On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 05:51:43PM +0200, Michael Sternberg wrote:
>
> >From: Nadav Har'El
> >If you're willing to relax the request for an "X server",
> >and merely request that you can view on Windows graphical
> >applications that are running on a remote Linux machine,
> >VNC is an excellent s
From: Nadav Har'El
If you're willing to relax the request for an "X server",
and merely request that you can view on Windows graphical
applications that are running on a remote Linux machine,
VNC is an excellent solution.
I know what VNC is. I was actually looking for a "real" X
server as a singl
# cat /proc/meminfo
total:used:free: shared: buffers: cached:
Mem: 3301101568 1523159040 17779425280 3514368 1450356736
Swap:000
MemTotal: 3223732 kB
MemFree: 1736272 kB
MemShared: 0 kB
Buffers: 3432 kB
Cached:
Nadav Har'El wrote:
Note that VNC's security sucks (cleartext passwords, unencrypted traffic),
so don't do this on the open Internet...
Actually that's exactly what I'd like to do with my mom's
Windows XP - Install a VNC server on the Windows machine and
connect to it from my Linux to help her over
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:48:35PM +0200, Michael Sternberg wrote:
>
> >I have put together a small package of X (from cygwin) and putty that
> >should allow you to use a minimal X server from any win32 computer.
>
> 2. Its still big - 6.60 MB. What about "Run X from a floppy" ?
>Do we have a
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004, Michael Sternberg wrote about "RE: [OT] minimal X and ssh
for win32":
> 1. Why do you think this is [OT] ?
> 2. Its still big - 6.60 MB. What about "Run X from a floppy" ?
>Do we have any smaller package for X server ?
If you're willing to relax the request for an "X ser
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:43:18PM +0200, Kobi Cohen-Arazi wrote:
> Hi Muli,
>
> Thanks for your reply.
> In case I dont use CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G, is 3.3GB reported seems to be
> OK ?
It seems somewhat short, but possible... can you paste the full output
from /proc/meminfo?
Cheers,
Muli
--
Muli
Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> Can you elaborate how this is different from cygwin itself? Cygwin
> offers both an X server and ssh. And you can choose to install only
> the components you are interested in. Why something special? Why putty
> and not openssh (from cygwin itself)? What are the advantages?
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:22:20PM +0200, Kobi Cohen-Arazi wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Given an 8 GB RAM, what is the maximum of the memory I should expect
> reported from /proc/meminfo ?
> I'm using 2.4.26 Vanilla
>
> Right now I can see ~3.3GB when cat-ing /proc/meminfo on that specific
> machine.
I
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:24:39PM +, Oleg Goldshmidt wrote:
> Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Hi
> >
> > I figure that some of you may find this useful
> >
> > I have put together a small package of X (from cygwin) and putty that
> > should allow you to use a minimal X serve
I have put together a small package of X (from cygwin) and putty that
should allow you to use a minimal X server from any win32 computer.
1. Why do you think this is [OT] ?
2. Its still big - 6.60 MB. What about "Run X from a floppy" ?
Do we have any smaller package for X server ?
=
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:22:20PM +0200, Kobi Cohen-Arazi wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Given an 8 GB RAM, what is the maximum of the memory I should expect
> reported from /proc/meminfo ?
> I'm using 2.4.26 Vanilla
>
> Right now I can see ~3.3GB when cat-ing /proc/meminfo on that
> specific machine.
I
Hi Muli,
Thanks for your reply.
In case I dont use CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G, is 3.3GB reported seems to be OK ?
Kobi.
On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 15:40:22 +0200, Muli Ben-Yehuda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 03:22:20PM +0200, Kobi Cohen-Arazi wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Given an 8 GB RAM
Tzafrir Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi
>
> I figure that some of you may find this useful
>
> I have put together a small package of X (from cygwin) and putty that
> should allow you to use a minimal X server from any win32 computer.
>
> I put only the minimal required fonts, as most re
Hi all,
Given an 8 GB RAM, what is the maximum of the memory I should expect
reported from /proc/meminfo ?
I'm using 2.4.26 Vanilla
Right now I can see ~3.3GB when cat-ing /proc/meminfo on that specific machine.
Thanks in advance,
Kobi.
