Hi Maureen,
On Tue, 10 Sep 2024 20:18:03 -0400
Maureen L Thomas wrote:
> My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at
> laser printers and have always favored HP. But, in saying that I am
> open to any brand. I always get an all in one model since it does
> come in han
> I am great friend of "Brother" printers. They are cheap and reliable and they
> are well supported by linux. Brother is offering deb packages for installing
> or a linu script, which is downloading and installing these packages
> automatically.
Of course, that means you're at the mercy of Br
Le Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 08:18:03PM -0400, Maureen L Thomas a écrit :
> Date: Tue, 10 Sep 2024 20:18:03 -0400
> From: Maureen L Thomas
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Just a simple question.
>
> My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at la
Am Mittwoch, 11. September 2024, 02:18:03 CEST schrieb Maureen L Thomas:
> My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at
> laser printers and have always favored HP. But, in saying that I am
> open to any brand. I always get an all in one model since it does come
> in handy.
* Ash Joubert [24-09/11=Wed 17:19 +1200]:
> On 2024-09-11 12:18, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
> > My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at
> > laser printers and have always favored HP. But, in saying that I am
> > open to any brand. I always get an all in one model since i
On 2024-09-11 12:18, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at
laser printers and have always favored HP. But, in saying that I am
open to any brand. I always get an all in one model since it does come
in handy. Any advice is welcome. Thanks
My old HP is not working right and it is very old. I am looking at
laser printers and have always favored HP. But, in saying that I am
open to any brand. I always get an all in one model since it does come
in handy. Any advice is welcome. Thanks in advance.
Maureen
[Please don't post in HTML]
On Sat, Sep 20, 2008 at 11:31:10AM +0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hello,
> I am new bee to Debian.
Welcome.
> I notice the "Security Advisories" on the main page of Debian.
>
> Is there an auto-update tool in the debian system
> which can auto update softwa
Saturday 20 September 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote :
> Hello,
> I am new bee to Debian.
> I notice the "Security Advisories" on the main page of Debian.
>
> Is there an auto-update tool in the debian system
> which can auto update software and auto fix some
> bugs make me needn't to take care
Generally, when you see an advisory, run (as root, or using sudo if
you have it installed):
apt-get update && apt-get upgrade
and that should update you.
You should generally pay attention to Security Advisories, because as
you learn more about the system, you'll understand them more : ) and
mor
Hello,
I am new bee to Debian.
I notice the "Security Advisories" on the main page of Debian.
Is there an auto-update tool in the debian system
which can auto update software and auto fix some
bugs make me needn't to take care about the "Security Advisories"?
Thanks.
On Wed, 21 Feb 2007 15:49:48 -0800
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Justin Hartman wrote:
>
> > So down to the "simple" question. Is this really normal on a PC-based
> > Laptop to experience such pitfalls in installing Debian?
>
> With the IBM/L
Paul Johnson wrote:
Voting with your money is important when it comes to
compatability on Linux.
I'd be all for getting something other than a Dell, but they were the
only ones I could find that offered a laptop with a screen resolution
meeting or exceeding 1600x1200. Does anybody know of an
Justin Hartman wrote:
> So down to the "simple" question. Is this really normal on a PC-based
> Laptop to experience such pitfalls in installing Debian?
With the IBM/Lenovo Thinkpads, not usually. With Dell, HP, Acer, etc, yes,
the experience is typical. This is a result of mos
Steve Lamb wrote:
Justin Hartman wrote:
Wouldn't the Debian Live CD work as a better option?
Not really. Since Debian has so many different release architectures they
really don't push automatic detection and configuration as far as the splinter
distributions which focus mostly on
On 18 Feb 2007, Steve Lamb wrote:
> Justin Hartman wrote:
> > Wouldn't the Debian Live CD work as a better option?
>
> Not really. Since Debian has so many different release architectures they
> really don't push automatic detection and configuration as far as the splinter
> distributions whi
Justin Hartman wrote:
> Wouldn't the Debian Live CD work as a better option?
Not really. Since Debian has so many different release architectures they
really don't push automatic detection and configuration as far as the splinter
distributions which focus mostly on the x86 architecture. A go
On 2/18/07, Anthony Campbell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Not really what you want to hear, but try Ubuntu live; if it works, at
least you'll know that it's *possible* to get things running in Linux.
