Jens, I know just the right guy to do this...our soon to be departed
project leader. Didn't he mention doing something similar as part of
his life-after-project-leader? Something about taking service calls and
stripping out company details, then providing that back to the Debian
community. M
How about joe? Don't know anything about Norton Editor, but I've heard
some oldtimers say joe is like Wordstar was. Does that ring any bells?
Joe seems to me to be somewhat like pico, but with more features (?).
hth .kevin
On Fri, 21 Nov 1997, Bob Nielsen wrote:
>
IIRC there is a TeTeX HOWTO that says it is meant to fill in some of the
information thats supposed to be in the often non-existent local guide.
Of course it can't supply info on where all the files are stashed on your
local system, but I, like Dale, am about to set off down the Latex path
and
Will,
Don't know about KDE, but.
I believe an appropriate entry in /etc/rc5.d is where the debian package
of xdm installs itself (I have an S99xdm entry there). IIRC the debian
package postinstall asks you if you'd like to log directly into xdm. It's
a symbolic link to /etc/init.d/xdm. T
Don't know about your card, but Accelerated X has been working well for
me since v1.2. I wouldn't say I've ever stressed it either, but its done
well for me on cards which weren't well supported under XFree86.
kevin
On Sun, 2 Nov 1997, Will Lowe wrote:
> I'm thinking abou
Bruce Perens wrote:
>
> No, you need to type "linux reboot=h", so that when you halt Linux it will
> reset the computer.
>
> Bruce
> --
> Can you get your operating system fixed when you need it?
> Linux - the supportable operating system. http://www.debian.org/support.html
> Bruce Perens
Dave,
I can appreciate the fact that you don't like Bruce's handling of the
project. I do like the job that Bruce is doing, however. I'll stick
with Bruce until the normal time for succession comes, and probably even
after that.
But please, by all means continue with your plan to release an
Don't know the exact answer, but you can go to http://www.redhat.com and
on their main page they have a blurb about Netscape for Linux. In that
blurb they have instructions about how to get it from Netscape. If my
memory serves me right, the info is not Redhat specific, and should be
valid fo
Or the reverse may be occuring if you are using a commercial X server
like AcceleratedX. It expects to find *.Z fonts, not *.gz fonts. So
if you did install new fonts when you upgraded you may hose up
your commercial X server.
kevni
> Date:
Since Debian maintainers are being faced with this dilemma across the
board, users should probably do as has been described many times on this
list and install libc6 following the mini-howto. Or become friends
with alien, rpm, and RedHat's (and sunsite no doubt) contrib directory to
continue u
Just don't expect to find and update your samba package with dselect. :-(
Usde dpkg instead.
On Tue, 30 Sep 1997, joost witteveen wrote:
> > Dear Folks,
> >
> > If you know about the samba security problem, could you please send me
> > as soon as possible a pointer to more information, or to the
Haven't seen an answer to this one, so I'll give it a try. When you
press tab during the boot process you will get a list of bootable
kernels/OSes. Is that what you want? There ought to be a way to hack
lilo.cfg to make it happen by default, but I don't know it.
Don't know how much thos S3 cards Joost wrote about cost, but it may be
more cost effective to buy AxxeleratedX from Xi Graphics ($99, www.xig.com).
It does support your card/chipset and you can download a demo before
buying to make sure (times out after 10 mins). Install was a piece of
cake, a
suggest it to me when I
asked them how to make their product interact properly with XFree86 3.3.
I had no previous knowledge of xfs. If I get brave, I'll give
it a try...naah, my setup isn't broke so I'd better not try to fix it :-).
On Thu, 25 Sep 1997, Remco Blaakmeer wrote:
Points well taken. Don't know what got into me this morning!
On Thu, 25 Sep 1997 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> According to Civ Kevin F. Havener:
> >
> > You would think, at least in the case of bash, a bash 2.01 (or whatever)
> > would be compiled
You didn't say (and I can't figure out from your error messages) whether
or not you are using AcceleratedX. If so, you need to go into all of
your font directories and gunzip the fonts, then ncompress them if you
have it, then do the mkfontdir step. AcceleratedX can't do gzipped
fonts, but it
You would think, at least in the case of bash, a bash 2.01 (or whatever)
would be compiled against libc5 and put in the bo-updates tree. This
orphaning of the 1.3 tree sorta ticks me off. Since the kernel fiasco
(2.0.30) had already occurred for the very same reason, and since we've
gone thro
I'm contemplating buying one of the two subject printers. Has anyone out
there used either of these two printers under Linux?
