Doug wrote:
> And disconnect the Windows drive
> when you install Linux.
completely paranoid approach, but if you are not sure in what you are doing,
it is justified. However for the record it is not necessary to do any of
this and even not required to have 2 drives, unless you do some windows
fa
Hello Jiri,
I have faced the same problem. I think there is something wrong with the
sssd-nss socket unit /lib/systemd/system/sssd-nss.socket
After I disabled it by
# systemctl disable sssd-nss.socket
the problem has disappeared and my system (Stretch) boots normally. SSSD
works. NSS throu
Lisi Reisz:
>> In most cases documents simplify that stretch is testing,
Ok, got it, I think your post helps the archive.
I don't think I should open a new post/thread for one more
clarification. If I understand the freeze process well (I think I
don't) why would updated packages appear today on
On Wednesday, 8 February 2017 15:37:48 CET solitone wrote:
> With time, though, I noticed that even suspension doesn't work very well.
> Sometimes the laptop does not suspend, neither if I wait for the set 5
> minutes, nor if I close the lid. It basically remains active, cunsuming
> battery.
After
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Thursday, February 09, 2017 07:36:50 AM Dan Purgert wrote:
>> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>> > 2. I'm sure that I'm looking at the download flows from my ISP as the
>> > ratio of the octets / bytes between the two flows is generally
>> > something like 10 to 1. I'm s
On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:43:00AM +, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
> If I understand the freeze process well (I think I
> don't) why would updated packages appear today on the list?
The freeze means that only bug fixes go in. No new upstream versions,
unless it's a very special case.
On Friday, February 10, 2017 06:56:10 AM Dan Purgert wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Eh, I was thinking more stuff like Minecraft, Space Engineers, or other
> "real time" multiplayer games, where there is a fair bit of
> communication between the client and server.
I guessed that, which was w
Greg Wooledge:
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:43:00AM +, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
>> If I understand the freeze process well (I think I
>> don't) why would updated packages appear today on the list?
>
> The freeze means that only bug fixes go in. No new upstream versions,
> unless it's a very speci
Hi Don,
On 02/08/17 23:36, Don Armstrong wrote:
>
> If this is a private package which you are using to enforce your local
> configuration, just change the conffile in your postinst [possibly after
> checking that the conffile hasn't been modified.]
>
This can become pretty difficult, depending
Does Debian support the "software collections" machinery from RedHat? Or
will it support them in the near future? Googling indicates that the answer
is "no" but I can't find a flat-out statement so far. Thanks...Nick G
On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:55:24AM -0600, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
Does Debian support the "software collections" machinery from RedHat? Or will
it support them in the near future? Googling indicates that the answer is "no"
but I can't find a flat-out statement so far. Thanks...Nick G
I suspect
On Fri, 10 Feb 2017, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> Not to mention the config file conflicts on the next upgrade, even if
> the DM changed only a single comment line. Plus there is no
> notification to run my postinst script again.
If this is a configuration package, then presumably you want
--force-confd
On Thu, 09 Feb 2017, Erwan David wrote:
> Wouldn't that make it impossible to write languages with diacritics in
> it ? Would be pathetic.
You can just use the compose key instead, or additionally AltGr if your
keyboard has one.
--
Don Armstrong https://www.donarmstrong.com
Le 02/10/2017 à 18:31, Don Armstrong a écrit :
> On Thu, 09 Feb 2017, Erwan David wrote:
>> Wouldn't that make it impossible to write languages with diacritics in
>> it ? Would be pathetic.
>
> You can just use the compose key instead, or additionally AltGr if your
> keyboard has one.
>
My keybo
On 02/09/2017 12:13 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
You shared your philosophy ("tear it all down and rebuild it from scratch
every two years")
I don't know where you got this. The OP was having one helluva time with
a harddrive. I suggested that he create a partition to store his
personal files "m
On 2017-02-10, Darac Marjal wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:55:24AM -0600, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
>>Does Debian support the "software collections" machinery from RedHat? Or will
>>it support them in the near future? Googling indicates that the answer is "no"
>>but I can't find a flat-out sta
On Fri 10 Feb 2017 at 10:43:00 +, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
[We are are talking about some using the testing distribution].
> I did not upgrade this time, just left it where it is as "if it ain't
> broke don't fix it" wondering why this is. I think the uneasiness comes
> from the feeling of not bei
All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
with Debian?
--
John Culleton
Wexfordpress
Book design and indexing.
John Culleton wrote:
> All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available with
> Debian?
No.
Grüße,
Sven.
--
Sigmentation fault. Core dumped.
On 02/10/2017 03:45 PM, Sven Hartge wrote:
John Culleton wrote:
All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available with
Debian?
No.
Grüße,
Sven.
Have you looked at Master PDF Editor 4?
--doug
--
Blessed are the peacemakers...for they shall be shot at from both
sides.--A
On 11/02/17 09:39, John Culleton wrote:
All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
with Debian?
What functionality do you need? I suggest trying a Debian Live image and
evaluating some of the many open source PDF readers.
Kind regards,
--
Ben Caradoc-Davies
Director
Op Fri, 10 Feb 2017 21:39:20 +0100 schreef John Culleton
:
All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
with Debian?
a very old version is available from:
ftp://ftp.adobe.com/pub/adobe/reader/unix/9.x/9.5.5/enu/
but the default pdf-reader in Debian is Evince
https://wi
On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 10:04:35 +1300
Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
> On 11/02/17 09:39, John Culleton wrote:
> > All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
> > with Debian?
