Mark Neidorff wrote:
Thanks. That solved 2 annoyances. Its too bad about the vim install.
Another of those things about Etch that doesn't make sense to me.
I think it is because of the minimal install. I may be wrong but I think
at some point in the past they replace nvi with vim-tiny.
On Tuesday 14 August 2007 04:18 pm, Michael Shuler wrote:
> On 08/14/2007 03:06 PM, Magnus Pedersen wrote:
> > Mark Neidorff wrote:
> >> First...vim. (Yeah, I'm old school) OK. I'm in text entry mode and
> >> I want to navagate up/down/left or right. If I press an arrow key, a
> >> new line is
On 21:19 Tue 14 Aug , John K Masters wrote:
> On 14:44 Tue 14 Aug , Mark Neidorff wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > After using another distribution for over 12 years, I've decided to give
> > Debian Etch a good try. I've now got the luxury of having a second
> > computer
> > to try things on
On 14:44 Tue 14 Aug , Mark Neidorff wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> After using another distribution for over 12 years, I've decided to give
> Debian Etch a good try. I've now got the luxury of having a second computer
> to try things on, so I've installed Debian on that and hope to move
> everything
On 08/14/2007 03:06 PM, Magnus Pedersen wrote:
> Mark Neidorff wrote:
>> First...vim. (Yeah, I'm old school) OK. I'm in text entry mode and
>> I want to navagate up/down/left or right. If I press an arrow key, a
>> new line is opened and a character ("B" or "D" or ...) is put in the
>> first po
Mark Neidorff wrote:
Hi all,
After using another distribution for over 12 years, I've decided to give
Debian Etch a good try. I've now got the luxury of having a second computer
to try things on, so I've installed Debian on that and hope to move
everything else over shortly. Right now, I've
Hi all,
After using another distribution for over 12 years, I've decided to give
Debian Etch a good try. I've now got the luxury of having a second computer
to try things on, so I've installed Debian on that and hope to move
everything else over shortly. Right now, I've got two annoyances tha
On Fri, Jan 17, 2003 at 10:11:15AM -0600, Brian McGroarty wrote:
> Are you sure you're accessing the same way?
Yes, by http://slashdot.org/ every time.
--
.''`. Baloo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
: :' :proud Debian admin and user
`. `'`
`- Debian - when you have better things to do than to f
> 2) What's with konqueror not hanging on to cookies between sessions on
>some sites (namely, slashdot)?
Are you sure you're accessing the same way?
SlashDot's cookie configuration is a little strange. www.slashdot.org
and slashdot.org have different cookie sets for some things, and if
you ac
This one time, at band camp, Paul Johnson said:
> OK, having gotten tired of dealing with nautilus, I gave KDE a shot.
> ...
> I've started to get curious about a few things, though...
> ...
> 3) How do you say "drawer" in KDE? Having all the icons on the panel
>without being able to drawer s
OK, having gotten tired of dealing with nautilus, I gave KDE a shot.
At first it was kind of strange and constricting (first impressions
quite overwhelming), but after a while it sort of became a part of
me. Feels strangely like CDE but actually good. I was wrong:
Neither KDE nor Gnome suck. The
oblem with
version 1.1.1?
-Dinesh
-Original Message-
From: Joel Keating [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, May 24, 1999 9:58 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Some kde questions
My kde is semi-working. My backspace key acts the same as a delete key
should. If i change s
I've recently switched to KDe to see what all the fuss was about. It's
not bad, although I have a few questions. First, I right clicked on the
clock at the lower right of the panel and clicked undock, to see what it
would do. Well, the boarder around the clock disappeared and I can't get
it back
My kde is semi-working. My backspace key acts the same as a
delete key should. If i change some things in Xmod keymap it doesn't
work at all. Another thing is that I don't get color when i set backgrounds
that are .jpg or .gif images. Any help would be great.
- --
Joel Keating
[EMAIL PROTECT
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On Thu, 18 Mar 1999, Stephen A. Witt wrote:
> 1) I'm having trouble modifying X resources using xrdb. In my .xsession
> file I do:
>
> if [ -f ~/.Xdefaults ]; then
> xrdb -merge ~/.Xdefaults
> fi
>
> before I start KDE but these resources don't seem to b
I've just upgraded to KDE 1.1 and have a couple of questions. I should
probably ask on the KDE mailing lists, but I'll try here first.
1) I'm having trouble modifying X resources using xrdb. In my .xsession
file I do:
if [ -f ~/.Xdefaults ]; then
xrdb -merge ~/.Xdefaults
fi
before I start
On Sun, 25 Oct 1998, Cristov Russell wrote:
> 2 - When I start the editor application, it opens 3 times. The first 2
> times it pops up an error message for a directory I have not loaded a file
> from previously but from a directory I used in bash prior to running KDE the
> first time!? Does any
*-"Cristov Russell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
|
| I have two questions concerning KDE that I have as yet been unable to find
| an answer in the documentation.
|
| 1 - Is it possible to switch to another window manager while in KDE? Can
| KDE be started from other window mangers?
Yes and yes. Kill kwm
On Sun, 25 Oct 1998, Cristov Russell wrote:
> I have two questions concerning KDE that I have as yet been unable to find
> an answer in the documentation.
>
> 1 - Is it possible to switch to another window manager while in KDE? Can
> KDE be started from other window mangers?
Don't know sorry.
I have two questions concerning KDE that I have as yet been unable to find
an answer in the documentation.
1 - Is it possible to switch to another window manager while in KDE? Can
KDE be started from other window mangers?
2 - When I start the editor application, it opens 3 times. The first 2
ti
Hey Bruce,
> You should be aware that we have a little problem with KDE. It uses Qt,
> which isn't free software by Debian's definition. For this reason,
Yes I saw your post the other day regarding the alternatives. Is GNOME
usable as a day to day solution yet? I noticed that there isn't a Debi
On Wed, 22 Oct 1997, Adam Shand wrote:
> Maybe I'm missing something here (possibly the enormity of the battle on
> 'our' hands... and I mean that seriously) but it seems to me that by
> choosing against something like KDE (which to all intents and purposes
> *is* free software to the end user) we
> Hey Bruce,
>
> > You should be aware that we have a little problem with KDE. It uses Qt,
> > which isn't free software by Debian's definition. For this reason,
[.. lots removed ..]
> Maybe I'm missing something here (possibly the enormity of the battle on
> 'our' hands... and I mean that serio
> The problem with this is that, if we were to embrace KDE now,
> we implicidly also say "Programming for Qt is good", and thus
> more people start programming for Qt. Then when GNOME/Berlin/WhatEver
> comes out, we cannot switch anymore.
Hmmm... not sure I buy that... but it's an interesting twis
You should be aware that we have a little problem with KDE. It uses Qt,
which isn't free software by Debian's definition. For this reason,
we are looking very hard at several upcoming replacements for KDE, and
will probably designate one as our preferred graphical desktop when it
is ready. If I had
Well I spent the day upgrading my system to libc6 so I could install KDE
Beta1. First off thanks to the KDE team who look like they make have
the beginnings, and more, of a decent X interface... YAY! (and of course
the debian packagers)
Everything went smoothly but I am left with a couple quest
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