On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 08:42:01PM +0200, William Leese wrote:
> Surely, there is someone out there using Konqueror to browse shares in their
> network?
>
> There is a tab in Kcontrol where you can fill in a login, a password and a
> workgroup to use for SAMBA shares, no mention of domain thoug
On Friday 03 August 2001 18:23, Carl Fink wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
> > I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
>
> It's a hybrid web browser/file manager. Yes, I think that's a bad
> idea, but copying Microsoft is apparently all the rage.
Personally I like it.
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 12:23:43PM -0400, Carl Fink wrote:
| On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
|
| > I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
|
| It's a hybrid web browser/file manager.
Ok, that would explain my confusion here.
| Yes, I think that's a bad idea, but copying Mi
William Leese wrote:
Again, I'm asking help. With SAMBA how do I:
Login to the domain (pdc)
I haven't figured that out yet, but it'd be great to know, so that I
could image a computer lab of 19 machines to be dual-bootable, so some
of the students could get some exposure to Linux. (I'm
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
> I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
It's a hybrid web browser/file manager. Yes, I think that's a bad
idea, but copying Microsoft is apparently all the rage.
--
Carl Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I-Con's Sc
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 10:47:30AM +0200, William Leese wrote:
| Currently I can login to the PDC and other computers logged into the domain.
| All that needs to be done now is to get konqueror display a listing of all
| these computers.
I thought Konqueror was a web browser. If it is, then I do
> -Original Message-
> From: Andrew Pritchard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 10:38
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
>
>
> > > You have to join the li
> > You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> > requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> > have those)
> >
> > %>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the
> > linux box needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast,
> > /etc/hosts or your sa
nt: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 8:15
To: 'William Leese'; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> have those)
>
> %&g
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Lieber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 8:15
To: 'William Leese'; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires som
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> have those)
>
> %>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the
> linux box needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast,
> /etc/hosts or your samba lmhos
> Login to the domain (pdc)
You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which requires some
level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you have those)
%>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the linux box
needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast, /etc/hosts or your
On Friday 03 August 2001 00:57, Nathan E Norman wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 02, 2001 at 04:20:20PM -0500, Dimitri Maziuk wrote:
> > * Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> > > Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to
> > > buy these essential books for you before
On Thu, Aug 02, 2001 at 04:20:20PM -0500, Dimitri Maziuk wrote:
> * Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> > Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to buy
> > these essential books for you before you set off as a fabulously well-paid
> > contractor?
>
> IM
to see if there's a book the ingrates want returned.
IME, its a cruel world out there where people don't have .edu in their email
addreses ;-)
- Original Message -
From: "Dimitri Maziuk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 10:20 PM
Subject: R
* Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to buy
> these essential books for you before you set off as a fabulously well-paid
> contractor?
IME you don't get to keep the books your employer's paid for. Which kinda
defe
t;William Leese" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
| On Thursday 02 August 2001 17:01, Kurt Lieber wrote:
| > If you're an NT administrator moving over to Linux, then I highly
| > recommen
er have some good online
tutorials to get things up and running initially.. and then learn everything
lateron when trying to fix small annoyances.
> > -Original Message-
> > From: William Leese [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 6:53 AM
&
ian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
>
>
> Hello list,
>
> I'm trying to get a Debian GNU/Linux machine up and running
> within an NT domain. My needs are simple:
>
> be able to login to the domain
> be able to view all comput
Hello list,
I'm trying to get a Debian GNU/Linux machine up and running within an NT
domain. My needs are simple:
be able to login to the domain
be able to view all computers logged into the domain
be able to browse shares
Does anyone have any experience with this?
I'm aware that I have to use
On 10 Dec, Zack Brown wrote:
> The basic system I am planning on will be Debian/KDE, since I use Debian
> myself, and find KDE to be most similar in appearance to ms-windows (no
> insult intended to KDE).
as an extra bonus, you could show them how flexible linux + X are, and
when you've finished
I have the opportunity to introduce linux into my company, completely
replacing the very flaky windows 95 system that we currently use.
Their primary software is Paradox and FileMaker Pro 4.0. As far as I can
make out, the other needs of the system are trivial (word perfect,
networking, internet c
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