ers, just the state
of affairs. We do what we must.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 31.0.50 2024-07-16) on Debian 12.0
ever, what depresses me is the number of responses suggesting
increasing memory etc. It's a sad state of affairs we have reached
where simple web browsing (and it *should* be simple) requires such
significant resources. Even banking should not lead to lag in window
management.
--
Eric S Fraga
individual commands, e.g.
man bash
which will describe in quite some detail how to use the shell and
man -k somekeyword
will allow to search man pages.
bash itself also has a help system: type "help" :-)
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 31.0.50 2024-08-16) on Debian 12.6
the space after the two dashes.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 31.0.50 2024-08-16) on Debian 12.6
I run an xterm then that, too, has to
> small cursor.
I've tried what Felix suggested and it works just fine with the X
terminal emulator I use (lxterminal). The cursor is nice and big if I
specify a size of 64.
I've not tried other terminal emulators. My window manager is EXWM.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 31.0.50 2024-07-16) on Debian 12.0
ms would not work reliably on Firefox (or as the direct app). IME,
Edge is typically MS: doesn't follow Linux standards and is a memory
hog.
Caveat: I now have Teams working with Firefox (separate profile which
doesn't block as many things) so haven't used Edge in a few months.
Response below/inline for email Paul M. Foster wrote:
> (original email sent 8 Oct 2024 at 20:50)
>
> Let me provide a dissenting view. I use "pass".
+1
it allows for a hierarchical representation of the different entries and
bonus marks because there is an excellent Emac
Hello
As the Subject says Any good Debian books highly recommended or Linux for
that matter.
I found one the other day Debian 12, it only had a one star review and the
buyer wishes he could get his money back
*From Eric.*
*Sent from Raspberry Pi 5 *
*Now we have wasted all our money on
everal usefull livesystems (I am
> using XBOOT for this, but it is also working with YUMI or some others.
On Friday, 5 Jan 2024 at 18:36, Hans wrote:
> Am Freitag, 5. Januar 2024, 17:48:39 CET schrieb Eric S Fraga:
> Me again:
>
> Second answer: You can easily install debian 32-bit fr
I have two: a Kinesis Advantage 2 and a Corsair gaming mechanical
keyboard, both USB connected. I use the latter almost exclusively and
love it: the feel of the mechanical keys, the sound of those keys, and
the keyboard lighting. I seldom use the Kinesis: just could not get
used to it.
--
Eric
ble SD card in the mess that is my office and will try live booting
different versions.
I am not bothered about DE -- simple WM will do. I just want to run
Emacs with org mode as a portable writing and agenda system.
Thanks again,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-06-19) on Debian 12.0
s currently
running with a 2.x kernel!
I have found some bits and bobs on the Interweb but I thought I'd ask
here in case somebody in this group/list has direct experience.
Thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
It looks like the package is already at the latest version?
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-06-19) on Debian 12.0
welding, cutting and assembly based on the assembly of machine
components and the prefabrication of electrical switchboards.
Let me know if you are interested in a short conversation regarding the order.
Best regards
Eric Risch
On Monday, 11 Dec 2023 at 07:32, Pocket wrote:
> No it is microsoft non sense
I'm not an MS fanboi but please stop blaming MS for something they did
not invent!
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
TeX list/group?
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
Untested but shouldn't the \mho be within braces, {\mho}?
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
On Friday, 8 Dec 2023 at 17:06, Pocket wrote:
> In Unix and Linux there isn't a file extension, that is a microsoft
> invention.
Predates MS by years. Systems like RSTS/E on PDP-11s, just to name one.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
I use zathura which is also quite light but I'm not sure if you can
print from it. I tend to print directly using lp although very
infrequently in any case.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
y, is closer to me
than the desktop which is hidden under the back of my desk.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.2
On Thursday, 9 Nov 2023 at 12:46, Todd Zullinger wrote:
> You may like pass[1]. It's a bash script which uses gpg, so
> it's somewhat familiar to what you've written in a sense.
+1
*and* it has an Emacs interface which is very easy to use.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Ema
available
again?
Thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-09-14) on Debian 12.1
quite recent.
Alternatively, you could post on the mobilread.com forum devoted to all
things calibre: https://www.mobileread.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=166
It's a very helpful community, I have found.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-06-19) on Debian 12.0
On Sunday, 1 Oct 2023 at 15:25, Joe wrote:
> Calibre converts/creates ebooks and is generally a useful accessory for
> a Kindle or other hardware reader. No, I'm not on commission.
