> > I just noticed this problem. The ownership of /var/spool/lpd has
> > changed to root.root, wheras it should be root.lp. I changed the
> > permission manually and it then worked. Hmm. I don't know what caused
> > this to happen.
>
> Wow, you win the prize. I had the same problem. I don't know
we have cut over 100 CDs using this recorder under linux. Never
got it wo work well under windows.
-Dan
Is the problem with bash 2 only the ; before the } ? Then wouldn't it be
possible to use perl to determine if a { ??? } type construct is a
variable replacement thingy or a block of code, and edit it accordingly?
Any idea where I could get a list of the syntax changes from bash 1.4.7
-> bash 2.0
John Foster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is the problem with bash 2 only the ; before the } ? Then wouldn't it be
> possible to use perl to determine if a { ??? } type construct is a
> variable replacement thingy or a block of code, and edit it accordingly?
>
> Any idea where I could get a list
Martin Schulze wrote:
>
> Ken Gaugler writes:
>
> > > What editors come on the base install? Also, what is the input device
> > > for 'cp ' that uses the console for input?
>
> ae is on board.
>
> > I am surprised nobody mentioned vi -- what, no purists out there
> > anymore? :-)
>
> We alrea
> You did right in getting the BINARY version instead of the version you have
> to compile as Lawrence mistakenly assumed.
>
> You have to get the version that has been staticly linked with motif. That
> means the motif it needs are part of it. If you have motif you would get the
> dynamic or sh
Benedikt Eric Heinen wrote:
>
> Hi there,
>
> does anyone out there have any experience running the Sun jws on a
> Debian GNU/Linux system. On my system the jws freezes completely when I
> try to use the jws source editor. Does anyone know of a fix? Or - if you
> got the jws running, can you te
Alfons Juan i Ciscar wrote:
>
> > that is, are there any packages that will enable one to use a scanner
> > that is able to read in characters, or in other words, uses OCR
> > (optical character recognition) technology?
>
> It depends on the scanner you have. I've a HPScanJet4c connected to
> a
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Philipp JW Grau) writes:
> and some fiddeling with the path entry in Makefiles and *.h files
> and some nice things like that
>
Well, i too fiddled with path entries and some *.h files too commenting
out includes not found on my sys
I wrote:
>> I wonder if this is another manifestation of the "dpkg tar problem".
>
>This isn't the problem with /var/spool/lpd, because that is a change
>in ownerships (which dpkg doesn't do) and it happens at reboot rather
>than when lprng is upgraded.
I was wrong. The permissions didn't change
On Tue, 8 Apr 1997, Gith wrote:
[snip]
>
> Any *constructive criticism* is welcome, ( in fact I'd love to hear
> everyone's ideas along the lines of " i wish it would/could do this
> or that" ).
>
Well, I like a feature that my aix 3.2.5 box has.
Software [packages] may be committed, which m
On 11 Apr 1997, Paul Seelig wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> ---cut-here--
>
> Looks like it was a bad idea to comment out those includes!? But
> without commenting them out the compilation would have already stopped
> at an earlie
On 11 Apr 1997, Paul Seelig wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Philipp JW Grau) writes:
> Well, i too fiddled with path entries and some *.h files too commenting
> out includes not found on my system like "iostream.h", "ifstream.h"
> and "fstream.h". But then the c
A weird thing is happening to my pppd. (version 2.2.0f-19) I added the
persist option to /etc/ppp/options so that if the connection went down, it
would immediately be brought back up again. However what happens is it
attempts to dial and then stops short. It does this about three times and
then
Hi
Which xserver should I use to get the most out of a Matrox Millinium card
(presently I use xserver-svga)
Karsten
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Why don't you try adding a wait or sleep command to the chatscript just
before the dialout, or try a comma (,) between the numbers to see if it
helps. It may be just sending the data too fast.
Also. Normally at&f doesn't reset the modem. It resets FACTORY DEF
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997 01:32:36 -0500 (EST), Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote:
>
>A weird thing is happening to my pppd. (version 2.2.0f-19) I added the
>persist option to /etc/ppp/options so that if the connection went down, it
>would immediately be brought back up again. However what happens is it
>attempts
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997 01:32:36 -0500 (EST), Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote:
>
>A weird thing is happening to my pppd. (version 2.2.0f-19) I added the
>persist option to /etc/ppp/options so that if the connection went down, it
>would immediately be brought back up again. However what happens is it
>attempts
Has anyone seen this month's Linux Journal yet? There's a man who
wrote a letter to the editor, complaining about RedHat. I wrote a
note to him, inviting him to try Debian. Maybe we'll see him on this
list soon? It would be good, I think.
