Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
What version do you use?
The debian one.
The version of Debian uses client-side rendering (Xft). The ones from
OOo[.il] use the traditional server-side rendering.
With client-side rendering you need to make the client aware of the
fonts. In server-side rendering you only nee
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 07:03:09PM +0300, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm trying to run OpenOffice from a remote machine. I'm getting a bit of
> confusing results.
What version do you use?
The version of Debian uses client-side rendering (Xft). The ones from
OOo[.il] use the traditiona
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 05:09:01PM +0300, Omer Zak wrote:
>
> Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
>
> >>2. Slow version of libraries (I vaguely remember having read something
> >>about this about RedHat 9.0). A google search caused me to feel as if I
> >>am searching for a needle in a big pile of hay.
> >
>
Hi all,
I'm trying to run OpenOffice from a remote machine. I'm getting a bit of
confusing results.
The problem can be catagorized in one word:
Fonts.
OO doesn't see any of the fonts available to my local X server. Is that
the standard behaviour? Is that how things should be?
Setup:
Local machi
I had FC1 and it got slow to the point of annoying.
I played with services etc but got little success.
I actually liked FC1 and would still be using it if not for the
slowness.
I am using Xandros and on the same hardware/ram it has been much faster,
at least until I started running tons of servi
Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
2. Slow version of libraries (I vaguely remember having read something
about this about RedHat 9.0). A google search caused me to feel as if I
am searching for a needle in a big pile of hay.
http://mirror.hamakor.org.il/archives/linux-il/01-2004/7844.html ?
Thanks for the
I have vague memories of playing with it, but can't give very specific
details. From googling (and from my memories), it's indeed software
raid, and if you have no specific reasons to use their driver, don't.
Simply use linux's software raid (md) if you want raid. This, of course,
assuming you _can
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 02:16:25PM +0300, Omer Zak wrote:
> I have the feeling that my Fedora Core 1 Linux installation on a IBM
> ThinkPad R40e laptop is too slow to start up applications.
> Once an application has been started, its response time is adequate.
> This happens even when I start up o
I have FC2 on Dell Inspiron 8200, P4 Mobile 2.0Ghz, with 512 MB and
performance, in KDE especially, can be outrageously bad. Menus can take
couple of seconds to open etc. I also run Debian on the same machine, same
version of KDE (3.2.2), and the difference in performance is very obvious. I
hav
Hi,
I'm trying to install SuSE 91 (kernel 2.6.4) on a machine that has the
LSI Raid adapter, and it doesn't have the driver. I have few questions:
1. the importer here in Israel claim that this is a hardware raid. There
is some raid support in the bios level of the adapter (initialize,
configur
Hi Omer,
On Wed, 2 Jun 2004, Omer Zak wrote:
> The system configuration is:
> 128MB memory
> 256MB swap
> 1.7GHz Intel Mobile Celeron (stepping 07) processor (3381.65 BogoMIPS)
> Gnome desktop
>
> What should I check in order to speed up the system?
Although you might not like to hear this, you
The FC1 installation in my laptop was a new installation from CDs. The
computer came with MS-Windows XP. However, I never booted it into
MS-Windows XP but immediately installed Linux on it.
The laptop's hard disk size is 20GB, 3GB of which was reserved by IBM
for restoration. The rest 17GB i
>Sorry. I have answred the wrong question...
>
>> I have two keyboard layouts, spanish and israeli.
>>
>> Where can I find the israeli keyboard distribution. I can test the main
>> keys, but still canĀ“t find the vowels.
>
>Use either the variant "lyx" or the variant "si1452" to the "il" layout.
Fi
On Wed, 2 Jun 2004, Omer Zak wrote:
Omer, what did you run there before ? Was it faster ? What hard disk
does it have ? 128M RAM ?
--Ariel
> I have the feeling that my Fedora Core 1 Linux installation on a IBM
> ThinkPad R40e laptop is too slow to start up applications.
> Once an appl
I have the feeling that my Fedora Core 1 Linux installation on a IBM
ThinkPad R40e laptop is too slow to start up applications.
Once an application has been started, its response time is adequate.
This happens even when I start up only a term and a relatively fast
application (AbiWord).
The syst
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 11:43:29AM +0300, Omer Zak wrote:
> I happen to be late-adopter of some technologies.
> But now I decided not to hold off joining the RSS bandwagon anymore.
> The question is, then, one of selecting a RSS viewer.
>
> 1. What features should I look for in one?
> 2. Which vi
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Recommended RSS viewer?
2. Which viewer is recommended for Linux users?
I'm happy with Firefox + RSS Reader Panel extension
=
To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I happen to be late-adopter of some technologies.
But now I decided not to hold off joining the RSS bandwagon anymore.
The question is, then, one of selecting a RSS viewer.
1. What features should I look for in one?
2. Which viewer is recommended for Linux users?
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