On Thu, 2025-02-06 at 08:38 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> https://ubuntu.com/community/governance
Oops! This is link I wanted to post:
https://ubuntu.com/community/governance/teams
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On Thu, 2025-02-06 at 12:38 +0530, Amit wrote:
> accept the reality.
https://ubuntu.com/community/governance
https://ubuntu.com/community/contribute
There are also a lot of other distributions with different policies.
https://n6cloud.com/blog/5-linux-distributions/#Best_Linux_distro_for_Windows_
On Wed, 2025-02-05 at 18:50 +0530, Amit wrote:
> I said that GNOME 2 user interface was more user friendly
> than GNOME 3 user interface
I agree! I'm using openbox, no desktop environment at all. You can
easily write a script that users of certain distros can use to get a
desktop similar to GNOME
PPS:
On Mon, 2025-02-03 at 17:13 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> https://www.zdnet.de/41548848/auswaertiges-amt-wechselt-von-linux-zurueck-zu-windows/
This is something that also applies to numerous German cities and other
authorities.
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PS:
Let's take an RFID USB card reader, i.e. for ID cards, health insurance
cards, bus tickets, etc., where a generic USB driver is of no use. The
bus companies, the federal government etc. had bought these things en
masse and for a while they were available free of charge on request,
including a
On Mon, 2025-02-03 at 20:49 +0530, Amit wrote:
> I had even sent an email to Germany's finance minister to adopt linux
> for all the government organizations in Germany.
"Federal Foreign Office switches from Linux back to Windows
In 2007, the use of Linux was still regarded as a flagship project.
On Tue, 2025-01-28 at 18:39 +, Chris Kelly wrote:
> Likewise with video editors. Decades ago I worked with Adobe Premier
> on an old Mac. I haven't seen a Linux video editor that's as good as
> that version of Adobe Premier. The closest is Shotcut, and it's
> pathetic by comparison. As with tex
On Sat, 2025-02-01 at 16:12 +0530, Amit wrote:
> But what is discouraging is that linux desktop developers themselves
> are not very interested in increasing the user base of linux desktops.
Hi,
then go ahead, fork a desktop environment and become the first developer
interested in "increasing the
PS: Somewhat abstract examples: There are so many areas, and for some
areas developers have to write software that depends on expensive
licenses, if the licenses are sold to open source communities at all. Or
very specialized hardware is needed, in such cases the hardware
manufacturers must first b
On Tue, 2025-01-28 at 16:08 +0530, Amit wrote:
> [snip]
> Some people will say that it is because of marketing by Microsoft and
> Apple but I don't buy this answer.
> [snip]
> I don't think Linux desktop development teams (GNOME, KDE, etc.) are
> interested in increasing the usage of Linux desktop
Hi,
maybe the keyboard layout used by the display manager's greeter doesn't
fit the used keyboard. Perhaps the used greeter has got a panel that
allows to change the keyboard layout at login and it might be that this
can be changed by accident with the mouse wheel.
Some GUI designs are tricky. Ve
Hi,
auf Deutsch, das Paket gibt es offen sichtlich nicht mehr, die lange
Antwort in englischer Sprache:
Hi,
On Thu, 2023-08-31 at 20:14 +0200, Norbert Nowicki wrote:
> sudo apt-get install -y libsane-extras
^^The computer god has been kind to you and
On Tue, 2023-06-27 at 15:31 -0400, Steven Friedrich wrote:
> I want to know transfer statistics, i.e., max speed, min speed, avg
> speed when I copy to/from a usb device to/from hdd/ssd.
> Please enhance cp utility to provide this info. A cmdline switch could
> request this report.
Hi,
the Int
Hi,
do you have a question?
Obviously this software hasn't been updated for 10 years, which could
possibly be the reason why it isn't made available through any
repository.
Regards,
Ralf
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On Fri, 2023-03-03 at 10:18 -0800, Coburn Ingram wrote:
> I found it, but I'm not telling you where, because I'm afraid that
> you'll delete it, too.
Hi,
my first guess is dconf.
