On Aug 30, 2015, at 10:42 PM, Glenn English wrote:
> Yet another possible possibility:
>
> * Is the disk backward compatible with USB2? If so, does it work with a USB2
> card? Might get rid of some variables.
Yes, that’s the first thing I tried. The disk (and all the USB2 and USB3 thumb
dri
On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the Internet is
> full of mail-order vendors selling keyboards (from several different
> manufacturers) built with those
Hi,
I tried all possible ways to fix wireless driver issues for my Dell Vostro
laptop. Chip manufactures Broadcom has provided a debian installation file from
their official website for the proper chipset. I tried it but no luck
Regards,
Ahlad Harilal
Copyright in this message and any attach
On Mon, August 31, 2015 1:58 am, Rick Thomas wrote:
> Does anybody know which USB3 interface chipsets are supported by the
> current Debian Jessie kernel?
You may already have done this, but, if not, you might try searching
google for "linux usb3". The first two hits are recent posts.
RLH
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 02:09:23 -0500
rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> > Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> > keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the Internet is
> > full of mail-order vendors sell
Tisztelt Hölgyem/Uram,
A nevem Borbényi Levente, a Lacan Technologies Kft-t képviselem.
Ezúton szeretném tájékoztatni, hogy meghirdetésre kerültek az Európai Unio új
pályázatai, amelyek a mikro-, kis- és középvállalkozások számára biztosítanak
fejlesztési lehetőséget.
A projekt fő célja a mikro
Petter Adsen writes:
> On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 02:09:23 -0500
> rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
>
> > On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> > > Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> > > keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the Internet
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On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 11:19:12PM +0200, Christian Seiler wrote:
Disclaimer: I totally dislike systemd. I'll try to do what it takes
to enjoy a systemd-free Debian. I'm not going to discuss the whys
and hows -- tne Nets are already full of that. That
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On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 12:39:14AM +0200, Sven Hartge wrote:
> bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
>
> > [6.210098] EXT4-fs (sda7): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode.
> > Opts:
> > (null)
> > [ 35.827945] r8169 :03:00.0: firmware: failed to
Hello There,
Blessings For a Beauty Full Day.
This is Ishita, I’m an online marketing executive.
We are an India based IT company. We have a good creative team ready to
design & develop an eye catching website for your business.
We currently have a great offer for complete new state of the art
Hello There,
Blessings For a Beauty Full Day.
This is Ishita, I’m an online marketing executive.
We are an India based IT company. We have a good creative team ready to
design & develop an eye catching website for your business.
We currently have a great offer for complete new state of the art
Hi.
On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 06:58:10AM -0700, bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
> On Sun, 30 Aug 2015 13:18:19 +0200
> Sven Hartge wrote:
>
> > bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
> > > On Sun, 30 Aug 2015 04:25:36 +0200 Sven Hartge wrote:
> > >> bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
> >
> > >>> There's no way anyone can
Dear Sir/Madam,
Good Tidings, Felicitations and Salutations be upon you!
Alas, here in Debian, we have no need of such web site design services
Blessings for a Fruit Full day.
Regards
Michael Fothergill
On Aug 31, 2015, at 12:17 AM, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> On Mon, August 31, 2015 1:58 am, Rick Thomas wrote:
>> Does anybody know which USB3 interface chipsets are supported by the
>> current Debian Jessie kernel?
>
> You may already have done this, but, if not, you might try searching
> googl
Hello Javier
>>> Did you try disabling nfs.v4.read_delegation?
>>>
>> No, since we only recently changed from NFSv3 to NFSv4 and with v3 were
>> using mount option nocto on 99% of the mounts for performance. We have
>> currently no idea what implications we would have if we turn off read
>> delega
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 09:45:03 +0200
"Gian Uberto Lauri" wrote:
> Petter Adsen writes:
> > On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 02:09:23 -0500
> > rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> > > How much do those things cost? Now that a keyboard can be had for $10 or
> > > $15, is it better to pay $150 or even $250 for a qu
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On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 11:56:09AM +0300, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 06:58:10AM -0700, bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
[...]
> > so it is the dreaded r8169 firmware crappola. the system works fine not
> > loading it.
>
> My-my. Call
On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 1:39 PM, T.J. Duchene wrote:
>
> On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 10:49 PM, Doug wrote:
>>
>> That's easy for you to say, since you are obviously a programmer. The rest
>> of us may never have programmed anything, and C just looks like some foreign
>> language --which it is!
>
>
>
On Mon 31 Aug 2015 at 11:56:09 +0300, Reco wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 06:58:10AM -0700, bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
> >
> > there's this in dmesg:
> >
> > [6.210098] EXT4-fs (sda7): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode.
