I appear to be having problems sending to the LUV mailing lists - posts
bounce after a week; testing only.
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main
Andrew Pam writes:
> On 16/11/15 10:42, Brian May via luv-main wrote:
>> I appear to be having problems sending to the LUV mailing lists - posts
>> bounce after a week; testing only.
>
> This post seems to have worked just fine.
Wow. Maybe I contacted somebody who fixed
Brian May writes:
> Andrew Pam writes:
>
>> On 16/11/15 10:42, Brian May via luv-main wrote:
>>> I appear to be having problems sending to the LUV mailing lists - posts
>>> bounce after a week; testing only.
>>
>> This post seems to have worked just fin
Brian May writes:
> I appear to be having problems sending to the LUV mailing lists - posts
> bounce after a week; testing only.
Is it fixed now? Retry...
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
htt
Rick Moen via luv-main writes:
> FYI, for anyone needing to contact me offlist: Almost all of my .signature
> blocks furnish my e-mail address. Said footer address should thus be
> consulted, given that LUV's mailing lists have now been configured to
> discard & replace posters' 'From: ' heade
Rick Moen via luv-main writes:
> The reason it's not only controversial but (since 2001) definitively a
> breaking of standards-compliant behaviour is that it overrides,
> discards, and replaces the sender's own legitimate user of that SMTP
> feature, as IETF reconfirmed in 2001 via RFC 2822: It
Chris Samuel via luv-main writes:
> I tried emailing the committee, but that just got moderated and I've not
> heard
> anything since, so I was wondering are was any progress on fix the LUV
> mailing
> list to not rewrite the From: header?
First you need to convince the list administor to ch
Hello,
Just wondering if Telstra supports IPv6? It didn't think so, however I
seem to be receiving RA packets on 80% of my connections, which
automatically configures an IPv6 address and route.
The problem with this is that IPv6 packets are getting silently dropped,
so I have to drop the default
Jason White via luv-main writes:
> When I last checked (several years ago, at best), they supported it only over
> their high-end business-grade connections, and definitely not over Bigpond.
>
> If they had commenced support for it recently, I would expect them to have
> made noise about it in a
Craig Sanders via luv-main writes:
> On Sat, Dec 19, 2015 at 04:04:45PM +0100, Anders Holmström via luv-main wrote:
>> As mentioned it was on luv-talk. As I recall there was no announcement; the
>> change was implemented without warning and /then/ there was some discussion.
>
> By "announcement",
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> In 3-5 weeks the LUV server will no longer be running at it's current
> location
> due to V3/VPAC closing.
Maybe you have better information then me(???), however according to
this blog post "The Victorian Partnership for Advanced Computing Ltd
(VPAC) tradi
Craig Sanders via luv-main writes:
> On Sat, Jan 02, 2016 at 08:32:05PM +1100, David Zuccaro wrote:
>> None of the packages seem to be on the CD:
>
> basic stuff like networking should be on the first install CD/DVD.
Is it possible there might be debs still in /var/cache/apt/archives too;
from w
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Unfortunately we have some DNS issues. I've got a simple TCP proxy in place
> for the web server but that doesn't work so well for email as it breaks lots
> of anti-spam checks. I will use a proxy for the mail server if we don't have
> DNS sorted out toni
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> On Tue, 12 Jan 2016 03:25:49 PM Tony Langdon via luv-main wrote:
>> Browsing to luv.asn.au gets an empty directory. I'm running native IPv6
>> here, and IPv6 is the preferred protocol.
>
> I think I've fixed that problem. Please test it again for me.
Seems t
Russell Coker writes:
> I don't know about paypalobjects or even why we are using it (might be an
> issue for Lev who's doing the Drupal stuff).
Suspect it might something to do with the Donate button.
> It should be better now as I've finished disk intensive stuff for the moment.
>
> Also
Tony Langdon via luv-main writes:
> On closer observation, it started with the message from you that I
> replied to, and it's only you. Another coincidence is that the Subject:
> header hasn't been munged in this thread, yet everyone else's posts
> still have the Subject: munging.
I don't see a
Tony Langdon via luv-main writes:
> I'm just mystified as to why the thread that Russell's message started
> is not being From: munged, whereas all else is. Though your message is
> munged, and Reply List is working perfectly.
