and have them all share the
> same package pool?
In particular, for example, I stopped my initial debian-security (off
of aar
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 01:20:22PM -0400, Michael Torres wrote:
> I am using 7.4 gnome
> On Apr 10, 2014 2:37 AM,
> wrote:
tl;dr
Please turn off digest mode if you want to post a question.
--
"If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being oppressed, and lo
I currently know to some degree, and use, debmirror.
I admin/help-desk for quite a few people in a rural area - the PCs I
admin are typically only connected to the Internet via high-latency,
low-bandwidth internet connections.
So, I run a debian mirror from a particular host which has a
high-band
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014 15:57:37 +0200 Florian Ernst sent:
> Try a wider window, or simply "COLUMNS=200 dpkg-query -l openssl", or
> use "apt-cache policy openssl".
>
> HTH,
> Flo
I'm already to "g" on Jessie. Is that good?
openssl:
Installed: 1.0.1g-2
Candidate: 1.0.1g-2
Version table:
***
On 11/04/14 05:07, Ric Moore wrote:
> On 04/09/2014 10:09 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
>> On Wed, Apr 09, 2014 at 03:03:14AM -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>>> I have a few hundred screen shots I want to put on a web page, but
>>> they are all full-screen and I want to crop to the real contents.
>>> Th
On 11/04/14 02:15, Mike McClain wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:14:39AM +1000, Scott Ferguson wrote:
>> On 10/04/14 01:44, Mike McClain wrote:
>>> The other day I noticed my computer clutteres up with many
>>> directories in /var/cache/man/ for languages I don't speak so I
>>> deleted them.
>>
On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>> On 12/5/12, Bob Proulx wrote:
>>> Zenaan Harkness wrote:
When I try to add armhf to my local debmirror archive, I get these
sorts of errors:
dists/wheezy/non-free/binary-armhf/Packages.diff/2012-08-12-
On 4/11/14, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On 12/5/12, Bob Proulx wrote:
>> Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>>> When I try to add armhf to my local debmirror archive, I get these
>>> sorts of errors:
>>>
>>> dists/wheezy/non-free/binary-armhf/Packages.diff/2012-08-12-0215.28.gz
>>> failed sha1sum check, removin
I know this is a little old, but it is the same thread, I finally got
around to trying my next step, see below:
On 12/5/12, Bob Proulx wrote:
> Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>> When I try to add armhf to my local debmirror archive, I get these
>> sorts of errors:
>>
>> dists/wheezy/non-free/binary-armhf
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 5:19 PM, David Guntner wrote:
> Presto! Now when you try to access your home machine, you can simply
> refer to mydomain.org and it will point you to the correct place.
Er... mydomain.org, being a *.TLD, will most likely be a *paid*
domain, hence defeating the purpose (OP
On 10/04/14 04:56 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
On 10/04/14 11:50 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
Re
On 2014-04-10 23:30 +0200, Alex Robbins wrote:
> I have been using Debian Testing (Jessie) and tried to upgrade today, and
> aptitude tried to remove openssh-blacklist and openssh-blacklist-extra
> as they
> were no longer used. Upon further inspection, in...
>
> Debian Wheezy:
> openssh-client a
I have been using Debian Testing (Jessie) and tried to upgrade today, and
aptitude tried to remove openssh-blacklist and openssh-blacklist-extra
as they
were no longer used. Upon further inspection, in...
Debian Wheezy:
openssh-client and openssh-server recommend openssh-blacklist and
openssh-
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> On 10/04/14 11:50 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> > On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> >
> >> Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
> >>
> >>
> >> root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
> >> Reading package lis
On Thursday 10 April 2014 19:44:52 pch0317 wrote:
> Type alsamixer in terminal; select sound card by F6 and press F5 to
> see if some indicator have MM (mute).
>
> On 04/10/2014 07:54 PM, Thomas H. George wrote:
> > Yesterday everything worked. Then I used Audacity to capture
> > stream from tape
On 04/09/2014 10:09 PM, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Wed, Apr 09, 2014 at 03:03:14AM -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
I have a few hundred screen shots I want to put on a web page, but
they are all full-screen and I want to crop to the real contents.
This is an identical region in all cases. So I want
Type alsamixer in terminal; select sound card by F6 and press F5 to see
if some indicator have MM (mute).
On 04/10/2014 07:54 PM, Thomas H. George wrote:
Yesterday everything worked. Then I used Audacity to capture stream
from tape deck. Now everyting seems to work, view meters show output
bu
I don't use tk but it is here https://packages.debian.org/sid/sound/tkmixer
On 04/10/2014 07:41 PM, R. Clayton wrote:
I'm running
$ uname -a
Linux UlanBator 3.10-2-686-pae #1 SMP Debian 3.10.5-1 (2013-08-07) i686
GNU/Linux
$ cat /etc/debian_version
jessie/sid
$
updated weekly
Yesterday everything worked. Then I used Audacity to capture stream
from tape deck. Now everyting seems to work, view meters show output
but no sound from speakers. I can't find where the signal is being
misdirected.
