Oops! I seem to have missed sending this to the list instead of Andrew.
On Wednesday 24 Jun 2015 22:03:45 Mick wrote:
> On Wednesday 24 Jun 2015 08:31:51 you wrote:
> > On Wed, 24 Jun 2015 07:08:01 +0100 Mick wrote:
> > > On Tuesday 23 Jun 2015 11:54:02 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > > > On Tue, 23 Jun
On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
> P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
> class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
> Google sees a <1% increase in performance as *the best thing ever*,
> because it can save them a bunch of money
On Wed, 24 Jun 2015 16:29:14 +0430, behrouz khosravi wrote:
> I have moved to i3wm and
> USE="-* " and it was not that hard.
No one said it would be hard, just that it has great potential for
breakage. That potential is still there. When the devs tweak default USE
settings in ebuilds to make
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
>> P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
>> class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
>> Google sees a <1% increase in performance as *the best thing ever*,
>> because it can
On 24/06/2015 14:23, behrouz khosravi wrote:
>
> Here's some good advice:
>
> Don't do that. See below.
>
>
> Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
Wait a little longer :-)
I predict within 2 weeks you'll be posting back about some completely
baffling problem and we'll have a h
On 25/06/2015 10:27, Dale wrote:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
>> On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
>>> P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
>>> class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
>>> Google sees a <1% increase in performance as *
On 25/06/2015 06:25, Jc García wrote:
> 2015-06-24 6:23 GMT-06:00 behrouz khosravi :
>>
>>> Here's some good advice:
>>>
>>> Don't do that. See below.
>>
>>
>> Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
>>
>>> That's a bit of a nonsensical line of thought, as what you think you
>>> want doesn't r
On 06/25/2015 01:29 AM, R0b0t1 wrote:
> What will the Qt application be doing? Any of those setups should be
> sufficient for a typical GUI program.
>
> Highest performance would probably be passing a discrete card to the
> guest... not particularly the smartest move, but it would account for
> eve
Oh, I forgot about the gtk and sdl displays... I'll test them together
with QXL.
Thanks for your hint!
But anyways, I'll need two X servers when using this setup - one on the
VM and one on the hypervisor.
Shouldn't X11 forwarding be less overhead?
Thank you
Ralf
On 06/25/2015 05:44 AM, waben.
> On Jun 25, 2015, at 11:47, Ralf wrote:
>
>> On 06/25/2015 01:29 AM, R0b0t1 wrote:
>> What will the Qt application be doing? Any of those setups should be
>> sufficient for a typical GUI program.
>>
>> Highest performance would probably be passing a discrete card to the
>> guest... not particul
On Wednesday 24 Jun 2015 12:13:06 Alex Thorne wrote:
> I used to get the following error in /var/log/rc.log
> /run/lvm/lvmetad.socket: connect failed: No such file or directory
> I am not sure why this was happening, but I read that one fix was to
> disable lvmetad entirely. And so I set
>
Hi James,
Am 24.06.2015 um 05:12 schrieb James:
So is there a tool/interface where I type something like
'layman -a java' and it writes out the file to
/etc/portage/repos.conf/
You should take a look at
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:Portage/Sync#layman-updater_Method.
TLDR: Install (
On Wednesday 24 Jun 2015 19:16:01 Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On 24/06/2015 19:35, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
> > On Wed, Jun 24 2015, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> >> One more thing I can add: From observation, I can say that Dell has 2 or
> >> more grades of kit they sell:
> >>
> >> 1. Cheap shit. You find the
Best way I ever found to learn how things really work under the hood is
> to build a Linux From Scratch and pay close attention to every single step.
>
> Not that you'd ever actually *use* that system - there's no sane package
> management for a start - but after building an LFS, the content of
> e
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 8:01 AM, behrouz khosravi wrote:
>
>
>> Best way I ever found to learn how things really work under the hood is
>> to build a Linux From Scratch and pay close attention to every single
>> step.
>>
>> Not that you'd ever actually *use* that system - there's no sane package
>
On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 12:09:03 +0100, Mick wrote:
> I would seek a refund for the MSWindows OS that it comes preinstalled
> with. (This is a blatant case of software bundling with their products
> and the refusal to cough up a refund when requested remains
> incompatible with European Directive 2005
On 25/06/2015 15:06, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 12:09:03 +0100, Mick wrote:
>
>> I would seek a refund for the MSWindows OS that it comes preinstalled
>> with. (This is a blatant case of software bundling with their products
>> and the refusal to cough up a refund when requested re
On Thu, Jun 25 2015, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 12:09:03 +0100, Mick wrote:
>
>> I would seek a refund for the MSWindows OS that it comes preinstalled
>> with. (This is a blatant case of software bundling with their products
>> and the refusal to cough up a refund when requested re
On Thu, Jun 25 2015, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On 25/06/2015 15:06, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 12:09:03 +0100, Mick wrote:
>>
>>> I would seek a refund for the MSWindows OS that it comes preinstalled
>>> with. (This is a blatant case of software bundling with their products
>>> and
On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 10:36:36 -0400, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
> > The XPS 13 at least is available as a "Developer Edition" that comes
> > with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS instead of Windows.
