Hello,
(B
(BI am trying to use NFS server on a testing FreeBSD machine.
(B
(BI have been able to share a folder with a linux machine.
(B
(BBut if I want the client to have write access to this folder; I have not
(Bfound a better way than giving world wide write access on this folder.
(B
(B
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 17:02:37 +0900
"Michel Bouchet" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> spake thus:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to use NFS server on a testing FreeBSD machine.
>
> I have been able to share a folder with a linux machine.
>
> But if I want the client to have write access to this folder; I have not
I tried both of them, I manage to get it work with ndiswrapper on linux
but i cant get it to work on freebsd :(
why are you showing me the information of ndiswrapper for linux?, can
you use the linux version on freebsd? (I dont think you can?)
I have the linksys WPC54G PCMCIA card
Thank you for tr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hello.
>
> My name is Paul and i am from Russia, Ufa city. I am a student.
> I recently have bought operational system FreeBSD 5.3-RELEASE.
> But appeared, that items of adjustment X Window have been removed
> from the program of adjustment SYSINSTALL system and adjustme
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Bart Silverstrim writes:
>
>> Then why new versions?
>
> Because Microsoft has to sell new versions in order to maintain its
> revenue flow. The only other option is licenses that are not
> perpetually valid (i.e., licenses you have to pay for again each month
> or each
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 04:19:25 +0100, Anthony Atkielski
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It ran for eight years without errors.
On a different OS.
> So your saying an anciety copy of NT is more reliable than a current
> copy of FreeBSD?
Don't try and put your words in my mouth. On your ancient hardw
I'm trying to determine the best way to interface a device like a servo
motor controller to a usb bus. Boards such as those produced by FTDI
would be useful but they have no FreeBSD drivers.
http://www.ftdichip.com/FTProducts.htm
If anyone knows of any similar products that do have FreeBSD driver
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> I have told him to go into his Vectra BIOS and limit the sync negotiation
> on both disk drives to the same speed - 10Mbt. He refuses to try doing
> this.
You're incorrect. I have _already_ done it, at your suggestion; it had
no effect, as I expected.
> I've also tol
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>> The problem is you just don't want it to be a hardware problem
>> because you don't accept the possibility that the NT driver wrote
>> around a hardware problem and the FreeBSD driver doesen't.
>
> No, I don't want to run on a wild goose chas
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> There is a third option. Microsoft can simply quite releasing new
> versions of it's established products and go to work creating new
> products that people would want to buy.
That business model doesn't work, which is why no PC software company is
using it.
It costs a
Freminlins writes:
> On a different OS.
Exactly. With _identical_ hardware. So if the hardware ran under the
other OS, but not under this OS, where do you look first for the
problem?
If your car runs perfectly for years with one brand of oil, and then you
change brands and the engine seizes, w
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> You have no proof of that unless you were to run the tests that I
> already posted.
You're wasting my time. Perhaps somebody who actually understands how
FreeBSD works will offer useful assistance sooner or later, although I'm
less and less optimistic.
--
Anthony
__
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Abu Khaled
> Sent: dinsdag 22 maart 2005 5:56
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Where is zlib-1.2.2 zlib.so?
>
>
> On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 20:21:17 GMT, Mark <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
Dan Nelson wrote:
In the last episode (Mar 21), Andrea Venturoli said:
Dan Nelson wrote:
I'm reverting to the mailing list, since this is possibly getting
interesting for other people too.
The change was also committed to the RELENG_5_3 branch after 5.3 was
released, so if you're tracking 5.3-st
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 10:25:14 +0100, Anthony Atkielski
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Exactly. With _identical_ hardware. So if the hardware ran under the
> other OS, but not under this OS, where do you look first for the
> problem?
Both, actually.
> If your car runs perfectly for years with one
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 10:13 +0100, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
[...]
> Only one thing has changed in this machine: I replaced Windows NT with
> FreeBSD. Windows NT had no problem with the SCSI drives; FreeBSD has a
> problem with them. Therefore FreeBSD is defective.
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Sun, 20 Mar 2005 01:52:40 -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> -Original Message-
>>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Anthony
>>> Atkielski Sent: Saturday, March 19, 2005 11:29 PM
>>> To: freebsd-questio
I switched to Postfix, and after a little twiddling everything works
fine. I'll just stick with PF until I need some sendmail-specific feature.
Anyway, thanks for your help!
