On Wednesday 11 Jan 2012 05:36:39 Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> There was not just one occasion when I thought I'd write a simple Qt-based
> desktop from scratch (e.g in the likes and scope of Xfce). ^^
razor-qt!! [1]
havent tried it yet (kdepim dosnt hate me as much) but heard good things about
i
Am 10.01.2012 23:57, schrieb Mark Knecht:
> It's not about making yourself a fool at all. You've done all the
> basic stuff and then a lot more and it's still not working.
>
> My suggestion would be to try the IntelGfx list. They helped me quite
> a lot when I first brought up the machine I teste
On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 10:53:48PM +, Mick wrote:
> > > However, as the e-news item says KDEPIM 4.7 is really borked right now.
> >
> > YEP!
> >
> > > Most people have recommended to move to T'bird, Claws, or mutt.
> >
> > Tbird ++1!
> > great, easy, universal (doz) .
When I was still
Peter Humphrey wrote:
ls -d /dev/rt*
This is mine:
root@fireball / # ls -dl /dev/rt*
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 4 Jan 1 15:39 /dev/rtc -> rtc0
crw--- 1 root root 254, 0 Jan 1 15:39 /dev/rtc0
root@fireball / #
Mine links rtc to rtc0 which should work if the OP have the same.
Dale
:-)
On Tuesday 10 January 2012 21:45:21 Jeff Cranmer wrote:
> Initially, the RTC options were not enabled in my kernel, but even after
> setting these, I'm still getting this error. I'm adding all the device
> drivers as modules and trying again to see if I can remove this error.
> I suspect it is th
On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 2:16 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
> Am 2012-01-05 23:15, schrieb Stefan G. Weichinger:
>
>> otoh it might be a bug and not my fault anyway.
>
> still no clue what this is all about ... *sigh* and I can't find any
> bug-reports on this.
>
> Gotta file one myself and maybe
On Monday 09 Jan 2012 16:38:52 James wrote:
> Mick gmail.com> writes:
> > Try Settings/Configure and then add new account, or fire up kcmshell4
> > kcm_akonadi and add resources as desired.
>
> I had to use the settings->configureKorganizer->calenders
> and then put the explict path into the conf
What he wants is "tinker panic 0" - see man ntp.conf
Allows a slew below the threshold, and a step at anything over, no
matter how great - works well as long as you are not doing sophisticated
DB stuff (rollbacks).
I am concerned about the rtc error:
try ...
bunyip ~ # ls -al /dev/rtc*
crw---
Jeff Cranmer wrote:
On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:02 -0600, Dale wrote:
Florian Philipp wrote:
Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
/etc/init.d/ntp-client. It will set the clock so that ntpd can keep it
in sync
Am 10.01.2012 22:42, schrieb Jarry:
> On 10-Jan-12 22:18, Florian Philipp wrote:
>
>>> Wouldn't it make more sense to get the clock set correctly on bootup
>>> with ntpdate, and then have ntpd keep things in line moving forward?
>>> Otherwise, every couple hours, you'd have your cron'd ntpddate ju
Am 2012-01-05 23:15, schrieb Stefan G. Weichinger:
> otoh it might be a bug and not my fault anyway.
still no clue what this is all about ... *sigh* and I can't find any
bug-reports on this.
Gotta file one myself and maybe make myself a fool because of some small
issue ... ;-)
S
On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 15:59:45 -0500
Michael Mol wrote:
> > Servers with long uptimes should use ntpd, especially if it's apps
> > timestamp data.
> > Laptops and desktops should instead use ntpdate every one or few
> > hours, that is more suitable for those machines (usually they only
> > care abo
Perfect answer Alan, many thanks...
On 2012-01-10 3:38 PM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 13:46:59 -0500
Tanstaafl wrote:
Ok, I did something really dumb...
I changed the root passwd for a system I manage last week, but
neglected to write it down, and now what I *thought* I had ch
On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:02 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Florian Philipp wrote:
> > Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
> > designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
> > /etc/init.d/ntp-client. It will set the clock so that ntpd can keep it
> > in sync af
On 10-Jan-12 22:18, Florian Philipp wrote:
Wouldn't it make more sense to get the clock set correctly on bootup
with ntpdate, and then have ntpd keep things in line moving forward?
Otherwise, every couple hours, you'd have your cron'd ntpddate jumping
the clock around. I've had apps get stuck in
Am 10.01.2012 21:59, schrieb Michael Mol:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
>> On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 13:02:38 -0600
>> Dale wrote:
>>
>>> Florian Philipp wrote:
Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
/etc/i
Hello,
I'm updating my system and I will emerge the mt-daapd package. revdep-rebuild
shows no errors and the system is working.