>
> I "dual boot" windows and gentoo. The quotes are there since my current
> machine (3 years old) has never been
On 25 June 2015 at 14:56, Rich Freeman wrote:
>
> The only issue I'd raise with LFS in this day and age is that many of
> these guides tend to leave out stuff like devtmpfs, udev, policykit,
> and so on. Some people choose not to use them (this list probably
> being one of the larger collections
Florian Gamböck floga.de> writes:
> You should take a look at
> https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:Portage/Sync#layman-updater_Method.
AWESOME!
> TLDR: Install (as in "accept keyword") a newer version of Layman (at
> least 2.2.16), add the "sync-plugin-portage" USE-Flag, and maybe double
On Thu, Jun 25 2015, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 10:36:36 -0400, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
>
>> > The XPS 13 at least is available as a "Developer Edition" that comes
>> > with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS instead of Windows.
>>
>> I "dual boot" windows and gentoo. The quotes are there since
On Thursday 25 Jun 2015 16:06:31 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 10:36:36 -0400, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
> > > The XPS 13 at least is available as a "Developer Edition" that comes
> > > with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS instead of Windows.
> >
> > I "dual boot" windows and gentoo. The quotes are t
When trying to access a webpage that uses java applets, I found that the
applets wouldn't load for me any more.
I'm running:
equery -q l '*tea*'
dev-java/icedtea-bin-7.2.5.5
dev-java/icedtea-sound-1.0.1
dev-java/icedtea-web-1.5.1-r1
eselect java-vm list
Available Java Virtual Machines:
[1] i
Am 25.06.2015 um 17:55 schrieb James:
Ah. You are my new hero, dude!
I'm glad I could help. :-)
All that googling and news items; I guess I missed this doc...
Actually there was a quite longish news item about that. "New portage
plug-in sync system" from 2015-02-02. There was also a link t
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 7:36 PM, Alexander Kapshuk <
alexander.kaps...@gmail.com> wrote:
> When trying to access a webpage that uses java applets, I found that the
> applets wouldn't load for me any more.
>
> I'm running:
>
> equery -q l '*tea*'
> dev-java/icedtea-bin-7.2.5.5
> dev-java/icedtea-so
Florian Gamböck floga.de> writes:
> Actually there was a quite longish news item about that. "New portage
> plug-in sync system" from 2015-02-02. There was also a link to the said
> Wiki page.
Yes I did and it did not work as noted. However, I did not have a default
mask set correctly on perm
Alexander Kapshuk gmail.com> writes:
> >>
I have had some weirdness. Sometimes it works, sometimes it does not
and often it takes about 3-10 seconds for it to work. This is all
on seamonkey. I've noticed, just not gotten around to debugging.
> When trying to access a webpage that uses java app
On Thu, Jun 25 2015, Mick wrote:
> On Thursday 25 Jun 2015 16:06:31 Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 10:36:36 -0400, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
>> > > The XPS 13 at least is available as a "Developer Edition" that comes
>> > > with Ubuntu 14.04 LTS instead of Windows.
>> >
>> > I "dual bo
This is cut/pasted from today's @RISK email from sans.org:
Title: Adobe Releases Emergency to Patch Zero Day Under Active
Exploitation in the Wild
Description: Adobe released an out-of-band patch to address
CVE-2015-3113, a Flash Player zero-day vulnerability that is actively
being used by an APT
> Best way I ever found to learn how things really work under the hood is
> to build a Linux From Scratch and pay close attention to every single step.
> Not that you'd ever actually *use* that system - there's no sane package
> management for a start - but after building an LFS, the content of
>
Hi,
On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 16:02:00 -0700 walt wrote:
> Title: Adobe Releases Emergency to Patch Zero Day Under Active
> Exploitation in the Wild
> Description: Adobe released an out-of-band patch to address
> CVE-2015-3113, a Flash Player zero-day vulnerability that is actively
> being used by an AP
On 26/06/2015 08:12, Andrew Savchenko wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Thu, 25 Jun 2015 16:02:00 -0700 walt wrote:
>> Title: Adobe Releases Emergency to Patch Zero Day Under Active
>> Exploitation in the Wild
>> Description: Adobe released an out-of-band patch to address
>> CVE-2015-3113, a Flash Player zero-d
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