Katipo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Steve Lamb wrote:
>>Am I the only one who's reading this exchange and wondering what people
>> are thinking?
>>
> No.
> As the OP has contacted the list, it's fairly safe to assume that he
> has net access?
What tells you that the OP contacted the list fro
Justin Guerin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> According to a comment from "sensovision from WKey" on page
> http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6983,
> "Unfortunately right now official libata library in kernel doesn't support
> ATA-passthrough calls and the only way to check SMART status right n
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> I have Reiser on LVM2 on RAID.
> At least, that's what I tried to set up.
> How can I check that that's what I'm really getting?
>
> Presumably running mount will tell me whether it's really reiser.
> But what can I do to enquire what the logical volumes are made of?
>
Mitchell Laks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is amd64 present at ftp.us.debian.org. How can I tell?
Did you try it out?
Look at http://buildd.debian.org/stats/amd64.txt. Currently it says 94%
of packages are up-to-date. This of course does not and will never
contain Sarge for amd64.
>
> Do I
"David R. Litwin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> To put it into perspective, what we think of the Metric system is what the
>> rest of the world thinks of English measure. A gigabyte is 1024 MB, not
>> 1000, dammit!
>
> Really? There is a metric byte-system? I've never heard of such a thing. I
>
David Broome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Package: xorg
> Version: 7:1:0:10
>
> Hello.
> I don't see this reported and just wanted to make sure since I have never
> file a bug report before.
>
> When upgrade to xorg 1:7.0 in unstable, it has unmet dependencies. Here is
> the
> output:
>
> Th
Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wed, 2006-04-12 at 12:32 -0400, Matthias Julius wrote:
>>
>> Yes, there is. As example here is part of the output of mdadm:
>>
>> Array Size : 468872448 (447.15 GiB 480.13 GB)
>> Device
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> There isn't anything non-ISO about "ä", including it in a message doesn't
> make
> it "not text only".
Right.
> The "ae" is a poorman form of "æ".
In German it is perfectly legitimate to use "ae" instead of "ä" if you
can not use that for what ever r
Mike McCarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Nope. Both the "K" and the "k" have been used in electronics
> to mean "times 1000" since I got involved in about 1965 or so.
That might be. But, SI standard only knows about "k".
Matthias
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subjec
Mike McCarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Wulfy wrote:
>> Digby Tarvin wrote:
>>> When I read your original message I see a Cyrillic capital 'D' between
>>> the 'J' and the 'germeister'. If I use vi or cat to view the message, I
>>> see 'J=E4germeister' or 'J0xe4germeister', which is less than cl
"Monique Y. Mudama" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 2006-04-19, Wayne Topa penned:
>>>
>>
>> folder-hook debian-user my_hdr Reply-To:
>> 'debian-user@lists.debian.org'
>
> It must be considered harmful by somebody:
>
> http://gmane.org/faq.php
>
> [quote]
> But I did use a valid email address.
>
Mike McCarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Only if they want "most" people to read what they write.
> Should people who use Hindi characters change?
> How about Arabic? Hebrew? How about Linear B?
If someone posts Arabic text then he might use Arabic characters with
a proper encoding. Do you wan
Raleigh Guevarra <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Any1 here knows how to setup cups with samba and debian and print to a
> printer from a windows client pc?
Read the samba documemtation. There is a lengthy chapter about this
subject.
See /usr/share/doc/samba-doc/htmldocs/Samba-HOWTO-Collection/CUP
Digby Tarvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Let me re-iterate in case that wasn't clear enough. There are many text
> formats, of which ISO *is* one. But ASCII is the only subset common to
> almost all, and consequently IMHO is the most appropriate for a public
> formum where you can't make assump
Digby Tarvin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Let me re-iterate in case that wasn't clear enough. There are many text
> formats, of which ISO *is* one. But ASCII is the only subset common to
> almost all, and consequently IMHO is the most appropriate for a public
> formum where you can't make assump
Andrei Popescu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> What do you need a graphical display for? If everything is properly set
> up, special characters will display just fine in text mode. For a few
> weeks I read mail using mutt, including -l10n-romanian, where special
> characters are used on regular basi
Richard Lyons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> All very strange. I grew up with lowercase for small, uppercase for large:
>
>m milli- 10^-3
>c centi- 10^-2
>d deci-10^-1
>
>D deca-10
>H hecta- 10^2
>K kilo-10^3
>
>M mega-10^6
>G giga-10^9
>
>
Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I do this to the point where I'll go to reply to my mom or something and hit
> L
> in kMail...type my reply, hit send, then get a modal telling me I didn't
> specify an email address. kMail in sid is *really* good about detecting
> mailing lists, eve
Wulfy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hmm... I know a little about midi, but not much. Since I'm able to
> play it with some application, I should think it would be possible
> with any...