$ gsettings list-recursively | grep gnome | grep icons
org.gnome.desktop.background show-desktop-icons false
[snip]
off topic
Unfortunately, very aesthetic native lettering invite problems in the
context of modern technology.
Reminds me of the Turkish alphabet revolution anticipating future
benefits https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Turkish_alphabet.
IMOH aesthetic native scripts or phonetic mixed forms o
On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 16:00 +, Brad Turnbough wrote:
> Can someone look into getting this package updated in order to resolve
> this vulnerability?
Hi,
why should a release model distro, especially a long term support
release model distro, update to another software version? This doesn't
make
On Tue, 2022-08-30 at 22:45 +0200, Maxime Pietrucci-Blacher wrote:
> Good evening, I have come to contact you to find out if the nginx-
> common and nginx-core packages are going to be updated soon, as there
> are many problems with the use of TLS on these two packages as they
> are no longer up to
On Thu, 19 May 2022 23:25:19 -0400, Isaac Encina wrote:
>Hello I was wondering if you guys knew where it would be possible to
>download a specific Ubuntu-drivers-common package?
Hi,
starting points are probably
https://launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubuntu-drivers-common
https://packages.ubuntu
On Tue, 3 May 2022 10:48:21 -0400, Ken Mandelberg wrote:
>All the other packages for bacula (director, sd) are available but not
>bacula-fd. bacula cannot run without it.
Hi,
what Ubuntu release are you using?
Did you run "sudo apt update" before trying to install it?
Oops, while writing I noti
On Mon, 21 Mar 2022 08:24:33 +0530, Amit wrote:
>There is no menu in the default Ubuntu desktop GUI.
Hi,
I suspect that still several Ubuntu flavours have got an application
menu by default, much likely even for the latest release.
At least Xubuntu 20.04 has got an application menu by default, th
On Sun, 20 Mar 2022 23:44:03 +0530, Amit wrote:
>I have used both windows and linux gui systems a lot.
So you should be able to describe what from your point of few are the
pitfalls of a Linux desktop environment and the pros of Windows.
As already pointed out, I suspect Jane the elementary schoo
On Sun, 20 Mar 2022 19:06:39 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>no WM at all
Oops, I at least should correct this typo. It should read "no DE
(desktop environment) at all". Of course, openbox is a WM (window
manager).
However, most new users nowadays are likely in favour of a desktop
env
On Sun, 20 Mar 2022 19:06:39 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>I'm a child of the 80th, born in 1966, so I never migrated from Windows
>to Linux. I do not come from Windows, as well as a lot of Linux users
>of my age or who are way older than I am.
>
>My first machine with something
I'm a child of the 80th, born in 1966, so I never migrated from Windows
to Linux. I do not come from Windows, as well as a lot of Linux users
of my age or who are way older than I am.
My first machine with something Microsoft alike was an Atari ST with a
80286 hardware emulator, IOW a PCB containi
On Sun, 20 Mar 2022 22:38:56 +0530, Amit wrote:
>On Sun, Mar 20, 2022, 10:27 PM Ralf Mardorf
> wrote:
>
>>
>> Windows is easier available, since it's installed by default on
>> almost all discounter desktop computers (and laptops...). "Available
>>
I'm not interested in reading another market share link. I'm quite sure
that most computer devices used via a GUI are smartphones and I doubt
that Windows is the most used OS on smartphones. However, given that
most desktop computers likely are equipped with Windows only, the market
share still isn
On Sun, 20 Mar 2022 21:08:01 +0530, Amit wrote:
>Microsoft Windows is there on about 90% of all (computer) systems
>mainly because it is very easy to use.
Hi,
that's complete bogus for several reasons.
>Windows is not a great OS but it is so easy to use that first timers
>and older people also u
On Mon, 26 Jul 2021 23:19:09 +0300, Nicholas Guriev wrote:
>You can pass `init=/bin/bash` as kernel boot parameter through GRUB and
>then copy the temporary files to a safe place.
I can't comment on GRUB. While my machine has got more than one Ubuntu
install, too, I'm in favour of syslinux. Howeve
On Mon, 26 Jul 2021 23:19:09 +0300, Nicholas Guriev wrote:
>However in general, /tmp is not intended to have important data which
>is worth regretting.