> > Opts:
> > (null)
> > [ 35.827945] r8169 :03:00.0: f
Back in the 1990s I purchased several IBM M-5 keyboards for about $5
each. The only one that died was the one I poured alcohol into in order
to clean it out. Perhaps some are still around at a reasonable price.
On 2015-08-30, atux wrote:
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
> --010609010802020702010907
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> hello everyone.
>
> i have a usb stick that it gets recognised as read only.
> how do i
On 31/08/15 08:09, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
How much do those things cost? Now that a keyboard can be had for $10 or
$15, is it better to pay $150 or even $250 for a quality keyboard, or
replace a $15 keyboard every year or even every six months?
Well, I'm typing this on a Das Keyboard (Cher
On 2015-08-31, Haines Brown wrote:
> Back in the 1990s I purchased several IBM M-5 keyboards for about $5
> each. The only one that died was the one I poured alcohol into in order
> to clean it out. Perhaps some are still around at a reasonable price.
>
>
Well, at least it died drunk so it didn'
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 20:15:44 +0900
Joel Rees wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 6:52 PM, Petter Adsen wrote:
> > The Windows software will also auto-update the firmware in the
> > keyboard,
>
> Say what? Since when does a keyboard need a firmware update?
>
> Hmm. Maybe the USB controller stuff,
On 2015-08-31 at 00:39, T.J. Duchene wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 10:49 PM, Doug
> wrote:
>> What we would like is stability, and until Poettering started
>> messing with Linux, we pretty much had it--at least in any given
>> distro.
>
> That's where we part in agreement. You can't blame P
On Monday 31 August 2015 07:04:22 Joel Rees wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 4:09 PM, wrote:
> > On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> >> Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> >> keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the
> >> Inter
On 2015-08-31 at 03:47, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 11:19:12PM +0200, Christian Seiler wrote:
>
> Disclaimer: I totally dislike systemd. I'll try to do what it takes
> to enjoy a systemd-free Debian. I'm not going to discuss the whys and
> hows -- tne Nets are already full
Joel Rees writes:
>
> Say what? Since when does a keyboard need a firmware update?
>
> Hmm. Maybe the USB controller stuff, but still, ...
Nope. Check the item before engaging the fingers :).
These keyboard have some on board controller that is responsible to
controlling the color of each k
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On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 08:33:40AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2015-08-31 at 03:47, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > Slinging mud at people never helps: Lennart Poettering isn't out
> > there "to get us" -- he's writing free software. He deserves to be
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 08:25:25 -0400
Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 31 August 2015 07:04:22 Joel Rees wrote:
>
> > On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 4:09 PM, wrote:
> > > On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> > >> Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> > >> keys
Petter Adsen writes:
> Have you seen the Apple keyboards? They have keys that are barely
> raised from the keyboard itself, completely flat, and are AFAIK
> wireless.
Wired or wireless. Personally I still prefer a keyboard with Cherry
switches.
Should I get rich enough to buy a fully featured
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 11:56:09 +0300
Reco wrote:
> > there's this in dmesg:
> >
> > [6.210098] EXT4-fs (sda7): mounted filesystem with ordered data mode.
> > Opts:
> > (null)
> > [ 35.827945] r8169 :03:00.0: firmware: failed to load
> > rtl_nic/rtl8168f-1.fw (-2)
> > [ 35.827963] r8
Hi,
Gian Uberto Lauri wrote:
> "Das computermachineboot ist gestaren, relaxen und watchen das
> blinkenlichten."
Che bella macchina.
Have a nice day :)
Thomas
Hi,
atux wrote
> > even gparted has it recognised as read only
What exactly did it report ?
What permissions are shown with
ls -l /dev/sdb
Liam O'Toole wrote:
> The installer can leave a 'ro' entry for the stick in /etc/fstab.
If so, then block device level write operations should
succeed.
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 22:40:22 +0900
Joel Rees wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 9:38 PM, Gian Uberto Lauri wrote:
> > Joel Rees writes:
> > >
> > > Say what? Since when does a keyboard need a firmware update?
> > >
> > > Hmm. Maybe the USB controller stuff, but still, ...
> >
> > Nope. Check t
On 2015-08-21 22:08:33 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> Quoting Vincent Lefevre (vinc...@vinc17.net):
> > No, here's what I said:
> >
> > | In general, one wants NO-BREAK SPACE to be displayed just like
> > | a space. The differentiation is useful mainly in source code
> > | and when editing, thus it
On 08/31/2015 02:33 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
> Also, while I agree that Lennart is not out "to get us" in the sense of
> malicious laughter and diabolical plans, he _does_ seem to outright
> reject some principles which have been valued in the free-software world
> for decades, to want to see those
Petter Adsen writes:
> No, it doesn't. But it has 5 macro keys, intended to be used in
> Windows games for sending series of keystrokes. Under Linux, they
> simply send normal keycodes, but I believe the Windows drivers and
> software do more than that.
