lution but offers a nice means of
remote control which should allow me to sleep in a bit later on these
cold mornings!
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/
gly in ways such as the time to
power the heater or even whether to turn it off should a temperature
rise occur through the night. In other words, I intend much more than a
simple clock timer can provide, but I also have a need that, as I see
it, is much much less than all the complexity of the home a
tdoor elements. Of course there is the Home
Assistant forum I can sign up for and ask but I thought I would try here
first in case someone has already found such devices.
TIA
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true.&q
s are
rather easily found for Lenovo laptops.
I've been using Debian on one Thinkpad model or another for over 25
years.
> Note that Trixie is around the corner
I also have an older Thinkpad X1 Carbon, Generation 3 that I'm running
Trixie on as well as Arch as the mood strikes.
* On 2024 11 Dec 18:32 -0600, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2024 at 06:07:49PM -0600, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > I don't like to be that guy that says, "Works for me", but I don't
> > notice problems with Firefox here.
>
> […]
>
>
eally help with lower
> end machines.
Along with uBlock Origin on both Firefox and Chromium I also run the
Adblock service on my Openwrt router. Adblock on the router helps keep
our phones clear of ads when they're connected to our LAN.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we
terminal windows open and multiple Libre Office Calc windows,
and other apps running. This Core i5 just cruises along with its dual
displays with all that going on.
Have you tried clearing the browser cache? In times past that used to
help a lot but even these days it's not somethin
titude TUI, exiting that and using
the advised command installed the new libs and the updated chromium
package.
I often use the advised command on other machines I maintain but not
this one so that caught me out.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possib
ckages of libc++1-19
and libc++abi1-19 in the following directory listing:
https://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm-proposed-updates/
I do wear reading glasses these days so that might be why.
I am just holding off on the Chromium update until this is resolved
through the security repositor
ly has changed since. For those guests
Virtualbox worked without issue.
If Secure Boot is in use the current virtualbox-dkms package from
fasttrack installs its own signing key through shim and signs the newly
compiled kernel modules thus enabling seamless kernel upgrades.
Once again Debian sh
* On 2024 31 Oct 09:07 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 10/31/24 7:46 AM, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > * On 2024 31 Oct 06:02 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > Currently, my Debian 12 installations have Firefox 128.3.1esr-1~deb12u1.
> > Aptitude also shows that this version is fro
so shows that this version is from the Debian Security team.
You do have security updates enabled, right?
I opened the USDA PDF in your OP with this version of Firefox with zero
issues and can zoom to ridiculous levels and also the opened the links
in the quoted text above just fine.
Keep abrea
g post shows, I like to unify the color schemes between the
console, Gnome Terminal, and Xterm.
If this is not your issue, then you'll need to consult the dialog
manual.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is
ng time and in that system one needs
to start a new thread and link back to the prior one(s) for context.
Here I can go back and add to a thread I have kept in my MailDir.
Yes, I am old, a tail-end Boomer to be exact.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possibl
lly a rather capable format it's just that the info
format and the info utility intended for terminal display throw nearly
all of that away.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
age) of info documents may be seen by running either info or pinfo
without commandline arguments or from within Emacs.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
ion. The stand alone
GNU info browser is rather obtuse. I found a much better option to be
the independent pinfo (Debian package of the same name) browser which
provides navigation up and down through the document using Lynx style
key bindings. If pinfo doesn't find an info document it will ope
popular setting going, buddy.
Until he sets up a real MUA, I doubt the formatting will improve.
I endure this on many other mailing lists unrelated to Debian,
particularly from groups.io that have a Web interface.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possi
orm to achieve their goals no
matter what it is. You and your colleagues may well each be in one of
those categories.
Most of the time the platform is dictated by the application(s) a user
wants to run. Sometimes the platform is dictated by ego.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that
ven greater scrutiny by project
maintainers? I suspect that at a minimum if a maintainer doesn't
clearly understand a patch then it won't get applied, but if the
maintainer is clever enough to work in a non-obvious patch that is
malicious, all bets are off.
It's a mess.