On Mon, Mar 21, 2005 at 12:43:19PM +0200, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> On 2005-03-20 14:21, Ulf Magnusson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Freminlins writes:
> So stick with NT. Why would you change from something that runs
> perfectly for 8 years?
I was able to retire the legacy applications on the machine and I wanted
to try something new.
> That doesn't mean nothing has changed in 20 years, does it?
It means that the age of the
Peter Risdon writes:
> 1. Does either Windows 2003 or XP SP2, the only versions of Windows that
> are meaningful comparisons with the latest versions of FreeBSD, fully
> and without errors support this SCSI adapter and drive combination?
I don't know. But I'm not trying to run Windows 2003 or XP
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>> I have told him to go into his Vectra BIOS and limit the sync
>> negotiation on both disk drives to the same speed - 10Mbt. He
>> refuses to try doing this.
>
> You're incorrect. I have _already_ done it, at your suggestion; it
> had no eff
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> The dmesg you sent indicated that the 2 disks were negotiating at
> different sync rates. If you did limit them to 10mbt sync negotiation
> as you stated, then why does the dmesg show them at different rates?
It dates from before the change. They both show 10.00 MB/s
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 11:40 +0100, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Peter Risdon writes:
>
> > 1. Does either Windows 2003 or XP SP2, the only versions of Windows that
> > are meaningful comparisons with the latest versions of FreeBSD, fully
> > and without errors support this SCSI adapter and drive com
On 2005-03-22 11:16, Ulf Magnusson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On Mon, Mar 21, 2005 at 12:43:19PM +0200, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
>>On 2005-03-20 14:21, Ulf Magnusson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>> [ Question about Sendmail, SMART_HOST and delivery failures like: ]
>>>
>>> %- The following
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>> There is a third option. Microsoft can simply quite releasing new
>> versions of it's established products and go to work creating new
>> products that people would want to buy.
>
> That business model doesn't work, which is why no PC softwar
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 11:26:13 +0100, Anthony Atkielski
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Freminlins writes:
> No, FreeBSD doesn't work very well with the hardware. As a matter of
> fact, it doesn't work very well with the hardware on my production
> server, either.
So, you seem to have a problem.
>
Peter Risdon writes:
> You _are_ trying to run a version of FreeBSD equivalent to 2003/XP.
No, I'm just running FreeBSD 5.3. It has nothing to do with Windows.
> Because you were making comparisons with an 8 y.o. version of Windows.
> Because it might be the case that you also have to run an 8
Freminlins writes:
> So, you seem to have a problem.
Yes, FreeBSD seems to have a few bugs.
> Review the supported hardware list on the FreeBSD site. If the
> hardware is not on there, stop complaining.
The AIC7880 controller is on the list.
> If it's supposed to be supported, raise it a PR an
Is this a serious no-no?
I see this breaks make installworld... :\ Complains about / being read-only,
and naturally there is no way for me to remount it r/w with the system being
up... :( And a rescue CD kinda defeats the object of rebuilding from source...
:(
So, would I do best to reinstall
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 12:51:36 +0100, Anthony Atkielski
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> And _hope_?
Yes, hope someone looks into it. You get the support you paid for...
> --
> Anthony
Frem.
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freeb
On 2005-03-22 13:54, Andrew Lewis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is this a serious no-no?
>
> I see this breaks make installworld... :\ Complains about / being
> read-only, and naturally there is no way for me to remount it r/w with
> the system being up... :( And a rescue CD kinda defeats the object
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005, Anthony Atkielski at Wanadoo.FR wrote:
[ Not a lot ]
Wanadoo.FR - says it all, really.
No sane sysadmin accepts mail from that spam-house.
-- Dave
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/lis
Sorry, it's again I.
So, I was trying to modify my OpenBSD pf brandmauer to collect me
information about traffic. Now I has following rules:
pass out on $ext_if proto tcp all modulate state flags S/SA
pass out on $ext_if proto { udp, icmp } all keep state
So, where could I put label to mark inbo
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>> The dmesg you sent indicated that the 2 disks were negotiating at
>> different sync rates. If you did limit them to 10mbt sync
>> negotiation as you stated, then why does the dmesg show them at
>> different rates?
>
> It dates from before th
"Eugene M. Minkovskii" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> pass out on $ext_if proto tcp all modulate state flags S/SA
> pass out on $ext_if proto { udp, icmp } all keep state
>
> So, where could I put label to mark inbound traffic? This traffic
> goes into my machine because I use state table.