Wouldn't the Debian Live CD work as a better option?
Regards
Justin Hartman
PGP Key ID: 102CC123
On 17 Feb 2007, Steve Lamb wrote:
> Justin Hartman wrote:
> > So down to the "simple" question. Is this really normal on a PC-based
> > Laptop to experience such pitfalls in installing Debian?
>
> Yes. Laptops are notorious for having horrible compatibility wi
Justin Hartman wrote:
> So down to the "simple" question. Is this really normal on a PC-based
> Laptop to experience such pitfalls in installing Debian?
Yes. Laptops are notorious for having horrible compatibility with
anything other than the OS they are shipped with. Th
working when I
installed KDE - go figure)
* Preventing Gnome from crashing almost immediately on startup (only
an upgrade to unstable fixed this)
* Various network related issues (lots of trial and error)
* Not able to print to a SMB network printer (tried everything yet
still can't get there)
So
On 1/28/07, Hodgins Family <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Firewalling routers are $50 and do a reasonably
> good job.
Any recommendations?
What are you using?
I believe that just about any home wireless AP / switch / router these
days does stateful packet inspection and NAT, making it a decent H
On 1/28/07, John L Fjellstad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Make sure you buy v4 or below. v5 can't be upgraded (and doesn't run
Linux)
The WRT54G v4 was re-released as the WRT54GL - the L for Linux.
Zach
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Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 01/28/07 13:32, John L Fjellstad wrote:
>> Make sure you buy v4 or below. v5 can't be upgraded (and doesn't run
>> Linux)
>
> I thought that was the difference between the WRT54GL and WRT54G.
You're right. The WRT54GL is the linux version. From what
On Sun, Jan 28, 2007 at 08:08:55AM -0700, Hodgins Family wrote:
> > Firewalling routers are $50 and do a reasonably
> > good job.
>
> Any recommendations?
> What are you using?
Get any old (now 486 or newer) box and install basic debian on it. Add
shorewall and you have a totally configurable fi
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On 01/28/07 13:32, John L Fjellstad wrote:
> Hodgins Family <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>>> The Linux geek fave is the Linksys WRT54GL, since it runs Linux and
>>> can be upgraded with 3rd-party binaries. It's a wireless access
>>> port, but also h
Hodgins Family <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> The Linux geek fave is the Linksys WRT54GL, since it runs Linux and
>> can be upgraded with 3rd-party binaries. It's a wireless access
>> port, but also has 4 RJ45 jacks and has a firewall. US$54 at Newegg.
>
> Thanks!
Make sure you buy v4 or below.
> I use a Netgear RP614v2, but don't like it.
>
> The Linux geek fave is the Linksys WRT54GL, since it runs Linux and
> can be upgraded with 3rd-party binaries. It's a wireless access
> port, but also has 4 RJ45 jacks and has a firewall. US$54 at Newegg.
Thanks!
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On 01/28/07 09:08, Hodgins Family wrote:
>> Firewalling routers are $50 and do a reasonably
>> good job.
>
> Any recommendations?
> What are you using?
I use a Netgear RP614v2, but don't like it.
The Linux geek fave is the Linksys WRT54GL, since it
> Firewalling routers are $50 and do a reasonably
> good job.
Any recommendations?
What are you using?
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On Fri, Jan 26, 2007 at 10:01:43PM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On 01/26/07 19:03, Hodgins Family wrote:
> > Many people are installing Debian "from the internet". Yet, the Securing
> > Debian Manual suggests no contact with the internet until the
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On 01/27/07 18:00, s. keeling wrote:
> Sven Arvidsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> On Sat, 2007-01-27 at 01:28 +, s. keeling wrote:
[snip]
> Not necessary with any sort of net connection. It doesn't take
> long to apt-get/aptitude/synaptic install a wm
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On 01/27/07 17:52, s. keeling wrote:
> Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> On 01/26/07 19:28, s. keeling wrote:
>>> Gnome, KDE, and XFCE are not the only choices available.
>> Yes they are.