- Nate
--
* On 2024 01 Apr 23:41 -0500, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 01, 2024 at 03:19:18PM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > * On 2024 01 Apr 14:01 -0500, Andy Smith wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > Until now, who anticipated this? I'm sure there are security
> > resear
ssociated with a VCS tag and a release tarball,
and somehow verifying the identity of contributors/committers. I'm sure
other ideas are being discussed that I've not read. Suffice it to say,
at the moment this is not being swept under the proverbial rug.
- Nate
--
"The optimist
* On 2024 01 Apr 14:01 -0500, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Mon, Apr 01, 2024 at 03:33:37AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > From what I have read, lzma is not a direct dependency of openssh. It
> > turns out that it lzma is a dependency of libsystemd and that
> > re
This
recent event makes me just a little bit more skeptical about anyone
requesting to take over the project unless that person is a known member
of an already long established project. Not an easy situation for
project maintainers and the community to fix.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclai
bash for my login shell.
I've used shellcheck to point me in the right direction and figure that
if dash runs the script without errors then it's close enough to POSIX
compatible for my needs. I don't anticipate my scripts needing to run
on some ancient Unix shell.
- Nate
--
* On 2024 21 Feb 12:42 -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 19 Feb 2024 at 13:26:17 (-0600), Nate Bargmann wrote:
> >
> > After seeing this twice this morning I recalled that I have a cron entry
> > to kill the 'rec' program. This was to break up audio file
dev/null
When I want to use it next in order to protect other processes.
I certainly hope this is resolved. OTOH, it forced me to recall a
number of passwords! 🤣
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: htt
3 hits in Trixie, I know that an included utility called
"groffer" will be removed. To keep it I will copy it over from the
cloned groff repository I have locally. Sometimes a man's gotta do what
a man's gotta do...
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the
* On 2024 04 Feb 11:57 -0600, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> On 4 Feb 2024 11:36 -0600, from n...@n0nb.us (Nate Bargmann):
> >> Unicomp[1] still makes these keyboards, and you can get them for USB.
> >
> > I don't like their swapping of the right Alt and Menu keys u
* On 2024 04 Feb 04:23 -0600, hw wrote:
> On Fri, 2024-02-02 at 20:09 -0600, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > [...]
> > I have several of the now classic IBM Model M keyboards I procured in
> > the '90s. Modern BIOSes don't like them even with a PS/2 to USB
> > ad
s thick so you might not like it and it is
loud. It has the same number of keys as the Lenovo, 104, I think. This
one was not cheap while the Lenovo was considerably less expensive.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears thi
* On 2024 06 Jan 22:27 -0600, gene heskett wrote:
> On 1/6/24 17:06, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > * On 2024 06 Jan 14:34 -0600, gene heskett wrote:
> > > On 1/6/24 14:33, John Hasler wrote:
> > > > Try manpages.org .
> > >
> > > That is downright tasty
t I don't see a category for oldstable and
oldoldstable, etc.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41
cept America/Central without complaint. Yeah, US is a
directory and Central is a symlink to ../America/Chicago that could be
manually added to a system if need be.
Ambles off shaking fist at a cloud...
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. Th
e,
or would:
In Debian releases between Etch and Jessie (inclusive),
be good enough?
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint:
Thanks for the tip. I updated this morning well before any
announcements and having seen this I rebooted into the 6.1.0-12 (6.1.52)
package. Good thing old kernels are kept around.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears th
want to keep such as vim will be marked for removal and all
packages that were automatically installed with it. To reverse the
proposed removal action, use 'Ctrl-u'.
While I often use apt at the command line, I've been using aptitude
since early 2001 and often prefer its TUI for doi
, eve of 9 Tishrei 5784
sunrise: 07:10
sunset: 19:18
hdate: ALERT: The information displayed is for today's Hebrew date.
Because it is now after sunset, that means the data is
for the Gregorian day beginning at midnight.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that
* On 2023 14 Aug 21:29 -0500, Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 14/08/2023 07:30, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > Now, while typing this email all keyring PIDs have vanished!
>
> It may be a way to minimize RAM usage.
I don't think so. It has been persistent in the past in Buster and
Bullse
l-challenged sys admin hobbyist.
>
> Has anyone tried it? It sounds great, even the free version.
