On Du, 06 iun 21, 14:43:49, fxkl47BF wrote:
> i've gone back and forth between thunderbird and clawsmail
>
> clawsmail is lightweight and clean, i like that
> debian stable only has an old version, i don't like that
> to get an up to date version i have to continuously compile from source, i
> do
From: Greg Wooledge
Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2021 15:06:03 -0400
> I'm struggling to understand what you've got here. You're running *two*
> operating systems on the same machine... at the same time?
In a sense, yes. See following.
> Does this mean the "LinuxAos" thing is in a virtual machine
Martin McCormick composed on 2021-06-06 16:59 (UTC-0500):
...
> Swap is the last partition.
> Disk /dev/sde:
This is a big lurking booby trap that could have been the problem both last time
and this time. It's one of
I admit I made several big mistakes, here. The first was not
having a backup of /boot as I thought I did. The next is
thinking I could just copy the whole boot directory from a
known working system and be able to get it to work by using sed to
replace the UUID's of the system it was on with those
Felix Miata writes:
> IMO you gave up too soon. IIRC you never showed us output from parted -l
> or fdisk
> -l. Very likely on the problem PC the / filesystem was/is not on the first
> partition, where often lies a swap partition. Very likely root=/dev/sda2
> would
> have been/be correct.
Sorry
Hi,
On 2021-06-06 11:23 a.m., Georgi Naplatanov wrote:
> On 6/6/21 5:43 PM, fxkl47BF wrote:
>> i've gone back and forth between thunderbird and clawsmail
>>
>> clawsmail is lightweight and clean, i like that
>> debian stable only has an old version, i don't like that
>> to get an up to date versio
Martin McCormick composed on 2021-06-06 13:30 (UTC-0500):
> The sample that Greg Wooledge showed looked very close to
> how my grub.cfg looked after doctoring the drive references to
> point to hd0,1msdos. and I tried booting that way and set the
> root parameter to /dev/sda1, /dev/sdb1 and
On Sun, Jun 06, 2021 at 11:22:52AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> > How and when do you actually *run* this function?
>
> Invoked from a telnet console running in LinuxAos on the same machine.
> Similar to invoking from a plain text console on another machine on
> the LAN.
>
> (I'm aware tha
From: Greg Wooledge
Date: Sun, 6 Jun 2021 10:56:59 -0400
> Yu should quote "$1" but otherwise it seems OK.
Fixed. Thanks.
> How and when do you actually *run* this function?
Invoked from a telnet console running in LinuxAos on the same machine.
Similar to invoking from a plain text co
Thanks to all for the advice and knowledge you shared about how
grub works. I am writing this on June 6 and early this morning,
I edited the boot command in the grub shell after
verifying that my stubborn no-boot drive truly was sitting at
hd0,1msdos and grub-install had picked out hd2,1msdos for
On 6/6/21 5:43 PM, fxkl47BF wrote:
> i've gone back and forth between thunderbird and clawsmail
>
> clawsmail is lightweight and clean, i like that
> debian stable only has an old version, i don't like that
> to get an up to date version i have to continuously compile from source, i
> don't like
On Sun, Jun 06, 2021 at 06:43:31AM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The .bashrc here defines this function.
>
> met () { case $# in
> 0) mousepad --display=:0 /home/me/a & ;;
> 1) mousepad --display=:0 $1 & ;;
> *) echo "Too many arguments." ;;
> esac
> }
OK, this shows the fu
i've gone back and forth between thunderbird and clawsmail
clawsmail is lightweight and clean, i like that
debian stable only has an old version, i don't like that
to get an up to date version i have to continuously compile from source, i
don't like that
thunderbird is overly heavyweight for my
Hi,
The .bashrc here defines this function.
met () { case $# in
0) mousepad --display=:0 /home/me/a & ;;
1) mousepad --display=:0 $1 & ;;
*) echo "Too many arguments." ;;
esac
}
mousepad works as expected but messages such as this are spewed to the
terminal.
(mousepad:8747): dconf-WA
On Sat, Jun 05, 2021 at 08:17:38PM -0400, Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> On 6/5/21, Martin McCormick wrote:
> > First I greatly appreciate all this information as the idea is to
> > fix a problem I probably created long ago though I am not sure
> > how but the short story is that apt-get upgrade ran up
On Sb, 05 iun 21, 20:07:56, Antonio wrote:
>
> The problem is my ISP uses pppoe for my symmetric 1 gbps connection and I
> know this type of connection requires a quite performant cpu, as it is
> single-threaded and uses only one cpu core. I'm currently using a supermicro
> motherboard with a (fou
On Sb, 05 iun 21, 12:46:13, Martin McCormick wrote:
>
> One should be able to write a program to get the
> appropriate UUID's out of fstab on the working system
> and translate them in to corresponding UUID's for the system on
> the operating table.
Alternatively you might want to consider
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