I'd say
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 14:00:25 +0200
Giorgos Keramidas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You are definitely doing something wrong. The root filesystem should be
> mounted as read-write *before* you run installworld.
Right you were, I was overlooking those extra instructions. ;) Working fine
now. Thx f
On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 20:20:26 -0800 (PST), stheg olloydson
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it was said:
>
> >How install in FreeBSD NIC card nVidia nForce MCP Network
> Adapter
> >based on Realtek 8201BL PHY ?
>
> Hello,
>
> If you are using 5.3, try the nv driver in ports/net/. After
> building it
Hello dear friend!
Some weeks ago I bought FreeBSD 5.3 CD-ROM. But I got the problem
configuring internet connection. My ZyXEL OMNI 56K PCI Plus modem
doesn't work. I have 1100MHz AMD Duron processor with 128Mb RAM. Modem
connected to PCI slot #2. Modem based on Conexant CX11252 HSFi chipset.
I tr
On Tue, Mar 22, 2005 at 01:18:27PM +0100, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
" "Eugene M. Minkovskii" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
"
"
" I'd say something along the lines of
"
" allowed_out = "{ ssh, domain, http, https, etc... }"
"
" pass out on $ext_if proto tcp $allowed_out label allowed-out keep s
Hello dear friend!
Some weeks ago I bought FreeBSD 5.3 CD-ROM. But I got the problem
configuring internet connection. My ZyXEL OMNI 56K PCI Plus modem
doesn't work. I have 1100MHz AMD Duron processor with 128Mb RAM. Modem
connected to PCI slot #2. Modem based on Conexant CX11252 HSFi chipset.
I t
On Mar 21, 2005, at 10:19 PM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Freminlins writes:
Alternatively, show us it is not a firmware problem first.
It ran for eight years without errors.
It's not throwing darts, it's sensible advice. NT is ancient, like
your firmware no doubt.
So your saying an anciety copy of NT
"Eugene M. Minkovskii" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Just a moment, does it mean that your last rule allow any
> incoming connections from world to clients if thay matched by
> client2_inports, ANY, not only connections opened by clients?
That rule would let new connections from anywhere pass on
> No, the only way to find the error is to find someone who knows the
> FreeBSD code and is competent and willing to discuss the problem,
> instead of people who spend their time blowing smoke in order to avoid
> admitting that they haven't a ghost of a clue as to what the problem is.
You're look
On Mar 22, 2005, at 1:14 AM, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Anthony -
I'm curious - with the issues you are having with the drives (SCSI
I think you mentioned) have you considered these ideas?
1. Upgrade the system BIOS
2. Upgrade the firmware in the SCSI controller
3. Upg
I had a hard time trying to track down this file, think it's part of one
of the gnome meta-ports, posting it here for FYI.
ftp://ftp.internat.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/distfiles/gnome-menu-editor-0.1.tar.gz
http://www.nbritton.org/uploads/gnome-menu-editor-0.1.tar.gz
___
"
" In a word, yes. The 'keep state' in these examples, would AFAIK mean
" that the counters would keep track of all traffic for a connection, so
" traffic initiated from the inside would match the pass out rule's
" counters, while connections opened from the outside would count on the
" pass in r
Hi Scott,
On 20 Mar 2005, at 7:43 AM, Theo de Raadt wrote:
% file bin/aaccli
bin/aaccli: ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1, for
FreeBSD 4.4, statically linked, not stripped
Is there a SPARC version? Even for FreeBSD? If I wanted to use these
cards in one of my UltraSPARC machines,
On Mar 22, 2005, at 4:13 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
I have told him to go into his Vectra BIOS and limit the sync
negotiation
on both disk drives to the same speed - 10Mbt. He refuses to try
doing
this.
You're incorrect. I have _already_ done it, at your suggestion; i
[My apologies to the moderator for the traffic, but I just unsubscribed, and
I didn't want to leave this person hanging.]
Ned Harrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sunday 20 March 2005 09:55 pm, you wrote:
> > Ned Harrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > I reciently upgraded my home computer
On Mar 22, 2005, at 4:25 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Freminlins writes:
On a different OS.
Exactly. With _identical_ hardware. So if the hardware ran under the
other OS, but not under this OS, where do you look first for the
problem?
Depends on the problem. Windows 98 needed more reboots than N
Can we please STOP fueling Anthony's drivel?