>>
>> Unless you want to be investigated by Them. The NSA
> to create a default set of rules that would work for many people.
The default set of rules only needs to get people through the
installation safely. After that, they can alter them with their
favourite program, as needed.
The rules here:
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/securing-debian-howto/a
Sven Arvidsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> On Sat, 2007-01-27 at 01:28 +, s. keeling wrote:
> > And I would imagine any of them could be used if you chose to avoid
> > those three. Try out some of the other wm's. You might like them.
> > Gnome, KDE, and XFCE are not the only choices available.
Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On 01/26/07 19:28, s. keeling wrote:
> > Gnome, KDE, and XFCE are not the only choices available.
>
> Yes they are.
>
> Unless you want to be investigated by Them. The NSA & the RCMP are
> suspicious of anyone running desktop Linux (too many freethinkers),
On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 17:21:36 -0500
Angelo Bertolli <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For console, you can use lokkit:
>
> lokkit - basic interactive firewall configuration tool (console
> interface)
>
> But I don't think it gives you as much control as iptables.
My point was that it would be very di
For console, you can use lokkit:
lokkit - basic interactive firewall configuration tool (console interface)
But I don't think it gives you as much control as iptables.
Angelo
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On 01/27/07 01:44, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 01:24:33 -0600
> Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>> Shouldn't the setup of a firewall be part of the installation
>>> routine? Perhaps prior to running tasksel, some script could
On Sat, 2007-01-27 at 01:28 +, s. keeling wrote:
> And I would imagine any of them could be used if you chose to avoid
> those three. Try out some of the other wm's. You might like them.
> Gnome, KDE, and XFCE are not the only choices available.
There was some discussion about putting a whol
On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 01:24:33 -0600
Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Shouldn't the setup of a firewall be part of the installation
> > routine? Perhaps prior to running tasksel, some script could query
> > the user about using a firewall and/or help him/her set an
> > appropriate one up?
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On 01/27/07 01:16, Hodgins Family wrote:
>> Did you *read* the link you posted?
> Yes, I've read/seen this Appendix F section in various versions.
>
> Up until the last version that I read (version 3.10 of last November)
> there has been a "FIXME: tes
> Did you *read* the link you posted?
Yes, I've read/seen this Appendix F section in various versions.
Up until the last version that I read (version 3.10 of last November)
there has been a "FIXME: test this setup to see if it works properly."
Didn't exactly inspire me to use it as an aid for net
Hmmm, every time I do a net install, it installs the base files first,
reboots, and then uses the actual system to install the rest...
Angelo
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On 01/26/07 19:28, s. keeling wrote:
> Sven Arvidsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>> On Fri, 2007-01-26 at 16:08 -0800, j Mak wrote:
[snip]
> And I would imagine any of them could be used if you chose to avoid
> those three. Try out some of the other wm's.
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On 01/26/07 19:03, Hodgins Family wrote:
> Many people are installing Debian "from the internet". Yet, the Securing
> Debian Manual suggests no contact with the internet until the
> installation is "secure."
>
> The manual states that installing the O
Hodgins Family wrote:
> Are net installs (let's say for a Desktop environment) totally without
> vulnerability risks?
>
> When, during an installation, do/should people think about
> security/vulnerability issues of the software they are installing?
Well, let's see.. to perform a network install,
Sven Arvidsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
> On Fri, 2007-01-26 at 16:08 -0800, j Mak wrote:
> > I intend to install etch with xfce and would like to know how many cd-=
> > s do I have to download that include the base system. I read somewhere that=
> > the first cd doesn't include the entire xfce de
Many people are installing Debian "from the internet". Yet, the Securing
Debian Manual suggests no contact with the internet until the
installation is "secure."
The manual states that installing the OS off the web is not the best
idea (Section 3.3 found here:
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/secu
On Fri, 2007-01-26 at 16:08 -0800, j Mak wrote:
>I intend to install etch with xfce and would like to know how many cd-s do
> I have to download that include the base system. I read somewhere that the
> first cd doesn't include the entire xfce desktop. Do the first and the
> second cd inclu
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On 01/26/07 18:08, j Mak wrote:
> I intend to install etch with xfce and would like to know how
> many cd-s do I have to download that include the base system. I
> read somewhere that the first cd doesn't include the entire xfce
> desktop. Do the firs
Hi,
I intend to install etch with xfce and would like to know how many cd-s do I
have to download that include the base system. I read somewhere that the first
cd doesn't include the entire xfce desktop. Do the first and the second cd
include it?
