On Tuesday, 10 October 2000 at 0:51:50 -0600, Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Greg Lehey writes:
>> I had a PC with two graphics cards long before that. It was
>> relatively common to have a machine with both CGA and MDA, and there
>> were some debuggers which would handle bo
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Greg Lehey writes:
: I had a PC with two graphics cards long before that. It was
: relatively common to have a machine with both CGA and MDA, and there
: were some debuggers which would handle both (debug a full-screen
: application with the debug output on the othe
On Tuesday, 10 October 2000 at 0:35:07 -0600, Warner Losh wrote:
> In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Greg Lehey writes:
>> Well, you obviously need two keyboards and two mice. I can't think of
>> a case where that would be useful, but with x2x (in the Ports
>> collection) you can allow different pe
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Brad Guillory writes:
: I have a "new" laptop and a few problems related to apm resume.
apm on most modern machines is useless. You need to have acpi support
for things to work well. Good thing ACPI has been committed.
: When I suspend to disk then resume my soun
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Greg Lehey writes:
: Well, you obviously need two keyboards and two mice. I can't think of
: a case where that would be useful, but with x2x (in the Ports
: collection) you can allow different people access to the same server.
In 1990 I shared a Solbourne workstati
Hello all,
I have a "new" laptop and a few problems related to apm resume.
When I suspend to disk then resume my sound hardware and ls120
drive no longer work. I was looking for a knob that would let
me configure which drivers were called to reset their hardware.
PC Cards are reset in this way
On Tue, 10 Oct 2000, Greg Lehey wrote:
:
:Well, you obviously need two keyboards and two mice. I can't think of
:a case where that would be useful, but with x2x (in the Ports
:collection) you can allow different people access to the same server.
I'd think that a monitor, a keyboard, and a mouse
On Sunday, 8 October 2000 at 10:43:34 -0600, Wes Peters wrote:
> Eoin Lawless wrote:
>>
>> I've just got a dual head system with a matrox g400 working. However,
>> what I would really like to have is a dual console system - so that
>> two people could use it simultaneously. Has anyone tried that,
> Can one of you help me with a quick overview of what has happened
> with the Memory File System since 4.4BSD to the FreeBSD that exists
> today?
Hi,
I've never used it myself, but I read an article about it on
the O'Reilly network; hold on a sec while I look it up
http://www.oreillynet.co
This may be a free country, but these mailing lists are available as a
privilege rather than a right and if you guys want to continue using
them, you'll remain on-topic and follow the mailing list charter for
-hackers, something which is publically documented in the FreeBSD
handbook and should be
Erm, Bill? I think those sorts of replies are better vocalized out loud
and simply not sent. Thanks.
> On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 05:41:00PM +, Dan Evensen wrote:
> > I would say that this is untraditional to say the least. It does not belong
> > on the list. There are millions of promising
> Dan,
>
> Although I disagreed with your opinion, you're right, you do have a voice
> and every right to your opinion.
Actually, not in this forum. The FreeBSD mailing lists are hosted on
owned hardware, and constitute a collection of private databases. Use of
these resources is entirely at
Dan,
Although I disagreed with your opinion, you're right, you do have a voice
and every right to your opinion. I was actually on your side when you
received that rude reply from Bill Fumerola. Unfortunately, I don't agree
with your response, especially the last sentence. As was stated in t
On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Dan Evensen wrote:
> I stand by my opinion. I live in Free Country with a free voice. I stand
> by what I said. There are millions of deserving people in this world. If
> this person is so good WHY cant they afford a Laptop Successful people
> could.
This is really out of l
On Monday, October 09, 2000, Dan Evensen wrote:
> I stand by my opinion. I live in Free Country with a free voice. I stand by
> what I said. There are millions of deserving people in this world. If this
> person is so good WHY cant they afford a Laptop Successful people could.
The differenc
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Dan Evensen" writes:
>I stand by my opinion. I live in Free Country with a free voice. I stand by
>what I said. There are millions of deserving people in this world. If this
>person is so good WHY cant they afford a Laptop Successful people could.
Your emails
Did you not notice that this person lives in a former Eastern Block
country? Unless you've been in hiding, you would know that the cost of
electronics of any sort (when they are actually available) are far
beyond the reach of the "average citizen". I doubt very seriously, due
to the general lack o
Dan,
You also apparently live in a country where random capitalization is the
norm. Perhaps you would be less jealous and more successful if you could
write in English.
Also, your whining is more off-topic than the original request was.
Thanks,
Larry
- Original Message -
From: "Dan Ev
I stand by my opinion. I live in Free Country with a free voice. I stand by
what I said. There are millions of deserving people in this world. If this
person is so good WHY cant they afford a Laptop Successful people could.