Let alone that tmp could be mounted as tmpfs, see
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tmpfs . However, even if it's not a
tmpfs, a systemd unit might cl
On Fri, 23 Apr 2021 17:27:30 -0400, Thomas Ward wrote:
>Be aware though: 16.04.7 goes past End of Standard Support this month
>- you should consider upgrading 16.04 to 18.04 before the end of
>standard support happens.
Doesn't do-release-upgrade after April work anymore? I suspect that it
at least
Hi,
this is a misuse of protonmail, as well as of the Ubuntu mailing lists.
Please remove the accounts from this individual, who acts under a faked
name.
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-users/2021-April/303874.html
https://lists.ubuntu.com/archives/ubuntu-devel-discuss/2021-April/019001.
On Tue, 9 Feb 2021 16:51:51 -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>Does anyone have suggestions how to troubleshoot this further?
Hi,
it's probably not a driver related issue. At least you don't care for
the correct driver. The Radeon driver is pre-installed and used for your
Radeon graphics. The nouvea
On Thu, 2020-11-12 at 08:19 +0100, Damian wrote:
> > some versions ago (16.04) a cold start to me 16 seconds.
> > With all later versions even with SSD harddrives it takes over a
> > minutes.
>
> Which time frame do you measure that takes a minute? I measure 15
> seconds from hitting enter in grub
On Fri, 4 Sep 2020 15:30:24 +0700, D.Bosch wrote:
>Pls give me instructions how to install and run nwipe.
>
>what are the terminal programs.
Hi,
installing the package:
sudo apt update
sudo apt install nwipe
https://packages.ubuntu.com/focal/nwipe
"/usr/sbin/nwipe"
- https://packages.ubuntu.
On Sat, 11 Jul 2020 10:26:45 -0400, Santosh K. Saha wrote:
>*How can I upgrade from Linux-Ubuntu 18.04 LTS to 20.04 LTS* ?
Hi,
your request belongs to
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users .
If you should have questions related to the following howto, please use
the above m
On Mon, 27 Apr 2020 22:08:46 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>On Mon, 27 Apr 2020 21:25:57 +0200, André Pirard wrote:
>>Jolly Jumper. It would make a delicious Ubuntu mascot.
>
>I suspect you are thinking of an Ubuntu codename (release name) and a
>mascot for this Ubuntu release
On Mon, 27 Apr 2020 21:25:57 +0200, André Pirard wrote:
>Jolly Jumper. It would make a delicious Ubuntu mascot.
I suspect you are thinking of an Ubuntu codename (release name) and a
mascot for this Ubuntu release. This most likely would cause a legal
issue.
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On Thu, 2020-01-02 at 20:25 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Jan 2020 19:00:55 +, Daniel Llewellyn wrote:
> > On Wed, 1 Jan 2020 at 06:41, David Carissimi wrote:
> > > I have been installing all debs for Ubuntu on my iPhone with
> > > terminal and it seems to
On Thu, 2 Jan 2020 19:00:55 +, Daniel Llewellyn wrote:
>On Wed, 1 Jan 2020 at 06:41, David Carissimi wrote:
>> I have been installing all debs for Ubuntu on my iPhone with
>> terminal and it seems to magically work. Didn’t know if you had
>> anything else that could modify deep in the system ov
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 21:56:54 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>/proc/cmdline provides some information about pitfalls such as
>"mitigations=off audit=off" which might vs a new kernel in combination
>with a new microcode, by still using
On Sat, 21 Dec 2019 23:23:41 +0300, Andrey Ponomarenko wrote:
>Hello,
>
>I've recently initiated a new statistical project based on anonymously
>collected outputs of hwinfo, smartmontools and dmidecode utilities
>called "Linux Hardware Trends". The report for Ubuntu is now here:
>https://github.com
On Sat, 7 Dec 2019 04:32:55 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>To cut a long story short, different desktop environments provide
>different keyboard layout related GUI dialogs. Some of them follow your
>logic, other don't. In then end all of them just steer kind of a middle
^ th
PS:
In theory Ubuntu developers could change it for Ubuntu only, but you
better report your concern against upstream. Keep in mind that
portability might be important, too. A user might migrate from one Linux
distro to another, or even might migrate from Linux to FreeBSD, or vice
versa.