Once upon a long ago there was a daemon
On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 09:18:42PM -0400, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Oh joy! forgive my nose, especially since I missed this post at first.
> Still, I am typing right now, this very moment, on a real IBM clicky
> keyboard!
> However the cable is starting to fray, and I was wondering if I
> would be
On 2015-08-31 at 10:49, Christian Seiler wrote:
> On 08/31/2015 02:33 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> Also, while I agree that Lennart is not out "to get us" in the
>> sense of malicious laughter and diabolical plans, he _does_ seem to
>> outright reject some principles which have been valued in the
Quoting rlhar...@oplink.net (rlhar...@oplink.net):
> On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> > Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> > keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the Internet is
> > full of mail-order vendors selling keyboard
The Wanderer:
Some people develop and distribute malware as free software. Do they deserve to
be treated with respect for doing that?
I strongly suspect that malwares do not provide freedoms #1, #2, or #3
out of the Four Freedoms.
T.J. Duchene:
One programmer created asystemd fork called "uselessd".
He declared it dead about six months ago.
On 2015-08-31 at 11:25, Jonathan de Boyne Pollard wrote:
> The Wanderer:
>
>> Some people develop and distribute malware as free software. Do
>> they deserve to be treated with respect for doing that?
>
> I strongly suspect that malwares do not provide freedoms #1, #2, or
> #3 out of the Four Fr
The Wanderer:
Also on a mostly-cosmetic level, if you log in at a text console
without systemd, you will get a certain set of messages, coming mostly
from login and from your shell - but with systemd, logging in at a
text console also produces a mess of extra messages coming from
logind, whic
On Monday 31 August 2015 16:36:26 The Wanderer wrote:
> Lennart's proposed alternative (to su)
After all this discussion, I thought that I ought really to find out what
Lennart was proposing, and I must say that it looks remarkably
disability-unfriendly. :-(
For those who have still not discove
Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> For those who have still not discovered, you have to press ^ three times in
> succession inside a second.
>
> https://tlhp.cf/lennart-poettering-su/
Are you referring to that snippet:
# Connected to the local host. Press ^] three time
Hi,
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blinkenlights
Ah. That's the original version of
"Gnebbsche drigge derfe nur mir, die expedde."
Frankfurt hassian for
"Button pressing is reserved to us, the experts."
Have a nice day :)
Thomas
On 2015-08-31 at 11:32, Jonathan de Boyne Pollard wrote:
> The Wanderer:
>
>> Also on a mostly-cosmetic level, if you log in at a text console
>> without systemd, you will get a certain set of messages, coming
>> mostly from login and from your shell - but with systemd, logging
>> in at a text c
Yet another vote for Cherry. They are lovely.
The 'clicks' on mine come from the key hitting the bottom, not from something
in the switch. You select how loud the clicks are.
And 'most everything is made for Winders these days -- just ignore the key with
the little flag on it. It never occurred
Christian Seiler:
Note that _nobody_ working on su, neither upstream nor maintaining it
in distributions, has claimed that they will stop.
Indeed. The implication that su is being replaced has, rather, come
from the technology journalists and web log diarists writing headlines ...
* Paul Ca
On 08/31/2015 05:36 PM, The Wanderer wrote:
> Two, I base this assessment on the things he has said and the ways in
> which he has reacted when people have objected to various of the things
> he has done - on his public comments and discussion,
I get the opposite impression, that's why I responded
Hi.
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 16:25:29 +0100
Jonathan de Boyne Pollard
wrote:
> The Wanderer:
> > Some people develop and distribute malware as free software. Do they
> > deserve to be treated with respect for doing that?
>
> I strongly suspect that malwares do not provide freedoms #1, #2, or #3
>
On 08/31/2015 05:48 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 31 August 2015 16:36:26 The Wanderer wrote:
>> Lennart's proposed alternative (to su)
>
> After all this discussion, I thought that I ought really to find out what
> Lennart was proposing, and I must say that it looks remarkably
> disability-
On Monday 31 August 2015 17:43:00 Christian Seiler wrote:
> On 08/31/2015 05:48 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Monday 31 August 2015 16:36:26 The Wanderer wrote:
> >> Lennart's proposed alternative (to su)
> >
> > After all this discussion, I thought that I ought really to find out what
> > Lennart w
Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> Su is _much_ easier to type, and there is no restrictive time limit on how
> long you can take typing it.