Are you sure you are not getting confused with emails (like this) th
Craig Sanders via luv-main writes:
> On Fri, Jan 15, 2016 at 09:50:22AM +1100, Tony Langdon wrote:
>> Foe some reason, I'm only receiving one copy. Maybe a Gmail oddity? Or
>
> probably gmail.
The gmail web interface will not show duplicates.
(not sure if the same is true for imap or not)
--
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Not at all. The distributed and decentralised part of email is inherently
> not
> mailing lists. By definition lists are centralised!
nntp was suppose to be the distrbuted solution for mailing lists. Shame
it didn't work out. Mailing lists have won, but t
"Joel W. Shea via luv-main" writes:
> Agreed, PGP/GPG and S/MIME solved this long ago, with the added benefit
> of end-to-end encryption.
Imagine if the big email providers, such as Google and Yahoo supported
this sort of technology. They could push for the required client side
encryption standa
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> On Fri, 15 Jan 2016 06:54:22 PM Joel W. Shea via luv-main wrote:
>> Agreed, PGP/GPG and S/MIME solved this long ago, with the added benefit
>> of end-to-end encryption.
>
> Is it possible to put a PGP/GPG public key in the DNS and have an MUA use it?
Top goog
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Does Gmail support addresses of the form vk3jed+...@gmail.com to direct mail
> to IMAP folders? If so you can have your main address be subscribed but with
> delivery turned off (so you can post) and your secondary address enabled for
> delivery. It works
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> [...] If there was a system for encrypting mail between MTAs (like
> using GPG with DKIM/DMARC type mechanisms for managing keys) then they
> could display targeted adverts and users get the simplicity of having
> things just work (GPG is too hard for most pe
Russell Coker writes:
> Is there any way to publish the fact that I would prefer to receive mail via
> SSL?
Not that I know of. I think you would have to configure the sending
server to require it for the destination server. Which really isn't what
you wanted.
> My understanding is that if a h
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> On Sat, 16 Jan 2016 09:20:03 PM Erik Christiansen via luv-main wrote:
> You are obviously not reading any messages that I write. I am not going to
> explain myself again.
>
> It's time for this discussion to end.
I tend to agree - this discussion seems to b
Andrew Pam via luv-main writes:
> So you're saying someone accidentally made a hardlink rather than a
> softlink?
... except it isn't possible to have a hard link to a directory, and it
most definitely isn't possible to have hard links between file systems.
I am going to reread Lev's email, an
Lev Lafayette via luv-main writes:
> Note that the two directories have the same inode.
>
> # ls -id /home/username/
> 1081162059 /home/sanujig/
>
> ]# ls -id /data/user2/username
> 1081162059 /data/user2/username
>
> Fascinating, eh?
Ok, going to respond to the easiest part first.
That is actu
Lev Lafayette via luv-main writes:
> However when running an ls on the login node it shows they have a
> directory in home that is *not* a symlink, unlike others.
>
> # ls -lad /home/username
> drwxr-xr-x 46 username groupname 8192 Jan 15 07:53 /home/username/
> # ls -lad /home/lev
> lrwxrwxrwx 1
Jason White via luv-main writes:
> Google's public servers succeed, however, as DNSSec Analyzer appears to do:
> http://dnssec-debugger.verisignlabs.com/
http://dnssec-debugger.verisignlabs.com/jasonjgw.net shows an error:
opera.rednote.net/66.228.34.147 returns REFUSED for jasonjgw.net/DNSKEY
Andrew Pam via luv-main writes:
> On 28/01/16 00:18, Russell Coker via luv-main wrote:
>> Now I have configured the luv server to redirect all web traffic to https
>> (let me
>> know if that breaks anything) and to use a valid key for SMTP TLS.
>
> Note that I currently get a warning on luv.asn
Argh. Ignore my previous email. Somehow instead of cancelling, I managed
to send it instead :-(
I replied to the wrong thing.
Andrew Pam via luv-main writes:
> Actually it looks like that's not the main reason for the warnings - the
> bigger issue is that images are being served via http rather
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> - Squeeze LTS
Squeeze LTS will stop being supported very soon.
February 2016 according to https://wiki.debian.org/LTS
Then it will be Wheezy LTS.
My understanding is that the LTS releases are used more for servers not
running X, then desktops, so the
Julien Goodwin via luv-main writes:
> I've had native v6 on Telstra 3G & LTE for several years now, most LTE
> carriers in large markets also have native v6.
