On 7/7/23 12:28, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Microsoft didn't invent anything.
Yes they did - the highest level of system security - the Blue Screen Of
Death - if a computer is made completely inaccessible, then it cannot be
breached. Hence, the Blue Screen of Death is the highest level of syste
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 09:40:33AM +0300, Hassen Ibrahim wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I just purchased a Dell PowerEdge R250 server and was wondering if debian
> 10 is compatible with this server. The server has an Intel Xeon E-2334
> processor, 32GB RAM and 6TB storage. I'll be looking forward to hear
On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
Microsoft didn't invent anything.
This is highly off topic, but Microsoft 'invented' a lot of stuff much
in the say way that many GNU developers 'invented' stuff.
This is a process of continual adaptation of existing software and
methodology. In the Mic
On 7/7/23 16:51, jeremy ardley wrote:
On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
Microsoft didn't invent anything.
I did not post that statement as the original poster of that statement.
In responding to messages, please properly quote the message, or excerpt
of the message, to which the respons
On 7/7/23 10:14, Charles Curley wrote:
What, you couldn't figure that hlyg is not a master of the English
language from his|her|its sentence structure and vocabulary?
Furthermore, this is a world-wide list. We get all levels of English
mastery here, and courtesy calls for not assuming mastery
On 7/7/23 16:59, Bret Busby wrote:
On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
Microsoft didn't invent anything.
I did not post that statement as the original poster of that statement.
Your comment about BSOD strongly suggests you agree with the sentiment.
I reiterate. Microsoft for good or
Sorry, forgot to mention that: It did move with the USB-C-Cable. It's
a standard Amazon Basic 0,9m USB-C-to-DP-Cable, bought quite recently.
Am Do., 6. Juli 2023 um 18:18 Uhr schrieb :
>
> Stefan Schumacher wrote:
> > I have exchanged the connections - one NUC from HDMI to USB-C and the
> > othe
jeremy ardley wrote:
> On 7/7/23 16:59, Bret Busby wrote:
> >> On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
> >>> Microsoft didn't invent anything.
> >
> > I did not post that statement as the original poster of that
> > statement.
>
> Your comment about BSOD strongly suggests you agree with the
>
Hi,
does someone know, why and when zenmap was put off the repository?
I did not find a hint in the changelog of nmap, nor an advice
at https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/nmap[1] .
Zenmap disapperead sme years ago, but I totally missed it (as I am using nmap
in
commandline). However, I would lik
Am Freitag, 7. Juli 2023, 13:30:27 CEST schrieben Sie:
Answer myself:
looked int wrong changelog, the Debian-changelog told the drop of zenmap due
to old python version.
Sorry for the noise.
Best
Hans
> Hi,
>
> does someone know, why and when zenmap was put off the repository?
>
> I did no
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 01:30:27PM +0200, Hans wrote:
> does someone know, why and when zenmap was put off the repository?
It would help if you said whether this was a package name, or a filename
inside of another package.
> I did not find a hint in the changelog of nmap, nor an advice
> at htt
> Microsoft for good or bad has made major advances in
> software and is responsible for a fair fraction of what we experience in
> our Linux world.
true
if microsoft had ever produced a decent product
linux may not have ever become as popular as it is
On 06/07/2023 18:57, gene heskett wrote:
gene@coyote:~$ findmnt --target /home/gene/Pictures/Saw4Bruce (didn't work)
TARGET SOURCE FSTYPE OPTIONS
/home /dev/md0p1 ext4 rw,relatime,errors=remount-ro,stripe=256
gene@coyote:~$ findmnt --target /home/gene/Pictures/Newjuly5dlds (worked)
TARGET
On 7/7/23 19:28, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
That may be or not, but is irrelevant. Accurate attribution of quotes
is important, IMHO, and not difficult to do. So doubling down on your
mistake instead of a simple mea culpa means you move further down in my
hierarchy of respect. :(
I s
* On 2023 07 Jul 06:54 -0500, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
> > Microsoft for good or bad has made major advances in
> > software and is responsible for a fair fraction of what we experience in
> > our Linux world.
