Gorev wrote:
> На форуме поддержки не смог подобрать кодировку для отображения
> кириллицы. Подскажите, пожалуйста прямую ссылку на iso образ. Все
> пояснения на сайте не прояснили, что на каком образе находится. Нужен
> вариант для офиса. Во-первых нигде не сказано, есть ли русская
> локализация
Bernard wrote:
> With RedHat "rpm", I could find very easily
> whether a package was installed or not, what was the version number etc..
> With Debian, I have not yet found the way to go [...]
>
> #apt-cache search package_name
>
> gives me some information on said package, but not the version nu
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Andrew Sackville-West wrote:
> >more and more I think I should be building and selling
> >debian-installed computers...
> But would they sell ;-
(Sorry if I got the quotes messed up: I'm in a hurry, and folks suck at
quoting ;)
I for one would be interested in a supplie
Jonathan Roberts wrote:
> Just released a new podcast. The first episode has Richard Stallman,
> Jeremy Allison and Jeff Waugh all answering questions from the community
> in a panel format. It's a really interesting listen in my opinion and
> covers a good range of topics!
> the url is http://
Mark Grieveson wrote:
> >Hi Mark. You might be interested in the gmessage package. [...] It
> >includes an example script called gxdict, which acts as quick GUI for
> >dict. You'll find gxdict under /usr/share/doc/gmessage/examples/
> Thanks Tim. That sounds interesting. I'll check it out.
You
Mark Grieveson wrote:
> The laptop will not be connected to the internet
[...]
> I tried opendict, but I find it's slow on this laptop (I'm using xfce4,
> with neither Gnome nor KDE). opendict is a large program using python,
> and runs very slowly. I discovered dict, a terminal application,
Russell L. Harris wrote:
> Timothy Musson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Russell L. Harris wrote:
> >> And is there a "local" dictionary which can be installed on a
> >> machine which does not have Internet access?
> > Yes. Install 'dictd&
the following line to /etc/default/dictd:
DICTD_ARGS="$DICTD_ARGS --listen-to=127.0.0.1"
Hope that helps,
Tim
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a default.
It's a lot nicer than the old system, IMO :)
In case that's not what you're after, how about:
Applications > Desktop Preferences > Advanced > Preferred Applications
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gconftool-2 --set /apps/metacity/general/reduced_resources \
--type=bool true
If you have GNOME's gconf-editor installed, it'll let you do the same
thing. (See: Applications -> System Tools -> Configuration Editor.)
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environment
4) apt-get install console-terminus
5) vi /etc/console-tools/config
SCREEN_FONT=ter-v16b.psf
Switch to the unicode console font with:
unicode_start
consolechars -f ter-v16b.psf
Or back to Debian's default:
consolechars -f lat0-sun16
Hope that's some help...
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