On 2018-03-18, at 8:44 AM, Kenneth F. Cunningham wrote:
>> There's just one little problem remaining: I cannot use gcc-ar-mp-6 because
>> it reports the following error: "Cannot find plugin liblto_plugin.so".
>
Looks like this is just broken on all MacPorts versions of gcc, for example on
thi
On 20.03.2018 at 23:59 Chris Jones wrote:
> You can call these OSes ‘retro’ if you want, to make it sound good,
> but all they really are, are outdated and insecure.
I've always preferred freedom over security. And by the way, I have
a feeling that with each new Mac OS version the system becomes
On 21.03.2018 at 00:34 David Strubbe wrote:
> For the record, you can always stop a build by typing CTRL-C, and
> it will not corrupt anything. Only at the install stage are any
> files permanently changed. If you do "port clean" after stopping the
> build, you will be right back where you were be
I'm one of the guys who run a 10.4 G4 "just because I can". Some call it
retro computing :)
I'm glad macports still supports it and try to help to fix things when a
port is not building on it.
but I'm not expecting the project to spend resources in building
binaries for this kind of system.
When I
On Mar 21, 2018, at 2:23 PM, miniupnp wrote:
> It's quite fun to read exhortations to use upgrade to a more recent
> system. I'm trying to imagine which hacker could spend time to exploit
> Mac PPC machines to include them in a bitcoin mining botnet ;)
or DDOS or SPAM or other abusive behavior th
Le 21.03.2018 à 19:29, Daniel J. Luke a écrit :
> On Mar 21, 2018, at 2:23 PM, miniupnp wrote:
>> It's quite fun to read exhortations to use upgrade to a more recent
>> system. I'm trying to imagine which hacker could spend time to exploit
>> Mac PPC machines to include them in a bitcoin mining bo
On 20.03.2018 at 23:51 Ryan Schmidt wrote:
> There is not a great deal of interest in Tiger anymore, but I
> understand that the computers that are still running Tiger are slow
> and are thus the ones that might most benefit from the existence of binaries.
Definitely. Having binaries would be a g
On 21 Mar 2018, at 14:23, miniupnp wrote:
On the other hand, it is also fun to read message about someone afraid
of his hardware burned by a hours long macports build :)
This is a serious concern. I've had 3 Macs (Cube, G5 iMac, MacBook) that
got worse at heat dissipation over time to the po
In my experience, “jupyter notebook” is the correct startup command. Here is
what I do, using Python 2.7:
Install pyenv (https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv)
pyenv install 2.7.14
sudo port install py27-virtualenv
mkdir jupyter
cd jupyter
pyenv virtualenv 2.7.14 jupyter
echo "jupyter" > .python-version
On 2018-03-20, at 2:27 PM, Andreas Falkenhahn wrote:
>>
>> Personally, I do not understand why you are still running such an old
>> machine with macOS.
>
> It's retro, there doesn't have to be a rational reason for it :-)
> Besides, in the retro scene 10.4 is quite popular because it's the
>
Marius,
I just installed py27-jupyter today, checked the py27-future presence but it
crashes in a similar way to what Bob reported below :
py27-futures @3.2.0_0 (active)
py27-tornado @5.0.1_1 (active)
NICER>jupyter-2.7 notebook
Traceback (most recent call last):
File
"/opt/local/Library/
On 2018-03-21, at 11:49 PM, pagani laurent via macports-users wrote:
> pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'testpath' distribution was not found
> and is required by nbconvert
>
Looks like you should install py27-testpath and see if that fixes it.
Best,
Ken
Nope.
The following ports are currently installed:
py27-terminado @0.8.1_0 (active)
py27-testpath @0.3.1_0 (active)
py27-tkinter @2.7.14_0 (active)
py27-toolz @0.9.0_0 (active)
py27-tornado @4.5.2_0
py27-tornado @5.0.1_1 (active)
py27-traitlets @4.3.2_0 (active)
py27-typing @3.6.2_
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