On Wed, Aug 05, 2009 at 06:44:15PM +0300, Anton typed:
>
>Hello freebsd-questions,
>
> Found the solution here: [1]http
> ://unix.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/FreeBSD/questions/2008-10/msg01065
>.html
>But do not know how to apply patch :-(
The URL you posted says it all:
Sav
On Wed, 2009-08-05 at 14:50 -0800, Mel Flynn wrote:
> On Wednesday 05 August 2009 13:53:22 Coert Waagmeester wrote:
>
> > I tried it via the ports, but this error keeps popping up:
> > Missing pkg-descr for patch-2.5.9.
>
> I believe you have a defective ports tree. You should have the following
Coert Waagmeester skrev:
Hello all,
What is the best way to install eclipse on FreeBSD 7.2?
On Linux I installed java, and downloaded the newest eclipse.
Regards,
Coert
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Mark Stapper wrote:
> ... PowerPC is dead ...
I suspect both IBM and Freescale would beg to differ :)
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>
>
> Many people's only familiarity with computers in general will be from a
> Windows centric perspective. Somehow there is a tendency to believe that
> inserting a CD, booting, and then proceeding to click "OK" in a dialog box a
> few dozen times makes them some kind of expert when they succe
Randall Wood wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 03, 2009 at 11:53:22AM +0200, Wolfgang Riegler wrote:
>
>> Has anyone tested Arora?
>>
>
> I'm actually surprised no one has recommended Konqueror. It's not my
> favorite browser (I happen to love Opera) but it would seem to mostly fit the
> bill of fast
per...@pluto.rain.com wrote:
> Mark Stapper wrote:
>
>> ... PowerPC is dead ...
>>
Well yes
(lousy excuse coming up!) I meant in the PC/Mac world... ;-)
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On Thursday 06 August 2009 09:43:47 Mark Stapper wrote:
>
> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
> in the FreeBSD corner.
> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
> FreeBSD.
[snip]
> To achieve this, there are two things that should b
Mark Stapper wrote:
> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
> in the FreeBSD corner.
> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
> FreeBSD.
It's called PC-BSD.
HTH HAND
Matthew
--
Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil.
Frank Shute wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 05, 2009 at 07:43:05AM -0800, Mel Flynn wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
>> Well, we can start to agree that FreeBSD is not a "distro", but a UNIX
>> operating system. :)
>>
>
> We can't quite agree on that ;)
>
> BSD=Berkeley Software Distribution AKA distro of Unix
Matthew Seaman wrote:
> Mark Stapper wrote:
>
>
>
>> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
>> in the FreeBSD corner.
>> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
>> FreeBSD.
>>
>
> It's called PC-BSD.
>
> HTH HAND
>
>
On Thu, 2009-08-06 at 09:08 +0200, Coert Waagmeester wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-08-05 at 14:50 -0800, Mel Flynn wrote:
> > On Wednesday 05 August 2009 13:53:22 Coert Waagmeester wrote:
> >
> > > I tried it via the ports, but this error keeps popping up:
> > > Missing pkg-descr for patch-2.5.9.
> >
>
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 1:47 AM, Mel
Flynn wrote:
> Your best bet is to poll the mobile list (CC'd) to see if anyone was able to
> get FreeBSD working on this laptop (or even to know whether this is a lost
> cause till somebody makes some patches for this laptop). Since 7.2 also does
> not work and
Hi,
On 06 August 2009 pm 14:35:40 Mark Stapper wrote:
> Mel Flynn wrote:
> > On Wednesday 05 August 2009 05:27:55 Erik Trulsson wrote:
> >> The amd64 architecture is called that because it was AMD who
> >> invented and created it and was for a while the only one
>
> Now I come to think of it, isn'
Erich Dollansky wrote:
> Because people using them, new what they were doing.
>
And probably didn't care...
> IA 64? Wans't this once - or still is - the term used for the
> Itanium?
>
The one that didn't stick... indeed.