AFAIK Timidity is not really a MIDI application as it does not use the
MIDI sequencer. Instead it converts t
Andrew Sackville-West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Isn't that the purpose of symlinks to kernel images? so you don't have
> to rerun for new kernels with same name?
This is so that the lilo.conf doesn't need to be changed. The lilo
bootloader doesn't know anything about filesystems. And it doe
"H.S." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If I click on a video link, mozilla mplayer plugin shows that it is
> downloading the file but doesn't really play anything. After the
> download is complete, it tells as much and then it either doesn't do
> anything or just prints "Stopped" message in the mpla
Torquil Macdonald Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have some problems with the 'date' command:
>
> 'hwclock --show' outputs 08:00
> 'date' (as user root) outputs 08:00
> 'date' (as user tmac) outputs 06:00
>
> and the KDE clock (running as user tmac) outputs 08:00
>
> What is responsible f
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> The following message sent by this account has violated system policy:
>
> Connection From: 84.173.93.103
> From: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 09:00:10 -0500
> Subject: Re: Delivery Protection
When do postmasters learn t
Torquil Macdonald Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thursday 27 April 2006 13:49, Matthias Julius wrote:
>>
>> Do you set the TZ environment variable anywhere in your ~/.bashrc,
>> ~/.bash_profile or so?
>
> No, I have the following environment variables s
John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius writes:
>> When do postmasters learn that the From address of a SPAM/virus mail is
>> probably forged?
>
> I think that some antivirus software is deliberately configured to do this
> by default. The salesdro
Torquil Macdonald Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> It reports UTC when run as 'tmac', and CEST when run as 'root':
>
> As root:
> tmac:/home/tmac# date
> Thu Apr 27 19:50:37 CEST 2006
>
> As tmac:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~$ date
> Thu Apr 27 17:50:49 UTC 2006
Since when is it doing so? You cou
Matt Price <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm having a wierd phebomenon. Every time I reboot, the clock gets
> set back an additional hour, as though my ocmputer were adjusting for
> daylight savings time again. I've noticed this ever the latest time
> change, though I had thought it was an error
Torquil Macdonald Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> TZ=CEST didn't have any effect, and /etc/timezone contains a
> line "Europe/Oslo" which is correct.
Did you export it?
>
> I have found the problem now by comparing the strace output from the date
> command running as root and as tmac. T
"Matt Price" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I believe my system clock is set to UTC, and I don't have any other OS
> operating on the system.
If your system clock is set to UTC it should never be changed for
daylight savings time. If it is changed on every boot than you system
probably doesn't kn
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> OK. (This assumes you own a home). Figure out how much you paid in
> property taxes last year. Multiply that by 50. Now, do you think you
> could fund your child(ren)'s education for 12 years on that? I could
> probably afford to educate abou
Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> For $200, you can get the Robinson Curriculum, a complete K-12 home
> study kit, except math books. Math books are $50 each, new, approx
> one per year depending on student speed and aptitude of course.
>
> So even at the slowest, full 13 years worth of
Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Non-sequiter. Mere "gun use" is in no way anti-social. I can use a
> fire-extinguisher to crush someone's skull in, the largest mass
> murder in American history was perpetrated with airplanes. Neither of
> these acts reflects upon fire-extinguishers o
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Doesn't that make you feel cheap, though? I mean, I can understand if
> you are unemployed or if you have fallen on hard times financially.
> However, I don't particularly like the fact that I and my neighbors
> (very few of whom have school age
Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> So there are people without children who pay for public education.
>> This means the average parent who has kids in a public school is
>> paying less than what he would have to if he had to pay it all
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>
>>>For $200, you can get the Robinson Curriculum, a complete K-12 home
>>>study kit, except math books. Math
Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Cybe R. Wizard wrote:
>> US $9,900,000,000 (billion) profits /by one oil company/ in one
>> quarter when retail prices were skyrocketing. Does that seem like the
>> oil cartel has the American interests at heart?