I've not heard of it, but that's not surprising. I prefer OpenWRT as it
is a project similar in the vein of Debian. I shy away from single
points of failure if at all possible
* On 2023 26 Aug 07:57 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 26, 2023 at 07:40:46AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > * On 2023 26 Aug 07:13 -0500, Anssi Saari wrote:
> > > Nate Bargmann writes:
> > >
> > > > This Wiki is semi-private in that editing i
shell doesn't care and as the script
gets more complex it's much easier to keep one's bearings on where the
script is working at various points.
As I see it, relative paths are more for interactive shell use.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
p
* On 2023 26 Aug 07:13 -0500, Anssi Saari wrote:
> Nate Bargmann writes:
>
> > This Wiki is semi-private in that editing is not open to just everyone
> > but may only be done through an account (apparently I have one and now
> > have to figure out how to reset my passwor
content to the
Wiki by everyone is welcome and desired. In particular solutions are
provided on this list that should make it onto the Wiki. I'm not
volunteering for that "job" but it is something we might all consider in
the future.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that w
greg greg 6160384 Aug 20 20:18
> .mozilla/firefox/0uik3i3z.default/favicons.sqlite
As do my systems.
Taking a wild guess, presumably cleaning the cache removed the icon
files that the DB is still referencing and not requesting being
downloaded. In all likelihood it is safer for the
so I could see what the exact
characters are.
In my terminals I have switched to Fira Code, Regular as well as in the
GNOME settings.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
doesn't force anyone to upgrade.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819
s
s had been upgraded
and migrated uninterrupted over the intervening years but I did distro
hopping yet always came back to Debian and also bumped up to amd64 along
the way.
Here's to many more anniversaries.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds.
Right after rebooting the process list looked like this which mirrors
the laptop:
$ ps ax -u nate | grep "agent\|keyring"
2037 ?SLsl 0:00 /usr/bin/gnome-keyring-daemon --foreground
--components=pkcs11,secrets --control-directory=/run/user/1000/keyring
2151 ?S
ly sourced through Scaled Instruments[7]. They
carry complete stations for many brands as well as parts.
The aforementioned wxforum.net is a good place to seek out better
answers to your questions.
HTH,
- Nate
[1] https://www.wxforum.net/index.php?board=59.0
[2] http://weewx.com/
[
ibutions as they're all collections from many projects. Probably
the most dogmatic distributions are Trisquel and Guix but I doubt they
have the NIH attitude I sense from OpenBSD.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is t
to excise as much GNU
from their systems as they can (I don't follow their development
closely, it's just the impression I get).
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Pr
the BSDs have a rightful claim to be true descendants of AT&T
Unix and not clones or derivatives.
I also have a hard time calling GNU or Linux "clones" as they are
independent work-alike implementations but not bug-for-bug clones of
AT&T Unix or BSD.
Pedants R Us...
- Nate
d access to Minix, Tanenbaum had no interest in applying
the patches Linus, et. al. wanted to apply to make it a more general
system. Linus was only interested in a Unix he could afford and since
GNU lacked a kernel that is what he focused on. MS was never part of
the focus regarding the creation
* On 2023 14 Jun 03:24 -0500, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> On 2023-06-13 13:41:23 -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > I have always chickened out on that option. Looking at the ucf man page
> > and the description of the three-way merge it looks like the user would
> > have a yes or
* On 2023 13 Jun 10:01 -0500, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> On 2023-06-13 06:41:41 -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > I've been experimenting with Arch Linux for some time and one thing I
> > like about its pacman package management system is that it has a tool
> > available nam
changes to a config file
then I will install the maintainer's version, note it, and edit it for
needed local changes later. I've been bitten by keeping all of my local
configs in the past so I don't do that any more.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in th
I prefer vimdiff.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819
signature.asc
D
* On 2023 22 Mar 14:06 -0500, Lionel Élie Mamane wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 22, 2023 at 05:11:17AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > Why have you ruled out a system with an integrated Intel GPU?
>
> Well, I was trying to see if one could get reasonable hardware that
> doesn't have
t shake my head. As far
as I'm concerned Nvidia is banned from my network.
