On Tue, 2012-05-01 at 21:27 +0200, Joost Kraaijeveld wrote:
> On di, 2012-05-01 at 19:57 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> > I'm a pro-audio Linux user. CPU freq scaling is important for me.
> >
> > Debian has a script that runs on startup, it will force ondemand. I
> > don't remember the location, bu
On Tue, 2012-05-01 at 20:09 -0400, Brad Alexander wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> Got a question about running games in wine. I had, on my system,
> playonlinux (4.0.12) on my i386 system. Had a few games installed, and
> everything was working. Well, first of the year, I upgraded my system
> from a core2du
On Tue, 2012-05-01 at 21:00 +, debian-user wrote:
>
> > I can't see "acpi_cpufreq" loaded... hum, wait, for AMD should be
> > "powernow-k8" insetad, right? Is it loaded?
> Not according to lsmod. Loading it manually gives:
> modprobe -vv powernow-k8
> insmod /lib/modules/3.2.0-2-amd64/kerne
On Wed, 02 May 2012 02:00:02 +0200
Indulekha wrote:
> Appears you no longer have the xserver installed.
> Upgrade get interrupted, or finish with errors perhaps?
Thanks for your response however I'm not sure it isn't something else as all
the nividia-glx 295.40-1 sources and drivers inclusive
On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 09:53:55PM -0500, Charles Kroeger wrote:
> On Wed, 02 May 2012 02:00:02 +0200
> Indulekha wrote:
>
>
> > Appears you no longer have the xserver installed.
> > Upgrade get interrupted, or finish with errors perhaps?
>
>
> Thanks for your response however I'm not sure it
I know there are a bunch of things that load automatically and many are
necessary and others that do I want to run, but I know that there are
things that automatically start that I don't want or need.
Which of these can I safely get rid of and how can I prevent them from
automatically starting
[Please trim your posts!]
On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 05:24:10AM +0100, Sharon Kimble wrote:
> On 01/05/2012, Indulekha wrote:
> > Why don't you just rename your files, replacing the spaces with
> > underscores?
> > It's easy enough to do and to reverse...
>
> Thats exactly what i've just done using
Dennis Wicks:
> Greetings;
>
> I have a file that looks like the following in an ls list;
>
> -? ? ?? ?? Inbox.msf
>
> I can't do anything with it. Can't mv, rm, cp, or anything else I
> have thought of to get rid of it or write over it.
>
> Any ideas how
On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 05:05:28PM +0900, Han Soo Chang wrote:
> Thanks for your help.
>
> It was just that I needed to apt-get install as root, not sudo apt-get.
>
> The following command
> # apt-get install flashplugin-nonfree
> worked just fine.
>
> $ sudo apt-get install flashplugin-nonfree
Indulekha wrote:
> Charles Kroeger wrote:
> > $startx
> > /etc/X11/xinit/sderverrc: 3: exec: /usr/bin/X: not found
>
> Appears you no longer have the xserver installed.
> Upgrade get interrupted, or finish with errors perhaps?
I noticed today that an 'apt-get dist-upgrade' in Sid wanted to remove
Emil Payne wrote:
> Which of these can I safely get rid of and how can I prevent them
> from automatically starting?
Among other things you appear to have NFS server installed and running
and Apache web server installed and running. Do you use your machine
as a network file server? As a web serv
On Tue, May 1, 2012 at 7:13 PM, Charles Kroeger
wrote:
>
> After a dist-upgrade to an AMD64 wheezy/sid installation I get the following:
>
> $startx
> /etc/X11/xinit/sderverrc: 3: exec: /usr/bin/X: not found
>
> xinit: giving up
> xinit: unable to connect to X server: connection refused
> xinit: s
On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 11:38:26AM -0500, Indulekha wrote:
> Often I use something like:
>
> rsync --archive --one-file-system --hard-links --human-readable --inplace
> --numeric-ids --delete ...
>
On Wed, May 02, 2012 at 05:07:26PM +1200, Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 05:05:28PM +0900, Han Soo Chang wrote:
> > Thanks for your help.
> >
> > It was just that I needed to apt-get install as root, not sudo apt-get.
> >
> > The following command
> > # apt-get install flashplug
On Wed, May 02, 2012 at 06:16:59PM +1200, Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Tue, May 01, 2012 at 11:38:26AM -0500, Indulekha wrote:
> > Often I use something like:
> >
> > rsync --archive --one-file-system --hard-links --human-readable --inplace
> > --numeric-ids --delete ...
>
Hi,
today I run aptitude update and get errors:
http://paste.debian.net/166950/
After that I run aptitude safe-upgrade and again, I get errors:
http://paste.debian.net/166951/
What can I do to solve these problems?
--
Regards from Pal
--
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Hi,
Using apt-get I installed some security patches last week.
Inst libssl0.9.8 [0.9.8o-4squeeze11] (0.9.8o-4squeeze12
Debian-Security:6.0/stable [i386])
Inst openssl [0.9.8o-4squeeze11] (0.9.8o-4squeeze12 Debian-Security:6.0/stable
[i386])
After installing these two updates I suddenly have a b
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