>
> Didn't I address just this in a mes
"Cybe R. Wizard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Mon, 01 May 2006 15:24:21 -0700
> Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> > The same is true for drugs and other controlled substances. Would
>> > you vote mak
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> How about food and clothing? Should the community "provide" those? How
> about transportation?
Yes, local phone service, too. Everything needed to get people off
the streets and give them a chance to take care of themselfes.
> If people are c
"Matthew R. Dempsky" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I can understand that viewpoint, but I still dislike the premise that
> they can be provided only be the government itself. If the government
> must involve itself, I'd like to see it encouraging competition among
> providers of these services
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> On Tue, May 02, 2006 at 07:22:30AM -0400, Matthias Julius wrote:
>> While co-ops might help somewhat I don't think they are the solution.
>> What does it help when a bunch of poor guys form a co-op? They still
>> would not have funds to se
Rich Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On May 2, 2006, at 7:22 AM, Matthias Julius wrote:
>
>> "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>> [...snip...]
>>> If people are concerned about their ability to pay for education
>
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>
>>>Cybe R. Wizard wrote:
>>>
>>>>US $9,900,000,000 (billion) profits /by one oil company/ in one
&
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The problem is that public schools are very wasteful.
Is there no way of improving this? There were examples of public
schools brought up in this thread that actually do work.
> With private schools all competing for the market, I can virtually
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>
>>>Matthias Julius wrote:
>>>
>>>>Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>>
>> How do you recognize well-intentioned and law-abiding citizens? What
>> makes this difficult is that people change. They buy a gun as a
>> well-intentioned and law-
Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>
>> Maybe if noone had a gun to threaten you with you wouldn't need one to
>> defend yourself?
>
> So then what about carving knives, chainsaws, baseball bats,
> automobiles...
I di
"Fisher, Jason" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Has anyone commented on the notion that gun control only keeps guns out
> of law-abiding citizens? This idea that you can take guns away from
> everyone hasn't been proven to work anywhere.
Nobody said you could take guns away from everyone. But yo
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I would *certainly* want to put private profit interest above a social
> system. Know why? There is no stronger motivator in business than
> profit. Please look at the quality and level of service of monopoly
> phone carrier ISPs (bellsouth, sb
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Please see the previous email about the guy whose dad was a civil
> engineer in the USAF (sorry I forget who it was). *That* is how
> government works.
I have heard similar stories, not only from within the US. But, is
this the way a government
Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Monday 01 May 2006 21:02, Matthias Julius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> was heard to say:
>> The same is true for drugs and other controlled substances. Would
>> you vote making them freely available?
>
> At every opp
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>
> I don't enable them. They enable themselves.
Right. If everyone takes caro of himself everyone is taken care of.
> Please repeay after me, "It is not the government's respo
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>
>>>The problem is that public schools are very wasteful.
>>
>>
>> Is there no way
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>> "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>>
>>>Then that's what you would do with private education.
>>
>>
>> I thought you wer
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>>>
>>>- they are selling more than before
>>>- it is costing *more* to get the oil out of the ground
>>
>>
>> I doubt this cost has gone up 50% in the l
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Please explain to me why schooling must be treated differently from food
> clothing and medical care. Really, explain it. If a parent neglects
> his or her child, the child suffers. This is no different. Your
> argument is like saying that bec
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>>
>> Excuse me, but there is no provision to provide basic needs like food
>> and medical care for poor people in the US?
>>
>
> There is. However, the majority of i
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Matthias Julius wrote:
>>
>> Is there no other way to create a motive other than money?
>>
> There are other ways. Profit, however, is provably the most effective.
Below you say charities and church wou
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Wulfy wrote:
>>
>> Hmm... and who pays for this "foster-schooling"? The state?
>>
> Just like they do now with food and clothes. I had a friend who was a
> foster parent for several years. He and his wife have taken in many
> kids over the y
Joris Huizer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Paul Johnson wrote:
>> On Friday 28 April 2006 11:19, Joris Huizer wrote:
>>
>>>How does one setup debian to automatically account for "daylight saving
>>>time"?
>> Debian does this automatically by default. Make sure you answer the
>> questions regardin
Curt Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thursday 04 May 2006 13:54, Matthias Julius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> was heard to say:
>> Isn't better to support a child to live with his/her parents in a
>> stable home environment instead of foster care?
