Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> Has anyone successfully used the CyMotion linux keyboard under Gentoo?
> How do you like it? Is it available in the US?
Well, answered part of my own question. According to this:
http://hardware.newsforge.com/hardware/05/08/25/1212253.shtml?tid=152
the keyboard will
I upgraded to ghostscript-afpl because of problems with version 7 of
ghostscript and the current version of imagemagick in portage.
Version 8 of ghostscript now works nicely with imagemagick however it
is missing the print driver that I need (escpage or lp8900).
I would like to know if anyone has
Peter Gordon wrote:
>
>For what it's worth, I've never had a *single* problem with Ext3, and
>I've been using it with various distributions since I first started
>playing with GNU/Linux a few weeks after Fedora Core 1 was released.
>
>--Peter
>
>
I use reiserfs and have had no problems either.
What would you guys suggest in terms of specs for a server, serving
say 50 odd thin clients?
--
"When you say "I wrote a program that crashed Windows", people just
stare at you blankly and say "Hey, I got those with the system, for
free". - Linus Torvalds, 1995
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing
On Sat, Oct 29, 2005 at 01:18:27PM -0700, Schleimer, Ben wrote
> Hi,
> I'm trying to emerge realplayer-10.0.6 and it's not
> behaving properly:
[...deletia...]
> https://helixcommunity.org/download.php/...blah...blah...blah
*
*
Several people on this list, me included, have bee
On Mon, 2005-10-31 at 20:34 -0800, Joshua Schmidlkofer wrote:
> For a more sustainable situation, switch to XFS [It involved a
> backup/format/restore by whatever means you want] In any case, xfs
> has a tool called 'xfs_fsr' Which means 'file system reorganizer'.
> It does defragmentation, and b
BTW: 99% of the time, this has nothing to do with devfs, udev, or the
kernel. When it says 'module failed to load' it's because the x
is missing the driver file.
i.e.
/usr/lib/modules/drivers/nvidia_drv.so
/usr/lib/modules/drivers/nvidia_drv.o
On 10/30/05, renna bud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On
On 10/31/05, Ted Ozolins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:>>> I got rid of the file, and now X cannot see my mouse, and refuses to> start.> I think the problem is that it used to be /dev/mouse and is now> /dev/input/mouse0
> or some such. I'm not sure. I don't know where the Xorg c
James,
Why are you using IPtables directly? It's good for
an exercise, but roll-your-own firewall is not really as cool as it
seems. Have you looked at Shorewall [net-firewall/shorewall].
http://www.shorewall.net
thanks,
joshua
On 10/28/05, James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A. Khattri bw
I have not read every single post in it's entierty. I have seen
this lots with Firefox - especiall with flash. It tends to
actually be that the system is swapping out.
What filesyetem are you using?
js
On 10/31/05, Iain Buchanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, sorry about the late reply, but
On 10/31/05, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Rafael Fernández López wrote:>Hi,>>Well, I'd like to recover those holes (that 10% of the disk) and how to>do it, because I've tried with e2fsck with different options and read>"man e2fsck" with no possitive results.
>>Thanks,>Rafael Fernández López.>>>T
Hi, sorry about the late reply, but I didn't see the OP
Holly Bostick wrote:
> Sorry that this will not be an extremely clear question, but I really
> have no idea where to start, or what the problem is.
that will just bring you in line with some of my questions :)
> Basically, my system is run
Denis wrote:
>Why go through all this trouble trying to learn how to set up Mozilla
>mail? What's the benefit? I have been using YahooMail and GMail
>quite happily, where you have an easy, no-frills, light-weight
>interface, where you can customize exactly how you want to compose
>your response
Holly Bostick wrote:
Hey, all,
Sorry that this will not be an extremely clear question, but I really
have no idea where to start, or what the problem is.
Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but about
every 30 seconds or so, it 'pauses' to do something, and I have to wai
Why go through all this trouble trying to learn how to set up Mozilla
mail? What's the benefit? I have been using YahooMail and GMail
quite happily, where you have an easy, no-frills, light-weight
interface, where you can customize exactly how you want to compose
your response and arrange quotes
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 21:31:33 +0100
Holly Bostick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What else could I do alongside it, other than running an emerge or
> something?
>
You could switch to a non-proprietary gfx driver, and try that, though it
might not work with the ATI card you have.
Try emerging app-b
Rafael Fernández López wrote:
>Hi,
>
>Well, I'd like to recover those holes (that 10% of the disk) and how to
>do it, because I've tried with e2fsck with different options and read
>"man e2fsck" with no possitive results.