>
> true
> if microsoft had ever produced a decent product
> linux may not have ev
On Fri, Jul 7, 2023 at 4:00 AM Bret Busby wrote:
> On 7/7/23 16:51, jeremy ardley wrote:
> >
> > On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
> >> Microsoft didn't invent anything.
> >
> >
>
> I did not post that statement as the original poster of that statement.
>
> In responding to messages, please prop
On 7/7/23 20:47, Nate Bargmann wrote:
What MS has done has never been relevant to the creation of GNU, X, or
the Linux kernel.
Agreed, those technologies were mostly independent of anything Microsoft
has done.
GNU is a clone of Unix so a derivative. MS is also a derivative but not
much l
On 7/7/23 21:05, jeremy ardley wrote:
On 7/7/23 20:47, Nate Bargmann wrote:
What MS has done has never been relevant to the creation of GNU, X, or
the Linux kernel.
Agreed, those technologies were mostly independent of anything
Microsoft has done.
GNU is a clone of Unix so a derivative.
While I found most of this discussion not very appealing...
Am 07.07.2023 um 15:05 schrieb jeremy ardley:
...
One option I've not seen yet is a MS kernel running with a GNU
framework. It's entirely feasible, but unlikely to date.
How about this:
07/07/2023 15:19.32 /home/mobaxterm
* On 2023 07 Jul 08:13 -0500, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
> My error:
>
> I should have said
>
> "Linux is a clone of Unix so a derivative. MS is also a derivative but not
> much like Unix. "
If you mean MS Windows NT and later, it apparently owes much to VMS and
OS/2. Certainly, some POSIX support
jeremy ardley writes:
> On 7/7/23 21:05, jeremy ardley wrote:
>>
>> On 7/7/23 20:47, Nate Bargmann wrote:
>>> What MS has done has never been relevant to the creation of GNU, X, or
>>> the Linux kernel.
>>
>>
>> Agreed, those technologies were mostly independent of anything
>> Microsoft has done.
Twice, when trying to reboot my PC, I have had error messages which
indicate the root file system is corrupted and needs the manual use of fsck
to fix the root file system before a reboot can be done.
Any thoughts please as to what might cause the above problem ?
Hi Mick,
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 04:01:23PM +0100, Mick Ab wrote:
> Twice, when trying to reboot my PC, I have had error messages which
> indicate the root file system is corrupted and needs the manual use of fsck
> to fix the root file system before a reboot can be done.
>
> Any thoughts please
On July 7, 2023 6:01:23 PM GMT+03:00, Mick Ab
wrote:
>Twice, when trying to reboot my PC, I have had error messages which
>indicate the root file system is corrupted and needs the manual use of fsck
>to fix the root file system before a reboot can be done.
>
Typically, running fsck requires an
* On 2023 07 Jul 09:12 -0500, BRN wrote:
> I could be accused of nitpicking here, however; I'd suggest that GNU was
> inspired by the original UNIX rather than being a clone. A clone in
> the original biological context refers to an exact genetic copy - "byte
> for byte" if you like.
That is prob
On 16:39, Fri, 7 Jul 2023 Reco
> On July 7, 2023 6:01:23 PM GMT+03:00, Mick Ab <
recoverymail123...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >Twice, when trying to reboot my PC, I have had error messages which
> >indicate the root file system is corrupted and needs the manual use of
fsck
> >to fix the root file system
On 18:10, Fri, 7 Jul 2023 Mick Ab
> On 16:22, Fri, 7 Jul 2023 Andy Smith >
> > Hi Mick,
> >
> > On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 04:01:23PM +0100, Mick Ab wrote:
> > > Twice, when trying to reboot my PC, I have had error messages which
> > > indicate the root file system is corrupted and needs the manual
On Fri Jul 7 09:59:56 2023 fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
>> Microsoft for good or bad has made major advances in software
Yup. Like surveillance, flakiness, and an endless merry-go-round
of forced upgrades into ever-increasing bloatware.