--Stijn
--
Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.
pgpNgpdLy84Lz.pgp
Description: PGP signature
"Eugene M. Minkovskii" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Unfortunely, this mean, that OpenBSD's pf can not measure
> traffic, because we can not separate incoming and outgoing
> traffic in bidirectional rule. Or we must not use keep state
> feature.
I think I understand what you mean - you do not wan
On Mar 22, 2005, at 5:26 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Freminlins writes:
So stick with NT. Why would you change from something that runs
perfectly for 8 years?
I was able to retire the legacy applications on the machine and I
wanted
to try something new.
And you ran into a snag that you can't work
Bonjour,
J'aime avoir une documentation (fichiers, directions...) sur l'implémentation
de Ethernet sous FreeBSD
Merci
-
Découvrez le nouveau Yahoo! Mail : 250 Mo d'espace de stockage pour vos mails !
Créez votre Yahoo! Mail
___
Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>>Anthony -
>>
>> I'm curious - with the issues you are having with the drives (SCSI
>>I think you mentioned) have you considered these ideas?
>>
>>1. Upgrade the system BIOS
>>2. Upgrade the firmware in the SCSI controller
>>3. Upgrade the
Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>
>>I have told him to go into his Vectra BIOS and limit the sync negotiation
>>on both disk drives to the same speed - 10Mbt. He refuses to try doing
>>this.
>
>
> You're incorrect. I have _already_ done it, at your suggestion; it had
> n
Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
>
>
>>You have no proof of that unless you were to run the tests that I
>>already posted.
>
>
> You're wasting my time. Perhaps somebody who actually understands how
> FreeBSD works will offer useful assistance sooner or later, although I'm
>
On Mar 22, 2005, at 5:40 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
2. Does a version of FreeBSD that is contemporary with NT and your
machine (ancient, unsupported, like NT) drive this hardware OK?
I don't know. Why should I have to run an eight-year-old version of
FreeBSD?
Instead of a fi
On Mar 22, 2005, at 5:46 AM, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote:
That is also when I discovered how Microsoft gets away with telling the
world that they will fix any problem that you call into their
$250-and-incident
tech support people. If you present them with a problem they cannot
figure out, they will jus
Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Peter Risdon writes:
>
>
>>You _are_ trying to run a version of FreeBSD equivalent to 2003/XP.
>
>
> No, I'm just running FreeBSD 5.3. It has nothing to do with Windows.
>
>
>>Because you were making comparisons with an 8 y.o. version of Windows.
>>Because it might
On Tue, Mar 22, 2005 at 09:31:25AM +, Mark wrote:
> > > cd /usr/local/lib; if test -f libz.so.1.2.2; then rm -f
> > > libz.so libz.so.1;
> > > ln -s libz.so.1.2.2 libz.so; ln -s libz.so.1.2.2 libz.so.1;
> So, to reiterate, where is the new shared library, libz.so?
You were looking in /usr/
On Mar 21, 2005, at 9:31 PM, Kevin Kinsey wrote:
*If I'm wrong, it's Chuck's fault, heh heh
It's always my fault, even when it's not my fault.
(I must have done something. What did I do, again? :-)
--
-Chuck "guilty!" Swiger
PS: Kevin's suggestion is not a bad idea, either that or submitting
I was forgetting that this is FreeBSD, with unparallelled breadth of
hardware support 8-)
So of course these chips are supported.
device uftdi
device ucom
Peter.
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 09:10 +, Peter Risdon wrote:
> I'm trying to determine the best way to interface a device like
On Mar 22, 2005, at 6:39 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Peter Risdon writes:
You _are_ trying to run a version of FreeBSD equivalent to 2003/XP.
No, I'm just running FreeBSD 5.3. It has nothing to do with Windows.
This seems to be evidence that you're intentionally being obtuse.
Are you incapable of
On Tuesday 22 March 2005 03:29 am, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> > You have no proof of that unless you were to run the tests that I
> > already posted.
>
> You're wasting my time. Perhaps somebody who actually understands how
> FreeBSD works will offer useful assistance soo
I have a problem reading bar codes with chio on freebsd 4.9, and sony
1u (model lib-81) tape changers. The library sees the bar code, but
chio doesn't report them for reasons I don't understand.
I did my testing with what should be an otherwise identical 2u
(lib-162) changer. (Someone shipped
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005, Stijn Hoop wrote:
Can we please STOP fueling Anthony's drivel?
--Stijn
--
Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.
