On 2019-05-07 23:47, Gene Heskett wrote:
Greetings all;
First it doesn't have a clue what to do with a wired network.
Cheers, Gene (I need some winders help ) Heskett
usually bottom left corner click windows icon
click the settings that looks like a cog
select Ethernet / Change adapter opt
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 10:12:10 (+1000), David wrote:
On Mon, 6 May 2019 at 23:53, Erik Christiansen wrote:
> On 06.05.19 09:03, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 01:48:01PM +0200, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
[snipped all]
Hi Erik
Maybe you would enjoy answering this question then?
h
dear sir ! to day i am talk about you .. i am a iphone user . my iphone is
running ios version 12.1.2 . so, that is problem i am download a debian
file and instail via ifile with cydia . my debian file properly instail ios
device but application not open ...there is a prbolem "SB GAME HACKER" need
On 07.05.19 09:05, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> So, I'll use "publicly" -- I was going to do that, but it just seemed wrong
> at
> the time ;-)
It seems harder to remember uncommon spelling now than when I was
younger, and until the spellchecker disagreed, I'd gone with your
spelling - it's more
On Tuesday 07 May 2019 07:56:35 pm Dan Ritter wrote:
> Gene Heskett wrote:
> > I've had a problem, I think with dbus that smells a bit like this.
> >
> > I've a bash script that sends inotifywait to watch the mail dir in
> > /var, and when one of the files is closed after writing and incoming
> >
Gene Heskett wrote:
> I've had a problem, I think with dbus that smells a bit like this.
>
> I've a bash script that sends inotifywait to watch the mail dir in /var,
> and when one of the files is closed after writing and incoming mail to
> it, returns to my script with the name of the file an
On Tuesday 07 May 2019 07:17:11 pm Esteban L wrote:
> Thanks Mr. Ritter for sharing your expertise.
>
> I think the one thing that kind of mystifies me a little is the bus
> pipe. I am not familiar with that. A simple logout and log back in
> made my "environment" return to "normal."
>
> As you re
Thanks Mr. Ritter for sharing your expertise.
I think the one thing that kind of mystifies me a little is the bus
pipe. I am not familiar with that. A simple logout and log back in made
my "environment" return to "normal."
As you recommended, I simply ran the bash script on it's own. It worked
fi
Necesario para evitar la fuga de talento que tanto daña a la Organización.
EMPLOYER BRANDING:
- Haciendo de mi Empresa
el Mejor Lugar para Trabajar -
Fecha de inicio: 13 de Mayo 2019
Duración: 04 Semanas
ACCIONES CONCRETAS PARA ATRAER Y FIDELIZAR TALENTO HUMANO: Salario emocional,
dinámica
On Tuesday 07 May 2019 02:40:15 pm Dan Purgert wrote:
> Brian wrote:
> > On Tue 07 May 2019 at 13:29:39 -, Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> >> Hash: SHA256
> >>
> >> Gene Heskett wrote:
> >> > On Tuesday 07 May 2019 05:28:26 am Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> >> Gene Hesket
Greetings all;
First it doesn't have a clue what to do with a wired network.
It sure wants to hook up to all the neighborhoods wifi, all of which are
secured.
Second, its like stretch seems locked to ipv6 but its ipv4 for at least a
hundred miles in any direction from my 10-20 in North Central
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 02:57:10PM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Russell L. Harris wrote:
> > On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 09:40:05AM -0700, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
> > > On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
> > > > AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar...
> >
> > I f
Esteban L wrote:
> I stepped in poo, and broke a cardinal sin, trying a script that I
> didn't 100% understand. Now my environment is a little bit jacked. Not
> bad, still generally functioning.
>
> I was trying to get notifications to run from the command line, namely
> crontab. No easy task, a
Hello,
I stepped in poo, and broke a cardinal sin, trying a script that I
didn't 100% understand. Now my environment is a little bit jacked. Not
bad, still generally functioning.
I was trying to get notifications to run from the command line, namely
crontab. No easy task, at least, not as easy a
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 20:03:33 +0100, mick crane wrote:
> On 2019-05-07 19:40, Dan Purgert wrote:
>
> > Mainly the "pushbutton scan" and other fancy scanning options from the
> > "usb driver" -- I mean, I can walk over to the thing, and hit the "scan
> > to SFTP" button and get a PDF, but that's
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 18:40:15 -, Dan Purgert wrote:
> > There is enough misinformation in Gene's post without adding more. :)
> > Both the LPR and the CUPSwrapper printer driver packages are required.