>
> the illustration shows moving from user to root. $ to #
>
> It is, as I said, very disability unfriendly. su is not.
What a
On Monday 31 August 2015 18:08:21 pecon...@mesanetworks.net wrote:
> On a jessie system, I can interrupt an Emacs file edit session with cntrlZ.
> My only self acknowledged disabilities are mild loss of cognitive function
> and frequent finger fumbles at the keyboard, so I don't know what a person
On 2015-08-31, wrote:
>
>> I understand the whole "oh noes, firmware is a binary blob with unknown
>> contents [...]
>
> It seems you don't :-)
>
>> By not installing the firmware package, you are just making your life
>> harder without gaining anything but a delayed boot.
>
> There sure should b
On Monday 31 August 2015 16:59:48 Nicolas George wrote:
> Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > For those who have still not discovered, you have to press ^ three times
> > in succession inside a second.
> >
> > https://tlhp.cf/lennart-poettering-su/
>
> Are you referring t
Quoting The Wanderer (wande...@fastmail.fm):
> Debian could not have chosen systemd if Lennart had not written it, and
> Debian could not have chosen systemd-in-its-current-form if Lennart had
> not designed it in that form, so some layer of the blame does fall on
> him.
That's a very interesting
On Monday 31 August 2015 18:12:44 Nicolas George wrote:
> What are you talking about? The command to start the shell, or the key
> sequence to exit it?
Using su to change user.
Lisi
Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > What are you talking about? The command to start the shell, or the key
> > sequence to exit it?
> Using su to change user.
Then I do not agree with your statement that "machinectl shell" is less
disability-friendly than su, quite the c
Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> Then I have misunderstood, which does not surprise me.
With all the disinformation flying around when it comes to systemd, it is
hardly surprising.
> What is the alternative to su that there is so much fuss about? And I don't
> care
Hi.
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 19:42:20 +0200
Nicolas George wrote:
> Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > > What are you talking about? The command to start the shell, or the key
> > > sequence to exit it?
> > Using su to change user.
>
> Then I do not agree with your state
Hi.
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 18:25:09 +0100
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 31 August 2015 16:59:48 Nicolas George wrote:
> > Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > > For those who have still not discovered, you have to press ^ three times
> > > in succession inside a second.
>
Le 31/08/2015 20:27, Reco a écrit :
> Hi.
>
> On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 18:25:09 +0100
> Lisi Reisz wrote:
>
>> On Monday 31 August 2015 16:59:48 Nicolas George wrote:
>>> Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
For those who have still not discovered, you have to press ^ three
On Monday 31 August 2015 19:27:31 Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 18:25:09 +0100
>
> Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Monday 31 August 2015 16:59:48 Nicolas George wrote:
> > > Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
> > > > For those who have still not discovered, you have t
On Mon 31 Aug 2015 at 11:36:26 -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> The Subject line is an overstatement, yes, but it's not an entirely
> baseless one. Consider:
The power of language! What is clearly a distortion of the situation
related at
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/825
becomes an "o
Hi.
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 19:40:54 +0100
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 31 August 2015 19:27:31 Reco wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 18:25:09 +0100
> >
> > Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > On Monday 31 August 2015 16:59:48 Nicolas George wrote:
> > > > Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lis
Reco wrote on 08/29/2015 12:17 PM:
>
> Your /etc/logrotate.d/polipo should contain this line:
>
> su proxy adm
>
Yep.
[stuff elided]
>
> The solution of this problem should be as simple as:
>
> chgrp adm /var/log/polipo/pol*
> rm -f /var/log/polipo/polipo.log.1.gz
OK; I have done that, an
On Mon 31 Aug 2015 at 19:42:18 +0100, Brian wrote:
> Yet more advocacy to add to the 3,200+ posts we have in -user. Only
> about 1.5% of them are from the OP but he is trying hard to get up to
> 2%. :)
That bit was incorrect. The 1.5% is for the OP's sycophantic responder.
The OP is only on about
Quoting Vincent Lefevre (vinc...@vinc17.net):
> On 2015-08-21 22:08:33 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > Quoting Vincent Lefevre (vinc...@vinc17.net):
> > > No, here's what I said:
> > >
> > > | In general, one wants NO-BREAK SPACE to be displayed just like
> > > | a space. The differentiation is use
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 19:42:20 +0200
Nicolas George wrote:
>Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
>> > What are you talking about? The command to start the shell, or the key
>> > sequence to exit it?
>> Using su to change user.
