On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 23:58:56 -0700
Jimmy Johnson wrote:
Hello Jimmy,
>okay. It looks like "gtk-3" is the culprit. When the other 4 systems
Indeed. I've upgraded everything other than those myself. Again,
without ill effect.
Just have to keep a weather eye out for upgraded, bugfixed (natch)
The simplest way is to direct KMS's framebuffer to use a lower resolution
than the native hi-res one by including a video= parameter on the kernel
cmdline. The lower the resolution, the larger the standard (usually 16x9)
framebuffer font becomes. On a 1920x1200 display I typically use
video=144
Le tridi 23 fructidor, an CCXXIV, Felix Miata a écrit :
> The simplest way is to direct KMS's framebuffer to use a lower resolution
> than the native hi-res one by including a video= parameter on the kernel
> cmdline. The lower the resolution, the larger the standard (usually 16x9)
> framebuffer fo
Nicolas George composed on 2016-09-08 10:07 (UTC+0200):
Felix Miata composed:
The simplest way is to direct KMS's framebuffer to use a lower resolution
than the native hi-res one by including a video= parameter on the kernel
cmdline. The lower the resolution, the larger the standard (usually
Le tridi 23 fructidor, an CCXXIV, Felix Miata a écrit :
>as they are generally produced with many more pix
> than typical GUI fonts.
You said, quite rightly, "usually 16x9". That does not make many more
pixels, that is rather typical of what is used with GUI fonts too.
>
Ben Finney wrote:
> Byung-Hee HWANG writes:
>
>> My meant is that 100% rules/policy is not easy to keep for FSF-like
>> Free Software by the definition.
> [snip]
>
> Do you believe “keep 100% rules/policy” is necessary for a person using
> free software? What does that mean?
I think he means he d
On Thu, Sep 08, 2016 at 11:29:21AM -, Dan Purgert wrote:
Ben Finney wrote:
Byung-Hee HWANG writes:
My meant is that 100% rules/policy is not easy to keep for FSF-like
Free Software by the definition.
[snip]
Do you believe “keep 100% rules/policy” is necessary for a person using
free sof
Hi,
Darac Marjal wrote:
> I'm surprised that Grub (A GNU program) deigns to load Windows :)
If GNU can get people into using GNU software without giving up its
core values, then it normally does.
E.g. there is absolutely no ban on offering GNU software for proprietary
OSes.
The FSF does not forc
Hellow Darac!
Darac Marjal 께서 쓰시길,
《記事 全文 <20160908114300.k4ss4l63okr62...@darac.org.uk> 에서》:
> [...snip long lines...]
> This is where Debian differs from the "ideals" of the Free Software
> Foundation. (...)
So i prefer Debian to FSF, thanks!
--
^고맙습니다 _地平天成_ 감사합니다_^))//
Greetings all;
Has anyone an idea of a schedule of when that will put this security
update into the wheezy repo's?
I believe this is why I cannot use the paypal account I just opened.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo.
On 9/8/16, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
>
> If GNU can get people into using GNU software without giving up its
> core values, then it normally does.
> E.g. there is absolutely no ban on offering GNU software for proprietary
> OSes.
>
> The FSF does not force GNU programs to fully follow the political go
On Thu 08 Sep 2016 at 04:36:42 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
> Nicolas George composed on 2016-09-08 10:07 (UTC+0200):
>
> >Felix Miata composed:
>
> >>The simplest way is to direct KMS's framebuffer to use a lower resolution
> >>than the native hi-res one by including a video= parameter on the ker
Hi,
(i maintain GNU xorriso but do not speak for GNU or FSF)
Cindy-Sue Causey wrote:
> their objection to some of Debian might be easily fixable
The Debian position is that one should help people to install on
hardware of which the manufacturer imposed unsurpassable obstacles
for pure FSF-compli
On 09/07/2016 05:23 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
On Wednesday 07 September 2016 16:43:40 Mark Allums wrote:
On 09/07/2016 03:01 PM, Gary Dale wrote:
On 07/09/16 03:03 PM, Mark Allums wrote:
On 09/07/2016 01:39 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
Greetings all;
Online business seems to have hit a roadblock.