Easy to use under Linux is the key criteria.
Color printing is "nice to have" but most of my important printing
needs are black and whit
I concur. The next release of the stable tree should be called 1.3
Revision 2, not 1.3.1 Revision 1.
What problem has this solved for CD retailers? Will they still be bummed
when 1.3 Revision X+1 is released and they just got 1.3 Revision X on the
shelves? Did it make any difference that it
I'll take a crack at this one since I've asked and received an answer to
the very same question.
I use a two-line prompt that tells me who I'm logged on as and at what
machine on the first line and what is the full path to the current directory.
Put this in your ~/.bash_profile or in /etc/profil
Bruce,
You may want to consider just arbitrarily splitting the list into (say)
three. The current range of topics would remain the same but the volume
may go down 1/2 or more (approaching 2/3 asymptotically :-)).
Some list honcho(s) could summarize periodically and post to a debian
news (one-
They were previously compressed (*.Z). Now the XFree group uses the gnu
compression tool (gzip/*.gz). The compress algorithm has some
copyright/distribution problems--gzip doesn't. The choice is made by the
XFree foundation, not debian, though it makes better sense for debian, too.
Yes this
Glad you were able to figure out what to do. I figured if you were
reasonably competent (and I'm not) my hint may have been of some help.
Just bought a copy of AX3.1. I plan to upgrade to XFree 3.3 late this
week. If AX3.1 breaks I'll let you know what Xi support's official
position is. :)
Guys, I've seen the answer to this recently. Don't know how current the
archive is--so you may not be able to search it for the exact answer.
AccelX can't do compressed fonts (.gz I think). XFree has apparently
decided to start compressing them. There is a workaround and it
involves something
Try: zless file.name.gz (may not need the .gz)
or lynx file.name.gz (not sure here either)
On Tue, 1 Jul 1997, David Miles wrote:
>
> I need to read information in manual.txt
>
> when I went to the /usr/doc/lilo subdirectory, the closest filename that
> resembled this was Manual.txt.gz
>
I wnat to run a side by side comparison of two linux distributions--Debian
and one other. I plan to install them on the same IDE drive under separate
(monolithic) partitions. What does LILO need to recognize this set up?
mbr on hda
dos on hda1
swap on hda2
linux1 (/root) on hda3
linu
I installed 1.3.0 almost as soon as it became available. I've since seen
several updated packages destined for bo/stable/1.3. Yet when I point
dselect at ftp.debian.org|select|update, all my packages are current.
I'm reasonably sure that some of the updatated packages I've seen
announced are
Thanks for the info. I think this is a good way to do business.
.kfh
On Thu, 26 Jun 1997, Dale Scheetz wrote:
> On Wed, 25 Jun 1997, Civ Kevin F. Havener wrote:
>
> >
> > 1. Is there some base or required package that has
You are correct, sir!
Momentary loss of brain wave activity. It never worked under 1.14
because I just recently got a working X server. Hence I never would have
known whether it worked or not. All my VC logins *were* login
shells...duh!
Thanks to your pointers, the O'Reilly bash book, and
I use startx to launch my xserver. A default xterm comes up with no
error. However when I start a new xterm from the window manager, I get
the following error:
bash: /home/havenerk/.bashrc: line2: unexpected EOF while looking for
matching `''
bash: /home/havenerk/.bashrc: line3: syntax erro
I am using the (10-minute) demo on my machine until my official copy gets
here. It works fine for me. Broke temporarily when I upgraded to 1.3,
but a config file change put it all back in order for me.
Not much help...but it may be reassuring that someone else is having some
success with it.
A sort of novice question:
I read my mail with pine. Occasionally I get mail from this list and
from others that has HTML markup embedded within it. What causes this?
Is it the sender's mail-enabled browser's problem or is it a pine problem
on the receiving end? I sometimes use a mail-enabl
I saw a potential solution to this in a two-cent tip in Linux Gazette in
issue #11 or #12 I think. Check out http://www.ssc.com/lg. It may be
searchable.
On Mon, 24 Feb 1997, dpk wrote:
> i run the command "xconsole," this is pretty much what your looking for
> also... it is a read only win
I was not aware that linux ran on any apple machines. As a Mac (68040)
user, I've searched around the net quite a bit. The M68k linux
apparently only runs on M68k architectures except Mac (Amigas and
such). I don't know if there is such a thing as an M68k apple
(non-Mac). If there is, it's
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