> Note that creating multiple users with root privileges is generally a
> very bad idea... If you need to give root access to multiple people,
> the best way to do this is to use the sudo utility. It allows you to
> control what they can and can't run as root, and logs its usage in the
> system l
On Wed, 2002-12-11 at 10:14, Rigoberto de la Cruz wrote:
> I was wondering what a kernel panic code means... CAPS
> LOCK and SCROLL LOCK are flashing (at the same time).
> Does anyone know what that means? does anyone know
> here to find any info... thanks...
Hello Rigoberto,
A kernel panic is es
Rigoberto Spake:
>Andrew
>
> Hello Andrew.. thanks for your response... I did not
> express what I wanted to know.. the problem is that
> I'm getting a kernel panic... unfortunately I'm using
> X, so I can not see anything except for the blinking
> lights... I was wondering if I could get any
> i
> hard drives on USB 1.1 are virtually unusable
>
> I had problems with USB 2.0 on RH 7.3, sometimes worked, sometimes
> locked up. Firewire is better bet.
Hello,
Are you sure it wasnt a bad controller? I have used USB for quite some
time, and I can honestly say different hardware responds diff
> > I begin to move to something not BitchX as I read there are several URL
> > inform that BitchX is backdoored.
>
> Uhm, well, that was some months ago now... BitchX 1.0c19 still works
> fine for me. Or else you could take a look at irssi or ircii.
I gotta second irssi, I love it.
--
Psy
On Thu, 2002-12-19 at 22:17, Jesse Keating wrote:
> On Wednesday 18 December 2002 13:49, Schotty uttered:
> > I gotta second irssi, I love it.
>
> Just a question for you guys. I've been an irssi fan for a while, yet I can't
> quite get the .src.rpm to rebuild on
On Sun, 2002-12-22 at 11:25, Jim Christiansen wrote:
> Ok, it looks like the errors were false alarms. The only problem is that
> the nvidia rpms are no good. Looks like the tars are choice two.
>
> Jim
I religiously use the tarballs. Since the kernel module needs to be
compiled for a specific
Hello All!
Quick one for y'all. The menu bar at the bottom -- how do I center it?
I can do it in the less favored KDE, but am curious how to do it in
GNOME. I could easily do it in the non-RedHat GNOME 2.xx from the
internet (like for my FreeBSD box for example).
Thanks much!
And have a merry
> Do you mean the footprint menu icon. Right click and choose move.
> Then move with left button.
No I mean the whole bar: icons, tasklist, clock and all. In GNOME 1.xx
you could tell GNOEM to center it and it would grow as you added icons
and such.
--
Psyche-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECT
Panel is the word I was looking for ;)
On Wed, 2002-12-25 at 18:54, Schotty wrote:
> > Do you mean the footprint menu icon. Right click and choose move.
> > Then move with left button.
>
> No I mean the whole bar: icons, tasklist, clock and all. In GNOME 1.xx
> you could te
If you are referring to a borked rpm db lockfile, then it is actually
quite simple. This is where any rpm db query (whether an install, a
removal or just a plain ole search just sits infinitely, and has a real
bitch of a time getting killed off)
you will need to be root to do many of the things m
On Thu, 2003-01-09 at 22:08, Ekow Oppon wrote:
>
> Hi Patrick,
>
> Some of the presentations need to be on posters and my guess is there
> arent many places that will manage to print a presentation from office.
> As for waiting..., not possible. Got to have it done.
But you can save it in any f
On Fri, 2003-01-10 at 11:16, James McArthur wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a word doc here which consists mainly of tables within tables,
> bullets and other formatting oddities. OO never writes the file out
> correctly.
>
> This is the only OO problem I've had with the other MS Office users
> though, s
13 matches
Mail list logo