On Thu, Dec 22, 2005 at 03:05:38PM +0100, Michelle Konzack wrote:
> Am 2005-12-20 04:04:24, schrieb Teilhard Knight:
> > What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
>
> It depends.
>
> 1) For killing it the current bootet Computer
>
> /etc/init.d/gdm stop
>
> 2) Only from the runl
On Tue, 2005-12-20 at 17:08 -0500, David R. Litwin wrote:
>What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Killall.
Or '/etc/init.d/gdm stop'
Right, thank you.
Teilhard
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Am 2005-12-20 04:04:24, schrieb Teilhard Knight:
What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
It depends.
1) For killing it the current bootet Computer
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
2) Only from the runlevel 2
rm /etc/rc2.d/??gdm
3) Permanently
apt-get --purge remove gdm
Teilhard Knight wrote:
What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Formally it's:
invoke-rc.d gdm stop
But everybody (including myself) uses:
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
To stop it permanently use:
update-rc.d gdm remove
Thanks a lot.
Teilhard.
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On Tue, Dec 20, 2005 at 05:08:33PM -0500, David R. Litwin wrote:
What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Killall.
Seems like a bad idea, unless the service is hung. Using the proper init
script would make more sense. To simply stop the service, /etc/init.d/gdm
stop
as root would do the
Am 2005-12-20 04:04:24, schrieb Teilhard Knight:
> What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
It depends.
1) For killing it the current bootet Computer
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
2) Only from the runlevel 2
rm /etc/rc2.d/??gdm
3) Permanently
apt-get --purge remove gd
On Tue, 2005-12-20 at 17:08 -0500, David R. Litwin wrote:
> >What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
>
> Killall.
Or '/etc/init.d/gdm stop'
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Teilhard Knight wrote:
> What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Formally it's:
invoke-rc.d gdm stop
But everybody (including myself) uses:
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
To stop it permanently use:
update-rc.d gdm remove
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On Tue, Dec 20, 2005 at 05:08:33PM -0500, David R. Litwin wrote:
What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Killall.
Seems like a bad idea, unless the service is hung. Using the proper init
script would make more sense. To simply stop the service,
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
as root would do th
>What's the command to stop a service like gdm?Killall. -- —A watched bread-crumb never boils.—My hover-craft is full of eels.—[...]and that's the he and the she of it.
On Tue, Dec 20, 2005 at 04:25:04AM -0600, Teilhard Knight wrote:
> What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
/etc/init.d/gdm stop
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What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Teilhard.
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What's the command to stop a service like gdm?
Teilhard.
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On 9/9/05, Jay Vollmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Friday 09 September 2005 02:53, roberto wrote:
> > Hit on a "set" line to execute it.
> >
> > i tried with "Ctrl" or "Ctrl+R" but nothing happened
>
> Hi Roberto.
>
> usually means "Carriage-Return" - in other words, hit the ENTER key.
yes
hi all,
i'm trying to use gvim options window to set my own display settings,
but i don't understand what this line means:
Hit on a "set" line to execute it.
i tried with "Ctrl" or "Ctrl+R" but nothing happened
please help
bye
--
roberto
debian sarge, kernel 2.6.8
Thanks, and sorry for that thread thing, it was not intentional :)
On 6/5/05, Roberto C. Sanchez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 05, 2005 at 11:41:29PM +0300, Andras Lorincz wrote:
> > I used to compile Xorg and mplayer from cvs. For mplayer I generate
> > the debian package and in the ca
On Sun, Jun 05, 2005 at 11:41:29PM +0300, Andras Lorincz wrote:
> I used to compile Xorg and mplayer from cvs. For mplayer I generate
> the debian package and in the case of Xorg use make install. My
> question is: do I need to uninstall the previously installed mplayer
> or Xorg before installing
I used to compile Xorg and mplayer from cvs. For mplayer I generate
the debian package and in the case of Xorg use make install. My
question is: do I need to uninstall the previously installed mplayer
or Xorg before installing the new one, or I can install the new ones
over the old ones?