Karl M. Hegbloom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.ineta
Greg Vence writes:
> > ae is on board.
> >
> > > I am surprised nobody mentioned vi -- what, no purists out there
> > > anymore? :-)
> >
> > We already faught the fight before - and lost. ae won. :-(
> > There's a set of macros which can turn ae in a vi-mode. This
> > might be included in furt
If I set pppd to dial out on anything but ttyS1, it won't route.
The modem will dial and connect, but the routing table is not updated.
What have I forgotten to change?
Dave 'Kill a Cop' Cinege (aka Psychopath #3) --
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I just d/led moxfm 1.0 and fixed the Imakefile so it installs correctly now.
Here it is.
Change XFMLIBDIR to /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/moxfm
even though it says that it's hard coded in. The program looks in this dir
not the original. Which is right since /usr/X11 i
Dear all,
Just wonder what is a good ppp dial-up setup for multiple ISPs. I
want to be able to choose which ISP to dial up easily (read: without
having to edit /etc files manually each time I have to switch).
Is there a tool for this?
--
Billy C.-M. Chow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> Is there any special configuration I must do for Debian to detect
> my CD-Rom?
If this is an IDE drive, as virtually all new CD-Rom drvies are that
are not SCSI, you also need to watch the master/slave stetting. If
your CD-Rom is connected to be slave on your 1st ide port, it should be
jumpe
>> >Tim O'Brien wrote:
>> >>
>> >> I downloaded the moxfm file manager from the author's website in binary
>> >> form. I uudecoded, unzipped, and un-tarred it, and rtfm'd. Following the
>> >> instructions, I typed xmkmf and was told "can't find file
> ^
>> 'Imakefile.
Hello,
I tried to install the install disks from frozen/disks-i368/1997-03-16.
I made this disks as described in the docs by dd.
After mounting several local disks via the install program I selected
the entry to install base system. I have chosen /dev/fd0 as install
medium (NICE TO HAVE THE NEW
Chow Chi-Ming wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> Just wonder what is a good ppp dial-up setup for multiple ISPs. I
> want to be able to choose which ISP to dial up easily (read: without
> having to edit /etc files manually each time I have to switch).
If your ISP is using dynamic IP addressing,
you only
> I ran it because the INSTALL file said to do it as part of the installation
> process. I wish I could give a better reason, but though I've been a Linux
> weenie for about a year now, I'm just getting started with X and plowing up
> the learning curve.
I compiled my one from source and run fine.
Are you using cua for your modem?
Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote:
>
> A weird thing is happening to my pppd. (version 2.2.0f-19) I added the
> persist option to /etc/ppp/options so that if the connection went down, it
> would immediately be brought back up again. However what happens is it
> attempts to
Is it possible to transform an rpm pk into a debian one ? Or at least to
install an rpm pk on a debian dist., this instal. being recorded by the debian
package management ?
Or is it necessary to get rpm and deal with debian and redhat pk managers ?
Eric
Karsten Bolding wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> Which xserver should I use to get the most out of a Matrox Millinium card
> (presently I use xserver-svga)
>
> Karsten
MGA
--
Lawrence Chim [EMAIL PROTECTED]
A new home, with a sensible proxying setup: http://bovine.st.hmc.edu/
--
Steve McIntyre, CURS Secretary, Cambridge, UK. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~stevem/comp/>My PC page
"Can't keep my eyes from the circling sky, +--
"Tongue-tied & twi
Martin Schulze wrote:
>
> Greg Vence writes:
>
> > > ae is on board.
> > >
> > > > I am surprised nobody mentioned vi -- what, no purists out there
> > > > anymore? :-)
> > >
> > > We already faught the fight before - and lost. ae won. :-(
> > > There's a set of macros which can turn ae in a vi-
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Alexander Koch wrote:
> Hi again.
>
> Well, since it is said and I experienced it several times the making of the
> boot floppies is not that easy...