> Yes, also Intel can fail. Intel also failed with their first 32
> b
Hi,
On 06 August 2009 pm 16:40:41 Mark Stapper wrote:
> Erich Dollansky wrote:
>
> > IA 64? Wans't this once - or still is - the term used for the
> > Itanium?
>
> The one that didn't stick... indeed.
do they really sell machines with this CPU in numbers?
I have not seen one in the wild.
>
> > Y
On Tue, Aug 04, 2009 at 10:39:38AM -0600, Modulok wrote:
> But I'm also looking for a good way to generate high quality crypto
> keys. In the later case, the data being protected are disk images of
> clients...mountains of sensitive data. These will be on USB
> keys, and thus do not need to be memo
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 05:18:09PM +0800, Erich Dollansky wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 06 August 2009 pm 16:40:41 Mark Stapper wrote:
> > Erich Dollansky wrote:
> >
> > > IA 64? Wans't this once - or still is - the term used for the
> > > Itanium?
> >
> > The one that didn't stick... indeed.
>
> do they r
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 2:56 AM, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
> On Thursday 06 August 2009 09:43:47 Mark Stapper wrote:
>>
>> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
>> in the FreeBSD corner.
>> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
>> FreeBS
> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
> in the FreeBSD corner.
> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
> FreeBSD.
> I am not saying that a Windows user should be able to feel right at home
> on a box running FreeBSD, but a computer
- Original Message -
From: "Neal Hogan"
To: "Jonathan McKeown"
Cc:
Sent: Thursday, August 06, 2009 2:35 PM
Subject: Re: FreeBSD for the common man(or woman) (was: upgrade
7.2overwrites partitions)
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 2:56 AM, Jonathan McKeown
wrote:
On Thursday 06 August 2009
Le Mon, 3 Aug 2009 15:02:58 +0300,
Odhiambo ワシントン a écrit :
> > # grep ftps /etc/services
> > ftps-data 989/tcp# ftp protocol, data, over TLS/SSL
> > ftps-data 989/udp
> > ftps990/tcp# ftp protocol, control, over TLS/SSL
> > ftps990/udp
> >
>
> pure-f
Somewhere in *.freebsd.org is a page that lists which ports run
natively on amd64 and what the status is for the others. I've seen it,
I have it bookmarked in a place that is currently unavailable, and I
can't find it by hand. Anyone have the URL handy?
Respectfully,
On Thursday 06 August 2009 10:19:47 Robert Huff wrote:
> Somewhere in *.freebsd.org is a page that lists which ports run
> natively on amd64 and what the status is for the others. I've seen it,
> I have it bookmarked in a place that is currently unavailable, and I
> can't find it by hand. A
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 10:19:47AM -0400, Robert Huff wrote:
> Somewhere in *.freebsd.org is a page that lists which ports run
> natively on amd64 and what the status is for the others. I've seen it,
> I have it bookmarked in a place that is currently unavailable, and I
> can't find it by
Evening folks... have just built up a new 7.0-RELEASE box, and have gone to
update it to 7.0-RELEASEp11, however, whenever I run freebsd-update fetch I get
the following:
bigsis2# freebsd-update fetch
Looking up update1.FreeBSD.org mirrors... none found.
Fetching metadata signature for 7.0-RELEA
Damn have no clue how to build fix or anything with plist ... Except it
seemd to be a list of the files used ??
On Wed, Aug 5, 2009 at 8:48 PM, Mel Flynn <
mel.flynn+fbsd.questi...@mailing.thruhere.net
> wrote:
> On Wednesday 05 August 2009 10:35:02 Kalle Møller wrote:
>
> > make WITH_PERL="YES"
[snip]
> In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
> in the FreeBSD corner.
> What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
> FreeBSD.
> I am not saying that a Windows user should be able to feel right at home
> on a box running FreeBSD, but a co
On Thursday 06 August 2009 00:07:33 Coert Waagmeester wrote:
> I have PKGDIR variable exported.