Yes, I do have non-free firmware packages installed. I can't say that
they're strictly necessary.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The p
ros and
envelope templates for US #10 and #6 3/4 written in raw roff requests
that I use for printing such documents. I also edit these files in Vim
and find this to be a fast and relatively lightweight way of doing so.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of
so routinely. It made it easy for me to
simply look at the IP address and know there was some connectivity issue
for that machine.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects:
Well, I didn't fix the errors, but I was able to use 'btrfs replace' to
move the file system to an external HDD. The SDD I ordered apparently
is ping-ponging its way from Kansas City to various area post offices
and back again before they get it on the right truck. Sigh...
-
oneer hardware (Olimex A20-OLinuXino-LIME2).
*I* did not choose this filesystem for this application, just to be
clear. If there is a better choice for what is intended to be an
appliance running from a micro-SD card, then that should be communicated
to the Freedom Box people.
I have an SSD on order
tion as the MICRO cannot boot directly to the SSD as far as I know.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689
* On 2023 12 Jan 08:15 -0600, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > I have a Freedom Box Pioneer (hardware is an Olimex A20-OLinuXino-LIME2
> > unit with a Samsung 128 GB micro-SD card. The micro-SD is partitioned
> > into 2GB boot ext2 and the remainder as the ro
am I to do? At the moment the system is pretty
much useless.
All insights appreciated.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6
nner
that there is an implicit module name prefix but it isn't used since the
import command made the module's namespace a part of the program's main
namespace.
That's how I understand it, at least.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possi
on of Python
> curses?
Yes. I'm not familiar at all with the versioning of such modules.
Perhaps the Python folks have decided to normalize the versions of
modules with the main interpreter version resulting in an apparent
version jump.
The curses module should be a rather old and stabl
;Software" comes from the Gnome Project. Make of that
what you will. I use the Gnome desktop but not "Software". Like you I
found completely inadequate to my needs but it's installed anyway.
I use the Aptitude TUI and apt from the terminal when I don't need the
TUI. I do a
* On 2022 23 Dec 13:03 -0600, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-12-23, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> >
> >> Because there is no colorscheme named "white" in Debian's
> >> vim. The colorschemes are in /usr/share/vim/vim82/colors
> >
> > The problem as I see it
e wants reverse colors in 'vi' but
edited '.vimrc'. Historically those are two different programs but the
Debian alternatives eventually points 'vi' to 'vim.basic'. I would
presume that a setting that works in historic 'vi' might not be
supported by
it:
https://www.n0nb.us/blog/2012/11/ghost-a-partition-contents-with-rsync/
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0
but maybe I got the same error you did on a package I
was porting forward some time back.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint
k
10818 pts/0S+ 0:00 grep --color=auto fetchmail
which I had just started a few minutes before reading your mail. I do
not find any kind of default configuration under /etc. Was one added in
Bookworm?
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possi
nch of Debian :(
Even if the package is updated and put into the Free archive, the only
way it would make it into Bullseye is if it is uploaded to backports and
the user has that repository enabled. Otherwise, at best it will go
into Bookworm. At least that is how things usually work out.
-
r policy some day? Or that a different corporation will buy the
> rights to it, and change the policy that way? I don't know.
I have it installed through Bullseye Fast track. I don't follow how
packages flow, but they get to fasttrack.debian.net by some means.
- Nate
--
"Th
s. :)
And I have Autosave selected in all my installations of mc so IME, the
last one to close writes the file. It's not unusual for me to have half
a dozen instances of mc running at once! Sometimes I find I had two or
three running in the same terminal session. Oh dear...
- Nate
--
&
* On 2022 21 Mar 20:56 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 21 Mar 2022 at 19:34:46 (-0500), Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > * On 2022 21 Mar 15:19 -0500, Joe wrote:
> > > Probably best try nano unless you're particularly keen on vim. Don't
> > > forget that geany
=yellow,black:\
editmarked=black,cyan"
There may be more parameters available and it has been many years since
I found that somewhere on the 'Net and I failed to note the source.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fear
ectly which can only be done if all
instances of mc are closed.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6
E=wayland
XAUTHORITY=/run/user/1000/.mutter-Xwaylandauth.B6TFI1
WAYLAND_DISPLAY=wayland-0
MOZ_ENABLE_WAYLAND=1
$ echo $XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP
GNOME
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
P
.com/cvs2cl/
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41 F689 BBA6 FB2C 5130 D55A 8819
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
before moving into the desktop world alternating
between KDE and Xfce and now Gnome for the most part and my virtual
desktop equals the screen size.
