Re: How to investigate sudden shutdown?

2022-12-14 Thread Alexander V. Makartsev
On 14.12.2022 12:22, Tobias Diekershoff wrote: Hey everyone, perhaps someone of you can help me with tool / log file I have not investigated so far. I have a Thinkpad with Debian Bullseye on it, running KDE/Plasma as main desktop environment and from time to time it just turn off without prior i

Re: How to investigate sudden shutdown?

2022-12-14 Thread tomas
On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 01:40:06PM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote: > On 14.12.2022 12:22, Tobias Diekershoff wrote: > > Hey everyone, > > > > perhaps someone of you can help me with tool / log file I have not > > investigated > > so far. I have a Thinkpad with Debian Bullseye on it, running

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread Tom Schwindl
On Wed Dec 14, 2022 at 8:33 AM CET, Michel Verdier wrote: > Le 14 décembre 2022 paulf a écrit : > > > I prefer to run i3wm, but it has no native menu system. Like Openbox, > > GNOME, Plasma, etc. Does anyone know of a menu system/program which > > reads *.desktop files, and can supply categorized m

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread Pierre Tomon
There is also jgmenu, fast, customizable, does not use toolkits but cairo and pango to render the menu. Possibility to add widgets such as search box. https://github.com/jgmenu/jgmenu In the repo.

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread paulf
On Wed, 14 Dec 2022 11:55:39 +0100 Pierre Tomon wrote: > > There is also jgmenu, fast, customizable, does not use toolkits but > cairo and pango to render the menu. Possibility to add widgets such as > search box. > > https://github.com/jgmenu/jgmenu > In the repo. > Yes, I found this. It app

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread Max Nikulin
On 14/12/2022 06:22, pa...@quillandmouse.com wrote: I prefer to run i3wm, but it has no native menu system. Like Openbox, GNOME, Plasma, etc. Does anyone know of a menu system/program which reads *.desktop files, and can supply categorized menus, but doesn't insist on being run under a non-i3wm

Re: How to investigate sudden shutdown?

2022-12-14 Thread David Wright
On Wed 14 Dec 2022 at 08:22:01 (+0100), Tobias Diekershoff wrote: > > perhaps someone of you can help me with tool / log file I have not > investigated > so far. I have a Thinkpad with Debian Bullseye on it, running KDE/Plasma as > main > desktop environment and from time to time it just turn of

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread Pierre Tomon
Le Wed, 14 Dec 2022 07:42:15 -0500, a écrit : > On Wed, 14 Dec 2022 11:55:39 +0100 > Pierre Tomon wrote: > > > > > There is also jgmenu, fast, customizable, does not use toolkits but > > cairo and pango to render the menu. Possibility to add widgets such > > as search box. > > > > https://git

testing update of firefox (to firefox_108.0-1) may not work

2022-12-14 Thread songbird
i had to downgrade afterwards, bug has been reported so no more bugs need to be filed. just a warning to others who may be running testing. the specific error message is: XPCOMGlueLoad error for file /usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so: /usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so: cannot open shared

Re: Independent menu system

2022-12-14 Thread John Cunningham
Seconding dmenu. I used dwm for a long time and dmenu was great. John Cunningham On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 5:44 AM Tom Schwindl wrote: > On Wed Dec 14, 2022 at 8:33 AM CET, Michel Verdier wrote: > > Le 14 décembre 2022 paulf a écrit : > > > > > I prefer to run i3wm, but it has no native menu sys

Re: stopping mass surveillance

2022-12-14 Thread operation . privacyenforcement
On 1/9/84 19:84, Andy Smith wrote: Hello, Can't comment on something you haven't elaborated upon. First step, explain why your idea is better than, say, Tor. It is about solving a problem that counts as technically unsolveable. The idea is about making any type of traffic correlation including

Re: Stop feeding the trolls ( Was: Re: stopping mass surveillance)

2022-12-14 Thread operation . privacyenforcement
On 12/13/22 11:38, Henning Follmann wrote: Stop feeding the trolls Stop being not respectful, biased when you can not be sure about this after one message only. I am not.