I have two words for you: Mail Filtering.
Use it. It can work wonders on signal to noise ratio. He is not going to
quit, ever.
Honestly, the whole disk thing reminds
For those who haven't heard, FreeBSD committer Cameron Grant
died suddenly on Sunday morning.
Cameron was well known for his keen mind and personality, but
his body didn't work so well. The cause of death has yet to
be established, but he spent many years suffering from
neurological diseases that l
On Mar 22, 2005, at 4:21 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
There is a third option. Microsoft can simply quite releasing new
versions of it's established products and go to work creating new
products that people would want to buy.
That business model doesn't work, which is why n
Ted Mittelstaedt writes:
> OK, well then that increases the chances that it is a driver issue
> and reduces the chances that it is a hardware issue. Assuming your
> termination is correct, that would increase chances it is a driver
> issue even more.
That's rather what I've thought all along.
>
Jerry Bell writes:
> You're looking for the reason that your older hardware runs on NT and
> doesn't run on FreeBSD. Save any real hardware problem, the reason is
> most certainly pure incompatibility between the hardware and the drivers
> that are in FreeBSD.
No doubt.
> When someone goes to w
On Tue, Mar 22, 2005 at 08:55:01AM -0600, Duo wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Mar 2005, Stijn Hoop wrote:
> > Can we please STOP fueling Anthony's drivel?
>
> I have two words for you: Mail Filtering.
>
> Use it. It can work wonders on signal to noise ratio. He is not going to
> quit, ever.
Well, I'm of th
Bart Silverstrim writes:
> Or it gave warnings that NT didn't. Or it showed problems that NT
> didn't.
Unless someone can tell me what these messages mean, they are useless to
me, warnings or not.
> If it worked so well, why not put NT back on the machine and try
> running a battery of tests an
> -Original Message-
> From: Kris Kennaway [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: dinsdag 22 maart 2005 15:22
> To: Mark
> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Where is zlib-1.2.2 zlib.so?
>
> On Tue, Mar 22, 2005 at 09:31:25AM +, Mark wrote:
>
> > > > cd /usr/local/lib; if t
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 14:52 +, David Gerard wrote:
> For those who haven't heard, FreeBSD committer Cameron Grant
> died suddenly on Sunday morning.
>From someone who has only met Cameron once and a few limited email
exchanges, this is a great loss to the FreeBSD community, and to the
world as
After I start X, I need to switch to a virtual console and log in as
root so that I can issue kbdcontrol -r fast.
Is there a place I can set this so I don't have to do that anymore? I've
looked at the man pages for a few settings, but I can't seem to find
something that specifically addresses keyb
Bart Silverstrim writes:
> Depends on the problem. Windows 98 needed more reboots than NT did on
> the same hardware. By your comparison they should be the same in
> reliability and performance, no?
No, by my comparison they should experience the same hardware errors (or
absence thereof).
>
Hello all!
So, I've run into an interesting snag that I just can't seem to figure
out.
I've gotten 5.3 up and running and installed Xorg and KDE. I spent some
time in KDE playing around and when I came out by "logging out" it
dropped me to the command prompt but I couldn't type anything. I've
si
In the last episode (Mar 22), Andrea Venturoli said:
> Dan Nelson wrote:
> >In the last episode (Mar 21), Andrea Venturoli said:
> >>Dan Nelson wrote:
>
> I'm reverting to the mailing list, since this is possibly getting
> interesting for other people too.
>
> >>>The change was also committed to
Bart Silverstrim writes:
> And you ran into a snag that you can't work through.
Yes, at least not with the time I have available.
> Most people if they were doing this on a lark would either replace the
> hardware or try a different distro.
There's only one "distro" of FreeBSD. Replacing the h
Hi, Maybe someone has already address this, but there
seems to be a problem about firefox failed to build
after updating to the latest gnome. I upgraded the
freetype2 by portupgrade and the problem seems to be
gone.
Cheers,
Best Regards,
Tsu-Fan Cheng
On Mar 22, 2005, at 10:19 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Bart Silverstrim writes:
Or it gave warnings that NT didn't. Or it showed problems that NT
didn't.
Unless someone can tell me what these messages mean, they are useless
to
me, warnings or not.
If it worked so well, why not put NT back on the
Hello dudes,
I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer from
home. The office PC runs WinXP Home, not Professional.