On Thursday 08 September 2016 10:30:54 Mark Allums wrote:
> On 09/07/2016 05:23 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Wednesday 07 September 2016 16:43:40 Mark Allums wrote:
> >> On 09/07/2016 03:01 PM, Gary Dale wrote:
> >>> On 07/09/16 03:03 PM, Mark Allums wrote:
> On 09/07/2016 01:39 PM, Gene He
No, I have installed Flash, and I keep it up to date. My problem
is not YouTube, that was just an example. I get error messages
telling me that the web sites are not secure, coincidentally after
updating crypto packages and Firefox. I don't believe that YouTube
is insecure, hence the proble
David Wright composed on 2016-09-08 09:08 (UTC-0500):
On Thu 08 Sep 2016 at 04:36:42 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
Nicolas George composed on 2016-09-08 10:07 (UTC+0200):
>Felix Miata composed:
>>The simplest way is to direct KMS's framebuffer to use a lower resolution
>>than the native h
Hi all!
I recently set up an relay SMTP server on a host of Digital Ocean, using
Debian and Postfix.
The main reason for setting up this relay is that the cPanel VPS is
hosted at Godaddy, and they force everyone to send email through their
shared SMTP relay. As expected, that shared relay is cont
Hi Everybody,
I am working with a Raspberry PI running Jessie and I'm not happy about
the solutions I found to change it from DHCP to a fixed IP address.
Editing the file /etc/dhcpcd.conf does not seem to work correctly.
Can I go back to the old method of editing /etc/network/interfaces
Or is t
On Thu, Sep 08, 2016 at 06:08:04PM +0100, David wrote:
> I am working with a Raspberry PI running Jessie and I'm not happy about
> the solutions I found to change it from DHCP to a fixed IP address.
>
> Can I go back to the old method of editing /etc/network/interfaces
If it's Debian Jessie, then
On 08/09/16 13:56, Daniel Bareiro wrote:
> I recently set up an relay SMTP server on a host of Digital Ocean, using
> Debian and Postfix.
>
> The main reason for setting up this relay is that the cPanel VPS is
> hosted at Godaddy, and they force everyone to send email through their
> shared SMTP
On 9/8/2016 12:08 PM, David wrote:
I am working with a Raspberry PI running Jessie and I'm not happy about
the solutions I found to change it from DHCP to a fixed IP address.
Editing the file /etc/dhcpcd.conf does not seem to work correctly.
Can I go back to the old method of editing /etc/netwo
I have a very straightforward Debian Jessie machine on my network. For
SSH it uses the standard/default Port 22 and accessing it via ssh works
just fine from anywhere on the local network.
I also have a NetGear router configured so that a connection from the
outside world using Port 1024 gets
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 12:49:56 -0500
Tim McDonough wrote:
> I have a very straightforward Debian Jessie machine on my network.
> For SSH it uses the standard/default Port 22 and accessing it via ssh
> works just fine from anywhere on the local network.
>
> I also have a NetGear router configured so
On Thu 08 Sep 2016 at 09:30:54 -0500, Mark Allums wrote:
> On 09/07/2016 05:23 PM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> >
> >Maybe this is related to libns3 that someone mention, but we have to get
> >it from unstable? On wheezy, how?
> >
> >Thanks.
> >
> >Cheers, Gene Heskett
> >
>
> Installing libnss3 from si
On Thu 08 Sep 2016 at 18:08:04 +0100, David wrote:
> I am working with a Raspberry PI running Jessie and I'm not happy about
> the solutions I found to change it from DHCP to a fixed IP address.
That's a shame.
> Editing the file /etc/dhcpcd.conf does not seem to work correctly.
Nobody in thei
I want to set up a few servers at home. Unfortunately, as I live in
Bulgaria at the moment, the electric power is gone pretty often for
longer periods than my UPS'es can deal with. So my servers will have to
be started at least a few times every quarter.
Another challenge with living in Bulgar
On Thu, Sep 08, 2016 at 10:26:59PM +0300, Jarle Aase wrote:
> I want to set up a few servers at home. Unfortunately, as I live in Bulgaria
> at the moment, the electric power is gone pretty often for longer periods
> than my UPS'es can deal with. So my servers will have to be started at least
> a f
Hi,
I do not have 'qdbus' command installed.