>
>Thanks,
>Rafael Fernández López.
>
>
>
There was a guru on the forums t
Holly,
Well, I do have that little box checked and it displays Subject, From,
Reply to, Date and To. I just didn't look. I'm really bad at names, I
may have mentioned this before. I remember Holly because I know this
really nice girl named Holly that lives over hear that I meet. She was
a real
On Sat, 29 Oct 2005 22:55:24 +0200
Uwe Thiem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > One of the big problems with Linux diskless is it really doesn't scale
> > well, it doesn't allow for clients to run multiple versions of the os,
>
> Why would you want to do that?
>
Ah! Not everyone would. But ther
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 14:07:30 -0800 gentuxx <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| Just wondering if there was an "optimal" time to update one's system.
| Meaning, is there a global/bulk "cvs commit" done once a day, that we
| should wait for? Especially concerned about security patches - can we
| *safely* as
yes, I looked at them. The question wasn't really how-to as much as to
get some real world feedback. Wikis while usually helpful tend to be
full of errors IMHO. Thanks,
MarkOn 10/31/05, James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Mark gmail.com> writes:> Has anyone set up a Hylafax server along with a mail s
Antoine schreef:
>>
>> Indeed, life is harder for those of us who don't have English as
>> first language.
>>
>>> kashani, still trying to get his German, Spanish, and Farsi up to
>>> speed
>
> Can you imagine how hard it is to learn another language when
> everyone wants to speak English to
On Monday 31 October 2005 23:53, Michael Kjorling wrote:
> On 2005-10-31 22:41 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > make && make modules_install
> >
> > then change /etc/lilo.conf to the new(and only) kernel
>
> You need to copy the new bzImage (arch/*/boot/bzImage) into place, and
> re-run lilo for
On Monday 31 October 2005 23:41, karlos wrote:
> hi,
>
> I have found that, even after various attempts, I can not make my system
> use the new kernel I have just compiled.
> I proceeded in the following order:
>
> first:
> emerge gentoo-sources
>
> then:
> cd /usr/src
> ls
> linux linux-2.6.13-gen
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 22:41:50 +, karlos wrote:
> I have found that, even after various attempts, I can not make my
> system use the new kernel I have just compiled.
> I proceeded in the following order:
>
> first:
> emerge gentoo-sources
>
> then:
> cd /usr/src
> ls
> linux linux-2.6.13-gento
Did you mount /boot
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Rafael Fernández López wrote:
> ~ (more or less) the 10% of the filesystem is
> non-contiguous. I suppose that the problem is that I've saved and
> then deleted some files really big, and there's a hole.
>
> Well, I'd like to recover those holes (that 10% of the disk)
There are no holes, the
On 10/31/05, Mike Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 31 October 2005 22:41, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > So I'm game to give it a try. You say I need to hold c when I power on
> > to get it to see the Gentoo PPC install disk?
>
> > yaboot is the Apple boot loader? Like grub? (I'm a total App
On Monday 31 October 2005 22:41, Mark Knecht wrote:
> So I'm game to give it a try. You say I need to hold c when I power on
> to get it to see the Gentoo PPC install disk?
> yaboot is the Apple boot loader? Like grub? (I'm a total Apple newbie)
yaboot is the linux ppc bootloader, more akin to li
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 2005-10-31 22:41 +, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> make && make modules_install
>
> then change /etc/lilo.conf to the new(and only) kernel
You need to copy the new bzImage (arch/*/boot/bzImage) into place, and
re-run lilo for the changes to take e
On Monday 31 October 2005 22:41, karlos wrote:
> then change /etc/lilo.conf to the new(and only) kernel
You didn't re-run lilo.
--
Mike Williams
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On 10/31/05, Mike Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 31 October 2005 22:02, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > My question is whether I can put Gentoo on the external drive and
> > get Apple's Open Firmware to boot Gentoo. I do not really want to put
> > Gentoo on the internal drive, at least righ
hi,
I have found that, even after various attempts, I can not make my system use the new kernel I have just compiled.
I proceeded in the following order:
first:
emerge gentoo-sources
then:
cd /usr/src
ls
linux linux-2.6.13-gentoo-r5
ln -sf linux-2.6.13-gentoo-r5 linux
then:
make menuconfig an
And while I'm being talkative I'd like to second what Holly and a few
others have hinted at. Command of language is essential. As someone who
stumbled into the admin/network business nine years ago I can say that my
writing and language skills, specifically the lack of either, did far mo
On Monday 31 October 2005 22:07, gentuxx wrote:
> Just wondering if there was an "optimal" time to update one's system.