>
> What functionality do you need? I suggest trying a Debian Live image
> and evaluating some of the ma
Op Fri, 10 Feb 2017 18:51:20 +0100 schreef Curt :
On 2017-02-10, Darac Marjal wrote:
On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 10:55:24AM -0600, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
Does Debian support the "software collections" machinery from RedHat?
Or will
it support them in the near future? Googling indicates that th
Op Fri, 10 Feb 2017 22:12:34 +0100 schreef John Culleton
:
On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 10:04:35 +1300
Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
On 11/02/17 09:39, John Culleton wrote:
> All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
> with Debian?
What functionality do you need? I suggest tryin
On Fri, Feb 10, 2017 at 3:14 PM, Floris wrote:
>
> This sounds like flatpak
> http://flatpak.org/
>
> and is available in Debian
>
Thanks much. But sadly, from http://flatpak.org/faq.html
"Flatpak is designed to run inside a desktop session and relies on certain
session services, such as a dbus
I wonder are org-mode pdf exports good enough to pass for adobe pdf
files? It's possible with org-mode to write up an org-mode document and
then export that to a pdf file. I do know for sure such pdf files are
not accessible (cannot talk) but I don't know about any other failings.
emacs-orgmo
I've used Software Collections for deployment of server software, and I can
say they do a lot less than tools like flatpak or snap. Besides being
agnostic to desktop sessions, they try to address the problem of outdated
versions of CentOS/RHEL packages which are difficult to replace (like
Python),
On Fri, 10 Feb 2017 16:12:34 -0500
John Culleton wrote:
> On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 10:04:35 +1300
> Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
>
> > On 11/02/17 09:39, John Culleton wrote:
> > > All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
> > > with Debian?
> >
> > What functionality do
On 02/10/2017 12:39 PM, John Culleton wrote:
All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
with Debian?
From PDF-Debian Wiki; If you really need Adobe's Acrobat Reader, which
is non-free, it is available from ftp.adobe.com or the
deb-multimedia.org repository.
Get the det
On Fri, 10 Feb 2017 15:39:20 -0500 John Culleton
wrote:
> All I need from Debian is Adobe Acrobat Reader. Is this available
> with Debian?
Kind of.
Available only from Adobe, and it's very old -- 5 years IIRC. And
32-bit only! If you run a 64-bit system, you'll need to setup
multi-architect
On 02/09/2017 04:58 PM, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
Lisi Reisz:
Right, so if you wish to remain on Stretch, which I think you do, replace the
word testing with the name stretch in all 4 of those lines. Then update -
however you do that in Synaptic.
Ok thank you, I think it worked. I reloaded and no p
Have I missed something here?
.pdf files are portable, right?
How can I as a creator specify that you as the reader MUST use a specific
program to read them?
Keith Bainbridge
0447667468
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
Sent from my APad
On 11 Feb 2017 07:40, "John Culleton" wrote:
> All I need
On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 11:32:45 +1100
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
> Have I missed something here?
>
> .pdf files are portable, right?
>
>
> How can I as a creator specify that you as the reader MUST use a
> specific program to read them?
Maybe by adding a "feature" that is supported by your reader
On Sat 11 Feb 2017 at 02:11:38 (+0100), Michael Lange wrote:
> On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 11:32:45 +1100
> Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>
> > Have I missed something here?
> >
> > .pdf files are portable, right?
> >
> >
> > How can I as a creator specify that you as the reader MUST use a
> > specific pro
On Fri 10 Feb 2017 at 16:00:13 (-0800), Jimmy Johnson wrote:
> On 02/09/2017 04:58 PM, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
> >In most cases documents simplify that stretch is testing, so I thought
> >there was no difference, then something I read recently made me think
> >once stretch becomes stable I would be bum
Brian:
> On Fri 10 Feb 2017 at 10:43:00 +, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
>
> [We are are talking about some using the testing distribution].
>
>> I did not upgrade this time, just left it where it is as "if it ain't
>> broke don't fix it" wondering why this is. I think the uneasiness comes
>> from the
David Wright:
> On Sat 11 Feb 2017 at 02:11:38 (+0100), Michael Lange wrote:
>> On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 11:32:45 +1100
>> Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>>> How can I as a creator specify that you as the reader MUST use a
>>> specific program to read them?
>> Maybe by adding a "feature" that is supported by
On 02/10/2017 07:54 AM, debian-...@lists.debian.org wrote:
"Re: Bug#1 Freeze"
Jimmy Johnson doc
"Mine is an Intel Mobile GM965/GL960 Integrated Graphics and
it's now working swell with the Sid 4.8.0-2 kernel but not
as quick to load as the 4.7.0-1 kernel which works with no
problem. In Stretch t
On 02/10/2017 05:49 PM, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 10 Feb 2017 at 16:00:13 (-0800), Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 02/09/2017 04:58 PM, GiaThnYgeia wrote:
In most cases documents simplify that stretch is testing, so I thought
there was no difference, then something I read recently made me think
once
On 02/10/2017 08:11 PM, Michael Lange wrote:
On Sat, 11 Feb 2017 11:32:45 +1100
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Have I missed something here?
.pdf files are portable, right?
How can I as a creator specify that you as the reader MUST use a
specific program to read them?
Maybe by adding a "featur
On 02/08/2017 05:32 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 02/08/17 15:59, Marc Shapiro wrote:
So how do I lay down a low level format on [the new 1 TB] drive?
I would use the SeaTools bootable CD to fill the drive with zeroes:
On 02/03/17 23:13, David Christensen wrote:
> Sometimes you get lucky an
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