Ack, yeah. Should've thought of that. It's a badly chosen variable name for
pkg_add. You could make an alias though:
alias pkg_keep='env PKGDIR=/path/to/whatever pkg_add -K'
--
Mel
__
John Nielsen wrote:
There's always the build logs on pointyhat:
http://pointyhat.freebsd.org/errorlogs/
And some reports here:
http://portsmon.freebsd.org/index.html
These are not the droids I'm looking for.
As I remember the page, it has three columns: the port name, the
(color-co
Well, the bad day has come... My primary server won't boot. I have
backups of databases and user directories, but I need to try to get
this server back up again.
During the boot sequence, it freezes at the statement:
Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/mfid0s1a
I tried booting into single use
Kalle Møller wrote:
> Damn have no clue how to build fix or anything with plist ... Except it
> seemd to be a list of the files used ??
Pretty much, the porters handbook has a decent section on it if your
interested. Any installed files except man pages and documentation
(which are specified in t
Identry wrote:
> Well, the bad day has come... My primary server won't boot. I have
> backups of databases and user directories, but I need to try to get
> this server back up again.
>
> During the boot sequence, it freezes at the statement:
>
> Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/mfid0s1a
>
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 7:16 PM, Ben Fallon wrote:
> Might want to take a look at this page as it may provide a bit more insight.
> The problem isn't with the Machine specifically but with the ATI Sata
> Controller/Chipset. Not sure if this has been fixed yet.
>
> http://www.mavetju.org/mail/view
Might want to take a look at this page as it may provide a bit more insight.
The problem isn't with the Machine specifically but with the ATI Sata
Controller/Chipset. Not sure if this has been fixed yet.
http://www.mavetju.org/mail/view_message.php?list=freebsd-current&id=2740699
-Origin
Hi. I am attempting to secure some workstations in such a way that a
user would not be able gain full control of the computer (only user
access). However, they are able to see and touch the physical
workstation. Things I'm trying to avoid, to list a couple of
examples:
1. Go to BIOS settings and
Bernt Hansson wrote:
Matthew Seaman skrev:
Mark Stapper wrote:
In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
in the FreeBSD corner.
What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
FreeBSD.
It's called PC-BSD.
Have a look at Manolis Kiagias w
On 8/6/09, Nerius Landys wrote:
> Hi. I am attempting to secure some workstations in such a way that a
> user would not be able gain full control of the computer (only user
> access). However, they are able to see and touch the physical
> workstation. Things I'm trying to avoid, to list a couple
Al Plant wrote:
> Bernt Hansson wrote:
>> Matthew Seaman skrev:
>>> Mark Stapper wrote:
>>>
>>>
In light of this, I would really enjoy seeing a "Ubuntu" like movement
in the FreeBSD corner.
What I mean is that it would be nice for my mother to install and use
FreeBSD.
>>>
>>>
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 01:35:55PM -0600, Tim Judd wrote:
> On 8/6/09, Nerius Landys wrote:
> > Hi. I am attempting to secure some workstations in such a way that a
> > user would not be able gain full control of the computer (only user
> > access). However, they are able to see and touch the phy
Hi,
Am Dienstag, 04. Aug 2009, 13:26:24 +0200 schrieb Bertram Scharpf:
> an Acer notebook with a Synaptics Touchpad makes some trouble
> here.
This is a real mess. Nobody gives me any help and I do not know
what to try any further. I reduced the problem to the following
behaviour:
# dd if=/dev
> Try downloading and booting the livefs environment (I think you need cd1
> and the livefs cd or just the DVD) and see if you can mount it from
> that, if not it could be a controller issue. If you can then its
> probably your OS/kernel but at least you now have access to your
> data/configs etc e
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 09:56:59 +0200, Jonathan McKeown wrote:
> PC-BSD is FreeBSD, pre-packaged with a usable desktop and its own simplified
> package manager.
