Some might want to have a look at the desktop training pdf (from the
ubuntu wiki a few months ago).
student.pdf
It can currently be torrent downloaded easily from mininova
http://www.mininova.org/tor/1635675
and other locations, although the original wiki location appears not
to currently provid
Ian Pascoe wrote:
> Her current setup is an old desktop connected via an USB ADSL modem to the
> internet - it doesn't have a working ethernet card and she doesn't want to
> put one in as "it's too fragile" - the machine not her I hasten to add. And
> as we'll both need to be on the internet at t
London School of Puppetry wrote:
> In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
> techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
> Out of interest, as a middle-aged woman- I rarely see any other female names
> on the forum- but I really like Ubuntu but could not
Hello Ian,
I was thinking of this...
http://netbsd.gw.com/cgi-bin/man-cgi?upl+4+NetBSD-current
...which makes me wonder what chipset(s) are in the non-Prolific
cables. Whether or not similar support is included in Ubuntu I can't
say because I have neither the cable nor an Ubuntu bo
Andy
Could you point me in the direction of the open source stuff, presumeing
it's not already in Ubuntu?
Ian
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Andrew Ball
Sent: 07 August 2008 20:13
To: British Ubuntu Talk
Subject: Re: [ubuntu-uk] USB Network
2008/8/7 Dark Otter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Slightly off topic, but what kind of coding knowledge would someone need
> to be a worthwhile participant in the bug team? I'm planning to try
> learning several languages in the future (I only know some basic C# and
> python at the moment), and so I'm won
Hello Gav,
GF> A pair of USB wireless dongles or a USB to Ethernet
> adaptor for the Windows machine maybe?
I was going to suggest a PLIP cable, but then I
remembered that Microsoft Windows doesn't support PLIP.
There are USB PC-to-PC cables with open source drivers, but
I don't know w
A pair of USB wireless dongles or a USB to Ethernet adaptor for the Windows
machine maybe?
--
Gav Ford
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://revford.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk
I think we need to: Kick the gyro grid
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--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubunt
G'day all
Scenario. I'm going to have to stay on and off for a number of weeks at my
partners house whilst doing some on site work nearby.
Her current setup is an old desktop connected via an USB ADSL modem to the
internet - it doesn't have a working ethernet card and she doesn't want to
put one
Slightly off topic, but what kind of coding knowledge would someone need
to be a worthwhile participant in the bug team? I'm planning to try
learning several languages in the future (I only know some basic C# and
python at the moment), and so I'm wondering what to concentrate on to be
able to contr
On Thu, Aug 7, 2008 at 6:22 PM, norman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Have you considered joining the bug squad?
>> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad You sound like you may have found your
>> itch. You shouldn't need much more than a little technical knowledge and
>> only need to donate what time y
> Have you considered joining the bug squad?
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad You sound like you may have found your
> itch. You shouldn't need much more than a little technical knowledge and
> only need to donate what time you wish to donate, but maybe by joining
> this group you may start to g
Hi all,
Having thought this over a bit now and spoken to people about it, I would
like to put out a request for submissions to the newsletter. The kind of
things we're after is short articles about any project you may be running,
if you've done something remarkable (charity walks, parachute jumps,
Norman,
Have you considered joining the bug squad?
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BugSquad You sound like you may have found your
itch. You shouldn't need much more than a little technical knowledge and
only need to donate what time you wish to donate, but maybe by joining
this group you may start to get
London School of Puppetry wrote:
In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
We get all shapes and sizes in the ubuntu community, from the 13 year
old to the 70 year old we have them all. And i think its the fa
On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 15:08 +0100, norman wrote:
> Yes it is and no, I can find no bug report but then, is it really a bug?
Yeah, it's a bug somewhere in all likely hood. I'm not exactly
sure where, but filing it against italc would be a good start.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ita
> I'm sorry to see you seem to be hitting many problems.