Disclaime
Hi,
selecting the wanted keyboard layout is tricky.
A single user machine vs a multi-user system where each user might use a
different language and/or keyboard.
There are different levels on how to set up the wanted keyboard layout,
let alone that some apps are more or less smart.
An example, e
On Thu, 3 Oct 2019 12:22:16 -0400, Jeremy Bicha wrote:
>If every developer sent this list an email every time there was a new
>release, this email list would become usable.
^^^
^^ a Freudian slip ;) or
Hi,
installing "alien" packages, based upon a different package management
via apt, is a bad idea. This is not functional, it's dysfunctional.
Regards,
Ralf
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>On 6/23/19 12:51 PM, Mohamed Ikbel Boulabiar wrote:
>> My apologies for my long mail, and the kind-of rant.
Hi,
while I agree on many of your statements, those are not really related
to the 32-bit issue. Ubuntu still will support 32-bit for some while,
Arch Linux for example has already dropped
On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 09:59:01 -0800, Bryan Quigley wrote:
>Subject: Anacron/Cron needed by default anymore?
^^
Oops, I missed that part :D. You don't
want to drop it completely.
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On Tue, 12 Feb 2019 09:59:01 -0800, Bryan Quigley wrote:
>Based on a disco desktop current jobs:
>apport - clean all crash reports which are older than a week.
>apt-compat - says to prefer the systemd timers
>bsdmainutils - BSD mainutils calendar daily maintenance script
>cracklib-runtime - make a
On Sat, 17 Nov 2018 13:11:57 +, Caipenghui wrote:
> My computer is loaded with ubuntu18.04 LTS, but my computer is not
> connected to the Internet, so I can't install GCC online. So I have a
> network in another computer from
> https://packages.ubuntu.com/bionic-updates/devel/gcc download de
On Tue, 06 Nov 2018 11:19:07 +0100, Oliver Grawert wrote:
>isnt it great that ubuntu allows you to modify the default (that
>pleases the majority of users)
I seriously doubt that the majority of users is pleased by a
blacklisted pcspkr. It isn't great that Ubuntu defaults to something
stupid, the
Hi,
when upgrading Ubuntu 16.04.5 LTS right now I noticed something
alarming.
"Configuration file '/etc/modprobe.d/blacklist.conf'
==> Modified (by you or by a script) since installation.
==> Package distributor has shipped an updated version.
What would you like to do about it ? Your optio
On Sat, 8 Sep 2018 16:34:57 +0200, Markus wrote:
>The gui of
>
>slic3r
>
>
>and the gui of
>
>slic3r-prusa
>
>
>does not work within the distribution, that you maintain.
Hi,
I'm not a developer or maintainer. Given that Artful 17.10 exceeded End
of Life and that Cosmic 18.10 is a future release,
On Wed, 27 Jun 2018 15:11:06 +0530, umang agola wrote:
>Not proper working download tux paint pls send me link proper
Hi,
"tuxpaint" is provided by the "universe" repository for all
supported releases, Trusty, Xenial, Artful and Bionic as well as for
the future release Cosmic. Your request belong
On Sun, 13 May 2018 18:57:46 +0100, Colin Watson wrote:
>On Thu, May 10, 2018 at 04:25:25PM -0400, Thomas Ward wrote:
>> However, killing i386 support globally could introduce issues,
>> including but not limited to certain upstream softwares having to go
>> away entirely, due to the interdependenc
>On 11 May 2018 at 16:32, Fiedler Roman wrote:
>> b) Those, who do not want to consume more resources due to ethical
>> considerations (that's the one for me): how many people could fed or
>> how much CO2 prevented, if all systems were some percent smaller on
>> disk/RAM, including IT-system produ
On Mon, 2018-05-07 at 07:56 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Just autostart the browser with this specific website.