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with a sub
I'm running
$ uname -a
Linux UlanBator 3.10-2-686-pae #1 SMP Debian 3.10.5-1 (2013-08-07) i686
GNU/Linux
$ cat /etc/debian_version
jessie/sid
$
updated weekly, and I finally got around to noticing that tkmixer has
disappeared:
$ sudo apt-get update
Get:1 http://mirror.cc.colum
On 2014-04-10 17:02 +0200, Steffen Dettmer wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 7:35 PM, Sven Joachim wrote:
>> > Le 03.04.2014 11:46, Steffen Dettmer a écrit :
>> > > $ dpkg -i first.dep second.dep
>> > >
>> > > pre-dependency problem:
>> > > nd-second pre-depends on nd-first
>> > > nd-first is un
On Thu 10 Apr 2014 at 09:22:10 -0700, Mike McClain wrote:
> What are the advantages of mandb?
>From mandb(8):
mandb is used to initialise or manually update index database
caches that are usually maintained by man. The caches contain
information relevant to the current state of the manu
On Thu 10 Apr 2014 at 09:15:33 -0700, Mike McClain wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:14:39AM +1000, Scott Ferguson wrote:
> > On 10/04/14 01:44, Mike McClain wrote:
>
> > > Nothing in /etc/cron/* says anything about recreating them. I assume
> > > mandb did it but can't tell what initiated the
On 10/04/14 12:07 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Thursday 10 April 2014 16:17:21 Robin wrote:
Synaptic, I think, defaults to Smart Upgrade, the equivalent is
apt-get dist-upgrade.
Man apt-get for the full details
You probably ran
# aptitude upgrade
too. That doesn't remove anything.
# aptitude ful
On 10/04/14 11:50 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calc
Chris Angelico grabbed a keyboard and wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 11, 2014 at 2:19 AM, David Guntner wrote:
>> what you want to do is
>> create a CNAME record for the domain - set a CNAME of mydomain.org that
>> points to myhostname.someddns.com.
>>
>> Presto! Now when you try to access your home machin
On 10/04/14 11:17 AM, Robin wrote:
On 10 April 2014 16:07, Frank McCormick wrote:
Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculatin
On Fri, Apr 11, 2014 at 2:19 AM, David Guntner wrote:
> what you want to do is
> create a CNAME record for the domain - set a CNAME of mydomain.org that
> points to myhostname.someddns.com.
>
> Presto! Now when you try to access your home machine, you can simply
> refer to mydomain.org and it wil
abdelkader belahcene writes:
> Sorry, may be my question is not clear,
>
> I mean : what will be happen if oracle decides to close the software ???
We will use OpenJDK.
> same reason for what libreoffice ( instead of openoffice ) and Mariadb (
> instead of mysql) are created !!!
> am
What are the advantages of mandb?
Thanks,
Mike
--
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Sorry, may be my question is not clear,
I mean : what will be happen if oracle decides to close the software ???
same reason for what libreoffice ( instead of openoffice ) and Mariadb (
instead of mysql) are created !!!
am I wrong??
is it not same pb?
best regards
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:14:39AM +1000, Scott Ferguson wrote:
> On 10/04/14 01:44, Mike McClain wrote:
> > The other day I noticed my computer clutteres up with many
> > directories in /var/cache/man/ for languages I don't speak so I
> > deleted them.
>
> That was a mistake. You're new to this "s
Rick Macdonald grabbed a keyboard and wrote:
> [...]
> I only looked at a couple before deciding to use the free service from
> ASUS that is included with the router, so I don't know which of the
> above are actually free. The domain name is not pretty:
> [yourhostname].asuscomm.com, but that doesn
> > > Le 03.04.2014 11:46, Steffen Dettmer a écrit :
> > > > $ dpkg -i first.dep second.dep
> > > >
> > > > pre-dependency problem:
> > > > nd-second pre-depends on nd-first
> > > > nd-first is unpacked, but has never been configured.
> >
[snip]
On Thursday 10 April 2014 16:02:17 Steffen Dettmer
On Thursday 10 April 2014 16:17:21 Robin wrote:
> Synaptic, I think, defaults to Smart Upgrade, the equivalent is
> apt-get dist-upgrade.
> Man apt-get for the full details
You probably ran
# aptitude upgrade
too. That doesn't remove anything.
# aptitude full-upgrade
would have accomplished
On 08/04/14 02:51 PM, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
DynDNS just announced that their free hostname program in 30 days will
no longer be gratis.