+1 for calibre!
I use it for managing my Kobo devices. Works very well.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Em
Corporation GP107GL [Quadro
P1000] (rev a1)
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-04-18) on Debian 11.5
not remember which model, however). xrandr finds all monitors
successfully.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-04-18) on Debian 11.6
.cgi?bug=562765
According to that bug report, the problem is on sid. This is not
surprising? If you want stability, stick to stable releases?
cheese works perfectly for me and has done so for a very long time.
I cannot comment on qemu.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2023-01-02) on Debian 11.5
t; so no big database, best perf, easy backup and no mail losses. Gnus use
> standard gpg for encryption. I use swish for indexing and searching mails.
Pretty much the same for me except for notmuch instead of swish for
indexing/searching. Works very well in all respects including gpg.
--
Eric S
It's annoying that it has just the one big partition and I belatedly
realised I should have repartitioned to have a separate root and home
before copying over all of my (home) files. Easily fixed in due course.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 30.0.50 2022-12-02) on Debian 11.5
Just in case, what happens if you expand "~" in the path to PROCMAIL?
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-11-10) on Debian 11.4
emacs?
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-11-01) on Debian 11.4
need to accept
terms and subscribe. To do so please visit
https://aws.amazon.com/marketplace/pp?sku=55q52qvgjfpdj2fpfy9mb1lo4
Amazon Account ID: 412380406902
I need to be subscribed, can you please help?
Who runs the Amazon / AWS / Relationship??
Sincerely,
Eric Stone
erictst...@gmail.com
re is another utility?
I prefer ksnip (QT-based) for such things, very good. Have a lot of
options and settings.
https://github.com/ksnip/ksnip
For "moving" screenhots/demos there is also peek which is fairly ok as
well. :)
https://github.com/phw/peek
/eric
hone)... but that's another story.
> Oh, I have no DE, so I mount the cam explicitly. I don't like things
> auto-mounting. But I'm weird :)
I guess I'm weird as well then... ;-)
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-06-17) on Debian 11.3
ver utility you like. Why is some
> special program needed for this?
Unfortunately because many cameras do not implement USB file store
access, only MTP (media transfer protocol?). If they provide file store
access, life is simple.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-06-12) on Debian 11.3
On Friday, 10 Jun 2022 at 06:33, a wrote:
> nm-applet seems to be part of gnome
I guess it does; I never checked as it runs fine with stumpwm but I
probably have gnome dependencies installed. Sorry for the noise.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-06-07) on Debian 11.3
suit your needs.
--
Eric S Fraga via gnus (Emacs 29.0.50 2022-06-07) on Debian 11.3
or apt and have no
problems at all. I've noticed no delay for that server. Just tried
updating right now and the response was immediate.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.3 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.3
On Tuesday, 8 Mar 2022 at 22:47, Richmond wrote:
> Now that I have it working I fear to change it.
And this is exactly my modus operandum. Once I get a system to a stable
productive working state, I leave it alone (except for security issues).
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0
works very well for me and comes with nextcloud as well which is
useful.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
use gnus in Emacs) and davmail sends on
requests to the actual server. Instructions, at least for Outlook, on
the website. Not sure about gmail, mind you.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
On Friday, 4 Mar 2022 at 05:56, Peter Ehlert wrote:
> xfce: 774 MIB ram used .. 4 GIB / space used
> mate: 719 MIB ram used .. 6 GIB / space used
> mate*: 722 MIB ram used .. 6 GIB / space used
stumpwm: 86 MB, 1.3 GB ;-)
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
y nice laptop,
especially the matt screen (which doesn't have touch, a plus in my
mind).
Just my 2¢.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
out the
non-free firmware as it couldn't find the network.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
On Wednesday, 5 Jan 2022 at 11:26, Charles Curley wrote:
> Or, if you want to stick with your investment in Thunderbird, use
> dovecot to set up a local imap server.
dovecot is also quite useful for letting those MUAs that do not support
oauth2 access services which require it.
--
Eric S
this mystery. I remain wondering
why it stopped working last year... but it's good to have some mystery
left. ;-)
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
lse/default.pa rather than editing /etc/pulse/default.pa .
Okay, I will give this a try. Thank you. Should I leave the udev
auto-detection in there as well?
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
spend some time cleaning these up but none seems relevant to the problem
at first glance. The dpkg audit highlighted nothing and neither did the
firmware diagnostic.