>
>Then I do not agree with your statement that "m
Le 31/08/2015 20:53, Charlie Kravetz a écrit :
> On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 19:42:20 +0200
> Nicolas George wrote:
>
>> Le quartidi 14 fructidor, an CCXXIII, Lisi Reisz a écrit :
What are you talking about? The command to start the shell, or the key
sequence to exit it?
>>> Using su to change u
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> On Sun, August 30, 2015 8:49 pm, Martin Read wrote:
> > Cherry still *are* (or at some point resumed) making mechanical
> > keyswitches with a rated life in the tens of millions, and the Internet is
> > full of mail-order vendors selling keyboards
On 08/31/2015 05:14 AM, Joel Rees wrote:
Actually, there's a couple or three questions going begging here, that
I'd like to ask:
Sure, ask away! =)
(1) TJ, have you ever built LFS? Or, even better, built a running OS
on top of the Linux kernel without even the help of the LFS tutorial
and
On Mon, 31 Aug 2015, David Wright wrote:
> Quoting Vincent Lefevre (vinc...@vinc17.net):
> > From the terminal point of view, the shell is just like another
> > process.
>
> Just to make it clear: I didn't write that, even though you've made it
> appear that I did by putting ">" in front of it.
F
I got help from the debian-live list (chals)
the file auto/config must be :
#!/bin/sh
set -e
lb config noauto \
--architecture amd64 \
--bootappend-live "boot=live ip=frommedia persistence
locales=fr_FR.UTF-8 keyboard-layouts=fr" \
--archive-areas "main contrib non-free"
Charlie Kravetz:
There has never been mention of any other method to exit this new
shell command.
Probably because the people knowledgeble in the subject thought that it
went without saying. It plainly doesn't, because this is the third
place where the whole it-is-the-telnet-escape-sequen
On 08/31/15 02:19, Rick Thomas wrote:
I came across this
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1242321 In note
#46 there, James Ralston suggests turning off “auto suspend” on the
relevant USB device by doing
$ for F in /sys/bus/usb/devices/*/power/control; do echo on >”${F}";
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On 08/31/2015 10:06 AM, Petter Adsen wrote:
> On Mon, 31 Aug 2015 22:40:22 +0900
> Joel Rees wrote:
>
>> On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 9:38 PM, Gian Uberto Lauri wrote:
>>> Joel Rees writes:
>>> >
>>> > Say what? Since when does a keyboard need a firm
--
Paul E Condon
pecon...@mesanetworks.net
--- christ...@iwakd.de wrote:
From: Christian Seiler
To: Lisi Reisz , debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Another system management tool to disappear.
Date: Mon, 31 Aug 2015 18:43:00 +0200
On 08/31/2015 05:48 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
>
I am trying to establish a Mozilla-type Sync connection between my
Debian Jessie (systemd) desktop host and my Apple MacBook Pro. I'm
finding that password changes are being successfully transmitted from
Apple to Jessie, but changes on Jessie are not going to Apple.
I see a security fix for Icewea
Lennart Poettering
(https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/825#issuecomment-127917622):
Long story short: su is really a broken concept.
Christian Seiler:
So it's not like su is suddenly broken - it's just that some specific
new use cases don't work properly with it.
A fair number
The Wanderer:
No, but I believe I still have my laptop configured in a way which
gets this behavior. If you want, I can reboot it and do a detailed
examination; I'm probably about due for a reboot of that laptop, anyway.
It's mainly the final part about other people's login sessions causing
On Tue, 2015-09-01 at 01:25 +0100, Jonathan de Boyne Pollard wrote:
> Lennart Poettering
> (https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/825#issuecomment-127917622):
>
> > Long story short: su is really a broken concept.
> >
>
> Christian Seiler:
> >
> > So it's not like su is suddenly broken - it
On 2015-08-31 at 20:37, Jonathan de Boyne Pollard wrote:
> The Wanderer:
>
>> No, but I believe I still have my laptop configured in a way which
>> gets this behavior. If you want, I can reboot it and do a detailed
>> examination; I'm probably about due for a reboot of that laptop,
>> anyway.
>
To facilitate our search for property and discussion over the telephone of
various properties, my client wishes me to install google earth.
I see that Debian has a google earth package.
In view of our recent discussion "laptop protection in an office network",
I am curious as to what danger of co
On 09/01/2015 06:25 AM, Paul E Condon wrote:
> I am trying to establish a Mozilla-type Sync connection between my
> Debian Jessie (systemd) desktop host and my Apple MacBook Pro. I'm
> finding that password changes are being successfully transmitted from
> Apple to Jessie, but changes on Jessie a
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