I use that with ddclient to update the IP address for my blog.
Are there other free alternatives?
Some routers have built-in support for DDNS, so you don't e
On Thu, 10 Apr 2014, Frank McCormick wrote:
> Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
>
>
> root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
> Reading package lists... Done
> Building dependency tree
> Reading state information... Done
> Calculating upgrade... Done
> The f
On Thursday 10 April 2014 16:18:58 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Thursday 10 April 2014 14:57:37 Florian Ernst wrote:
> > Try a wider window, or simply "COLUMNS=200 dpkg-query -l
> > openssl", or use "apt-cache policy openssl".
>
> I'm glad that you are not partially sighted. Lucky you.
Sorry, everyone.
On Thursday 10 April 2014 14:57:37 Florian Ernst wrote:
> apt-cache policy openssl
lisi@Tux-II:~$ apt-cache policy openssl
openssl:
Installed: 1.0.1e-2+deb7u6
Candidate: 1.0.1e-2+deb7u6
Version table:
*** 1.0.1e-2+deb7u6 0
500 http://security.debian.org/ wheezy/updates/main amd64
P
On Thursday 10 April 2014 14:57:37 Florian Ernst wrote:
> Try a wider window, or simply "COLUMNS=200 dpkg-query -l openssl",
> or use "apt-cache policy openssl".
I'm glad that you are not partially sighted. Lucky you.
Lisi
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with
On 10 April 2014 16:07, Frank McCormick wrote:
> Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
>
>
> root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
> Reading package lists... Done
> Building dependency tree
> Reading state information... Done
> Calculating upgrade... Done
> The
Had a strange problem this morning for the second time recently:
root@frank-debian:/home/frank# apt-get upgrade
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
Calculating upgrade... Done
The following package was automatically installed and is no longer
Hi,
thanks for your fast replies and nice answers!
It turned out that it is a bit more complicated, so it took me
some time to ask around here, sorry for the delay, I hope you
still remember the context:
On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 7:35 PM, Sven Joachim wrote:
> > Le 03.04.2014 11:46, Steffen Dettme
Hi!
I've just converted a laptop from Windows XP to Debian Jessie, with
the expectation that I'd be able to do everything at least as well as
before. That's been mostly true, but I'm stuck on a problem with the
S-Video output: whatever I do, the TV shows only 800x600. I can force
the S-Video outpu
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 03:54:38PM +0200, Florian Ernst wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:18:00AM -0400, Brad Alexander wrote:
> > I don't believe that Wheezy was vulnerable to Heartbleed. It was only the
> > 1.0.1f (committed 31 Dec 2011) that incorporated the vulnerable heartbeat
> > feature. M
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 9:54 AM, Florian Ernst wrote:
>
> This is not accurate, OpenSSL 1.0.1 through 1.0.1f (inclusive) are
> vulnerable. Please see
> https://www.debian.org/security/2014/dsa-2896
> as well as
> http://heartbleed.com/
>
Thanks Flo,
That's one of the problems with stories like t
On 2014-04-10 15:49, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Thursday 10 April 2014 14:18:00 Brad Alexander wrote:
I don't believe that Wheezy was vulnerable to Heartbleed. It was
only the 1.0.1f (committed 31 Dec 2011) that incorporated the
vulnerable heartbeat feature. My wheezy box has 1.0.1e:
ii libssl1.0.0:
> On Thursday, April 10, 2014 9:30 AM, David Glover
> wrote:
> > Debian patched the wheezy version of OpenSSL without changing the version
> number.
>
> Run:
> dpkg-query -l openssl
>
> You should see version 1.0.1e-2+deb7u5.
>
> The "+deb7u5" indicates the heartbleed patch is installed.
> On Thursday, April 10, 2014 9:01 AM, Erwan David wrote:
> > Le 2014-04-10 14:56, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum a écrit :
>> I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i
>> installed, recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any
>> changes to the package infrastr
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 02:49:27PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> lisi@Tux-II:~$ dpkg-query -l openssl
> Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
> |
> Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
> |/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
> ||/ Name
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 09:18:00AM -0400, Brad Alexander wrote:
> I don't believe that Wheezy was vulnerable to Heartbleed. It was only the
> 1.0.1f (committed 31 Dec 2011) that incorporated the vulnerable heartbeat
> feature. My wheezy box has 1.0.1e:
> [...]
> So you shouldn't have anything to wo
On Thursday 10 April 2014 14:18:00 Brad Alexander wrote:
> I don't believe that Wheezy was vulnerable to Heartbleed. It was
> only the 1.0.1f (committed 31 Dec 2011) that incorporated the
> vulnerable heartbeat feature. My wheezy box has 1.0.1e:
>
> ii libssl1.0.0:i386 1.0.1e-2
Debian patched the wheezy version of OpenSSL without changing the version
number.
