On Sat, 02 Sep 2017 22:57:12 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> OK, so disclaimer up front. I detest Ruby. I hate it with a passion.
Personally I find that passion is better reserved for positive things.
> You have to understand what Ruby is. It is not a language. It is 5
> languages. Like python27 a
On Sunday, 3 September 2017 02:30:59 BST Dale wrote:
> Odd how some things work and some don't.
Allow me to introduce you to my old friend KMail ...
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Sunday, 3 September 2017 03:34:06 BST R0b0t1 wrote:
> On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 8:49 AM, Peter Humphrey
wrote:
> > A week or two ago I was investigating some other weirdnesses and at one
> > point I zeroed out the first partition: the unformatted one containing
> > the UEFI data. It took longer t
On 01/09/17 19:14, Grant wrote:
My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
applications?
Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE suppo
On Sunday, 3 September 2017 08:37:11 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday, 3 September 2017 02:30:59 BST Dale wrote:
> > Odd how some things work and some don't.
>
> Allow me to introduce you to my old friend KMail ...
Hmm ... mine was playing up since I moved to 5.5.3 and enabled USE=google for
Am 02. September 2017 um 21:18 Uhr -0500 schrieb R0b0t1 :
> Seeing as the OP is saying there are 3 versions queued for merge and
> he has not installed any of them by hand it looks like Alan is
> right. Perhaps the OP is using "old" Ruby based software, but software
> of that age in another languag
>> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
>> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
>> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
>> applications?
>
> Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE supports this, but in K
>> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
>> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
>> Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
>> well with any USB disks that happen to also be attached?
>>
>> crw--- 1 root root
>> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
>> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
>> Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
>> well with any USB disks that happen to also be attached?
>
> I'm not certain what you
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 7:59 PM, Grant wrote:
>
> >> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
> >> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
> >> Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
> >> well with any USB disks that
Mick wrote:
> On Sunday, 3 September 2017 08:37:11 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
>> On Sunday, 3 September 2017 02:30:59 BST Dale wrote:
>>> Odd how some things work and some don't.
>> Allow me to introduce you to my old friend KMail ...
> Hmm ... mine was playing up since I moved to 5.5.3 and enabled
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 1:08 AM, Hans de Graaff wrote:
> The situation with ruby really isn't different from python or perl at
> all. We also have multiple python versions in the tree just like with
> ruby. perl is not slotted but faces the same issues on each version (e.g.
> the "no . in INC path
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 2:39 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday, 3 September 2017 03:34:06 BST R0b0t1 wrote:
>> On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 8:49 AM, Peter Humphrey
> wrote:
>> > A week or two ago I was investigating some other weirdnesses and at one
>> > point I zeroed out the first partition: the u
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 2:11 PM, Grant wrote:
>>> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
>>> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
>>> Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
>>> well with any USB disks that happen
My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
well with any USB disks that happen to also be attached?
>>>
>>> I'm not cert
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 6:41 PM, Grant wrote:
> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which conflicts
> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
> Gentoo. Is there a udev method for renaming the disk that will work
> well with any USB disks tha
On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 9:26 PM, Mike Gilbert wrote:
>
> I would suggest you utilize the existing symlinks in one of the
> /dev/disk/ sub-directories, or create some udev rules to create your
> own symlinks based on whatever metadata you wish. I would also suggest
> you read the udev(7) manual page
On 3 September 2017 20:11:51 GMT+02:00, "Canek Peláez Valdés"
wrote:
>On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 7:59 PM, Grant wrote:
>>
>> >> My new laptop uses /dev/nvme0n1 instead of /dev/sda which
>conflicts
>> >> with the script I use to manage about 12 similar laptops running
>> >> Gentoo. Is there a udev m
On Mon, Sep 4, 2017 at 6:26 AM, J. Roeleveld wrote:
> On 3 September 2017 20:11:51 GMT+02:00, "Canek Peláez Valdés" <
can...@gmail.com> wrote:
[ ... ]
> >The label by itself works at boot since it's just another kernel
> >parameter;
> >for example in my latop (that uses NVME, by the way) uses the
Emerge -pv openssl:
[ebuild R] dev-libs/openssl-1.0.2l::gentoo USE="asm sslv3
tls-heartbeat zlib -bindist -gmp -kerberos -rfc3779 -sctp -sslv2
-static-libs {-test} -vanilla"...
I figured ssl better off without it; I think the issue with this package is
it builds it's own version of chromiu
Am 03. September 2017 um 15:35 Uhr -0500 schrieb R0b0t1 :
> I think the takeaway from Alan's comment is that Python is unnaturally
> stable compared to other interpreted languages. One might be inclined
> to think Python developers consider their work to be a widely used
> tool as opposed to a toy
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