And before doing this, autostart the user session ;).
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ht
Hi,
your request belongs to the users mailing list. Have you already done
some research by yourself? Without any experiences in this domain and
any research the following comes to my mind.
On Mon, 7 May 2018 02:28:07 +0530, Nipun Pruthi wrote:
>I need to make a custom version of linux with follow
Hi,
I'm surprised that "syslinux{,-common}" are in "main", see
https://packages.ubuntu.com/bionic/syslinux{,-common} and "extlinux" is
in "universe", see https://packages.ubuntu.com/bionic/extlinux, while
all belongs to the same upstream source.
Arch doesn't split syslinux.
$ pacman -Ql syslinux
On Sat, 3 Feb 2018 08:56:25 +, Colin Law wrote:
>On 2 February 2018 at 16:08, Βασίλης Κατσαρέλιας wrote:
>> I had to copy my `/home` folder over to a USB stick
>Of course you will have backed up everything before hand
>anyway just in case something goes wrong.
Let alone that a user regularly s
On Sat, 9 Dec 2017 22:17:09 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>I didn't read the complete Hagakure, not because I suffer from
>dyslexia, but because the content of the Hagakure was much
On Sat, 09 Dec 2017 14:31:12 +0100, Xen wrote:
>I think Kohlhaas was actually pretty sympathetic ;-).
Indeed, but don't confuse the way of Kohlhaas, with the way of the
worrier, as described by the Hagakure,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hagakure ;).
You sometimes sound like somebody doing a soft
On Sat, 09 Dec 2017 14:31:12 +0100, Xen wrote:
>I am pretty sure that if the upstream devs would have taken a more
>considerate approach, businesses would actually have been willing to
>fund security maintenance, since it would have cost them much less
>than making the transition.
See
https://li
On Fri, 8 Dec 2017 21:22:34 +, Robie Basak wrote:
>Assuming we do ship Python 2 in main in 18.04, which seems likely, you
>will be able to use Python 2 in 18.04 until 2023.
It's quite possible that Arch Linux (I mentioned it by a previous
reply) might move python2 back to the Arch User Reposit
On Sat, 9 Dec 2017 08:44:06 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>On Fri, 8 Dec 2017 23:24:52 +, Colin Watson wrote:
>>In any case, there is really very little point in tilting at this
>>windmill now
>
>Don Quixote doesn't need to worry about thinking about something
>
On Fri, 8 Dec 2017 23:24:52 +, Colin Watson wrote:
>In any case, there is really very little point in tilting at this
>windmill now
Don Quixote doesn't need to worry about thinking about something
idiotic, since actually it's Sancho Panza who has to face the music.
However, the analogy fits pe
On Tue, 28 Nov 2017 20:35:17 +0100, Xen wrote:
>Ralf Mardorf schreef op 28-11-2017 19:22:
>
>> There are far more known issues, Google is your friend. I doubt that
>> you will find a lot, if any known issues caused by Linux
>> distribution, but there are a vast number o
On Tue, 28 Nov 2017 12:06:19 +0100, Tobia wrote:
>I know that you are extremely busy I would like to report this bug
>since it's very, very serious and I do not know if you already know
>this issue.
>
>Ubuntu 17.10 corrupting BIOS - many LENOVO laptops models - Bug
>#1734147
>
>All of us affected c
On Mon, 16 Oct 2017 02:08:13 +0800, 蔡瑋倫 wrote:
>Dear two professional developers
I'm not a developer.
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Off-topic
One of my favourite aliases is
alias mad='LANG=de_DE.utf8 man'
:D
"mad" is for "man" and "de", fortunately many German manpages are
bananas, so the alias fits well.
Regards,
Ralf
PS: Be careful when you go on a mushroom foray
http://bananasinpyjamas.wikia.com/wiki/Bananas_in_Pyjam
Hi,
> On 15 Oct 2017, at 09:53, Xen wrote:
> Ralf Mardorf schreef op 15-10-2017 6:22:
>>
>>> On 14 Oct 2017, at 15:52, 蔡瑋倫 wrote:
>>> 1. From the perspective of keyboard typing, "cls" is much easier to type
>>> than "clear."
