Hi List,
I am trying (realy hard) to get bidi-abiword work on my Mandrake 8.0
linux.
So I compiled abiword-0.7.14-2 (with bidi enabled) and installed it
just as they say you should.
HOWEVER: I cannot get the hebrew to work!!
I wish to work with *unicode* hebrew. So I this is what I did:
1.
On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Itai Arad wrote:
> Hi List,
>
> I am trying (realy hard) to get bidi-abiword work on my Mandrake 8.0
> linux.
>
> So I compiled abiword-0.7.14-2 (with bidi enabled) and installed it
> just as they say you should.
>
> HOWEVER: I cannot get the hebrew to work!!
>
> I wish
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>Shachar Shemesh wrote:
>
>Writing (and reading) mail messages in Hebrew is one example that pops
>to mind.
>
>The composer may be another.
>
>In the composer, you have a means to set the direction: add a 'dir="rtl" '
>attribute where appropriate. Mozilla does not prov
On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> >
> >Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> >
> >Writing (and reading) mail messages in Hebrew is one example that pops
> >to mind.
> >
> >The composer may be another.
> >
> >In the composer, you have a means to set the direction: add a
For console you should set keyboard mode to utf8 by "kbd_mode -u",
then use "loadkeys" to load your table, and the default table it loads
is either /lib/kbd/keymaps/defkeymap.kmap or
/usr/src/linux/drivers/char/defkeymap.map
An example I prepared for persian is attached.
Behdad
On Mon, 9 Jul 2
Dear Micha!
To sort the confusion (and since I've dealt with the same issue before),
here are a couple of comments:
1. The unix/:-1 thing is very simple. unix stands for transport. / has to
preceed the hostname. If the host is local, than the column follows the
slash. And the last part is the nu
Hi List,
Im using iXplorer in my windows system. I can send files from the Linux
machine to the windows machine but, I cant send files from the windows
machine to the Linux machine. When I'm trying send files from the windows
machine to Linux Im getting a timeout...why?
==
Hi
A couple of small corrections. Also have a look at the IGLU faq.
On Mon, 9 Jul 2001, Alexander V. Karelin wrote:
> Dear Micha!
>
> To sort the confusion (and since I've dealt with the same issue before),
> here are a couple of comments:
>
> 1. The unix/:-1 thing is very simple. unix stands
Make sure that both machines know the names on each other..
on Linux: /etc/hosts
on Windows: c:\windows\system32\drivers\etc\hosts (there is hosts.sam -
rename it to hosts) - if I'm not mistaken. I don't have Windows right here..
a sample:
192.168.1.1 kookoo
192.168.1.2 kookey
192.168.
On Mon, Jul 09, 2001, Alexander V. Karelin wrote about "Re: X font problem":
> 1. The unix/:-1 thing is very simple. unix stands for transport. / has to
> preceed the hostname. If the host is local, than the column follows the
> slash. And the last part is the number of the port, which for unix
>
When I turn eth0 interface up i see the indicator in the hub that it is connected. When the interface is responding and if i ping i can see that hub indicates traffic. But once i try to get any heavy network activity or just upload/download any file the interface goes down. The hub still idicates
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