Regards,
Herbert
On 9/8/16 3:26 PM, Jarle Aase wrote:
I want to set up a few servers at home. Unfortunately, as I live in
Bulgaria at the moment, the electric power is gone pretty often for
longer periods than my UPS'es can deal with. So my servers will have
to be started at least a few times every quarter.
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 22:26:59 +0300
Jarle Aase wrote:
> I want to set up a few servers at home. Unfortunately, as I live in
> Bulgaria at the moment, the electric power is gone pretty often for
> longer periods than my UPS'es can deal with. So my servers will have to
> be started at least a few
For remote access, the RPi sounds like a good idea to me. I've had one on the
'Net for several years, doing things not requiring major CPU power. It's on my
UPS, and it's had no reliability problems.
A relatively small dedicated UPS would likely keep your border router and an
RPi going for quit
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 19:54:55 +0100
Brian wrote:
> Maybe you could post the URLs of two or three web sites which are now
> available to you without security-related error messages which you had
> trouble with before. Jessie users would be interested whether they too
> have to install libnss3 from u
Hi,
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 09:28:33 -0400
Gene Heskett wrote:
> Greetings all;
>
> Has anyone an idea of a schedule of when that will put this security
> update into the wheezy repo's?
>
> I believe this is why I cannot use the paypal account I just opened.
Maybe you could try the version from j
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 15:43:31 -0600
Glenn English wrote:
> For remote access, the RPi sounds like a good idea to me. I've had one on the
> 'Net for several years, doing things not requiring major CPU power. It's on
> my UPS, and it's had no reliability problems.
>
> A relatively small dedicated
On Thursday 08 September 2016 17:51:43 Michael Lange wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 09:28:33 -0400
>
> Gene Heskett wrote:
> > Greetings all;
> >
> > Has anyone an idea of a schedule of when that will put this security
> > update into the wheezy repo's?
> >
> > I believe this is why I cannot
On Thu, 08 Sep 2016, Jarle Aase wrote:
> Does anyone here have any experience with remote control with Debian boxes
> over serial? Will it work reliable?
It's fairly reliable; I actually prefer it to using KVM in almost all
cases. You just need to get it configured properly in grub, the bios,
and
On 08/09/16 23:07, Clive Menzies wrote:
Hi
We've suffered a series of seemingly disconnect problems on 4 machines
since upgrading jessie on Monday:
apt/log:
Start-Date: 2016-09-05 12:17:10
Commandline: apt-get upgrade
Upgrade: libgcrypt20:i386 (1.6.3-2+deb8u1, 1.6.3-2+deb8u2), gnupg:i386
(
On Thu, 08 Sep 2016, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Has anyone an idea of a schedule of when that will put this security
> update into the wheezy repo's?
https://wiki.debian.org/LTS
Please contact the Debian LTS people, and if this fix is not already in
the priority queue, you could offer to sponsor the
Hi
We've suffered a series of seemingly disconnect problems on 4 machines
since upgrading jessie on Monday:
apt/log:
Start-Date: 2016-09-05 12:17:10
Commandline: apt-get upgrade
Upgrade: libgcrypt20:i386 (1.6.3-2+deb8u1, 1.6.3-2+deb8u2), gnupg:i386
(1.4.18-7+deb8u1, 1.4.18-7+deb8u2), linux-
On 9/8/2016 1:42 PM, Joe wrote:
On Thu, 8 Sep 2016 12:49:56 -0500
Tim McDonough wrote:
I have a very straightforward Debian Jessie machine on my network.
For SSH it uses the standard/default Port 22 and accessing it via ssh
works just fine from anywhere on the local network.
I also have a Net
On 09/08/2016 10:26 PM, Jarle Aase wrote:
>...
> So I'm thinking about serial consoles. My gateway router will reboot
> after an outage, and it can act as a VPN endpoint. So I can access IP
> devices. With a rasberry pi and some relays, I can probably trigger a
> cold reboot whenever I need to. If
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