>> and is responsible for a fair fraction of what we e
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 11:08:57AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> * On 2023 07 Jul 09:12 -0500, BRN wrote:
> > I could be accused of nitpicking here, however; I'd suggest that GNU was
> > inspired by the original UNIX rather than being a clone. A clone in
> > the original biological context refers
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 04:59:48PM +0800, Bret Busby wrote:
> On 7/7/23 16:51, jeremy ardley wrote:
> >
> > On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote:
> > > Microsoft didn't invent anything.
> >
> >
>
> I did not post that statement as the original poster of that statement.
Oh, goody. No, that was me.
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 08:43:04AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> * On 2023 07 Jul 08:13 -0500, jeremy ardley wrote:
> >
> > My error:
> >
> > I should have said
> >
> > "Linux is a clone of Unix so a derivative. MS is also a derivative but not
> > much like Unix. "
>
> If you mean MS Windows NT
Hi Mick,
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 06:28:55PM +0100, Mick Ab wrote:
> Sorry, I should have said that fsck was manually run on the root
> file system (as advised by the error message) each time that the
> error occurred. On both occasions, the system was rebooted okay.
If you're actually interested
You need to boot into a rescue disk like grml and then you can fix your file
systems from there.
On Fri, 07 Jul 2023 14:30:50 -0400,
Andy Smith wrote:
>
> Hi Mick,
>
> On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 06:28:55PM +0100, Mick Ab wrote:
> > Sorry, I should have said that fsck was manually run on the root
> >
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 12:34:48AM -0400, hlyg wrote:
> deb12 is slow, it complains floppy error. in bios floppy drive is set to
> 1.44M though i have no floppy drive. this isn't problem for deb10/11. it's
> easy to correct bios setting but i am afraid deb12 is still slow.
>
If you don't have a f
I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
However, synaptic has developed a problem:
Google has not found a solution that works.
I would appreciate suggstions.
Thanks in advance.
--
Stephen P. Molnar, Ph.D.
https://insilicochemistry.net
(614)312-7528 (c)
Skype: smolnar1
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 06:26:28PM +0100, Mick Ab wrote:
> The error messages were of the form :-
>
> "/dev/mapper/vgpcname-root contains a file system with errors, check
> forced.
>Inodes that were a part of a corrupted orphan linked lost found.
>/dev/mapper/vgpcname-root : UNEXPECTED I
On 2023-07-07 19:19, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Thr rest, is, as they say...
.."A thirty-two bit extension and graphical shell to a sixteen bit patch
to an eight bit operating system originally coded for a four bit
microprocessor which was written by a two-bit company that can't stand
one bit
Hi Stephen,
On Fri, Jul 07, 2023 at 03:17:57PM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
>
> However, synaptic has developed a problem:
>
> Google has not found a solution that works.
>
> I would appreciate suggstions.
My main suggestion is that you
On Fri, 7 Jul 2023 15:17:57 -0400
"Stephen P. Molnar" wrote:
> I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
>
> However, synaptic has developed a problem:
>
> Google has not found a solution that works.
>
> I would appreciate suggstions.
>
>
Would you maybe consider telling us wha
Stephen P. Molnar composed on 2023-07-07 15:17 (UTC-0400):
> I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
> However, synaptic has developed a problem:
1920x1080 is working now???
> Google has not found a solution that works.
> I would appreciate suggstions.
It's for a Brother printer,
On 7/7/23, Felix Miata wrote:
> Stephen P. Molnar composed on 2023-07-07 15:17 (UTC-0400):
>
>> I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
>
>> However, synaptic has developed a problem:
>
> 1920x1080 is working now???
>
>> Google has not found a solution that works.
>
>> I would appreci
On 7/7/23 08:25, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 06/07/2023 18:57, gene heskett wrote:
gene@coyote:~$ findmnt --target /home/gene/Pictures/Saw4Bruce (didn't
work)
TARGET SOURCE FSTYPE OPTIONS
/home /dev/md0p1 ext4 rw,relatime,errors=remount-ro,stripe=256
gene@coyote:~$ findmnt --target /home/gene/
jeremy ardley wrote:
> On 7/7/23 19:28, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> >
> > That may be or not, but is irrelevant. Accurate attribution of
> > quotes is important, IMHO, and not difficult to do. So doubling
> > down on your mistake instead of a simple mea culpa means you move
> > further dow
On 7/7/23 13:33, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
On Fri Jul 7 09:59:56 2023 fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
>> Microsoft for good or bad has made major advances in software
Yup. Like surveillance, flakiness, and an endless merry-go-round
of forced upgrades into ever-increasing bloatware.
