As Tomas already wrote, sysadmin's main lang is EN and that would
probobly not change in anytime soon.
Beside that, OpenBSD can't be really used by non-english speaking users
when there's no "easy", or "simple" one-clik/one command way to enable
localization, and the whole localization doesn't seem
This has been already explained in multiple articles, really. It looks
like it's OEMs stuff. They decide whether they give the end user an
option to disable secure boot or not.
It's probobly the best to buy only "No OS" computers anyway. You can
also support various open BIOS initiatives.
Dnia
Cs. The last "no-OS" one I
> bought was an HP laptop (HP 360) with suse 11 onboard. Drops within
> an ocean. Unless EU Commission helps, it'll be a hell of a
> scenery....
>
>
>
> On Sat, Sep 24, 2011 at 4:13 PM, Marc Smith
> wrote:
>
>> This has been
Why bother with something you don't like / use?
Personally, I use it only in clients workplaces [fixing their
installations], My OS of choice is usually BSD, Linux or other open
source operating system. I like to keep myself cool when it comes to
the tools I use. I also recommend it to you, lanceba
It would be nice to have an official report, but IIRC there have been
many news on the net explaining results of this audit. It actually said
what happened and what didn't happen. Looks like response to me.
Probobly that is not sufficient for you and that's ok.
The problem is that after this observ
Yep, my bad, guys. I'm kind of busy and I didn't take my time to read
this reply. Next time I'll be more aware of that kind of tricks.
Regards
W dniu 02.10.2011 06:44, Nick Holland pisze:
> On 10/01/11 23:08, Christiano F. Haesbaert wrote:
>> Not again people, please.
>>
>> Stop feeding.
>
> Yes
> #include
>
> int main()
> {
> printf("goodbye, dad\n");
> return 0;
> }
That was really touching.
Rest in peace, Dennis Ritchie.
s me the most, that so many are using products of his
> achievements daily to make their lives comfortable and only a small
> minority know what it took to get here.
>
> 2011/10/13 Marc Smith :
>>> #include
>>>
>>> int main()
>>> {
>>> printf(&q
Dnia nie, 16 paE: 2011, 15:47:53 Christer Solskogen pisze:
> I've tried 4.9 and todays snapshot, and both i386 and amd64.
> Installing OpenBSD was no problem, but when booting for the first time
> i get this:
>
> Using drive 0, partition 3.
> Loading.
> probing: pc0 apm pci mem[619K, 3326M 768M a20
KDE3 was super cool. I used it on OpenBSD all the time, left it when
KDE4 happened and moved to XFCE4 and some spartan WMs. Gnome was never
my pair of shoes.
Porting this [TrinityDesktop] to OpenBSD is an absolutely great idea!
W dniu 02.11.2011 12:49, Amit Kulkarni pisze:
> On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at
dd if=/dev/wd0a of=root.img bs=32m [or compress it using: dd
if=/dev/wd0a bs=32m | gzip > root.img.gz]
and
dd if=root.img of=/dev/wd0a bs=32m [decompression: gzip -d -c
root.img.gz | dd of=/dev/wd0a bs=32m]
And yes, you can ommit additional values.
Dnia piD, 4 lis 2011, 17:43:28 Bambero pisz
#x27; parameter [skipping MBR info]. That'd make you go
Dnia nie, 6 lis 2011, 18:00:45 Bambero pisze:
> Thanks, but without skip=1 dd will copy partition table and mbr too
> (first block 521b).
> So it may damage my partition table on second machine. I'm I wrong ?
>
> On
IIRC, your /etc/X11/xorg.conf should be like this:
Section "Screen"
Identifier "Screen0"
Device "Card0"
Monitor"Monitor0"
SubSection "Display"
Viewport 0 0
Depth 16
Modes "1280x1024" "1920C1080"
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