How do you get this working? As per an another thread I created here
several weeks ago, I see Router Advertisements from Telstra which
co
Hello All,
For some reason ever since I upgraded my box to Debian testing, when I
try to log into Gnome with gdm, the system "freezes" with a grey
background until I push escape, then the system boots normally. Or If I
wait long enough it will eventually finish whatever it was doing and
continue n
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> Oh and I would really like it if Maildir storage worked large email
> storage would make this quite useful.
You might want to look at notmuch. It works well storing all your email
in Maildir, with a number of different clients.
--
Brian May
https://l
Glenn McIntosh via luv-main writes:
> If a file/directory on the USB drive is open and the drive temporarily
> loses power, then it will get assigned a new dev name when it is
> detected again.
Doesn't have to be a power failure, could just be a random failure to
communicate properly, which caus
Hello,
Has anybody had any recent experience talking to smart power meters via
ZigBee, preferably on Linux? e.g. what hardware? what software?
The only thing I can find is this post from several years ago:
https://lists.luv.asn.au/pipermail/luv-main/2014-August/006620.html
Regards
--
Brian May
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> What exactly does gpg2 offer that makes it more suitable than gpg for
> most usage?
I believe they rewrote gnupg-agent to actually make it secure - like
ssh-agent - instead of just storing your passphase it stores the private
key and denies any processes g
Tony Langdon via luv-main writes:
> On 13/04/2016 11:10 AM, John Mann via luv-main wrote:
>
>> If you _need_ IPv6, then nag/change your ISP,
>
> Internode definitely works. Who else offers native IPv6?
Internode still AFAIK have the limitation that all IPv6 is metered,
there is no free traffic
"Trent W. Buck via luv-main" writes:
> Why does everyone *still* use gnupg 1.x ?
This article talks about gnupg in Debian. Apparently there is a
experimental transition being planned.
https://www.preining.info/blog/2016/04/gnupg-subkeys-yubikey/
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
_
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Also there's the above issue. These are things in the past, but AFAIK Linode
> hasn't had those problems.
>
> https://www.hetzner.de/gb/hosting/produkte_vserver/cx10
>
> For cheap virtual servers Hetzner has one for E3.90 per month, that is less
> than the
Russell Coker writes:
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Power_management
>
> It is annoying that this happens. The above URL tells you how to change the
> systemd reaction to the power key press. What happens if you just set it to
> "ignore"?
Seems like this power button event might be
Tim Connors writes:
>> > It is annoying that this happens. The above URL tells you how to change
>> > the
>> > systemd reaction to the power key press. What happens if you just set it
>> > to
>> > "ignore"?
>>
>> Seems like this power button event might be a deliberate attempt to
>> reset my
Hello,
Just wondering if there was such a thing as a 240V power meter,
e.g. something that looks like:
http://www.jaycar.com.au/mains-power-meter/p/MS6115
...but can feed the usage figures into a Linux system (e.g. Raspberry
pi) or something (would be happy with Arduino) for recording or graphin
Just noticed the following company seems to have products distributed by
Jaycar. Still trying to understand what these are capable of, and if
they meet my needs or not.
http://efergy.com/au/
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main ma
Hello,
Do we have a meeting tomorrow?
AFAIK nothing announced; the website says we are having a talk by TBD,
but doesn't say what TBD will be discussing.
https://luv.asn.au/2016/08/02
Regards
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
https:
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
>> Better than the crap one usually sees from commercial services
>> "There's an issue affecting a really tiny PERCENTAGE of our HUGE customer
>> base" ... "The issue is being examined" ... "The issue has been resolved,
>
> People who work for commercial ISPs g
Jason White via luv-main writes:
> I've used Nodephone successfully with FreeSWITCH using a Snom 320 and an
> Android phone as SIP clients.
>
> This configuration is no longer current, however, as circumstances have
> changed. Nevertheless, the Nodephone account is still serving the needs of
> fa
Brian May writes:
> I have asked about this on the mailing list, and reported a bug, but
> nobody seems to be able to help me.
Forgot to link to the bug report:
https://freeswitch.org/jira/browse/FS-9133?filter=-2
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
_
Jason White via luv-main writes:
> Try their IRC channel; you may be able to contact the developers there. In my
> experience, they resolve problems quickly.