> Meaning, is there a global/bulk "cvs commit" done once a day, that we
> should wait for? Especially concerned about security patches - can we
> *safely* assume that if the GLS
On Monday 31 October 2005 22:02, Mark Knecht wrote:
> My question is whether I can put Gentoo on the external drive and
> get Apple's Open Firmware to boot Gentoo. I do not really want to put
> Gentoo on the internal drive, at least right now. I'd love to be able
> to use an external drive to bo
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Just wondering if there was an "optimal" time to update one's system.
Meaning, is there a global/bulk "cvs commit" done once a day, that we
should wait for? Especially concerned about security patches - can we
*safely* assume that if the GLSA is out, t
On 10/31/05, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 10:35:26 -0800, Mark Knecht wrote:
>
> >What Gentoo email list is best for Mac Mini questions? Is that the
> > gentoo-ppc list or something else?
>
> Questions specific to PPC hardware go to gentoo-ppc, CPU-independent
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I have 4 gentoo systems. Three are 1-3 years old, the fourth has just
been rebooted for the first time after installing gento 2005.1 on it.
When I reboot any of the older three computers and simply type
emerge
it takes 14 to 20 seconds before I get a message
Robert Svoboda schreef:
> * Holly Bostick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-10-31 18:50]:
>
>> Hey, all,
>
>
> Hi,
>
> [...]
>
>
>> Since all the problems seem to be related to the X server, maybe
>> it's an X problem;
>
>
> So have you tried it without X running?
>
Not yet; can't kill X without
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 10:35:26 -0800, Mark Knecht wrote:
>What Gentoo email list is best for Mac Mini questions? Is that the
> gentoo-ppc list or something else?
Questions specific to PPC hardware go to gentoo-ppc, CPU-independent
questions belong here. gentoo-ppc is very quiet.
--
Neil Both
* Holly Bostick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2005-10-31 18:50]:
> Hey, all,
Hi,
[...]
> Since all the problems seem to be related to the X server,
> maybe it's an X problem;
So have you tried it without X running?
Robert
--
Robert Svoboda
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
brullo nulla wrote:
Whoa! Are you running for "Ubergeek-Of-The-Year" award?
:D
Seriously (haha), your considerations are technically true, but they
are of no use in explaining/burning down the famous joke. The sense of
the joke is (1)making people that understand binary understand the
joke itsel
Hans-Werner Hilse schreef:
> Hi,
>
> On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 17:24:26 +0100 Holly Bostick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
>
>
>> Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but
>> about every 30 seconds or so, it 'pauses' to do something, and I
>> have to wait for 5-10 seconds while
Hello,
I have 4 gentoo systems. Three are 1-3 years old, the fourth has just
been rebooted for the first time after installing gento 2005.1 on it.
When I reboot any of the older three computers and simply type
emerge
it takes 14 to 20 seconds before I get a message from emerge. On the
fourth c
Hi,
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 12:36:56 -0600
Harry Putnam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [...]
> I want to know what is happening there. A restart of samba has no
> noticable effect.
It can't, it only manages server side. Client side is done by the
kernel.
> What can I do to hasten the remountability
Hi,
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 17:24:26 +0100
Holly Bostick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but about
> every 30 seconds or so, it 'pauses' to do something, and I have to wait
> for 5-10 seconds while it does it before I can go further. Or the
> d
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, kashani wrote:
> Jorge Almeida wrote:
> > > On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, kashani wrote: usefulness for the inarticulate), and
> > > top posting (I blame Pine).
> >
> > Why?
>
> The semi-factual answer is because bottom posting was the norm until
> Pine appeared on the scene or
On Monday 31 October 2005 18:35, Mark Knecht wrote:
> What Gentoo email list is best for Mac Mini questions? Is that the
> gentoo-ppc list or something else?
ppc-user is all but dead.
Installing really isn't anymore difficult than normal though, and google has
answered all my questions.
--
M
Jorge Almeida wrote:
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, kashani wrote:
usefulness for the inarticulate), and top posting (I blame Pine).
Why?
The semi-factual answer is because bottom posting was the norm until
Pine appeared on the scene or at least that's the story according to
apocryphal Internet lege
Hi,
What Gentoo email list is best for Mac Mini questions? Is that the
gentoo-ppc list or something else?