>>
Hi,
> On 14 Oct 2017, at 15:52, 蔡瑋倫 wrote:
> 1. From the perspective of keyboard typing, "cls" is much easier to type than
> "clear."
what is speaking against using Ctrl+L ?
> 2. The corresponding command under Windows is "cls." By googling for some
> related materials, I have figured out tha
On Wed, 27 Sep 2017 16:04:37 -0300, Jaime de Paula wrote:
>If I choose to work with another window manager (Enlightenment,
>Cinnamon, etc...) it works perfectly, and so I guess it's an
>incompatibility between Unity and my video card. But Unity is better
>for me.
Hi,
Unity is discontinued, so con
On Sun, 27 Aug 2017 08:47:13 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>Regarding
>https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-software/+bug/1551273
>it might be, that by design it only shows apps with a GUI :p.
My apologies, this bug seems to be about another software installer GUI.
It seems
On Sat, 2017-08-26 at 23:10 +0300, Коля Гурьев wrote:
> 26.08.2017 19:16, Nrbrtx пишет:
> > Let's assume that we need to install libgtk2.0-dev from gnome-software.
> > How to do it? Simple search of libgtk2.0-dev produces no results (note:
> > software-center finds and installs this package). Any
On Fri, 25 Aug 2017 09:38:03 -0500, Eder Rafo Jose Pariona Espinhal
wrote:
>How I can download and install tdsodbc, *but from source or manually.*
It's available by official repositories for all supported Ubuntu
releases, e.g.
https://packages.ubuntu.com/search?suite=zesty&searchon=names&keywords
On Sun, 27 Aug 2017 01:04:56 +0300, Nrbrtx wrote:
>I have never used auto-apt.
Neither have I. I installed it just in case it should be useful some
day.
>In Debian Stretch it works very stable. It is pre-installed as
>recommendation for Xfce, Cinnamon, MATE, LXQT, LXDE and other desktops
In my e
PS:
"auto-apt search Xlib.h" -
http://wiki.linuxquestions.org/wiki/Auto-apt
"sudo auto-apt run ./configure" -
https://www.howtogeek.com/106526/how-to-resolve-dependencies-while-compiling-software-on-ubuntu/
FWIW I only run
tool update
or
tool upd
to upgrade everything, since I wrote a sc
On Sat, 26 Aug 2017 21:36:36 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>http://www.debiananwenderhandbuch.de/auto-apt.html
The text I found is in English, on the left there is a selection box
were you could chose the language, seemingly the original link is in
German.
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On Sat, 26 Aug 2017 20:32:34 +0300, Nrbrtx wrote:
>>OK, I see where you are coming from. It never occurred to me that
>>anyone wanting to install libgtk2.0-dev, or similar, would want to use
>>a GUI. I assumed everyone used apt for that. Obviously I am wrong.
>lol :)
>
>In other words gnome-soft
Btw. sometimes I want tabs and sometimes I want individual windows.
IMO it's strange to provide multiple desktop workspaces, but making it
hard to chose between a new tab or a new window for some apps.
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Modify settings or
Xfw is missing features and eye candy, but as a quid pro quo there
are never issues, e.g. regarding /run/user/*/dconf/user permissions.
I prefer pluma and xed (and for some tasks nano) over xfw, but
sometimes xfw is helpful for my workflow as well.
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On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 18:58:11 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 11:26:56 +0200, Xen wrote:
>>Linux does not have a good single-window (no tabs) text editor. Xed
>>comes closest (from Mint) but is multi-tab.
>
>[rocketmouse@archlinux tmp]$ xed & xed --new-
On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 11:26:56 +0200, Xen wrote:
>Linux does not have a good single-window (no tabs) text editor. Xed
>comes closest (from Mint) but is multi-tab.
[rocketmouse@archlinux tmp]$ xed & xed --new-window & xed --new-window
opens no tabs, just three instances of xed
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On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 14:51:13 +0200, Andreas Ronnquist wrote:
>What does ROXTerm do that no other terminal application does?