>
> My problem is that I take the resc1440.bin and write it to disc (with dd)
> and when it comes to boot it just does nothi
Andreas Tille wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I tried to install the install disks from frozen/disks-i368/1997-03-16.
> I made this disks as described in the docs by dd.
>
That set is a known problem. If you're using ftp.debian.org it's not up
to date.
On ftp.cdrom.com in the debian/frozen/disks-i386 th
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Eric De Vito wrote:
> Is it possible to transform an rpm pk into a debian one ? Or at least to
> install an rpm pk on a debian dist., this instal. being recorded by the debian
> package management ?
> Or is it necessary to get rpm and deal with debian and redhat pk managers ?
Snip for the sake of bandwith
I must appolagise for the typing mistake it should be
I can't get kdm to work when I type kdm
>I can's get kdm to work when I type kde nothing happens ... no prosess
>are spawned and no errors are given ... I also can not get xdm to work
>... same deal as a
On Apr 11, Greg Vence wrote
> > Me too. Apart from the fact that i cannot understand the decision
> > I don't want to perform this fight a second time. This was the decision
> > and now we should al live with it until we find a better solution
> > (which could mean finding a very small vi or red
The only shortcoming I have run into with ae as a base editor is the lack
of a basic search command.
+--+
+ Paul Wade Greenbush Technologies Corporation +
+ mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www
Martin Schulze wrote:
>
> Greg Vence writes:
>
> > > ae is on board.
> > >
> > > > I am surprised nobody mentioned vi -- what, no purists out there
> > > > anymore? :-)
> > >
> > > We already faught the fight before - and lost. ae won. :-(
> > > There's a set of macros which can turn ae in a vi-
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Lawrence Chim wrote:
> > Just wonder what is a good ppp dial-up setup for multiple ISPs. I
> > want to be able to choose which ISP to dial up easily (read: without
> > having to edit /etc files manually each time I have to switch).
>
> If your ISP is using dynamic IP address
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Alexander Koch wrote:
> Quoting Paul Wade ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> [...]
> > > My problem is that I take the resc1440.bin and write it to disc (with dd)
> > > and when it comes to boot it just does nothing and the mbr of /dev/sda
> > > (lilo) is taken.
> >
> > Is the floppy dri
Hi!
I've been tried to allow the normal users in my system to mount a CD-ROM
but with no success... I even put the following line in my /etc/fstab:
/dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
Where /dev/cdrom is a symbolic link to /dev/scd0. My /cdrom directory
has the following
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Paul Seelig) writes:
> Well, i too fiddled with path entries and some *.h files too commenting
> out includes not found on my system like "iostream.h", "ifstream.h"
> and "fstream.h".
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:[leutloff] >dpkg -S iostream.h
libg++27-dev: /usr/include/g++/iostream.h
li
>
> Hi!
>
> I've been tried to allow the normal users in my system to mount a CD-ROM
> but with no success... I even put the following line in my /etc/fstab:
>
> /dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
>
> Where /dev/cdrom is a symbolic link to /dev/scd0. My /cdrom directory
> "Chow" == Chow Chi-Ming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Chow> Dear all, Just wonder what is a good ppp dial-up setup for
Chow> multiple ISPs. I want to be able to choose which ISP to dial
Chow> up easily (read: without having to edit /etc files manually
Chow> each time I have to switch)
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
If I'm understanding you right, you're saying that when you try to boot from
the rescue disk it just boots your previous lilo. If this is true check your
BIOS settings for boot order and make sure that it will boot from the floppy
drive before it looks at the h
Hi, you should look at your bios settings. They can give you trouble
when trying to install the base system. Specifically you should look at
the memory (cache and video) and turn it off. The other thing that comes
to mind is your rescue disk write pertected. If it isn't that is why it
is tr
Felix Almeida wrote:
>/dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
> Where /dev/cdrom is a symbolic link to /dev/scd0. My /cdrom directory
...
>"mount /cdrom" works fine but "umount /cdrom" gives the error message:
>umount: /cdrom mount disagrees with the fstab
I had this problem
> "Daniel" == Daniel Karlsson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Daniel> Now, I wanted to boot my machine in Linux. There's been no
Daniel> problem with that until now. All that comes up is: "LIL-" And
Daniel> then there's no response.