Thanks again,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.2 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
upload=true&script=true&cardinfo=
!!##
w months typically) and
so have made a note of this to try then. The link you gave is very
helpful.
Thanks again,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
e rebooting. I did do it this time but just
wondering.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
ulseaudio doc gives
> some hints there:
Thank you for the link. I will read that FAQ in case I can find
something to help. I am not sure combining outputs is what I want but
maybe that's what I need to do. I'll play around.
Thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
ther here or in the configuration tab.
The list of modules itemised via pavucontrol includes alsa so I am not
sure why I cannot see the devices that alsa knows about. It's a mystery
(to me, at least).
thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
DMI 2]
but pulseaudio only shows the HDMI interface.
Any hints on getting pulseaudio to find the Intel device would be
welcome.
Thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.2
cost could be worth it, of
course, but it's not really. I only posted earlier in the thread as a
data point on what things can slow desktop environments down.
Thank you for your suggestions!
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.1
on this
system are definitely on the slow side. I could upgrade but killing
firefox periodically is an easier (and cheaper 😉) solution for me! 🙂
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.1
Thank you all.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5.1 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.0
ual processors for each core.
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.1
use jetaudio (rocketplayer instead) but
I name my playlists with an .m3u extension. Maybe try that?
--
Eric S Fraga with org 9.5 in Emacs 29.0.50 on Debian 11.1
web related... ;-)) and then close it immediately. No performance
issues then!
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
he GPU driver is helpful as I probably don't have
the optimum graphics card settings (I do very little graphical work:
mostly text in Emacs all day long...). I have an nvidia graphics card
and my experience with nvidia has never been positive, to be fair.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
erwise. Drive and memory all test fine.
Only Firefox causes me problems if I let it run for a long time. My
system is up 24/7.
YMMV, of course, and that's great for you. But don't dismiss other
people's experiences so out of hand please.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
My experience is that Firefox, if you open too many tabs and especially
some of the very javascript heavy ones, gets bogged down quite severely
and requires restarting. It can slow the whole system down in my
experience.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
e wheel and being /too-limiting/, implying that LISP is the only way
to go (and I like LISP).
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
a product.
I cannot remember any longer which one supplied this one. Might have
been Tiscali?
And, yes, leaving 99 static addresses free might be a reason.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
On Friday, 22 Oct 2021 at 13:40, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Typically modems and home routers use the .1 address for themselves.
Interesting. My last 2 routers have had *.254 (!) and *.100 as their
address.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.1
On Sunday, 10 Oct 2021 at 16:53, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> I was using online fora on the U of Illinois' Plato system in 1977.
Blast from that past that! I remember playing with the air flight
simulator with people connected across the continent.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 &
etc.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.0
On Saturday, 2 Oct 2021 at 15:39, Brian wrote:
> BTW, I do not think gv accepts an output piped to it.
Well, it does on my Debian system. YMMV, of course.
I did try the command before posting. ;-)
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.0
On Saturday, 2 Oct 2021 at 09:03, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> This appears to produce a Postscript stream.
Yes; I was basing my post on the specified need for "dead wood" output.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.60 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.0
the software: I can still generate a PDF of my thesis now
after more than 30 years since I wrote it. Try that in Word... ;-)
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.5 on Debian 11.0
Thank you for posting this. Interesting article.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.6 on Debian 11.0
ons of firefox (and Thunderbird
as this was my test vehicle) but got there eventually. Now have gnus
reading email via davmail although hanging after downloading the
emails. I've posted on the gnus mailing list about this aspect.
Thanks again,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org
On Thursday, 29 Apr 2021 at 21:09, deloptes wrote:
> The admin says "F**k off" :D
Yep, that's pretty much what's happened (so far... I'm pushing).
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.6 on Debian bullseye/sid
Netlify can publish your page from your git-repository and run the build
of the site in their pipeline and finally publish it statically.
There are of course others as netlify, but thats the one i have most
experience with.
Good luck!
Eric
found
that the equivalent TV (same screen/hardware as the monitor but with a
tuner) was half the price. We bought the TV.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.5 on Debian bullseye/sid
On Thursday, 29 Apr 2021 at 16:43, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Judging by your mail address, you are in academia. This is doubly sad.
My experience is that academic institutions are no different than any
other organization in these regards. For better or for worse.