If you need to ask this question, then it's irrelevant for your
workflow. If you should miss something by using other terminals, you
might find it, when using ROXterm. Unfort
On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 17:23:16 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>I need to complain about the ongoing Windows vs Microsoft
>discussions. When in Rome, do as the Romans do. IOW if you migrate from
>Windows to Linux, please don't force native Windows use
On Sat, 22 Jul 2017 11:26:56 +0200, Xen wrote:
>Linux does not have a good single-window (no tabs) text editor.
Perhaps xfw is "good" for your purpose?
>The only viable solution for copy and pasting in terminals
Given that you could use the completion feature via tab-key and
history features via
My apologies, it wasn't intended to send a duplicated message, let alone
that I forgot to change the signature to...
Death of ROXTerm
https://sourceforge.net/p/roxterm/discussion/422638/thread/60da6975/
...because it describes the ROXTerm issue.
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On Fri, 21 Jul 2017 17:26:47 +0200, Dustin Kirkland wrote:
>We're seeking your input on your favorite apps for the Linux desktop.
Hi,
it would be nice, if a team with the skills and the time to do so, would
fix, IOW rewrite the discontinued ROXTerm. As far as I know, there's no
terminal availab
On Fri, 21 Jul 2017 17:26:47 +0200, Dustin Kirkland wrote:
>We're seeking your input on your favorite apps for the Linux desktop.
Hi,
it would be nice, if a team with the skills and the time to do so, would
fix, IOW rewrite the discontinued ROXTerm. As far as I know, there's no
terminal available
Hi,
my apologies, there was an issue with a signature in my previous mail,
instead of deleting it, I copied it into the text by accident. As
already pointed out, actually zesty already providers 3.3.7, so the OP
could easily do a release upgrade.
Regards,
Ralf
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On Thu, 6 Jul 2017 01:42:42 -0400, Harley Lorenzo wrote:
>The qbittorrent version on apt is out of date and needs updating. The
>version on apt is 3.3.1 and the current version is 3.3.13. I can say
>that version is very stable based on my own testing and that an
>upgrade should be pushed onto apt
On Sun, 2 Jul 2017 14:04:09 +0200 (CEST), Norbert SIROT wrote:
>Linux Mint 18.1.
Hi,
first of all, chances to get help are better when sending a request to
the Ubuntu users mailing list, than when asking for support on the
devel discussion mailing list. However, Linux is _not_ Mint!
Subscribe to
On Thu, 29 Jun 2017 08:17:00 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 12:49:06 -0700, paulwhee...@cox.net wrote:
>>Frustrated, and falling behind in my work, because of your bug.
>
>No, because you are ignoring the messages you get by synaptic
PS:
If you would use an Ubun
Hi,
On Wed, 28 Jun 2017 12:49:06 -0700, paulwhee...@cox.net wrote:
>Frustrated, and falling behind in my work, because of your bug.
No, because you are ignoring the messages you get by synaptic, as well
as sending tons of requests, instead of just one smart request and apart
from this you are sen
On Fri, 23 Jun 2017 22:52:40 +0300, Nrbrtx wrote:
>It is not OK.
>Do you plan to revert this security patch?
Hi,
I'm not an Ubuntu developer.
Did you read about CVE-2017-1000364,
https://www.google.de/?gws_rd=ssl#q=ubuntu+CVE-2017-1000364 ?
Do you really expect a fix for a _high severity_ vuln
On Thu, 15 Jun 2017 13:52:04 -0700, Brendan || Lyn Perrine wrote:
>On Thu, 15 Jun 2017 16:17:53 + aconcernedfoss...@airmail.cc wrote:
>> Oh exaulted one, I am so sorry to have wasted your inbox space.
>> You see we all live for you, exalted aryan queen!
Hi,
should we tolerate the above tone o
PS:
FWIW https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users seems to be
a better place for requests like yours.
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On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 10:05:47 -0500, Scott Fenech wrote:
>https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2363054
Hi,
if IIUC the issue is solved now?
As a site note
1. Users should always run
sudo apt update
before "install".
2. sudo gdebi path/package
as well as
sudo dpkg --force-dep
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