==
Hello,
I have an IDE disk in an external USB enclosure, connected to a PC. I
wish to spin it down at times, and also to have it spin down
automatically after some period of inactivity.
For IDE devices ther e are the -S, -B, -y and -Y options of hdparm, but
they don't work on SCSI drives. For s
There is a significant difference, since this connects you to a
"normal" Ethernet cable in which you have a 1 to many relationship
(using TCP/IP) with other computers instead of a dedicated 1 to 1
relationship with a dedicated computer for which there doesn't seem to
be a TCP/IP connection ("n
Yaacov Fenster - System Engineering Troubleshooting and other stuff wrote:
A USB NIC is a network card (Network InterConnect) that connects to
your computer using the USB bus. (See for example
http://www.dlink.com/products/?sec=1&pid=133). Depending on your work
process, having one or two availa
Yaacov Fenster - System Engineering Troubleshooting and other stuff wrote:
Here are a few ideas/questions:
a) Connect a USB CD and boot from it to Linux.
b) Bringup a virtual windows session under vmware and use the windows
to windows software.
(http://www.vmware.com/support/ws3/doc/ws32_devices5
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 11:05:45AM +0200, Skliarouk Arieh wrote:
> Hello,
>
> What is the time and quality wise optimal way to check (and remap where
> possible) harddisk for bad blocks (with no useful data on it)?
In addition to what you wrote, SCSI has some other tools.
Do something like 'apt-
Here are a few ideas/questions:
a) Connect a USB CD and boot from it to Linux.
b) Bringup a virtual windows session under vmware and use the windows to
windows software. (http://www.vmware.com/support/ws3/doc/ws32_devices5.html)
c) Boot the laptop from a diskette and move the files over the networ
meh wrote:
Yaacov Fenster - System Engineering Troubleshooting and other stuff
wrote:
meh -
Perhaps you might try to boot the windows pc from a (Knoppix?) CD and
do a Linux to Linux synchronization?
It's a laptop - it is problematic. NTFS pose problems as well.
What kind of exeternal connection
Hi
I figure that some of you may find this useful
I have put together a small package of X (from cygwin) and putty that
should allow you to use a minimal X server from any win32 computer.
I put only the minimal required fonts, as most recent programs use
client-side rendering and will do without
It might have a serial connection. However it isn't so good so I'd
rather use the already availible USB.
There must be some sort of sollution for that. Even setting a TCP
connection is OK - just letme know how
Thanks
Yaacov Fenster - System Engineering Troubleshooting and other stuff wrote:
meh
Hello,
What is the time and quality wise optimal way to check (and remap where
possible) harddisk for bad blocks (with no useful data on it)?
I see following ways:
1. cat /dev/zero > /dev/hdc
It will remap all bad blocks (if any) onto reserved blocks.
I would not know about the remaps though
On Sun, Nov 14, 2004 at 12:52:22AM +0200, Ira Abramov wrote:
> Quoting Yedidyah Bar-David, from the post of Sat, 13 Nov:
> > >
> > > I surf in tabs. when I middle-click a link, there's a pretty long freeze
> > > while the mozilla allocates the memory for the new tab, draws the tab,
> > > starts tw
meh -
Perhaps you might try to boot the windows pc from a (Knoppix?) CD and do
a Linux to Linux synchronization?
Yaacov
meh wrote:
How can I connect a win98 to my linux box with host-to-host usb cable?
I can't find anything with google.
Please do not refer me to http://www.linux-usb.org/usbnet
Yaacov Fenster - System Engineering Troubleshooting and other stuff wrote:
meh -
Perhaps you might try to boot the windows pc from a (Knoppix?) CD and
do a Linux to Linux synchronization?
It's a laptop - it is problematic. NTFS pose problems as well.
Except I know no similar program to usblink tha
How can I connect a win98 to my linux box with host-to-host usb cable?
I can't find anything with google.
Please do not refer me to http://www.linux-usb.org/usbnet/ as it doesn't
refer to windows OS.
I need something like usblink to synchronize with a laptop.
=
Ira Abramov wrote:
problem solved. oddly it was the ide-cd module (ide-scsi is deprecated
in 2.6, and cdrecord works quite well with ATA). Next to install my DVD
burner...
What device name do you use with it?
Thanks,
--Amos
=
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