If you're talking about PBI, that's what the "average user" expects:
You open a web browser (d'oh), search for what you think will be the
s
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--- On Thu, 8/6/09, freebsd-questions-requ...@freebsd.org
wrote:
>
> Message: 16
> Date: Thu, 6 Aug 2009 06:41:12 -0500
> From: Neal Hogan
> Subject: Re: FreeBSD for the common man(or woman) (was:
> upgrade 7.2
> overwrites partitions)
> To: Mark Stapper
> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebs
I have a server in Manhattan (NYI.net) that isn't booting. I'm trying
to fix it (not making any changes until I'm absolutely sure I know
what the problem is and how to fix it), but I have the feeling that
this problem may be beyond my relatively limited admin skills. If you
are a very experienced F
On Thu, 06 Aug 2009 22:48:10 +0300, Manolis Kiagias wrote:
> I should however note that although this work takes out most of the
> compiling steps (and I plan to expand the range of pre-built packages
> soon), it is still not "a common man's OS", as all the configuration
> steps are manual.
A tr
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 02:46:05 +0100, Frank Shute wrote:
> At least the OP didn't make the faux pas of calling FreeBSD a Linux
> distro like one of his colleagues did a couple of years ago on this
> list.
I've seen this in a german Linux magazine, titeling in a way
similar to this: "FreeBSD - the pr
On Wed, 5 Aug 2009 19:51:00 -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
> Been thinking over what someone said recently about restricting or
> dropping further ports. BSD is the best opensource system around. But
> keeping everything current is painful.
If you're not running a public or mission
On Thu, 06 Aug 2009 04:53:23 +0200, Peter Boosten wrote:
> Polytropon wrote:
> > On FreeBSD, you don't need to download things manually via a web
> > browser in this old fashioned way. :-)
>
> Unfortunately this is not true for the jdk. But it's only a minor
> disadvantage ;-)
Sadly, you are tru
> inspired by a guy (the OP) who has been using fBSD for many
>> years
>> (over 5 . . . I can't remember the exact number).
>>
>
> I have been struggling to use FreeBSD for a shorter amount of time (for a
> fileserver). I was originally attracted to OpenBSD "for security." However,
> OpenBSD user
> Identry wrote:
>>
>> During the boot sequence, it freezes at the statement:
>>
>> Trying to mount root from ufs:/dev/mfid0s1a
>>
> Try downloading and booting the livefs environment (I think you need cd1
> and the livefs cd or just the DVD) and see if you can mount it from
> that, if not it c
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 05:31:49PM -0400, Identry wrote:
> > Try downloading and booting the livefs environment (I think you need cd1
> > and the livefs cd or just the DVD) and see if you can mount it from
> > that, if not it could be a controller issue. If you can then its
> > probably your OS/ker
On Wed, 5 Aug 2009 14:14:49 +0100
David Southwell wrote:
> Hi every one
>
> My understanding is that one uses the amd64 for building a kernel for
> systems with Intel Quad Core processors.
>
> It is helpful when naming conventions follow a logical strand. I mean
> why does freebsd use a single
--- On Thu, 8/6/09, Neal Hogan wrote:
> > So, this long story boils down to the following
> question:
> >
> > What is that best way to use the handbook and related
> documentation (like man-pages)?
> >
>
> What?!
>
> Ummm . . . read them. I'm not trying to be too big of a
> dick, but your
>
>> How do you expect to get comfortable w/out "playing
>> around," other
>> than, I guess (a'la above) reading the documentation?
>>
>
> Put another way: I want a reliable, backed-up file-server before playing
> around on my "workstation" that would be a separate computer.
>
> I want to build myse
Nerius Landys wrote:
Hi. I am attempting to secure some workstations in such a way that a
user would not be able gain full control of the computer (only user
access). However, they are able to see and touch the physical
workstation.
I assume that users cannot tingle with the hardware, take it
Identry wrote:
>> Try downloading and booting the livefs environment (I think you need cd1
>> and the livefs cd or just the DVD) and see if you can mount it from
>> that, if not it could be a controller issue. If you can then its
>> probably your OS/kernel but at least you now have access to your
James Phillips wrote:
> Put another way: I want a reliable, backed-up file-server before playing
> around on my "workstation" that would be a separate computer.