I have turned the Internet upside-down trying to get an app that will
enable me access the goddamn XP desktop, using something like krdesktop,
from home. Somethi
On Mar 22, 2005, at 10:37 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Bart Silverstrim writes:
Depends on the problem. Windows 98 needed more reboots than NT did on
the same hardware. By your comparison they should be the same in
reliability and performance, no?
No, by my comparison they should experience the
Hello All,
I need some help trying to locate or how to obtain/build a file named
"mkhomedir.so" this file is needed to create home directories after logging in
successfully though winbind. I am running FreeBSD 5.3 Release, and Samba 3.
Thank you,
JP
On March 22, 2005 10:54 am, Odhiambo Washington wrote:
> I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer from
> home. The office PC runs WinXP Home, not Professional.
> I have turned the Internet upside-down trying to get an app that will
> enable me access the goddamn XP desktop, u
Bart Silverstrim writes:
> Instead of a five year old version of Windows? :-)
Why should it matter?
> Because dumb terminals are just smart serial modems?
Serial modems are largely obsolete, too. And I haven't seen too many
modems that behave like VT100 terminals.
> Because those specs haven'
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 18:54:38 +0300, Odhiambo Washington
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello dudes,
>
> I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer from
> home. The office PC runs WinXP Home, not Professional.
> I have turned the Internet upside-down trying to get an app that wil
Chris writes:
> ... and as of June 2005, MS retires 2000 - at least thats the projected
> date.
So this hardware is still supported today. I suspect it may still be on
the HCL afterwards, too.
> In addition, if you went back to NT - you would also know you are on
> your own being that MS stoppe
VNC works very well for me, good suggestion!
--Nick
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 11:02:48 -0500, daniel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On March 22, 2005 10:54 am, Odhiambo Washington wrote:
> > I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer from
> > home. The office PC runs WinXP Home, not
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 08:55 -0600, Duo wrote:
>
> Honestly, the whole disk thing reminds me of an experience with FreeBSD
> and an old gateway solo laptop.
[...]
I acquired an old Initio SCSI card (9100) around the time of FreeBSD
4.5. A driver was available from the manufacturer's website for
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-freebsd-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Odhiambo Washington
> Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 21:25
> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Accessing Windows XP Desktop (Home Edition) remotely
>
> Hello dudes,
>
> I hav
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-freebsd-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Nick Pavlica
> Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 21:39
> To: daniel
> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: Accessing Windows XP Desktop (Home Edition) remotely
>
> VNC works ver
Remington wrote:
change the device driver to vesa, see if it still crashes
Changed "I810" to "vesa":
old:
(EE) I810(0): No Video BIOS modes for chosen depth.
(==) I810(0): Write-combining range (0x0,0x1000) was already clear
(II) UnloadModule: "i810"
(II) UnloadModule: "ddc"
(II) Unloading /usr/X11
I've done a lot of snooping around Google to figure this out. I've come
to the conclusion that PHP just plain sucks ;c)
I am fairly consistently getting bus errors in Apache when I use PHP (or
at least, I'm fairly sure it is due to PHP). Entries like:
... [notice] child pid 70121 exit signal Segm
On Tuesday 22 March 2005 10:02 am, daniel wrote:
> On March 22, 2005 10:54 am, Odhiambo Washington wrote:
> > I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer
> > from home. The office PC runs WinXP Home, not Professional.
> > I have turned the Internet upside-down trying to get an a
Well said! I completely agree.
--Nick
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 08:55:01 -0600 (CST), Duo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Mar 2005, Stijn Hoop wrote:
>
> > Can we please STOP fueling Anthony's drivel?
> >
> > --Stijn
> >
> > --
> > Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.
> >
>
> I have two word
On Mar 22, 2005, at 10:49 AM, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
Bart Silverstrim writes:
And you ran into a snag that you can't work through.
Yes, at least not with the time I have available.
Classic tune. I play it a lot too.
Most people if they were doing this on a lark would either replace the
hardware
* Gary Smithe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [20050322 19:08]: wrote:
> On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 18:54:38 +0300, Odhiambo Washington
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hello dudes,
> >
> > I have this big curse that I have to access the office computer from
> > home. The o
On Tue, 2005-03-22 at 09:22 -0700, Tom Vilot wrote:
> I've done a lot of snooping around Google to figure this out. I've come
> to the conclusion that PHP just plain sucks ;c)
>
> I am fairly consistently getting bus errors in Apache when I use PHP (or
> at least, I'm fairly sure it is due to PHP)
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