>> and is res
On 8/7/23 03:30, mick.crane wrote:
On 2023-07-07 19:19, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Thr rest, is, as they say...
.."A thirty-two bit extension and graphical shell to a sixteen bit patch
to an eight bit operating system originally coded for a four bit
microprocessor which was written by a two-bi
On 7/7/23 15:32, Felix Miata wrote:
Stephen P. Molnar composed on 2023-07-07 15:17 (UTC-0400):
I have just installed Bookworm without any problems.
However, synaptic has developed a problem:
1920x1080 is working now???
Google has not found a solution that works.
I would appreciate sug
Bret writes:
> With bits and bytes, one strange thing that I remember, is that, in
> 1985, in Australia, a particular computer was introduced, that had a
> 32 bit processor with 8 bit buses. It was a Motorola 68008 CPU, and, I
> could not understand why a company would produce a 32 bit CPU wit 8
>
Bret Busby wrote:
>
> With bits and bytes, one strange thing that I remember, is that, in 1985, in
> Australia, a particular computer was introduced, that had a 32 bit processor
> with 8 bit buses. It was a Motorola 68008 CPU, and, I could not understand
> why a company would produce a 32 bit CPU
* On 2023 07 Jul 12:59 -0500, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> There is lots of cross-pollination, though. Before the advent of Clang
> there weren't many credible alternatives to the GCC toolchain; I don't
> think any BSD sysadmin worth their salt would renounce using rsync just
> because it's GPL. Conve
On Fri 07 Jul 2023 at 16:08:44 (-0500), John Hasler wrote:
> Bret writes:
> > With bits and bytes, one strange thing that I remember, is that, in
> > 1985, in Australia, a particular computer was introduced, that had a
> > 32 bit processor with 8 bit buses. It was a Motorola 68008 CPU, and, I
> > c
On 7/7/23 17:24, Dan Ritter wrote:
Bret Busby wrote:
With bits and bytes, one strange thing that I remember, is that, in 1985, in
Australia, a particular computer was introduced, that had a 32 bit processor
with 8 bit buses. It was a Motorola 68008 CPU, and, I could not understand
why a company
On Fri, 07 Jul 2023 23:10:01 +0200 John Hasler wrote:
> Bret writes:
>
>> With bits and bytes, one strange thing that I remember, is that, in
>> 1985, in Australia, a particular computer was introduced, that had a
>> 32 bit processor with 8 bit buses. It was a Motorola 68008 CPU, and,
>> I could
> Motorola's 68000 line had an internal 32 bit architecture, which made
> the CPU both performant and expensive.
Hmm... it had a (non-internal) 32bit instruction set architecture
(i.e. programmers could directly manipulate 32bit entities), but
internally it manipulated only 16bit at a time (e.g. a
On 7/8/23 03:00, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
If you don't have a floppy drive - don't set it up in the BIOS,
If you're running off a disk that's connected via USB - it will be slower
than the same disk directly attached to SATA.
Debian 12 is (probably) no slower than Debian 11 - but it is more u
On Fri, 07 Jul 2023 16:08:44 -0500
John Hasler wrote:
Hello John,
>That processor was targeted at embedded systems and it made sense in
>some applications. I don't understand why anyone would put it in a
>desktop.
Cost.
--
Regards _ "Valid sig separator is {dash}{dash}{space}"
Hello,
I'm trying to get firewalld going on Debian 12. I'm getting a python
error and I've seen it on google searches but not found a resolution.
Any suggestions welcome. Here's the complete log.
Thanks.
Dave.
root@hostname:/etc/ssh#cat /etc/debian_version
12.0
root@hostname:~#apt install firewal
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