This sounds as if you need to reboot with a floppy, then run lilo
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I sent this msg lastnight but it doesn't appear in my sent mail dir and I
haven't gotten any response.
I just got a 33.6 PnP modem that doesn't seem to want to work no matter what
I do.
isapnp seems to configure it. setserial seems to configure it. statserial
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > I've been tried to allow the normal users in my system to mount a CD-ROM
> > but with no success... I even put the following line in my /etc/fstab:
> >
> > /dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
> >
> > Where /dev/cdrom is a sy
> jdk 1.0.2 with no problem, though I am not using it now.
Did you need to install any patches to make it run?
SuSE delivered a modified classes.zip along with jws, claiming the
original wouldn't work...
Benedikt
signoff
---
Benedikt Eric Heinen - Muehlemattstrasse 53 - CH3007 Bern - S
> Apart from the fact that I need a vi, many new users won't ever use
> vi if they find it. vi is a tool for freaks, hackers and gurus (therefore
> it's a very good editor for us...).
I only wish i could remember all the vi i knew , gad, 13 years ago? I got here,
hit
unxix again, but everyth
> The only shortcoming I have run into with ae as a base editor is the lack
> of a basic search command.
I've also had screen freezes using it over telnet; i don't know if the new
versions of ncurses have fixed this.
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Felix Almeida wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I've been tried to allow the normal users in my system to mount a CD-ROM
> but with no success... I even put the following line in my /etc/fstab:
>
> /dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
>
> Where /dev/cdrom is a symboli
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I'm going to finally ask this question.
What is it that is so special about vi? Does it decompile programs or write
them all by itself or leap tall buildings with a single bound?
Really. I've been on unix boxes for about 7 years and only used vi when I
had no
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
By the way. Once you run xmkmf you have to run make install ; make
install.man which you may already know. Just in case though.
On 09-Apr-97 Tim O'Brien wrote:
>I downloaded the moxfm file manager from the author's website in binary
>form. I uudecoded, unzippe
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
> Really. I've been on unix boxes for about 7 years and only used vi when I
> had no other choice.
That's it, exactly. When you have no other choice. Some people seem
to force themselves to use it _all_ the time, just they they know what to do
when they have n
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Rick Macdonald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
>
>> Really. I've been on unix boxes for about 7 years and only used vi when I
>> had no other choice.
>
>That's it, exactly. When you have no other choice. Some people seem
>to force them
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Are you saying that I should use vi all the time so I know what to do when I
have no other choice? Or are you saying that vi is a solid standby editor to
use in an emergency and you don't understand why ppl use it all the time?
On 11-Apr-97 Rick Macdonald wrote
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I sent this a few days ago but got no answer.
Does anybody know how to clear dselect status? I used hold to select only
the bo pkgs I wanted to install thinking I could reset the suggested status.
But it don't work. How do I reset the pkgs to the suggested st
> Which xserver should I use to get the most out of a Matrox Millinium card
> (presently I use xserver-svga)
The best option is replacing the XF86_SVGA binary from xserver-svga with one
from XFree86 3.2A -- it has less problems and also supports modes with more
colors than 8bpp.
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Ken Gaugler wrote:
> When I was in school, my UNIX teacher had one immutable law;
> "Thou shalt learn vi". His argument was that no matter what
> flavor of unix you happen to come across in your career as a
> unix administrator, there will always be vi on the system. I
> hav
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
On 11-Apr-97 Alexander Koch wrote:
>Well, until now I used rawrite to produce about 4 rescue floppy disks. I
>tried them all in order. I have the right order of booting.
>
>When booting the floppy is accessed (*schrab* *schrab*) and then the hard
drive
>is read
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Andreas Tille wrote:
> I tried to install the install disks from frozen/disks-i368/1997-03-16.
> I made this disks as described in the docs by dd.
These disks are obsolete. There is a newer set (1997-04-04?). There
were many problems with those disks. The newest disk set
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Felix Almeida wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I've been tried to allow the normal users in my system to mount a CD-ROM
> but with no success... I even put the following line in my /etc/fstab:
>
> /dev/cdrom /cdrom iso9660 ro,noauto,user,unhide 0 0
>
> Where /dev/cdrom is a symboli
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Lawrence Chim wrote:
> Are you using cua for your modem?