Thanks.
On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 07:14:04AM +1100, Sam Watkins wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 15, 2004 at 08:57:14PM +0100, Paul Akkermans wrote:
> > Can somebody tell me what a kernel_lock() is?
>
> I suggest try a list that knows about the kernel!
Capable of subscribing to debian-user but clueless about Google -
On Wed, Dec 15, 2004 at 08:57:14PM +0100, Paul Akkermans wrote:
> Can somebody tell me what a kernel_lock() is?
I suggest try a list that knows about the kernel!
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Can somebody tell me what a kernel_lock()
is?
thanks in advance,
PA
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 14:30:25 +, Samuel Ferrer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi guys
> I want to install Java based products starting with jdk itself.
>
> But I dont have "make" installed because it belongs to the developer
> package.
>
> questions:
>
> - where to get that package?
> - how
On Wed, 20 Oct 2004 14:30:25 +, "Samuel Ferrer"
wrote:
>
>
> Hi guys
> I want to install Java based products starting with
jdk
> itself.
>
> But I dont have "make" installed because it belongs to
> the developer
> package.
>
> questions:
>
> - where to get that package?
which package jdk
Hi guys
I want to install Java based products starting with jdk itself.
But I dont have "make" installed because it belongs to the developer
package.
questions:
- where to get that package?
- how to install it?
- how to register to this list?
Saludos
Maquina
__
On Thu, 12 Feb 2004 13:05:55 -0600
Alan Shutko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> James Tappin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > In the /etc/init.d script for smartmontools there is a condition that
> > checks whether start_smartd is equal to "yes". Is there a "proper" way to
> > set this variable so t
James Tappin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> In the /etc/init.d script for smartmontools there is a condition that
> checks whether start_smartd is equal to "yes". Is there a "proper" way to
> set this variable so that smartmontools starts at boot
Check /etc/default/smartmontools
--
Alan Shutko <
On Thu, Feb 12, 2004 at 06:45:50PM +, James Tappin wrote:
> In the /etc/init.d script for smartmontools there is a condition that
> checks whether start_smartd is equal to "yes". Is there a "proper" way to
> set this variable so that smartmontools starts at boot -- or is the whole
> thing a lef
In the /etc/init.d script for smartmontools there is a condition that
checks whether start_smartd is equal to "yes". Is there a "proper" way to
set this variable so that smartmontools starts at boot -- or is the whole
thing a leftover SuSEism and thus a bug that should be reported?
This is with ve
Hi all,
I started to play with ldap today. Installed openldapd for potato.
I have a simple domain: animus.com.br and put the following at
sladp.conf
include /etc/openldap/slapd.at.conf
include /etc/openldap/slapd.oc.conf
schemacheck off
loglevel
On Tue, Feb 19, 2002 at 04:26:29AM -0800, Paul 'Baloo' Johnson wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Feb 2002, Francis Pineda wrote:
> > 2. Where is Debian located? I understand there are over 800
> > distrubuters nationwide that communicate via e-mail and message
> > boards. But is there a specific "home" to debi
On Mon, 18 Feb 2002, Francis Pineda wrote:
(It's recommended you turn your line wraps on to 72 columns for the
comfort of the people reading your messages)
> I am currently a computer networking student researching different
> flavours of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my instructor, I have
> sh
Em Ter, 2002-02-19 às 04:11, Gustavo Noronha Silva escreveu:
> On Mon, 18 Feb 2002 23:29:44 -0700
> "Francis Pineda" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > 1. What is the user base targeted? Is it simply geared towards the
> > home-user
> > looking for a free OS? Or is it geared more towards the powe
On Monday 18 February 2002 10:29 pm, Francis Pineda wrote:
> Greetings Debian Community!
>
> I am currently a computer networking student researching different flavours
> of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my instructor, I have shosen to research
> Debian. He says it's, "Really Cool" I find it ve
Greetings Debian
Community!