Dan Evensen
>From: Bill Fumerola <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: Dan Evense
On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 05:41:00PM +, Dan Evensen wrote:
> I would say that this is untraditional to say the least. It does not belong
> on the list. There are millions of promising people in such a need.
>
> Dan Evensen CCNA Wan Switching
You're a moron.
Thanks.
--
Bill Fumerola - Netwo
Brooks Davis writes:
| On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 11:42:32AM -0700, Dave Cornejo wrote:
| > Some comments on your code:
| > - WEP keysare variable length from 5-13 bytes, you should just check for
| > >=5 & <=13 (it seems odd, but I have seen networks that use the odd
| > sizes).
|
| Since all the w
Dave Cornejo writes:
| It doesn't matter to me which version gets used - I just need the
| capability to set the WEP keys.
|
| Some comments on your code:
| - WEP keysare variable length from 5-13 bytes, you should just check for
| >=5 & <=13 (it seems odd, but I have seen networks that use the o
On Mon, 9 Oct 2000, Dan Evensen wrote:
> I would say that this is untraditional to say the least. It does not
> belong on the list. There are millions of promising people in such a
> need.
Need maybe but in this case the return on investment has been pretty high
(if this is who I think it is.)
I
On Mon, Oct 09, 2000 at 11:42:32AM -0700, Dave Cornejo wrote:
> Some comments on your code:
> - WEP keysare variable length from 5-13 bytes, you should just check for
> >=5 & <=13 (it seems odd, but I have seen networks that use the odd
> sizes).
Since all the windows drivers I've looked at only
I just recently ported xmovie 1.5.2 to FreeBSD 4.0. The patch file
can be found at my home page http://www.pelissero.org.
It's rather big (80K) because it can be considered a fix patch for the
Linux version as well.
Among the other bugs, the code relied on a (sort of) misbehavior of
the Linux p
It doesn't matter to me which version gets used - I just need the
capability to set the WEP keys.
Some comments on your code:
- WEP keysare variable length from 5-13 bytes, you should just check for
>=5 & <=13 (it seems odd, but I have seen networks that use the odd
sizes).
- In an_setkeys() you
I would say that this is untraditional to say the least. It does not belong
on the list. There are millions of promising people in such a need.
Dan Evensen CCNA Wan Switching
>From: Poul-Henning Kamp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: We need your old laptop for a committer..
Dave Cornejo writes:
| my apologies if i am not following the correct procedures here...
|
| I have submitted a patch in PR kern/21843 which adds WEP key support
| to the an driver. This is my first attempt at messing with driver
| code so any constructive criticism is appreciated.
|
| I have t
my apologies if i am not following the correct procedures here...
I have submitted a patch in PR kern/21843 which adds WEP key support
to the an driver. This is my first attempt at messing with driver
code so any constructive criticism is appreciated.
I have tested the patch with the hardware a
On Sun, Oct 08, 2000 at 10:43:34AM -0600, Wes Peters wrote:
> Maybe it would be possible to kludge something together using PS/2 mouse
> and keyboard for one and USB mouse and keyboard for the other. I don't
> think there is anything available "out of the box" for this, though.
>
Yes, my plan w
Hi guys,
We have a committer, a productive and promising kernel talent, who
is being hampered in his FreeBSD work by lack of hardware.
It would help him a lot if we could find him a laptop with enough
disk to hold a CVS tree and a few extra bits and pieces so he can
transport data to and from w
Has any more come of this?
I've just started playing with LADSPA (The Linux Audio
Developer's Simple Plugin API http://www.ladspa.org) on my
FreeBSD 4-STABLE box, and run into a similar problem.
This is an entirely C API, and the demonstration applications
are all straight C, but some of the plu
Yip , a nice description here ...
http://www.freebsd.org/tutorials/
the last 3 links on the page
On 09-Oct-00 Christopher F. Moran wrote:
> This is probably a dumb question, but here goes.
>
> I want to write a driver for some custom hardware we use here. I've done
> this Windows NT and (earlie
This is probably a dumb question, but here goes.
I want to write a driver for some custom hardware we use here. I've done
this Windows NT and (earlier) MS-DOS, so the concept doesn't scare me.
What I need is a starting point. Besides trawling through the code, are
there any standard references
Howdy, all!
I am sending this to [EMAIL PROTECTED], but I am sending a CC
to Christos Zoulas, because what I have noticed has an undesired
effect on tcsh, though apparently this is mostly related to libc
sources from FreeBSD 3.5.1 release.
I have
Hello all,
does anyone know if the etherchannel
(aka bonding) is a feature that's expected
to be seen in future releases of freebsd?
Andreas
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