--
Eric S Fraga via Em
as it seems like it will work. Or I will switch to
davmail. Solutions do seem to exist!
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.5 on Debian bullseye/sid
On Thursday, 29 Apr 2021 at 14:38, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 29, 2021 at 01:27:07PM +0100, Eric S Fraga wrote:
>> 2. txt message to your phone (so need not be "smart")
>
> You know those can be (and have been) hi-jacked, don't you?
Yeah. :-(
What real
On Thursday, 29 Apr 2021 at 14:03, Darac Marjal wrote:
> Ask your administrator to enable "Per Application Passwords" -
Thank you. I've looked at this and it looks feasible (if they enable
this which is unfortunately not very likely but still worth asking).
--
Eric S Fraga
nux
throughout. They've given up but the challenges continue: you must use
Outlook, Word, ... And now we have to use SharePoint and Teams and all
these tools don't even talk to each other properly even though they come
from the same vendor. What a joke.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.5 on Debian bullseye/sid
ink that email was once a simple yet effective tool. It's been
hijacked.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.5 on Debian bullseye/sid
Dystopian is right. Our organization, using O365, has moved to
"multi-factor authentication" without consultation and I can no longer
use gnus, for instance. Absolutely horrible.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.5 on Debian bullseye/sid
seye
> at the moment.
Thank you. Excellent suggestion!
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
ing
> "version 78.9" doesn't tell us which version you're running—I see
> a different one in bullseye: 78.9.0esr-1.)
Yes, sorry, I was being lazy. It is indeed 78.9.0esr-1.
Thanks again,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
want to re-install a package for whatever reason, I do 'apt-get
> remove ...' or 'apt-get purge ...'. If I'm suspicious, I
> reboot. Then I do 'apt-get install ...' and reboot.
Yes, I guess I could be extreme and try this if everything else
fails. Thank you.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
nning bullseye/sid (contents of
/etc/debian-version) although I do try to avoid Debian unstable so not
sure where the /sid bit comes from.
cheers,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
ing
is gone before starting it.
thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
s one...).
I don't have time to do much more investigating at the moment but
thought I'd post this just in case anybody else has had the same
behaviour. I'll hopefully investigate more in a few days.
Thank you,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
the
phone).
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
On Wednesday, 9 Dec 2020 at 14:10, Eric S Fraga wrote:
> Zoom has the same limitation on Linux but at least zoom allows the
> other participants to zoom (no pun intended) into the view presented
> by the application.
Update: it does seem that zoom allows sharing individual
windows. W
re not as good which, these
days, is rather surprising (to me) as platform independent software
should be much easier to write than it used to be. In the case of
Teams, of course, there is a disincentive for MS to support Linux
properly...
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
choice of screens is a
wide 38" or a 27" in portrait mode... Why they cannot support window
sharing is beyond me.
Zoom has the same limitation on Linux but at least zoom allows the other
participants to zoom (no pun intended) into the view presented by the
application.
--
Eric S
.
And don't get me started with the chat feature...
Best is to turn off most notifications. I also did have to turn off gpu
acceleration in teams as it consistently crashed my video but that was
potentially an issue with the nouveau driver.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4
to find a positive outcome of social media
(Facebook etc.): I no longer get these emails! :-)
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
7;ve never received one with an
embedded form to submit (I wouldn't respond to such in any case).
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.4 on Debian bullseye/sid
ng for.
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.3.7 on Debian bullseye/sid
On Wednesday, 29 Jul 2020 at 04:40, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 07/27/2020 10:13 AM, Eric S Fraga wrote:
>> You may wish to have a look at recutils:
>
> A database is over-kill for some personal preferences.
>
> I had mentioned spreadsheets in original post as I had visualized
You may wish to have a look at recutils:
https://www.gnu.org/software/recutils/
but it may not have some of the functionality you wish (although you
could build on it with shell scripts & awk, say).
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.3.7 on Debian bullseye/sid
On Thursday, 16 Jul 2020 at 13:30, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Eric S Fraga wrote:
>> echo " 34 + 45 \| abc \| 1 2 3 \| c\|123abc " | sed -e 's/\\|/\n/g'
>
> But how to get the lines into the array ?
See the "\n" (newline) in the replacement pattern?
--
Try sed:
echo " 34 + 45 \| abc \| 1 2 3 \| c\|123abc " | sed -e 's/\\|/\n/g'
HTH,
eric
--
Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50 & org 9.3.7 on Debian bullseye/sid
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