On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 11:23:43AM -0500, Derrick 'dman' Hudson wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 13, 2002 at 03:17:42PM +0100, martin f krafft wrote:
> | also sprach Nori Heikkinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.12.13.1443 +0100]:
> | > what do you mean by "functional"? even though i have quite limited
> | > exper
On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 02:14:21PM -0500, Seneca wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 23, 2003 at 12:27:55PM -0500, Emma Jane Hogbin wrote:
> > Is there a way to add java support to Phoenix by using debian packages? I
> > did a quick google and came up with these:
>
> Phoenix works for me with the Blackdown Java
Intention is to define font-bold _only_ for
one column in a table.
I had tried this using w3m without
any success:
..here are my table contents
Would someone kindly provide some advice?
Robert
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". T
On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 01:52:46PM -0500, Emma Jane Hogbin wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 06:30:03PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > Intention is to define font-bold _only_ for
> > one column in a table.
>
> This may be a question that webdesign-L could help you with. How
On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 07:16:22PM +, Pigeon wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 06:11:28PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > and couldn't find anything on the Phoenix web page
> > mentioning system requirements. Would someone kindly
> > jump in and provide some advice?
>
reading the signal(7) man page I noticed
the header "Linux Programmer's Manual" -
yet, how to I find the contents or index
of this manual 'section'?
Debian provides some information in several
readme's and manuals in
/usr/share/doc/man
/usr/share/doc/man-db
but unfortunatly I'm not able to extra
Thanks for the detailed explaination using
a additional library system - I really appreciate
your help.
> > Just curiously grepped for LD_LIBRARY_PATH in
> > some dirs and noticed that perl seems to use
> > this environment variable too. Is there some
> > source of standard env. variables? - I h
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 06:45:39PM -0500, Emma Jane Hogbin wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 26, 2003 at 09:23:56PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > Thank you very much for your assistance Emma.
> > I hoped not to use style sheets because the w3m
> > version I am using does not seem to s
On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 07:32:51PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 07:01:15PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > reading the signal(7) man page I noticed
> > the header "Linux Programmer's Manual" -
> > yet, how to I find the contents
I'm not very experienced with unix/linux and would
appreciate some information on the mail topic.
I have this one box system, using my general account
'rland' and sometimes root for system configuration.
What I would like to know is if/how rland recieves mail
actually ment for root, because I rar
Do people on this list use these ancient udma2 hdd's?
I did a short test using "hdparm -t /dev/hda" and although
I have everything turned on that sounds like 'fast' the
test only showed ~9 MB/s !
I once did a test on a win system using hdtach and this
test made a awful lot of noise, took longer a
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 11:47:41AM -0500, Stephen Gran wrote:
> Your understanding is correct. All system mail is sent through port 25,
> even stuff generated by the low level programs. In fact, it's more
> likely to be the high level stuff (like mozilla mail) that can operate
> independently of
How can I persuade lynx to 'forget' it's capabilities underlining
fonts? Everything thats or even is rendered underlined
and makes reading regular expressions in html docs very hard if
they have attributes.
Actually I would like to change the black background to default
just like mutt enables
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 06:27:04PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 07:10:19PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > By the way, does Mutt 1.4 enable to jump up to previous messages
> > (whilest in the pager). The version 1.0.1i only allows me to 'space'
>
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 10:47:44AM -0800, nate wrote:
> Robert Land said:
> > Do people on this list use these ancient udma2 hdd's?
> >
> > I did a short test using "hdparm -t /dev/hda" and although
> > I have everything turned on that sounds li
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 02:02:10PM -0500, Derrick 'dman' Hudson wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 01:56:08PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> | What I'm realy unsure about is if _all_ mail, even the one
> | sent by the lowlevel 'mail' program goes through port 25.
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 08:07:13PM +, Pigeon wrote:
> Without knowing the details of your setup, I don't know if you've
> configured it so that nothing ever ends up in /var/spool/mail/rland. I
> think the safest thing to do is to set MAILPATH to include both
> /var/spool/mail and whatever dire
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 04:24:04PM -0800, Charlie Reiman wrote:
> If you can't find a nice way to do it in lynx, you should be able to snag
> the terminfo entry and customize it to your liking, then set this up as a
> new terminal. Given how easy it is to hack up terminal info this should make
> a
On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 08:38:05PM +, Pigeon wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 10, 2002 at 06:49:04PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > How can I persuade lynx to 'forget' it's capabilities underlining
> > fonts? Everything thats or even is rendered underlined
> > and
On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 05:12:16PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> Batched SMTP is a slightly more specialized technique, used when you're
> getting a group of messages from some source other than normal SMTP and
> injecting them into the mail system all at once. The basic idea is that
> you save (i.
On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 11:18:00AM -0800, Charlie Reiman wrote:
> Not xresources, terminfo. Terminfo is lower level. Programs use terminfo to
> know what a terminal is capable of and what character sequences it needs to
> send to get the terminal to do things. For example, if my TERM is xterm, a
>
On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 04:04:32PM -0500, Derrick 'dman' Hudson wrote:
> Note that the data stream looks the same, except there is no response
> from the server. The "batched" comes from the intent that the data
> stream will be saved and then later fed into an MTA. An example
> usage, as Colin
On Thu, Dec 12, 2002 at 03:55:06PM +, Pigeon wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 11, 2002 at 06:42:46PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > Good idea, found the setting in login.defs. I did a:
> >
> > MAIL_DIR/var/spool/mail
> > #MAIL_FILE .mail
> > MAILFILE
On Thu, Dec 12, 2002 at 03:47:29PM +, Pigeon wrote:
> That's a Pigeonism, based on the thought of "bollocks to all the fancy
> stuff". What it does is create a file /tmp/cleandoc.html, based on
> dodgydoc.html but with all the , , and removed.