Thanks,
Mark
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Friday 28 October 2005 14:23, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Fri, 28 Oct 2005 13:14:33 -0500, John Jolet wrote:
> > > You should have got that when you synced the server with one of the
> > > Gentoo mirrors. the file is at ${PORTDIR}/metadata/timestamp.chk
> >
> > should have been loaded in with an e
Matthias Bethke wrote:
> Hi Hemmann,,
> on Sunday, 2005-10-30 at 19:05:20, you wrote:
>
>>>Oh, no doubt that they can recover from burned platters.
>>>But have you ever seen, that they can recover overwritten
>>>data?
>>
>>not seen, but read about it. They can recover overwritten data.
>
>
> May
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, kashani wrote:
> usefulness for the inarticulate), and top posting (I blame Pine).
Why?
>
--
Jorge Almeida
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
If only Gentoo were more complicated to administrate we'd have less time
for discussing mathematical jokes (funny), html mail (a crutch of
dubious usefulness for the inarticulate), and top posting (I blame Pine).
Damn you Pooorrrageee!!!
Since these subjects come up every six
I notice whenever mounted shares or external drives etc. (Etc here
only includes cifs mounted shares of msOS origin).
And something unforseen happens before they are umounted properly,
like powered down disconnected reboot etc) Those mount points will
fail a umount. And even when share becomes a
On Thursday 01 September 2005 04:09 am, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 31 Aug 2005 20:16:55 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
> > > >2) If it's a file in /etc/initd then I update it automatically.
> >
> > This rule is still true. I am not a programmer and will never edit
> > an init script. For me these ar
Martins Steinbergs schreef:
> On Monday 31 October 2005 18:24, Holly Bostick wrote:
>>
>>Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but about
>>every 30 seconds or so, it 'pauses' to do something, and I have to wait
>>for 5-10 seconds while it does it before I can go further. Or th
Alexander Skwar, who happens to be smarter than you, thinks:
> Dale schrieb:
>
> > Those forensics folks sure are good though. I have heard they can get
> > it back even after you have wrote alternating 1's and 0's to the drive a
> > dozen times.
>
> Where have you heard that? I don't think they
Hello list
I need to update Apache 1.3.33 to Apache 1.3.34 but I cant find an
ebuild for that version,
Why 1.3.34 ebuild is not in portage? Is unstable??
Is there a way to install apache 1.3.34 without and ebuild and without
"crash" portage?
Or I have to make my own ebuild?
tnks
--
ge
Hi,
Each 20 times that my hard disk is mounted, my ext3 partition (is the
only one that I have) gets checked for inconsistencies.
On the last times that that task has been runned, it tells me that ~
(more or less) the 10% of the filesystem is non-contiguous. I suppose
that the pro
Hello list
I need to update Apache 1.3.33 to Apache 1.3.34 but I cant find an
ebuild for that version,
Why 1.3.34 ebuild is not in portage? Is unstable??
Is there a way to install apache 1.3.34 without and ebuild and without
"crash" portage?
Or I have to make my own ebuild?
tnks
--
ge
On Monday 31 October 2005 18:24, Holly Bostick wrote:
> Hey, all,
>
> Sorry that this will not be an extremely clear question, but I really
> have no idea where to start, or what the problem is.
>
> Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but about
> every 30 seconds or so, it '
* On 31.10.2005 James wrote:
>> [ebuild R ] net-analyzer/ethereal-0.10.13-r1 -adns +gtk +ipv6
>> -kerberos -snmp +ssl 0 kB
>
> What syntax did you use to generate this listing?
,-
| % emerge -pv ethereal
|
| These are the packages that I would merge, in order:
|
| Calculating depende
Mark gmail.com> writes:
> Has anyone set up a Hylafax server along with a mail system on the same
> server?
Did you look at:
http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_FAX_Server
or
http://www.linuxhowtos.org/System/faxserver.htm
these result of googling with:
+hylafax +postscript +gentoo
hth,
James
--
Hey, all,
Sorry that this will not be an extremely clear question, but I really
have no idea where to start, or what the problem is.
Basically, my system is running "fine" (no overt problems), but about
every 30 seconds or so, it 'pauses' to do something, and I have to wait
for 5-10 seconds while
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>
>
> I got rid of the file, and now X cannot see my mouse, and refuses to
> start.