>
You mean the modem device or something else? I am using /dev/modem which
is symlinked to /dev/ttyS1 in pppd as well minicom and pppupd both of
which redial correctly.
-- Jaldhar
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Dave Cinege wrote:
> I'm seeing things like this once and awhile. I just went to a serial port
> that only provides Rx, Tx, RTS, and CTS.
>
> I have to set DTR ON all the timeon the modem, and it seems to work fine,
> but sometimes it will not redial correctly. It also take
Hello,
is there a chance to find a new installation disks set that is aware of bug
#8313 regarding perl / perl-base in the stable release (1.2.9?) before 1.3
release date, or should I hack them for myself?
I'll have to install 3 PC next week and need to put a stable release on them.
Thanks in
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>
> Why don't you try adding a wait or sleep command to the chatscript just
> before the dialout, or try a comma (,) between the numbers to see if it
> helps. It may be just sending the data too fast.
>
> Also. Normally at&f
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Alexander Koch wrote:
>My problem is that I take the resc1440.bin and write it to disc (with dd)
>and when it comes to boot it just does nothing and the mbr of /dev/sda
>(lilo) is taken.
According to your further mails, BIOS settings try the floppy first.
Was the floppy written
> I'm going to finally ask this question.
>
> What is it that is so special about vi? Does it decompile programs or write
> them all by itself or leap tall buildings with a single bound?
It works from any keyboard, you don't need arrows, f-keys or other
unlikely stuff. You keep your hands on th
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Felix Almeida wrote:
> The problem is that the users can mount the CD but cannot umount it!
A few people already told you, the symbolic links were the problem.
A further suggestion: Why not use the automounter, This is probably what
you want, if users should be able to access
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
>I sent this msg lastnight but it doesn't appear in my sent mail dir and I
>haven't gotten any response.
>
>I just got a 33.6 PnP modem that doesn't seem to want to work no matter what
>I do.
>
>isapnp seems to configure it. setserial seems to configure it. statse
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Jaldhar H. Vyas wrote:
>
> A weird thing is happening to my pppd. (version 2.2.0f-19) I added the
> persist option to /etc/ppp/options so that if the connection went down, it
> would immediately be brought back up again. However what happens is it
> attempts to dial and the
"Jaldhar H. Vyas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You mean the modem device or something else? I am using /dev/modem which
> is symlinked to /dev/ttyS1 in pppd as well minicom and pppupd both of
> which redial correctly.
I may be mistaken, but I think that this can cause problems in some
cases, esp
Hi all,
I have a proble with the Debian bug tracking system.
I have found a minor bugs in some packages, and I have used "bug" to
report the error. But I have not received the automatical answer from the
bug tracking system. I like to know what's is wrong, and if the message has
reached the bug tra
Alexander Koch wrote:
>
> Quoting Paul Wade ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> [...]
> > > My problem is that I take the resc1440.bin and write it to disc (with dd)
> > > and when it comes to boot it just does nothing and the mbr of /dev/sda
> > > (lilo) is taken.
> >
> > Is the floppy drive trying to read at
On Apr 12, Francesco Tapparo wrote
> Hi all,
> I have a proble with the Debian bug tracking system.
> I have found a minor bugs in some packages, and I have used "bug" to
> report the error. But I have not received the automatical answer from the
> bug tracking system. I like to know what's is wron
Martin Schulze writes:
> ...there's already a notice that the only installed editor is called ae.
Where?
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, WI
Hi folks!
Thank you very much! You're right about the symbolic link, it was the
problem... >-(
I only changed my fstab to point /dev/scd0 instead of /dev/cdrom and
everything works fine now. Thank you. :-)
PS: Special thanks to Riku, Andrew and Bob.
Felix Almeida.
Rob Browning wrote:
>
> "Jaldhar H. Vyas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > You mean the modem device or something else? I am using /dev/modem which
> > is symlinked to /dev/ttyS1 in pppd as well minicom and pppupd both of
> > which redial correctly.
>
> I may be mistaken, but I think that this
> I'm going to finally ask this question.
> What is it that is so special about vi? Does it decompile programs or write
> them all by itself or leap tall buildings with a single bound?
> Really. I've been on unix boxes for about 7 years and only used vi when I
> had no other choice. Is there
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Well, that's the port I configured it for.