Re: stopping mass surveillance

2022-12-14 Thread Jeremy Hendricks
Please provide code examples, flow chart, or a white paper. On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 5:06 PM wrote: > On 1/9/84 19:84, Andy Smith wrote: > > Hello, > > Can't comment on something you haven't elaborated upon. > > First step, explain why your idea is better than, say, Tor. > > It is about solving a

Re: testing update of firefox (to firefox_108.0-1) may not work

2022-12-14 Thread Ash Joubert
On 15/12/2022 04:31, songbird wrote: i had to downgrade afterwards, bug has been reported so no more bugs need to be filed. just a warning to others who may be running testing. the specific error message is: XPCOMGlueLoad error for file /usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so: /usr/lib/firef

Re: stopping mass surveillance

2022-12-14 Thread Timothy M Butterworth
The internet functions much like the post office. The Media Access Control Address is the equivalent of the street address and the Internet Protocol Address is the Zip Code. The addresses have to be in clear text for the internet to function properly. Tor uses Encryption and Network Address Transla

Re: stopping mass surveillance

2022-12-14 Thread Jeffrey Walton
On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 9:13 PM Timothy M Butterworth wrote: > ... > The USA does not have a constitutional right to privacy from the government. > The only thing that comes close is the constitutional right requiring a > warrant for search and seizure of documents and property. The Right to Pr

Re: stopping mass surveillance

2022-12-14 Thread paulf
On Wed, 14 Dec 2022 23:11:36 -0500 Jeffrey Walton wrote: > On Wed, Dec 14, 2022 at 9:13 PM Timothy M Butterworth > wrote: > > ... > > The USA does not have a constitutional right to privacy from the > > government. The only thing that comes close is the constitutional > > right requiring a warra

Re: testing update of firefox (to firefox_108.0-1) may not work

2022-12-14 Thread Brad Rogers
On Thu, 15 Dec 2022 10:30:44 +1300 Ash Joubert wrote: Hello Ash, >Also affects sid. For those affected, the bug is: songbird's subject is ambiguous; Could mean "testing repo..." Could mean "I am testing v108" AFAICS the issue only affects sid, since Firefox only exists there never anywhere

Re: Debian failed

2022-12-14 Thread hw
On Sun, 2022-12-11 at 11:55 +0100, hede wrote: > On Sun, 11 Dec 2022 04:51:10 +0100 hw wrote: > > > And it works like 97% perfectly fine ... > > That's an oxymoron. > > > > > > Radeon RX 6000 series was released last year. I doubt it was possible to > > > use one of these with Red Hat Enterp

Re: Debian failed

2022-12-14 Thread hw
On Sat, 2022-12-10 at 23:05 -0600, David Wright wrote: > On Sun 11 Dec 2022 at 04:39:02 (+0100), hw wrote: > > > > How can Debian be so old? > > Maturity takes a little ageing. Then Debian needs to figure out how to become sufficiently mature without becoming outdated. How is this working anywa

Re: Debian failed

2022-12-14 Thread hw
On Sat, 2022-12-10 at 22:44 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote: > On Sat, Dec 10, 2022 at 10:39 PM hw wrote: > > On Sun, 2022-12-04 at 18:42 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote: > > > ... > > > Yeah, a newer kernel is probably worth a try. The 5.8 kernel may work. > > > The 5.15 kernel will work based on my expe

Re: Debian failed

2022-12-14 Thread Jeffrey Walton
On Thu, Dec 15, 2022 at 2:46 AM hw wrote: > On Sat, 2022-12-10 at 22:44 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote: > [...] > > Maybe you can try Debian Sid? > > What's sid? https://www.debian.org/releases/sid/ Jeff