> > One contains a PPD and the other a driver for conversion to the specific
> > printer lan
On 2019-05-07 19:40, Dan Purgert wrote:
Mainly the "pushbutton scan" and other fancy scanning options from the
"usb driver" -- I mean, I can walk over to the thing, and hit the "scan
to SFTP" button and get a PDF, but that's about the extent of my "scan
back to a PC" ability. There are also a c
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 10:12:10 (+1000), David wrote:
> On Mon, 6 May 2019 at 23:53, Erik Christiansen
> wrote:
> > On 06.05.19 09:03, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 01:48:01PM +0200, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> > > > Quoting Erik Christiansen (2019-05-04 08:43:53)
>
> > > > >
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Brian wrote:
> On Tue 07 May 2019 at 13:29:39 -, Dan Purgert wrote:
>
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA256
>>
>> Gene Heskett wrote:
>> > On Tuesday 07 May 2019 05:28:26 am Dan Purgert wrote:
>> >> Gene Heskett wrote:
>> >>> [..
Hi,
Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> $ ls
> $ *STILL. crickets.*
You need to re-enter the directory, because the thing which now has
its name is not the directory which you entered before mount.
All programs which show the mounted content have addressed the directory
by its name after the mount operati
On 5/7/19 12:02 PM, Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
I didn't fully *cognitively* grasp what you're saying, BUT I did grasp
enough to attempt the following via xfce4-terminal:
$ cd /mountpoint
$ ls
$ *(anticipated) crickets*
$ sudo (YEAH, I KNOW!) mount LABEL=buster-backup /mountpoint
$ ls
$ *mammoth-siz
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 13:29:39 -, Dan Purgert wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA256
>
> Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Tuesday 07 May 2019 05:28:26 am Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> Gene Heskett wrote:
> >>> [...]
> >>> Is that a lib/module I can install to a
> >>> 4.9.0-9-rt-amd64
Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> On 5/7/19, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> >
> > Makes sense: the current shell (and that is from where we're looking
> > at things) keeps the current working directory, CWD, open. This inode
> > doesn't go away after a mount -- thus as long as the shell doesn't
> > close it (
On 5/7/19, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 11:20:57AM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
>> Martin McCormick wrote:
>> >I may just be remembering things the wrong way [...]
>
> [about not immediatlely "seeing" the results of a mount on the CWD]
>
> [...]
>
>> mkdir point
>> cd point
>>
On 5/7/19, Martin McCormick wrote:
> This Summer will mark 30 years since I first laid hands on a
> unix-like system. I probably was introduced to unix mount points
> very shortly after starting in the unix world which reminded me a
> lot of MSDOS except that there aren't nearly as many gotchas a
On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 11:20:57AM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Martin McCormick wrote:
> > I may just be remembering things the wrong way [...]
[about not immediatlely "seeing" the results of a mount on the CWD]
[...]
> mkdir point
> cd point
> touch original
> ls
[practical demonstration i
On 07/05/2019 14:06, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> You probably use systemd: system/dev-hugepages.mount
Yes that was it. Thanks.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 07/05/2019 13:51, Reco wrote:
> This particular systemd part is called dev-hugepages.mount.
I see, yes now it works well. Thanks for the info.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
> On Tuesday, May 07, 2019 08:41:16 AM Erik Christiansen wrote:
> > P.S. s/publically/publicly (Yep, spellchecking in Vim in Mutt is OK
> >
> > with that. Caveat: I use a British
> > dictionary. Haven't checked for possible
> >
Martin McCormick wrote:
> I may just be remembering things the wrong way but it
> seems like that for most of my memory, one could be root and, if
> you cd'd to a mount point, one could mount /dev/whatever on that
> mount point and immediately see the top of the new tree you had
> just mount
This Summer will mark 30 years since I first laid hands on a
unix-like system. I probably was introduced to unix mount points
very shortly after starting in the unix world which reminded me a
lot of MSDOS except that there aren't nearly as many gotchas and
things worked like one would dream they s
>> Most of those ARM SBCs come with a µSD slot plus other things.
>> Even if you connect a SATA disk, you'll often need a µSD because some
>> of those SBCs don't have any on-board flash memory, so you need the µSD
>> to hold the U-Boot (which plays the role of the BIOS) without which the
>> board d
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Tuesday 07 May 2019 05:28:26 am Dan Purgert wrote:
>> Gene Heskett wrote:
>>> [...]
>>> Is that a lib/module I can install to a
>>> 4.9.0-9-rt-amd64 #1 SMP PREEMPT RT Debian 4.9.168-1
>>> kernel?
>>
>> Multiarch? It's a dpkg
Thanks for your reply, and thanks for putting it on the list!
Oh, and thanks for checking the spelling (kmail, at least the version I use,
doesn't check spelling (or maybe I haven't enabled spellcheck).
(I may check the US spelling at some point -- ah, ok, a quick google finds:
“Publicly” and
On Tuesday 07 May 2019 05:28:26 am Dan Purgert wrote:
> Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Monday 06 May 2019 01:46:36 pm Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> Gene Heskett wrote:
> >> > [...]
> >> > Logged out no, started a new konsole and ran ff from it yes.
> >> > Managed to get the little b&w laser working, but a 2
On 07.05.19 07:38, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote off-list:
> On Tuesday, May 07, 2019 12:01:49 AM Erik Christiansen wrote:
> > only the author is dumb enough
>
> Why use language like that? (It does not contribute to the welcoming
> environment that I'd like to see cultivated here.)