On 11-Apr-97 Nils Rennebarth wrote:
>On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
>
>>I sent this msg lastnight but it doesn't appear in my sent mail dir and I
>>haven't gotten any response.
>>
>>I just got a 33.6 PnP modem that do
Greg Vence <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Please don't let me start another editor snowball here. What is the
> difference between /dev/ttyS0 and /dev/cua0?
I think this is (or should be) a FAQ somewhere, but the short story is
that the cua* devices are only kept around in the kernel for
historic
> I'm going to finally ask this question.
> What is it that is so special about vi? Does it decompile programs or write
> them all by itself or leap tall buildings with a single bound?
> Really. I've been on unix boxes for about 7 years and only used vi when I
> had no other choice. Is there
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
It's my understanding that /dev/cua* is outdated and only used for backward
compatability. /dev/ttyS* is the correct usage. Which both belong to
dialout.
On 11-Apr-97 Greg Vence wrote:
>Rob Browning wrote:
>>
>> "Jaldhar H. Vyas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Well, actually the manual isn't wrong. AT&F does reset the modem but to
FACTORY DEFAULTS. ATZ re-initializes the modem to the prior settings. If
the factory sets the defaults to no compression, no error checking, and
software handshaking for example and minico
[EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> What I missed most, and missed on years of word processors, is the
> trivially easy manner of making compound, repeated, commands. I
> know it's possible in emacs, but i've found no-one whom I could ask
> who could tell me.
For emacs, C-x ( starts recording, C-x )
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There doesn't seem to be a --clear-status arg for dpkg. It gives me an
error. And --clear-avail doesn't do it either.
I can't believe that there's no way to clear this. From one site to another
or one dir to another the status remains the same.
On 11-Apr-
As part of the facelift for Debian 2.0, I'd like to offer an improved
interface as an alternative for "dselect".
To this end, I'm going to be putting together a team of people to produce
such a product.
If you would like to work on this, please let me know and tell me what
resources you have (mac
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
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>
> I sent this msg lastnight but it doesn't appear in my sent mail dir and I
> haven't gotten any response.
>
> I just got a 33.6 PnP modem that doesn't seem to want to work no matter what
> I do.
>
> isapnp seems to configu
Miquel van Smoorenburg writes:
> Ed, man! !man ed
> ...
> Computer Scientists love ed
> ...
> RUNS ED!!
> ...
> ...the mighty ed...
> ...
> Ed, the greatest WYGIWYG editor of all.
> ED IS THE TRUE PATH TO NIRVANA!
> ...
> THE MIGHTY ED HAS SPOKEN!!!
Teco.
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John
Alexander writes:
> When booting the floppy is accessed (*schrab* *schrab*) and then the hard
> drive is read and my old lilo turns up. Well, I tried 4 discs that were
> ok (Just checked at my other computer here, usual checks says nothing), 4
> new discs.
I went through eight discs the other day
From: someone...
> I've never seen a base-line Unix box w/o vi that was what prompted the
> initial mail.
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Martin Schulze)
> Me too. Apart from the fact that i cannot understand the decision [...]
It's funny how often this comes up. The reason is that the base system
is t
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Chow Chi-Ming wrote:
> Just wonder what is a good ppp dial-up setup for multiple ISPs. I
> want to be able to choose which ISP to dial up easily (read: without
> having to edit /etc files manually each time I have to switch).
>
> Is there a tool for this?
I don't believe t
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I found a PNP FAQ and double checked at usr.com. It seems that PNP modems
with emulated uart's (what an idea) are totally incompatable. This
"Winmodem" will only work with windows (not even DOS).
By the way. I did do all that.
I'm going to repost this under
On Fri, 11 Apr 1997, Rick wrote:
> What is it that is so special about vi? Does it decompile programs or write
> them all by itself or leap tall buildings with a single bound?
I get calls from users all the time asking "How do I search and replace in
my file?" 9 times out of 10, they are using
On 11 Apr 1997 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > THE MIGHTY ED HAS SPOKEN!!!
>
> Teco.
Bwah. Real men edit with cat, sed, awk, head and tail. Better yet, they
write directly to the disk with a hex sector editor.
Jason Costomiris | Finger for PGP 2.6.2 Public Key
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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