For the Newbie it seems that Linux is harder then windows when it comes to
install program or maintain the system.
I think the revolution should start at the companies that will switch their
workstations/servers with Linux to avoid the fee to Microsoft.
Then the companies workers will start to c
Thanks ;-)
Max.
On Wednesday 12 December 2001 00:18, Nadav Har'El wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 11, 2001, The Rabbit of Vugluskr wrote about "Two mouses in X.":
> > IBM laptop with "native" mouse (I don't remember how it's called, the red
> > button people sometimes call "dagdegan":-)) recognized as Gener
>
> By doing so, Microsoft has achieved an important target: The user doesn't
> really need to know how the program works in order to start working with
> it. This is the very thing that (IMHO) wasn't achieved on Linux.
>
The stupid user approach: a program that does not work on the first run,
is
On 2001 December 11 &bet;,Tuesday 04:29, you wrote:
(deleted my orrors spelling... does anybody know how to configure kmail to check for
spelling orrors each time I press ctrl-enter?)
> Well, WinCommandder is a really good program, but it is not free, so I
> guess you can't port it yourself.
I wa
On Tue, 11 Dec 2001, Schlomo Schapiro wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just now got my new AMD Athlon 1600+ w/ 512MB RAM and free gives this
> output:
> total used free sharedbuffers cached
> Mem:514032 208576 305456 0 48824 178956
> -/+
On Tue, Dec 11, 2001, The Rabbit of Vugluskr wrote about "Two mouses in X.":
> IBM laptop with "native" mouse (I don't remember how it's called, the red
> button people sometimes call "dagdegan":-)) recognized as Generic PS/2
> (/dev/psaux) and USB mouse (/dev/input/mice). X works perfectly with
Hi list.
Sorry for bothering you guys, but here is another problem:
IBM laptop with "native" mouse (I don't remember how it's called, the red
button people sometimes call "dagdegan":-)) recognized as Generic PS/2
(/dev/psaux) and USB mouse (/dev/input/mice). X works perfectly with both, of
cous
On Mon, Dec 10, 2001, Nadav Har'El wrote about "New SendSMS released":
> A new version 2.5 of SendSMS has been released.
Oof, those SMS providers can't let me have a single restful evening :(
Today, around 14:00, Orange-Walla changed their site too, forcing me to
release yet another version of Se
Unkillable <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You still have to learn the basic commands !
Not really. The modern GUIs work just as well as Windows or better.
> after all, you have to remember that linux is command-line based...
> but windows is more friendly to the user, and you dont allways have t
You still have to learn the basic commands !
after all, you have to remember that linux is command-line based...
but windows is more friendly to the user, and you dont allways have to
open shell window to perform an action, for example to use 'grep'
you need to use the commandline,
my point is
On Monday 10 December 2001 00:57, Ez-Aton wrote:
> - Original Message -
> From: "Shlomi Fish" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Ez-Aton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: "Adir Abraham" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Orr Dunkelman"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Orna Agmon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> "Alon Altman" <[EMAIL P
Actually more and more FTP clients (not webbrowsers) do support
ftp-over-httpd. Even the famous lftp command line client does it well.
Schlomo
On Mon, 10 Dec 2001, Maxim Kryachko wrote:
> Got the point, tnx.
>
> Max
>
> On Monday 10 December 2001 18:01, Evgeny Popov wrote:
> > Will not work. Sq
although evolution has the look and feel of outlook,
AFAIK it does not have shared calanders and does not support hebrew.
( I would be happy to be corrected on this :-)
regards
erez.
Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
> > Also, i need a program that have strong mailing rules like in
> > outlook that can a
Or if you could wait a month or so, Ximian will release (for money) their
Ximian connector and I assume they'll have some import for this...
And for those who are thinking to purchase Ximian connector (with their
announced price) I would strongly suggest to wait. As far as I know there are
3 c
I tried to install Open Mail.
It was hard to Install
Hard to understand / configure
and slow for even 1 user !
I recently checked KOrganizer and it sure look hot.
I hope that Hebrew on KDE3 with the upcoming Korganizer 3 which suppose to
support some kind of server ( like exchange ) will give a
> I believe that some subscribers of this list had experience with HP
> Open Mail, which may be a (better than nothing) solution.
It isn't not a solution (and maybe not even better then nothing).
At least that was my experience with it. I do know that HP stopped supporting it
though.
Gilad.
-
> Also, i need a program that have strong mailing rules like in
> outlook that can also read and write hebrew prefferably in X.
> Any one have a solution that will fit the above description?
Personally I think the notion of Outlook having strong rules is quite funny, having
come to know procmai
Oh yes, I tried it.
If you can, don't touch it. Also, it might be discontinued now (I heard
such a rumor some time ago).
Schlomo
On Tue, 11 Dec 2001, Eli Marmor wrote:
> I believe that some subscribers of this list had experience with HP
> Open Mail, which may be a (better than nothing) solut
Hi,
I just now got my new AMD Athlon 1600+ w/ 512MB RAM and free gives this
output:
total used free sharedbuffers cached
Mem:514032 208576 305456 0 48824 178956
-/+ buffers/cache: 18014398509462780 533236
Swap: 52530
I believe that some subscribers of this list had experience with HP
Open Mail, which may be a (better than nothing) solution.
--
Eli Marmor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
CTO, Founder
Netmask (El-Mar) Internet Technologies Ltd.
__
Tel.: +972-9-766-1020
Once I had a similar problem with mail in Outlook, and wrote a small
Perl script which exports the mail to text files, and from there on you
can use Mail::Folder or whatever to process it and store in mailboxes
accessible from linux programs. Several issues however:
1. You need Perl installed on
Hi all,
I have gigs of archives of email messages over the years which are on pst files and
are easy for me to search and backup.
The thing is, that i want to work on linux more, and in order to do that i need to
port my email system to another format while still maintaining the directory
struc
Boris,
Your opinion about textual interface and command line is basicaly wrong.
The point is that in the *nix OS , the command line and terminal is just
the default input/output devices. When a program/utility/whatever is
writen and uses the default io devices it becomes extremly flexible: you
can
Gilad Ben-Yossef wrote:
>
What about Mozilla? The Best browser for Linux (and any
>>other OS as
>>
well).
>>>And heaviest (even comparing to IE). It has many problems, yet,
>>>
I'll also note that I don't think it is inherently heavier than IE. Only
problem is that you cann
> > > What about Mozilla? The Best browser for Linux (and any
> other OS as
> > > well).
> > >
> > And heaviest (even comparing to IE). It has many problems, yet,
> and, still,
> > sux.
> >
For the record, although this was not doubt true for previous versions, IMHO the
latest version of M
I'm not going to defend "Unkillable"'s opinion, but over the time I have
established an opinion about the various Linux GUI implementations.
On Linux, 99% of the server applications take their configuration from a
config file.
This requires you to do one of the following:
1. Get to know what the
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