Run:
dpkg-query -l openssl
You should see version 1.0.1e-2+deb7u5.
The "+deb7u5" indicates the heartbleed patch is installed.
--
David Glover | http://www.davidglover.org/contact
PGP key 5518C7DE | Amateur R
On 10.04.2014 08:56, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum wrote:
I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i
installed, recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any
changes to the package infrastructure.
I'm trying to fix the Heartbleed bug, but my system seems to think
every
I don't believe that Wheezy was vulnerable to Heartbleed. It was only the
1.0.1f (committed 31 Dec 2011) that incorporated the vulnerable heartbeat
feature. My wheezy box has 1.0.1e:
ii libssl1.0.0:i386 1.0.1e-2+deb7u6
i386 SSL shared libraries
ii openssl
Le 2014-04-10 14:56, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum a écrit :
I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i
installed, recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any
changes to the package infrastructure.
I'm trying to fix the Heartbleed bug, but my system seems to think
ev
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 03:00:52PM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
> Le 2014-04-10 14:56, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum a écrit :
> >I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i
> >installed, recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any
> >changes to the package infrastructure.
Le 2014-04-10 14:56, Dr. Jennifer Nussbaum a écrit :
I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i
installed, recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any
changes to the package infrastructure.
I'm trying to fix the Heartbleed bug, but my system seems to think
ev
I'm running Debian Wheezy 7.4 on a server in Amazon's EC2, that i installed,
recently, from the official Debian AMI. I havent made any changes to the
package infrastructure.
I'm trying to fix the Heartbleed bug, but my system seems to think everything
is up to date.
My /etc/apt/sources.list h
On 4/9/14, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
> Zenaan Harkness writes:
>> Any idea why the following:
>>
>> $ dpkg -s debmirror|grep Status
>> Status: install ok installed
>>
>> $ apt-cache show debmirror|grep Depends
>> Depends: perl (>= 5.10), libnet-perl, libdigest-md5-perl,
>> libdigest-sha-perl, liblock
On 2014-04-09 16:58, Lisi Reisz wrote:
whats the correct way to have a working smokeping on jessie?
https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=smokeping&searchon=names&suite=all§ion=all
Exact hits
Package smokeping
squeeze (oldstable) (net): latency logging and graphing system
2.3.6
shawn wilson writes:
> The problems with java come from allowing untrusted compiled code to
> run natively on your machine (WebStart).
I think that this problem arises with EVERY and EACH programming
language.
You trust Debian software packages because you trust Debian, not because
of the pro
(Nice top post)
On Thu, Apr 10, 2014 at 2:57 AM, Gian Uberto Lauri
wrote:
> The only problem with Java is that it is a bit "old" for current
> architectures. There are better languages that run on the JVM (Clojure and
> Scala to name two).
>
The problems with java come from allowing untrusted
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On Thu 10 Apr 2014 at 10:31:05 +0400, Pavel Volkov wrote:
> Just wondering.
> I this Jessie? Is there a reasonable systemd support already? I mean
> mostly in terms of packages that provide unit files.
Obtain a Contents file from http.debian.net/debian/dists/jessie/main/. A
seach of it with "/lib
On Jo, 10 apr 14, 10:31:05, Pavel Volkov wrote:
>
> Just wondering.
> I this Jessie?
It's the same on wheezy already.
> Is there a reasonable systemd support already? I mean mostly
> in terms of packages that provide unit files.
Depends on what you mean by "reasonable". systemd is capable of us
2014-04-10 10:05 GMT+02:00 Alex Mestiashvili :
> On 04/09/2014 11:03 PM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
>
>> On Wed, Apr 09, 2014 at 03:12:40PM +0200, Alex Mestiashvili wrote:
>>
>>> |
>>> find . -name "*.png" | parallel -P8 convert -quality 95 {} -geometry
>>> 1280 /tmp/{.}.jpg|
>>>
>> Alternatively
>
On 04/09/2014 11:03 PM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Wed, Apr 09, 2014 at 03:12:40PM +0200, Alex Mestiashvili wrote:
|
find . -name "*.png" | parallel -P8 convert -quality 95 {} -geometry 1280
/tmp/{.}.jpg|
Alternatively
find . -name "*.png" -exec convert -quality 95 {} -geometry 1280 /tmp/{}
The only problem with Java is that it is a bit "old" for current architectures.
There are better languages that run on the JVM (Clojure and Scala to name two).
--
Gian Uberto Lauri
Messaggio inviato da un tablet
> On 09/apr/2014, at 22:31, abdelkader belahcene wrote:
>
> is there a risk to pro
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