> I think the problem is that it used to be /dev/mouse and is now
> /dev/input/mouse0
> or some such. I'm not sure. I don't know where the Xorg config file is,
> so I don't know what to chan
Dale schreef:
> Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
>>
>> Sometimes this 'educating' may sound much harsher than ment - but
>> don't forget, that for a lot of people on this (or every public)
>> mailing list english is only the second or third language - and
>> hitting the right 'tone' is not easy, if yo
This changed things, but not for the better. See below.
On 10/30/05, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:> 2) The init scripts complain that the system doesn't support DEVFS or> UDEV, but> a) I thought I *did* have UDEV; I remember a big deal about> converting to it.
Richard Fish asmallpond.org> writes:
> >ethereal has worked for a long time on my portable. eix says it's installed:
> You need to add the +gtk use flag. Otherwise you just get "tethereal"
> which is the console interface.
Well, I've had 'gtk in my make.use file since the beginning. When did
On Oct 31, 2005, at 3:03 pm, Hans-Werner Hilse wrote:
I really loved getting the widescreen framebuffer working - it was
such
a buzz, so cool. That made for the ultimate in notebook usability and
portability.
I'm copying it here verbatim. It's made against a 2.6.11.n kernel and
may need a l
It was a typo in the conf. I had commented out the
line: title install GRUB onto the hard disk.
--- maxim wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> This is too weird. Just did a re-emerge of grub onto
> a
> tiny(80M) hd as /dev/hda for /dev/hdb, my main
> drive.
> Grub seems to bo
Dale schreef:
> I wonder which one worked, the telling it to ask first, which it
> didn't, or setting the domain thing.
I don't know why the asking thing didn't work (I'd have to look, and
it's not really important anymore), but the domain thing doesn't have to
ask you, because you've told it wh
Dale wrote:
I can't tell any difference over here. It looks the same to me. <
scratches head >
Mozilla/Thunderbird will 'interpret' plain-text messages, so for example
when you see this in Thunderbird, you will see that /this is italic/,
*this is bold*, and _this is underlined_. No HTM
Yes, it is.
JD
-Original Message-
From: Qian Qiao [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, October 30, 2005 7:00 PM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] updates
On 10/30/05, John Dangler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Roy~
> Thanks for the reply. I actually used gen
Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
>you are correct, english was my second language (and latin my third).
>
>And I was so bad in english that I had to redo 7th grade... ;)
>
>Glück Auf
>Volker
>
>
>
Don't worry, my english ain't all that great either. Bad part is, I
only know english. O_O
Dale
--
Whoa! Are you running for "Ubergeek-Of-The-Year" award?
:D
Seriously (haha), your considerations are technically true, but they
are of no use in explaining/burning down the famous joke. The sense of
the joke is (1)making people that understand binary understand the
joke itself and (2)letting other
Hi,
On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 17:48:24 +
Stroller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Oct 30, 2005, at 11:18 am, Hans-Werner Hilse wrote:
> >
> > I'm running Gentoo on my picturebook happily since about 2 or 3 years
> > now. Just ask if there are more problems. I can give you a kernel patch
> > for the
On Monday 31 October 2005 15:43, Dale wrote:
>
> Thanks, I needed that. Can I assume english is not your native
> language? The writing was fine, the name gave it away though. I do
> like to read those who have bad english sometimes. It may take me a
> minute to figure it out but they need hel
Qian Qiao wrote:
>
>It's just like moving into a new neighbourhood, you have to take your
>time to get acquainted, it is natural to feel a bit uncomfortable at
>the begining, but that's not how it is. Once you get used to things,
>you'll be part of that neighbourhood.
>
>
I live in the country,
Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
>Hi,
>
>nobody wants to hurt, harm or insult you.
>
>It is just that 95% of all public mailing lists have this two simple rules:
>no top posting
>no html
>
>A lot of people don't even read html mails, some even get angry about them, so
>when somebody tells you, not to
I'll byte. I avoided commenting on this yesterday on the principle that
"if you have to explain the joke then it's no longer funny", but here's
my interpretation.
On Oct 31, 2005, at 11:54 am, Holly Bostick wrote:
There are 10 kinds of people in the world
Those who understand binary, and thos
Qian Qiao wrote:
>On 10/31/05, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>>I'm not sure that last one worked right either. It was supposed to ask
>>before sending, it didn't. I added this domain to plain text, something
>>I just lucked up and found in preferences. Maybe this will work. Let
>>me kn
Dale schrieb:
> Well, I have Mozilla set up to send both types, plain and HTML, so that
> you can get whatever you want.