>
> Aside: I'v
On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 10:12:10AM +1000, David wrote:
> Maybe you would enjoy answering this question then?
> https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/help-bash/2019-05/msg0.html
>
> Because apparently no-one else has, hehe :D
You didn't like my answer?
(The OP clarified in a subsequent post that
Quoting Mikhail Morfikov (2019-05-07 13:12:47)
> There's an entry on the Debian wiki[1] where people can read about the
> hugepages in Debian, but I don't really think this article is up to
> date. Basically when you look at the mount points in the system, you
> can also see this one:
>
>#
On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 12:42:27PM +0100, Joe wrote:
> On Tue, 7 May 2019 12:26:44 +0200
> Siard wrote:
>
> > On Sat, 4 May 2019 09:27:26 -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> > > Running firefox-esr on buster I don't seem to be able to install
> > > addons.
> >
> > I just read that they fixed it in a n
Hi.
On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 01:12:47PM +0200, Mikhail Morfikov wrote:
># mount | grep -i huge
>hugetlbfs on /dev/hugepages type hugetlbfs (rw,relatime,pagesize=2M)
>
> I don't have any fstab entries that would allow to mount /dev/hugepages .
> So something is mounting it automat
On Tue 07 May 2019 at 21:34:14 +1000, Erik Christiansen wrote:
> On 04.05.19 13:48, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> > Quoting Erik Christiansen (2019-05-04 08:43:53)
> > > There doesn't seem to be an option for pmount to mount at
> > > /media/label_read_from_the_media
> ...
> > I don't personally use
On Tue, 7 May 2019 12:26:44 +0200
Siard wrote:
> On Sat, 4 May 2019 09:27:26 -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> > Running firefox-esr on buster I don't seem to be able to install
> > addons.
>
> I just read that they fixed it in a new release:
> https://news.softpedia.com/news/mozilla-releases-firefo
On 04.05.19 13:48, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> Quoting Erik Christiansen (2019-05-04 08:43:53)
> > There doesn't seem to be an option for pmount to mount at
> > /media/label_read_from_the_media
...
> I don't personally use pmount since some years, but that sure sounds
> like a nice suggestion: Ple
Opened bug report at mainstream.
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/12498
On Tue, May 7, 2019 at 12:17 PM Peter Viskup wrote:
> It is related to systemd processing of chroot, as with commenting the User
> setting, the service start up successfully.
>
> Want to mimic the startup of the ser
On Mon, 6 May 2019 08:53:56 -0400
Kenneth Parker wrote:
Hello Kenneth,
>I don't notice any Advertising on ProtonMail.
The 'cost' will not necessarily be advertising. Data-mining all emails
in and out of the account is far more likely and, potentially, more
lucrative (for the miner, obviously).
There's an entry on the Debian wiki[1] where people can read about the
hugepages in Debian, but I don't really think this article is up to
date. Basically when you look at the mount points in the system, you
can also see this one:
# mount | grep -i huge
hugetlbfs on /dev/hugepages type h
It is related to systemd processing of chroot, as with commenting the User
setting, the service start up successfully.
Want to mimic the startup of the service in init script on Debian8 (which
is running fine):
~# start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile
"/srv/inst/var/run/rsyslogd.pid" --chuid
On Sat, 4 May 2019 09:27:26 -0700, Ross Boylan wrote:
> Running firefox-esr on buster I don't seem to be able to install
> addons.
I just read that they fixed it in a new release:
https://news.softpedia.com/news/mozilla-releases-firefox-66-0-4-for-pcs-and-android-to-fix-major-add-ons-issue-525888.
On Tue, May 07, 2019 at 11:08:38AM +0200, Peter Viskup wrote:
> Running Debian9 with systemd 241-3~bpo9+1 from backports.
> Having trouble to start rsyslog service in chroot jail using the systemd
> service file with RootDirectory and User settings.
> Setting AmbientCapabilities=CAP_SYS_CHROOT does
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 06 May 2019 01:46:36 pm Dan Purgert wrote:
>
>> Gene Heskett wrote:
>> > [...]
>> > Logged out no, started a new konsole and ran ff from it yes. Managed
>> > to get the little b&w laser working, but a 2 year old 11x17
Running Debian9 with systemd 241-3~bpo9+1 from backports.
Having trouble to start rsyslog service in chroot jail using the systemd
service file with RootDirectory and User settings.
Setting AmbientCapabilities=CAP_SYS_CHROOT does not help and still getting
following errors:
rsyslog-chroot@inst.se
On Mon 06 May 2019 at 17:29:01 -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 06 May 2019 04:06:43 pm Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> > Ulf Volmer wrote:
> > > On 06.05.19 20:10, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > > On Sunday 05 May 2019 12:56:27 pm Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > >
> > > > I had other problems that overshadowed
Hi Ansgar,
I highly appreciate your detailed response. I had not expected
that the keyserver is restricted to developer keys.
Thanx very much
Harri
53 matches
Mail list logo