The emerge call builds the depended packages exception net-dns/avahi and the
media-sound/mt-daapd. I'm building it with:
[ebuild N ] net-dns/avahi-0.6.30-r2 USE=
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 13:02:38 -0600
> Dale wrote:
>
>> Florian Philipp wrote:
>>> Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
>>> designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
>>> /etc/init.d/ntp-client. It will set the clock so that nt
On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 13:02:38 -0600
Dale wrote:
> Florian Philipp wrote:
> > Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
> > designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
> > /etc/init.d/ntp-client. It will set the clock so that ntpd can keep
> > it in sync a
On Tue, Jan 10, 2012 at 08:12:53PM +0100, Hinnerk van Bruinehsen wrote:
> On 10.01.2012 19:46, Tanstaafl wrote:
> > Ok, I did something really dumb...
> >
> > I changed the root passwd for a system I manage last week, but
> > neglected to write it down, and now what I *thought* I had changed
> > i
On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 13:46:59 -0500
Tanstaafl wrote:
> Ok, I did something really dumb...
>
> I changed the root passwd for a system I manage last week, but
> neglected to write it down, and now what I *thought* I had changed it
> to isn't working... I know, I know, really *really* dumb, but that
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 10.01.2012 19:46, Tanstaafl wrote:
> Ok, I did something really dumb...
>
> I changed the root passwd for a system I manage last week, but
> neglected to write it down, and now what I *thought* I had changed
> it to isn't working... I know, I know,
Florian Philipp wrote:
Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
/etc/init.d/ntp-client. It will set the clock so that ntpd can keep it
in sync afterwards. You can start ntp-client on a running system but
it m
> I have the following (default) keyboard shortcuts in xfce4:
>
> XF86Display
> p
> Escape
> Delete
> F2
>
> F2 works, but Escape and Delete don't
> work. I don't know what keys correspond to XF86Display and p
> so I haven't tested those. The commands associated with the two
> shortcuts that don'
Florian Philipp writes:
> Am 10.01.2012 18:43, schrieb Michael Mol:
> > Jeff Cranmer wrote:
> > Hm. That sounds like your tz (-0500) is being applied twice.
>
> Besides, ntpd does not correct such large differences. It is not
> designed to do this, especially on a running system. Activate
> /etc
Ok, I did something really dumb...
I changed the root passwd for a system I manage last week, but neglected
to write it down, and now what I *thought* I had changed it to isn't
working... I know, I know, really *really* dumb, but that's where I am...
I know I can boot into Single User mode, r
Am 10.01.2012 18:43, schrieb Michael Mol:
> Jeff Cranmer wrote:
>> On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:56 +0800, W.Kenworthy wrote:
>>> Define crashing?
>>>
>>> This looks more like problems with yout TZ variables than ntpd.
>>>
>>> try "ntpq -p" to check if its actually running/locked. If ntpd is
>>> freewh
Jeff Cranmer wrote:
> On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:56 +0800, W.Kenworthy wrote:
>> Define crashing?
>>
>> This looks more like problems with yout TZ variables than ntpd.
>>
>> try "ntpq -p" to check if its actually running/locked. If ntpd is
>> freewheeling, it is prpbably because your time is too far
On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:56 +0800, W.Kenworthy wrote:
> Define crashing?
>
> This looks more like problems with yout TZ variables than ntpd.
>
> try "ntpq -p" to check if its actually running/locked. If ntpd is
> freewheeling, it is prpbably because your time is too far from lock so
> it will s
This is true, however it's a temporary measure only, and I have backups.
Once the prices drop again, I'll buy another 1.5TB disk and convert back
to a RAID5.
On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:14 +0700, Pandu Poluan wrote:
>
> On Jan 10, 2012 8:48 AM, "Jeff Cranmer"
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > > >
> > > > Me too
On 09.01.2012 22:08, Walter Dnes wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 09, 2012 at 04:47:22PM +0700, Pandu Poluan wrote
>
>> Is it possible to load the firmware blob after booting, from the shell?
>
> I don't think so. These are not standard kernel modules (*.o) files.
You could build the radeon driver as mod
On 09.01.2012 19:31, James wrote:
> Daniel Troeder admin-box.com> writes:
>
So I have installed sys-process/vixie-cron
>
>
> Ah, excellent. Just so you know, Paul Vixie is one of the un_sung
> heros of the the internet.
>
> just look up Paul Vixie on wikepedia and you'll quickly realize t
On 10 January 2012 10:12, Andrea Perotti wrote:
> Il 06/01/2012 10:51, András Csányi ha scritto:
>> under /boot directory. Did I missed something? Is there anything new
>> in genkernel? Should I report it?
>
> Check /etc/genkernel/genkernel.conf maybe is commented the option that
> install it into
Il 06/01/2012 10:51, András Csányi ha scritto:
> under /boot directory. Did I missed something? Is there anything new
> in genkernel? Should I report it?
Check /etc/genkernel/genkernel.conf maybe is commented the option that
install it into /boot .
hth
A.
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