Yes, you can setup Mozilla that way.
> It makes it take longer to send over my
> slow dial-up but I thought it polite, maybe it is not after all.
HTML most often ist not pol
On 10/31/05, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Funny, I feel turned upside down. I'm not everybody else either, I'm
> me. I like to help people but I don't want to change who I am to do it.
It's just like moving into a new neighbourhood, you have to take your
time to get acquainted, it is natura
On 10/31/05, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm not sure that last one worked right either. It was supposed to ask
> before sending, it didn't. I added this domain to plain text, something
> I just lucked up and found in preferences. Maybe this will work. Let
> me know if it does or not.
It
Hi,
nobody wants to hurt, harm or insult you.
It is just that 95% of all public mailing lists have this two simple rules:
no top posting
no html
A lot of people don't even read html mails, some even get angry about them, so
when somebody tells you, not to send them, (s)he does it to help you.
T
Qian Qiao wrote:
>>You are not turning yourself upside down, and you don't have to. Not
>>sending HTML and try not to top-post isn't that hard to do, almost
>>everybody else on this list knows how to do that, and I don't see why
>>you can't.
>>
>>-- Joe
>>
>>
>>
I'm not sure that last one work
Qian Qiao wrote:
>You are not turning yourself upside down, and you don't have to. Not
>sending HTML and try not to top-post isn't that hard to do, almost
>everybody else on this list knows how to do that, and I don't see why
>you can't.
>
>-- Joe
>
>
>
Funny, I feel turned upside down. I'm not
dumb problem? :D
--
Best Regards
Peper
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On 10/31/05, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> Holly Bostick wrote:
> Dale schreef:
> If I am that big of a headache, so sorry I came here. I used to wonder why
> more people didn't try to help people that use Linux, I beginning to see
> why. You join a list and have to turn yourself upside
Holly Bostick wrote:
Dale schreef:
Well, I have Mozilla set up to send both types, plain and HTML, so
that you can get whatever you want. It makes it take longer to send
over my slow dial-up but I thought it polite, maybe it is not after
all.
In that case, you're
Dale schreef:
> Well, I have Mozilla set up to send both types, plain and HTML, so
> that you can get whatever you want. It makes it take longer to send
> over my slow dial-up but I thought it polite, maybe it is not after
> all.
In that case, you're wasting your own bandwidth, since many of
Alexander Skwar wrote:
Dale schrieb:
Alexander Skwar wrote:
Dale schrieb:
Well I have to have HTML because I use email for a LOT more than just
this list.
And why do you need HTML there?
Anyway, Mozilla/Thunderb
> Well I have to have HTML because I use email for a LOT more than just
> this list.
>
> Because I send pictures and make my text have color and all that stuff.
> Ain't that HTML? Ain't no list getting between me and my lady. No way!
You're guilty of terrible bad taste :) . I exchange pl
Matthias Bethke schreef:
> Hi Anthony, on Sunday, 2005-10-30 at 16:06:47, you wrote:
>
>> The main reason for my interest in Gentoo was to replace Suse on my
>> server, since it looked promising in the control I have over the
>> installation.
>>
>> My question is this: I want to replace Suse on
problem 1: can no longer access my block devices from Konqueror. FromKonqueror I get a "Protocol not supported" error when I click on the
devices tab. So I can't access my usb disk or even view my partitionsfrom Konqueror.
It seems you lack the correct kioslaves. When you emerged the split ebuilds
Alexander Skwar schreef:
> Holly Bostick schrieb:
>
>>The other joke is similar, but goes like this
>>
>>There are 10 kinds of people in the world
>>Those who understand binary, and those who don't
>>
>>("1" is "yes" in binary language, which only consists of the "letters" 1
>>and 0, and is the ba
Dale schreef:
> Alexander Skwar wrote:
>
>> Dale schrieb:
>>
>>> Well I have to have HTML because I use email for a LOT more than
>>> just this list.
>>
>> And why do you need HTML there?
>>
>> Anyway, Mozilla/Thunderbird makes it very easy to decide if HTML is
>> used or not - when you set t
Dale schrieb:
> Alexander Skwar wrote:
>
>>Dale schrieb:
>>
>>
>>
>>>Well I have to have HTML because I use email for a LOT more than just
>>>this list.
>>>
>>>
>>
>>And why do you need HTML there?
>>
>>Anyway, Mozilla/Thunderbird makes it very easy to decide if
>>HTML is used or not - when
1 - 100 of 111 matches
Mail list logo