>
> On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 12:32 +0100, norman wrote:
> > The point I am making is that the software causing the problem was
> > installed by default, causing a problem which had been well documented
> > but that nothing appears to have bee
< snip >
>
> Norman >>> I really sympathise with you about this, and I have had
> similar irritations and exasperations (mostly with wifi and printers).
> I guess, after a while, I've tended to think, "Well, the person who
> writes and maintains this software is probably doing it for free, in
On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 13:49 +0100, Mac wrote:
> That's a good deal more useful than my reply to Norman -- for which, in
> retrospect, I feel I should apologise: he could do without getting a
> philosophical reflection when what he needs is help.
I did agree with what you said. I was also intere
James Westby wrote:
> I'm sorry to see you seem to be hitting many problems.
> Is
> http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=749394
> the problem to which you refer?
That's a good deal more useful than my reply to Norman -- for which, in
retrospect, I feel I should apologise: he could do wit
norman wrote:
> Here we go again... I will not bore you with the many difficulties I have
> encountered, please just accept that, because I like the ideas behind
> Ubuntu, I am prepared to try to find ways around them. If I depended on
> the use of the computer for my living I probably would not be
Hello again Norman,
I'm sorry to see you seem to be hitting many problems.
On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 12:32 +0100, norman wrote:
> The point I am making is that the software causing the problem was
> installed by default, causing a problem which had been well documented
> but that nothing appears to h
Here we go again. During the final testing to make sure that Edubuntu
was working correctly before handing the machine to my granddaughter,
when a new problem occurred. All worked well, as administrator, but when
I logged out and then tried to log in as my granddaughter an error
message appeared te
On 07/08/2008, Michael Holloway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I think, (and without starting WW3 here) that the statistics are linked
> to a whole lot more. Women have always been welcome to join in these
> communities. (or at least for a long time ?? don't know how it was in
> the 80s). But:
Th
> I've missed loads, I didn't realise there were so many.
>
I know, i was just looking too - there really are loads!
> > communities are often "boys-clubs", they are not limited to boys
> only.
> Unfortunately, the statistics disagree with you. For what ever reason
> the FOSS community is almost
London School of Puppetry wrote:
> In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
> techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
> Out of interest, as a middle-aged woman- I rarely see any other female names
> on the forum- but I really like Ubuntu but could not
I'm middle-aged and female - someone has to keep these youngsters in
order! :)
But there is a women's group on the forum, which I don't read much - I
can't help feeling that gender-specific groups are a bit discriminatory.
Unless the object is to show that women *are* using Ubuntu and
encouraging
On 07/08/2008, Stephen O'Neill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My girlfriend is interested in gaming, but cares not for IT and
> operating systems etc. She came to a LUG meeting with us once but only
> because we were watching a video and it was in a pub that served good beer.
My boyfriend is inte
On 07/08/2008, Michael Holloway <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't know of many "aimed at/for/by women" communities, but a few of
> the KUbuntu contributors and Planet-ubuntu members are part of the KDE
> Women team. http://women.kde.org/ They might have some interesting info
> on this topic
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Lucy wrote:
> The people I know who use Linux and go to LUG meetings are anything
> from 16-70 (at a guess) year old males, with a few women in between.
> So there's certainly a large spread, but from my experience people
> tend to get involved at coll
On 07/08/2008, London School of Puppetry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
> techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
> Out of interest, as a middle-aged woman- I rarely see any other female names
> on the forum- but
And apparently there is also
http://ubuntu-women.org/
On Thu, 2008-08-07 at 10:08 +0100, London School of Puppetry wrote:
> In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
> techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
> Out of interest, as a middle-aged woman-
Unfortunately... i think that conversation was partly accurate, though
the word "ONLY" is a bit strong. Ubuntu was pretty much created to break
that tradition, and to some extent it is slowly working (spreading to
the not so young, not so male population).
I don't know of many "aimed at/for/by wom
In a conversation recently someone said to me that Ubuntu is only for
techies.and blokes at that- and young blokes at that!
Out of interest, as a middle-aged woman- I rarely see any other female names
on the forum- but I really like Ubuntu but could not do without the help
from the Forum
-what
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