Ok, so I ended up resolving the problem myself. Apparently if you don't
explicitly answer the call you might be able to send audio, but no
On 2016-11-30 15:26, Russell Coker via luv-main wrote:
> On Tuesday, 29 November 2016 1:47:47 PM AEDT Craig Sanders via luv-main
> wrote: *That Linux Users of Victoria apply to become a subcommittee of
> Linux Australia and conditional upon acceptance, wind up the present
> Victorian association
Ray via luv-main writes:
> Now I only use email when I have to, I do not regard it as a reliable
> method of communication, but from the little I know about pop3 and
> imap.On general principle I do not like to store my own material
> on a system outside of my control. I also ONLY use
Peter Ross via luv-main writes:
> thanks. I did already. I used the GUI (and should never do this
> again;-) but realized it does not do the "apt-get update" behind the
> scenes.
>
> The GUI should do this by itself, I believe, because it is there to
> allow the inexperienced user to keep his sys
Ray via luv-main writes:
> And I am certainly ABSOLUTELY NOT going to run windows just to get
> internet access
Are you sure that your NBN hardware working? May not be what you want to
hear, however I recommend you prove that there isn't anything wrong with
Windows first, then try Linux. If it
Both Linux and Windows have problems with this card. However the
Thinkware f770 dash camera seems to be fine. Can record and playback
without any problems. So seems that the the SD card really is storing
more then 16kb.
Any ideas?
Disk /dev/sdc: 64 KiB, 65536 bytes, 128 sectors
Units: sectors of
Just realized, another explanation is that my card reader doesn't
support cards this big :-(
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
https://lists.luv.asn.au/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/luv-main
Russell Coker writes:
> That's plausible. Is it SD or micro-SD? The full size SD cards are old and
> might be prone to such compatibility issues, but I've tried plenty of larger
> micro-SD cards without having a problem.
micro-SD. I found a recent computer with a SD card reader, using an
ada
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> I have a diff file that has changes to multiple source files that I want to
> split
> up for sending upstream. Is there a good tool for splitting this?
>
> The ideal would be something that takes a list of source files on the command
> line, and writes the
Andrew Pam via luv-main writes:
> Currently some attendees go for dinner after the meetings, but I guess
> we could reverse that and have dinner first and then meetings. Are
> there any members who currently attend LUV main meetings and would be
> seriously inconvenienced by a later start time,
Erik Christiansen via luv-main writes:
> On my distinctly stable debian, I did:
>
> $ apt-cache search youtube-dl
> nicovideo-dl - Download videos from www.nicovideo.jp
It is in jessie, stretch, and sid:
https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=youtube-dl
If you are still using wheezy, mayb
Bob via luv-main writes:
> [debug] youtube-dl version 2016.06.25
Maybe this version is too old?
(just speculation here)
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
https://lists.luv.asn.au/cgi-bin/mail
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> You can also find extensive discussions in the bug-bash archives on
> why you shouldn't be using set -e, regardless of how many "sources" on
> the web claim that it helps write "robust" or "correct" shell scripts.
If this sort of thing matters to you, it i
Hello,
What is the easiest way of monitor SNMP data from a small number of VMs,
servers, routers, switches and UPS?
Previously I used zenoss for this. It is good in that I can tell it to
monitor a switch, and I automatically get statistics recorded for every
port on the switch (without having to
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Earlier today I changed the IPv6 address used for the LUV server. I didn't
> keep the old address working because almost no-one uses IPv6 and IPv6 clients
> can generally fall back to IPv4 if necessary, so the time that the old
> address
> remains in DNS
Hello,
What is a good USB wifi adaptor - preferably dual band although not 100%
required that will work out of the box with recent Linux kernels on
Raspberry Pi 2?
I currently have an adaptor based on the RTL8188CUS, but ever since
upgrading from Debian Jessie (not Raspbian) to Debian Stretch,
Russell Coker writes:
> Have you tried running the Jessie kernel with Stretch? The general aim (at
> least unofficially) is that you should be able to run a Debian system with a
> kernel from the previous or the next release.
>
> The Stretch kernel has many new security features. But the bene
Craig Sanders via luv-main writes:
> See also python-rgain:
Apparently the project is looking for a new maintainer:
https://bitbucket.org/fk/rgain
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
luv-main mailing list
luv-main@luv.asn.au
https://li
Hello,
I seem to be having an increasing problem on my Thinkpad Carbon X1 2015,
where:
* The screen will lose sync. Like it is an older analogue monitor.