Gnome calls them "workspaces" and I typically use four per screen. It's
default is to create them dynamically but I use a fixed number.
nux Conf.au[1]
in early 2020 about X history and politics[2]. As I recall (it's been
two years since I watched it), much of what you wrote above echos
Keith's comments.
- Nate
[1] https://www.keithp.com/blogs/tags/lca/
[2] https://youtu.be/cj02_UeUnGQ
--
"The optimist proclaims
* On 2022 11 Mar 14:06 -0600, Emanuel Berg wrote:
> Nate Bargmann wrote:
>
> > Interesting as no one uses Wayland or X11 directly but
> > through a window manager or quite likely one of the desktop
> > environments.
>
> I don't know, I think it is fair to s
* On 2022 11 Mar 14:10 -0600, Emanuel Berg wrote:
> Nate Bargmann wrote:
>
> >> No, I understood, but that sounds like too much emulator ...
> >
> > My understanding is that xwayland is an X server that runs
> > under Wayland and the idea is that it handles X prot
* On 2022 11 Mar 07:16 -0600, Christian Britz wrote:
>
>
> On 2022-03-11 12:47 UTC+0100, Nate Bargmann wrote:
>
> > I have used Gnome on Wayland since late 2018. It improved a lot with
> > the release of Bullseye. I use this setup on two machines, a laptop and
&g
yland either
which I can live with (I'm sure the built in Gnome blanker works just
fine).
My GPUs are stock Intel on board graphics as I don't game nor do I need
fancy 3D capability. This hardware is sufficient for displaying the GL
screen savers and for whatever compositing requireme
to have just the main user
set to do root's work and that root can no longer log in directly. I
hope the OP can clarify!
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: htt
, what is seldom acknowledged is that new releases also
bring new and as yet undisclosed bugs that will be fixed next time or
the time after or the time after that or... I figure it's a gamble
either way and stick with the Debian packages.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live i
* On 2022 07 Jan 10:26 -0600, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-01-07, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> >
> > Did you try Shift + Right-click and select "Open Link" or some such in
> > your terminal? That is what works for me in Gnome Terminal.
> >
>
> This is what works fo
ng
> the link does not do anything. Is it supposed to send the default browser
> to that page? If so, where should I check for the broken linkage?
Did you try Shift + Right-click and select "Open Link" or some such in
your terminal? That is what works for me in Gnome Termina
ck and
forth between Mozilla provided binaries and Debian installed packages
and have never deleted nor modified ~/.mozilla
Perhaps you intended to remove the cache which is found under
~/.cache/mozilla? FF will rebuild it automatically when it is missing.
- Nate
--
"The optimist procla
oon character.
>
> That's exactly what I look like ;)
Close! Going by your avatar I see when browsing the Planet Debian blog
feed. :-)
In Mutt running in Gnome Terminal I see a square following the face
(screenshot attached).
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we liv
utomatically installed so I guess I got the functionality "for free" by
using Gnome.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D
w that there is keyboard sequence in Gnome Terminal (Ctl-Shift-E
then Space) to bring up a menu to select Unicode glyphs.
🐮
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://
ices beyond two-way radio transmitters. In other words,
this tech should have applicability in network security, to bring it
back on topic a bit.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
P
ce of the RF spectrum, it seems like they would be perfect
for the task.
- Nate
--
"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all
possible worlds. The pessimist fears this is true."
Web: https://www.n0nb.us
Projects: https://github.com/N0NB
GPG fingerprint: 82D6 4F6B 0E67 CD41
need to be written from scratch as they
are probably Turbo C and Soundblaster specific, respectively. Still
this would be a very useful tool for those interested in radio frequency
(RF) work, especially with a laptop or SBC (Raspberry Pi, etc.).
- Nate
[1] https://www.qsl.net/n9zia/xmit_id/leg
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