I am currently a computer networking
student
researching different flavours of Unix/Linux. From the advice of
my
instructor, I have shosen to research Debian. He says it's,
"Really
Cool" I find it very appealing and hope to install it as soon as
m
On Mon, 18 Feb 2002 23:29:44 -0700, Francis Pineda wrote:
>Greetings Debian Community!
>
>I am currently a computer networking student researching different flavours of
>Unix/Linux. From the advice of my instructor, I have shosen to research
>Debian. He says it's, "Really Cool" I find it very
On Mon, 18 Feb 2002 23:29:44 -0700
"Francis Pineda" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 1. What is the user base targeted? Is it simply geared towards the home-user
> looking for a free OS? Or is it geared more towards the power-user?
"From professionals to professionals", I don't think Debian is home-
On Tue, 2002-02-19 at 00:29, Francis Pineda wrote:
> Greetings Debian Community!
Greetings!
> 1. What is the user base targeted? Is it simply geared towards the home-user
> looking for a free OS? Or is it geared more towards the power-user?
Supposedly it's the home user, but considering the dif
On Tuesday 19 February 2002 07:29, Francis Pineda wrote:
> Greetings Debian Community!
>
> I am currently a computer networking student researching different flavours
> of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my instructor, I have shosen to research
> Debian. He says it's, "Really Cool" I find it very
Greetings Debian Community!
I am currently a computer networking student
researching different flavours of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my
instructor, I have shosen to research Debian. He says it's, "Really
Cool" I find it very appealing and hope to install it as soon as my system
is
-Original Message-
From:Walter Landry [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:Wed, 03 Oct 2001 13:57:58 -0700
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: A simple question about wildcards with tar
Greetings,
I'm trying to make a backup with tar, but there are certain
files that
I don
On Wed, Oct 03, 2001 at 01:57:58PM -0700, Walter Landry wrote:
> I'm trying to make a backup with tar, but there are certain files that
> I don't want to include in the backup. Reading the info documentation
> about tar, it says that I can use the --exclude=PATTERN option. So if
> I type
>
> t
Greetings,
I'm trying to make a backup with tar, but there are certain files that
I don't want to include in the backup. Reading the info documentation
about tar, it says that I can use the --exclude=PATTERN option. So if
I type
tar -cvf backup.tar --exclude='*.fig' *
then it excludes all fi
On Mon, Sep 17, 2001 at 09:16:44PM -0700, Mike Egglestone wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I installed magicfilter and setup 2 remote printers.
> What would be the best way to add a 3rd printer?
> also, how do you set the default printer?
>
> Before, I would just blow away /etc/printcap
> and then add all 3 prin
Hi,
I installed magicfilter and setup 2 remote printers.
What would be the best way to add a 3rd printer?
also, how do you set the default printer?
Before, I would just blow away /etc/printcap
and then add all 3 printers at once.
Is there a better way?
Would it be okay to backup my /etc/printcap
thanks a lot!
philipp
Eric Richardson wrote:
> Philipp Bliedung wrote:
> >
> > hi
> >
> > I have jdk-1.1.8-3 installed right now. I want to update to jdk-1.2.2 so
> > I got the tar.gz file.
> > Now my question: how can I _replace_ the old by the new?
> > For jdk-1.1.8-3 I uesed apt-get and it tol
Philipp Bliedung wrote:
>
> hi
>
> I have jdk-1.1.8-3 installed right now. I want to update to jdk-1.2.2 so
> I got the tar.gz file.
> Now my question: how can I _replace_ the old by the new?
> For jdk-1.1.8-3 I uesed apt-get and it told me to get the jdk-1.1.8-3
> tar.gz file and installed i
hi
I have jdk-1.1.8-3 installed right now. I want to update to jdk-1.2.2 so
I got the tar.gz file.
Now my question: how can I _replace_ the old by the new?
For jdk-1.1.8-3 I uesed apt-get and it told me to get the jdk-1.1.8-3
tar.gz file and installed it. How can I replace this version by the
On 09-Mar-2001 MaD dUCK wrote:
> also sprach Stefan Srdic (on Thu, 08 Mar 2001 09:32:22PM -0700):
>> I still consider myslef a newbie when it comes to Linux, I've been using
>> Linux for less then one year. Anyway, I found out that my system is
>> running pump to configure my host via DHCP. Wher
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