>
&
Magnus Therning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been getting bounce messages like this for a little while now.
> Where's Fred?
I guess the mail server at fredbrooks.co.uk is broken. It should send
bounces to lists.debian.org instead of the sender of the original
mail.
Matthias
--
To UNSUB
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> As far as civic buildings and courts, it's obvious that you are either
> just being argumentative or simply do not understand the role of
> government. Civic buildings and courts (and roads and traffic signage,
> for that matter) directly support
"Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Paul Johnson wrote:
>>
>> That's like claiming you're paying twice to cross a toll bridge, never mind
>> there are usually alternate (longer) routes and the toll goes away once the
>> bridge is paid for...
>>
>
> Never been to Florida, eh? It
"David A. Parker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Have most packages been ported to the amd64 architecture, or is there
> a limited selection?
Check out http://buildd.debian.org/stats/
Yes, most packages have been ported.
> I found the amd64 "testing" version here:
>
> http://amd64.debian.net/deb
Marc Shapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is the mail client responsible for setting the time on outgoing mail?
> I am running Sarge, with exim 3.36-16 and Thunderbird 1.0.2. I used
> to live on the east coast (of the US) and am now living on the west
> coast (3 TZs later).
>
> Output of tzconfi
Steve Block <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The options are most definitely NOT supposed to come before the input
> file. This changed in version 6.x to make the ImageMagick syntax more
> consistent.
Consistent with what? Not many tools are expecting non-option
arguments before options (I can't th
Hi,
I am trying to build AnyMeal (http://anymeal.sourceforge.net). When
running make I get following error:
,
| In file included from /usr/include/xalanc/XPath/XPathProcessorImpl.hpp:39,
| from xmlDocument.cpp:27:
| ../xalanc/PlatformSupport/XalanMessageLoader.hpp:29:29: err
Steve Block <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Internally consistent. If you look at the 6.x documentation they treat
> the whole thing as a stream operation, i.e. load an image, do this, do
> that, maybe load a second image and so something with that, composite
> the two images, load a third, resize i
Mladen Adamovic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You probably have AnyMeal related problem so the better idea is to use
> anymeal mailing list or forums.
> Most probably you are using different version of Xalan-C then the
> AnyMeal's authors.
I was guessing something like that. The thing that confu
Bernard Fay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I tried to create the DB either with the script of manually. When trying
> the manual method it keeps telling the following:
>
> # mysql -u root -p
> Enter password:
> "ERROR 1045 (28000): Access denied for user 'root'@'localhost' (using
> password: YES)"
Bernard Fay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> But is this root user the MySQL db admin name defined at the
> installation of phpGroupWare? If yes then something went wrong at the
> installation because I gave a password to this user.
Try to run 'dpkg-reconifigure phpgroupware'. That should ask you
"Pabla,Balbir [Ontario]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I tried :
> fdisk -s 102000 /dev/sdb... it says cannot open 102000 ...
> What is wrong with my syntax?
You don't have a partition called 102000.
>From man fdisk
,
| -s partition
| The size of the partition (in bloc
Andrew Cady <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> RAID devices typically are named /dev/md0 for the first, and so on; or
> /dev/md/0 for the devfs naming scheme. (md stands for multi-disk; the
> software RAID driver in linux is called "md"). In any case the first
> raid device (md0) has major number 9 an
Bernard Fay <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I tried to reconfigure phpgroupware and YET to give a password to the
> root MySQL user but I got the same result so I created the DB by hand
> and without password. I guess there is a problem with this part of the
> configuration.
Did you assign a passwo
"Todd A. Jacobs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The kernel doesn't seem to include modules for ide-scsi anymore, and I
> have to manually load sg.o with "sudo modprobe sg" before cdrecord will
> even find the device. What's weird, though, is that burning DVDs on the
> same device still works.
>
> W
"Todd A. Jacobs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sat, Mar 11, 2006 at 02:20:55PM -0500, Matthias Julius wrote:
>
>> Forget about ide-scsi! cdrecord doesn't need it anymore. It can use
>> ATA drives directly.
>
> But it's not an ATA drive,
"Todd A. Jacobs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Because ide-scsi is missing, and now cdrecord doesn't work. If you know
> something I don't about why cdrecord stopped working due to the kernel
> change, please share. Better yet, if you know how to fix the problem,
> please share.
I have to admit
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