>
> I want to build myself a "sand-box" so I don't have to worry about breaking
> stuff that is unrelated.
>
> Another way of asking the
On Thursday 06 August 2009 12:46:21 Bertram Scharpf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Am Dienstag, 04. Aug 2009, 13:26:24 +0200 schrieb Bertram Scharpf:
> > an Acer notebook with a Synaptics Touchpad makes some trouble
> > here.
>
> This is a real mess. Nobody gives me any help and I do not know
> what to try any f
I've got a server in lower manhattan (at NYI.net datacenter) that
hangs when trying to mount the root partition. I'm working on it right
now, but have a feeling this may be beyond my limited admin skills,
and I really need this server back online ASAP.
Might be time to hire a professional.
Can an
Hey you Im live on webcam check me out! Check my camDear questions! Get
Yourself a cool, short @in.com Email ID now!
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On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 14:56:41 -0700 (PDT), James Phillips
wrote:
> I was also attracted to BSD because I knew from my brief stint at
> university that the BSD man-pages were actually kept up to date.
As a developer, documentation is VERY important to me. That's why
I love FreeBSD, because the OS a
Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go about
it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an upgrade path
that's not fraught with gotchas?
--
Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
As if it wasn't already obvious, my opinions
are my own and not th
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 15:41:40 -0700 (PDT), James Phillips
wrote:
> Put another way: I want a reliable, backed-up file-server before
> playing around on my "workstation" that would be a separate
> computer.
The default installation of FreeBSD covers most cases.
> I want to build myself a "sand-b
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 18:31:12 -0400, Identry wrote:
> I've booted the install CD1 and found something called 'fixit' mode.
> I've been googling, but can't seem to find any info on 'fixit'. Is it
> possible to use this instead of a livefs disk?
As far as I remember, that's correct. CD1 contains the
On Fri, 07 Aug 2009 02:09:51 +0300, Manolis Kiagias wrote:
> Windows experience won't help much - mainly due to the fact Windows
> forces the users (and admins) to a completely different way of thinking
> than FreeBSD.
That's true. It's even hard to communicate with "'Windows' admins"
because of
Hi,
On 06 August 2009 pm 19:07:12 Erik Trulsson wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 05:18:09PM +0800, Erich Dollansky wrote:
> > On 06 August 2009 pm 16:40:41 Mark Stapper wrote:
> > > Erich Dollansky wrote:
> > > > IA 64? Wans't this once - or still is - the term used for
> > > > the Itanium?
> > >
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 6:21 PM, Paul Schmehl wrote:
> Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
> about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an
> upgrade path that's not fraught with gotchas?
>
> --
> Paul Schmehl, Senior Infosec Analyst
>
Unl
On Fri, Aug 07, 2009 at 12:14:15AM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
> On Wed, 5 Aug 2009 19:51:00 -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
> > Been thinking over what someone said recently about restricting or
> > dropping further ports. BSD is the best opensource system around. But
> > keeping everything c
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 19:15:18 -0500, Andrew Gould
wrote:
> Unless things have changed very recently, KDE4 is in its own directory
> folder.
Terminology: the directory (is not a folder, and not a directory folder).
FreeBSD has directories, not folders. :-)
--
Polytropon
>From Magdeburg, German
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 17:25:07 -0700, Gary Kline wrote:
> Super! just offhand, can i install PCSD *over* thius FBSd
> --7.1--? Keep /usr/home and so on?
basically yes. Check if the installer allows you NOT to format
the partition where you have your home directories. If it is /usr/home
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 11:21:14PM +, Paul Schmehl wrote:
> Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
> about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an
> upgrade path that's not fraught with gotchas?
>
i have a "me-too" here. i d
> Try downloading and booting the livefs environment (I think you need cd1
> and the livefs cd or just the DVD) and see if you can mount it from
> that, if not it could be a controller issue. If you can then its
> probably your OS/kernel but at least you now have access to your
> data/configs etc e
> Once taken the time to set things up, they make you happy running for
> a lifetime. :-)
Amen.