Sometimes it will come good after 1 second. Other times a suspend/resume
will solve this. Some videos showing the problems:
https://photos.ap
Anthony via luv-main writes:
> So, I found the instructions for turning off gnome-keyring-ssh and turning
> on normal ssh-agent.
> ... but then I realised my keys still weren't propagating to programs I ran
> (primarily ssh + rsync using ssh from command line)
> So I hacked around it with some st
Just downgraded from vmlinuz-4.9.0-4-amd64 to vmlinuz-4.9.0-3-amd64, and
my Thinkpad does seems a lot healthier.
I do know that I have experienced similar symptoms before upgrading to
vmlinuz-4.9.0-4-amd64 however, so not entirely convinced. However, at
least now I seem to be able to use the syste
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> As I understand it, if you want to host an AWS EC2 server, you need to
> pay a "region" price for access to a region; it is my belief that it
> costs roughly $1500 per month, not sure if that is already in AUD or not.
Where did you get this information fro
Andrew McGlashan via luv-main writes:
> Okay, the problem pricing may be related to "Amazon EC2 Dedicated
> Instances" ... that seems the closest (from what I can tell), to having
> your own physical server and being able to do with it what you like.
>
> Perhaps this product is way overkill.
If
Brian May writes:
> Just downgraded from vmlinuz-4.9.0-4-amd64 to vmlinuz-4.9.0-3-amd64, and
> my Thinkpad does seems a lot healthier.
No problems since upgrading to the Linux kernel in the Debian
backports. 4.13.0. 4.14.0 seems fine also.
I noticed both systems I encounted this problem have th
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> My Thinkpad X301 has had some problems with the display, when resuming from
> suspend it would be flickering and jumping around. Changing to a text VT and
> then changing back to the X display would fix it. That problem seems to have
> gone away with a re
Mark Trickett via luv-main writes:
> I have managed to install Google Chrome, and sort of watch iView, but
> the bandwidth appears poor, the sound is ok, but the video apalling,
> fixed intermittent frames, and sometimes even those low resolution
> pixellated.
I can't seem to get iView to work a
Hello,
I have installed Debian/stretch on a MacBook Pro, and it all seems OK,
except suspend/resume is now suspend/crash instead. Sometimes I get a
black screen, most times the screen gets restored and then it crashes.
Furthermore, I was accidentally pressing the power button and shutting
down
On 2018-01-15 14:28, Brian May via luv-main wrote:
> most times the screen gets restored and then it crashes.
Through the process of trial and error, I have found that if when it
"crashes" I disconnect the thunderbolt ethernet adapter, the system
unfreezes and comes good. I can then
Andrew Worsley via luv-main writes:
> I have been too scared to try my lightening ethernet adaptor with
> resume :-). I heard it always has to be present on boot up to be
> activated...
Have a look at:
https://www.jethrocarr.com/2014/06/16/thunderbolt-and-other-macbook-hardware-issues-with-linux
Andrew Worsley writes:
> Interesting - I wonder if I am doing something weird because no kernel
> after then seems to work for me. Always crashing the same spot in the
> resume?
>
> It's really tedious to test because you have to install, boot the new
> kernel, suspend and the boot again to resu
Piers Rowan via luv-main writes:
> We have moved to GMail from our own servers. For good reasons I have 4
> mailboxes that I use. (At least one of which receives 200 messages per
> hour with a rule in place to move some of the content into folders).
>
> I am using Thunderbird right now and the
On 2018-04-04 15:21, Russell Coker via luv-main wrote:
> https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.network.html
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/systemd-networkd
> https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-networkd.service.html
>
> The above 3 URLs document the
Jason White via luv-main writes:
> For various reasons, I need to maintain a CV, and, moreover, several different
> versions of it to meet different requirements.
>
> At the moment, it's written in Markdown, maintained in a Git repository, and
> uses Pandoc for conversion to various file formats
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> It seems that I have to create the master repository with "git init --bare"
> and then push
> from the slave after adding a file. Adding a file on the master is also
> apparently a bad
> idea.
Both of these apply equally to subversion. You have to create
Russell Coker via luv-main writes:
> Git gives you the impression that you can push/pull
> from anywhere to anywhere when that isn't the case.
Maybe I am confused. What do you mean when you say that this isn't the
case?