>
> sed - stream editor
> -e - next argument is
This is a problem relating to lynx 2.8.3 out of the
stable potato branch:
Having html code describing a 2 column table like this:
very_long_line_very_long_line_very_long_line
very_long_line_very_long_line_very_long_line
.. is displayed in this manner if xterm does not
provid
The slrnpull program provides the option to
use the env variable NNTPSERVER instead of
passing the newsserver by argument.
As being not that experienced in unix I had
a look at the rcS script to look how this
might be done.
Following the PATH setting in this file I added
these two lines:
NNTPSER
Using recursive grep for large directory structures
caused the entire system to freeze.
The same happens for "find / * -group xx_x".
I'm still using potato and the current available
findutils deb package.
Have any users had this before?
Robert
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 04:28:20AM -0800, Paul Johnson wrote:
> Yes. This is also not a bug. It's trying to fit things to your
> terminal width.
>
> If you want something that doesn't smash tables into term width, go
> grab links-ssl. Keyboard commands are roughly the same, [ and ]
> scroll le
On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 03:07:36PM +0100, Michael Naumann wrote:
> 29.12.2002 10:51:04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert Land) wrote:
>
> >Using recursive grep for large directory structures
> >caused the entire system to freeze.
>
> I once had this, when I tried to access scsi
On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 10:16:54PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 10:27:40PM +0100, Frank Gevaerts wrote:
> > On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 07:31:22PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> > > On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 07:47:27PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > >
On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 11:10:36PM +0100, Michael Naumann wrote:
> 29.12.2002 20:06:56, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert Land) wrote:
> >Yet this grep thing happened today - I know 64MB RAM is
> >not quite what you would use nowadays - but I only have
> >currently a few xterms runni
On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 01:18:29PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 01:22:32PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > Colin - what do you mean by backporting, downgrading the
> > compiler or something like that?
>
> No; backporting doesn't mean downgrading,
On Sun, Dec 29, 2002 at 11:16:28AM -0500, David Z Maze wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Robert Land) writes:
>
> > The slrnpull program provides the option to
> > use the env variable NNTPSERVER instead of
> > passing the newsserver by argument.
> >
> > As bein
I'm new to slrn and did a apt-get install a few weeks
ago. I'm not that sure anymore but I thought apt-get
had prompted for a valid news server while being
in installation mode.
Addionaly I also thought slrn had pulled all newsgroups
from the prompted newsserver (at least I have this
warning about
On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 06:00:43PM +, Alan Chandler wrote:
> I just received an e-mail that looked as though it at come from this list,
> (from "nate" ) but in closer inspection it had done nothing of the sort
> having been forwarded through a mail server at free.fr from a dial up account
> at
On Mon, Jan 06, 2003 at 03:40:55PM +0100, J.H.M. Dassen (Ray) wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 06, 2003 at 14:49:09 +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > I'm new to slrn and did a apt-get install a few weeks ago. I'm not that
> > sure anymore but I thought apt-get had prompted for a valid ne
As having great difficulties in setting up a offline
newsreader system for various users on a debian box
I would grately appreciate some guidance.
My intention is to have a systemwide spool directory
where each user on this box may access his beloved
newsgroup he has subscribed to.
Some people re
I was used to in other distros). I don't
> like the way Debian sets up leafnode at first. It assumes everyone has a dialup
> ISP connection.
>
> OP, Robert Land:
> If you would like any help getting it set up (leafnode, slrn). Email me offlist
> and I'll help in a
Would someone kindly explain when to use the
"ls -d" command? The --help notes this would
list the directory entries - which puzzles me
a bit because I had never thought of there
may be more than one!
Seems I have some lack in basic knowledge on
this too.
Then, when wanting ls only to plot the nam
Does the latest mutt release enable the emacs
key bindings Meta+b and Meta+f to jump wordwise
forth and back?
If so, would someone kindly paste the function
name and the key for "meta" so I may have a try
in Muttrc. The docs that came with mutt-0.9.deb
do not seem to contain any help on this speci
ifier: alt
>
> Cheers,
>
> Euan
> * Robert Land ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > Does the latest mutt release enable the emacs
> > key bindings Meta+b and Meta+f to jump wordwise
> > forth and back?
> >
> > If so, would someone kindly paste the function
&g
On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 03:35:38PM +, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 08, 2003 at 03:49:00PM +0100, Robert Land wrote:
> > Would someone kindly explain when to use the
> > "ls -d" command? The --help notes this would
> > list the directory entries - which puz
This is a example one can find on one of the links
discribed in the deb HOWTO package:
=Section Multipliers(text just pasted):
"
An example from the phone list:
1248 Kate 634
1548 Kerry 534
To match a line that starts with a 1,
has some digits, at least one space
and a name
43 matches
Mail list logo