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--On August 6, 2009 7:15:18 PM -0500 Andrew Gould
wrote:
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 6:21 PM, Paul Schmehl
wrote:
Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an
upgrade path that's not fraught with got
On Thursday 06 August 2009 15:21:14 Paul Schmehl wrote:
> Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
> about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an
> upgrade path that's not fraught with gotchas?
Wait a week I'd say. KDE 4.3.0 has hit the port
On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 7:37 PM, Polytropon wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 19:15:18 -0500, Andrew Gould
> wrote:
>> Unless things have changed very recently, KDE4 is in its own directory
>> folder.
>
> Terminology: the directory (is not a folder, and not a directory folder).
> FreeBSD has directories
Hello,
I have a device that sends one byte over the serial line every 10ms.
Using c, I wrote an application that opens the serial port and reads
bytes in an infinite loop. I disabled all blocking (O_NONBLOCK, VMIN=0,
VTIME=0, B115200). My CPU spends ~100% of its time calling read()
[which a
[snip]
> Once taken the time to set things up, they make you happy running for
> a lifetime. :-)
[/snip]
It's nice to be able to go on vacation, without worrying about the
servers back home craping out :)
-Modulok-
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--On August 6, 2009 9:29:30 PM -0500 Mel Flynn
wrote:
On Thursday 06 August 2009 15:21:14 Paul Schmehl wrote:
Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is there an
upgrade path that's not fraught with go
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On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 09:25:38PM -0600, Modulok wrote:
> [snip]
> > Once taken the time to set things up, they make you happy running for
> > a lifetime. :-)
> [/snip]
>
> It's nice to be able to go on vacation, without worrying about the
> servers back home craping out :)
>
> -Modulok-
On Thursday 06 August 2009 05:53:05 pm Paul Schmehl wrote:
> --On August 6, 2009 7:15:18 PM -0500 Andrew Gould
>
> wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 6:21 PM, Paul Schmehl
> >
> > wrote:
> >> Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way to go
> >> about it? Do I need to compl
On Fri, Aug 07, 2009 at 02:37:26AM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
> On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 19:15:18 -0500, Andrew Gould
> wrote:
> > Unless things have changed very recently, KDE4 is in its own directory
> > folder.
>
> Terminology: the directory (is not a folder, and not a directory folder).
> FreeBSD h
On Mon, Aug 03, 2009 at 08:27:34AM -0400, Chris Hill wrote:
>
> Firefox has not had Ctrl-Q for some time. Try Alt-F followed by Q. I guess
> that's 2.5 keystrokes, but at least it's keystrokes.
What version number would you call "some time" ago? I just used Ctrl-Q
about six hours or so ago.
--
On Mon, Aug 03, 2009 at 11:53:22AM +0200, Wolfgang Riegler wrote:
> Has anyone tested Arora?
I wouldn't recommend Arora as a "lightweight" browser to anyone who isn't
already using applications built with the Qt toolkit. If you're a KDE
user, it may be a good choice; if you aren't, it spectacular
On Thu 06 Aug 2009 at 22:49:09 PDT Gary Kline wrote:
On Fri, Aug 07, 2009 at 02:37:26AM +0200, Polytropon wrote:
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 19:15:18 -0500, Andrew Gould
wrote:
> Unless things have changed very recently, KDE4 is in its own directory
> folder.
Terminology: the directory (is not a folde
On Tue, Aug 04, 2009 at 10:37:46PM +, b. f. wrote:
> Roland Smith wrote:
> >What you can do is make a list of all installed ports with
> >ports-mgmt/portmaster:
> > portmaster -L >ports.list
> >
> >Looking through this list, you'll see four categories;
> >- Root ports (No dependencies, not d
On Thu, 6 Aug 2009 19:15:18 -0500
Andrew Gould wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 6, 2009 at 6:21 PM, Paul
> Schmehl wrote:
> > Can someone who has already done this upgrade suggest the best way
> > to go about it? Do I need to completely uninstall kde3 first? Is
> > there an upgrade path that's not fraught
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