--
Brian May
https://linuxpenguins.xyz/brian/
___
Russell Coker writes:
> Well I can't create a repository, check files in, and then pull and
> push to it from other systems. I need to create an empty repository,
> push to it from somewhere, and then I can pull and push from anywhere.
I suspect what you need to do is adjust things slightly, so
Anthony via luv-main writes:
> Depends on the phone, but newer devices these days generally do not present
> a mass storage device. They instead expose storage at file level via MTP
> (Media Transfer Protocol), as block storage access requires exclusive lock
> on partition, and that means backgro
Hello,
For a while now I have had this problem that apcupsd doesn't restart
properly on system boot - e.g. after power failure. The log appears
fine:
2018-10-11 16:43:44 +1100 apcupsd 3.14.14 (31 May 2016) debian startup
succeeded
I can't remember for sure if the process is running or not. I t
h via luv-main writes:
> Does anyone know about tableau, and whether there is a FOSS
> equivalent?
I would suggest looking at elasticsearch + Kibana. Entirely open source.
I don't think Kibana is a complete replacement for Tableau, however this
really depends on your requirements. If it is suff
Mark Trickett via luv-main writes:
>> The Tragedy of systemd
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o_AIw9bGogo
>
> Had to get the URL to another PC, typed it in, then carefully checked
> the URL, yes one typo, but correct and the video is not available,
> still.
The URL works fine for me... Maybe y
I seem to be unable to use postfix to send outgoing email to my accounts
on outlook.office365.com:
Jun 3 13:39:46 xx postfix/smtp[27582]: 428CB46005E: SASL authentication
failed; cannot authenticate to server
outlook.office365.com[52.98.3.178]: invalid parameter supplied
Jun 3 13:39:46 xx post
Brian May via luv-main writes:
> I seem to be unable to use postfix to send outgoing email to my accounts
> on outlook.office365.com:
I think I solved the issue. I added to the config:
debug_peer_list = outlook.office365.com
... and retried.
I then saw in the logs:
:smtp_sasl_authen
Jason White writes:
> As a side question, how reliable is their IMAP server? If I remember
> rightly, it used to have a reputation for not conforming to standards,
> but that was a very long time ago with Microsoft Exchange.
>
> I'm wondering whether Linux clients would be able to work with it.
bob via luv-main writes:
>> I can access the damaged disk by attaching it to my Kubuntu
>> workstation, reading it with testdisk and all the partitions and data
>> appears to be still there, but I can't see the files because of the
>> RAID filing system.
This sort of puzzles me. Under Linux
Rick Moen via luv-main writes:
>> I am thinking about running a public DNS server (with Pi-Hole) at
>> home, but not sure if that's safe.
>
> Safe against what?
Probably the most likely risk is the risk your home Internet connection
goes offline, and not being able to fix it for days++ while tr
Robert Parker via luv-main writes:
> This may help some traveller's. From Melbourne Airport you can catch a PTV
> bus 901 to Broadmeadows station. A zone 2 fare. Avoid the Skybus
> ripoff.
I have done this myself. Although check to make sure trains are running
first.
On my return trip (might ha
Hello,
Can anyone recommend a good remote control - ideally USB based - for a
MythTV system that doesn't have or need a TV controller card?
The current one we have is driving us crazy because it often requires
multiple key presses for MythTV to finally respond. Where as the
keyboard response (or
John La Rooy writes:
> I use an older version of this
>
> https://flirc.tv/more/flirc-usb
>
> I trained it to translate extra buttons on the TV remove into keystrokes,
> but you could use any old remote control you have lying around.
Unfortunately that is the very system I seem to be having prob
Rohan McLeod writes:
> It's definitely not a problem with dirty contacts on the remote ?
> My Sony remote gradually "lost buttons" and I was going to replace it;
> untill someone suggested pulling it apart and
> cleaning the contacts with isopropyl alcoholnow it's like new !
Dad seems con
John La Rooy writes:
> You can verify whether the remote is sending something by viewing the LED
> via your phone camera when you press the buttons.
Looking at the keyboard characters generated on another computer, when I
press up, I can get one of three responses:
* On first press: nothing.
*
Brian May writes:
> I wonder if flirc just cannot read my brand of remote reliably (old one
> from old Hauppauge TV card). Either that or it has some functionality
> (on first press do X on second press do Y) that I am not familiar with.
Another remote control works much better. Only thing is it
1 - 100 of 157 matches
Mail list logo