Robert Flatters wrote:
> downloaded a copy last night and installed it on two machine tonight. First
> impression are good, all though ive come across some small issues with
> window message screens freezing
I upgraded a couple of machines yesterday, and was also impressed with
Jaunty, which loo
I had a great time! Hope to see you all in 6 months time for 9.10, if
not sooner!
Simon Wears
munkyju...@gmail.com
http://MunkyJunky.com | http://Twitter.com/MunkyJunky
MunkyJunky on irc.freenode.net
On 25 Apr 2009, at 01:05, Gordon Allott wrote:
> On Wed, 2009-03-25 at 12:57 +, Lucy wrot
On Wed, 2009-03-25 at 12:57 +, Lucy wrote:
> I'm pleased to announce that Ian Forrester (from BBC Backstage) has
> booked us the BBC Manchester Bar on Friday 24th April for the
> Ubuntu-UK Manchester release party. The party will start at 7pm and
> go on until late (although after 10pm we may
Hi David
It's a pity UNR is only available as an image. The image writer just
dd's the data to the USB. The USB startup disk creator is more clever
because when it copies an iso you can also have a persistent storage
area on the stick.
I did a lot of testing on my EEEPC with the Beta, the RC an
downloaded a copy last night and installed it on two machine tonight. First
impression are good, all though ive come across some small issues with
window message screens freezing
On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 6:09 PM, Tony Pursell
wrote:
> On 24 Apr 2009 at 12:00, David King wrote:
>
> >
> > I am tryin
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As I have forgotten to say elsewhere in my emails, in the Central Bar,
we will be upstairs. To get upstairs one must walk into the bar, go
roughly 5 metres forward and the stairs will be on your right. If there
are any problems, then you are able to te
I have successfully downloaded UNR, installed to a USB flash drive, and
booted my Asus Eee PC with it. It is a great OS and seems to be more
powerful than the default Xandros.
However, I would like, when using this, to save my settings and
installed software on the USB drive, or on the Eee PC S
Tony Pursell wrote:
> The link you sent me wasn't very helpful in itself but it did get me
> looking round the community help pages and I found this
> https://help.ubuntu.com/community/AudioCapture
> which did the trick.
>
> Its a pity that Ubuntu doesn't ship with the audio capture enabled!
Hi folks,
I thought this might be useful to some of you out there who use laptops.
http://www.ubuntu-inside.me/2009/03/howto-disable-touchpad-while-typing.html
Basically it it is instructions on how to disable the touchpad while
typing and how to tweak the settings of the touchpad. The touchpa
On 24 Apr 2009 at 12:00, David King wrote:
>
> I am trying to download Ubuntu Netbook Remix, after having recently
> bought an Asus Eee PC 901. I like Xandros (KDE mode), but its system
> space is so limited that I cannot do much with it.
>
> The UNR looks better in its design in easy mode tha
Hi mac
On 23 Apr 2009 at 6:06, mac wrote:
>
> Tony Pursell wrote:
> > I want to use the great new Netbook Remix on my EEEPC...
> > ...the sound input just does not work, either
> > using the built in mic or a plugged in mic.
>
> > Does anyone have any ideas how I can get sound input working?
>
Hi folks,
Just seen this on The Register...
http://www.reghardware.co.uk/2009/04/24/acer_revo_storage_switch/
It looks like in the next couple of weeks Acer are going to be releasing
the Revo 'Nettop' which has an Atom 230 CPU (1.6GHz Single core IIRC)
and NVidia ION chipset and even better th
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Jamie Bennett wrote:
> On 24 Apr 2009, at 16:17, doug livesey wrote:
>
>> Following on from an earlier thread, I now am about to (this
>> weekend, anyway) set up a backup policy for my machine using rdiff-
>> backup.
>> So what files & dirs do peop
On 24 Apr 2009, at 16:17, doug livesey wrote:
> Following on from an earlier thread, I now am about to (this
> weekend, anyway) set up a backup policy for my machine using rdiff-
> backup.
> So what files & dirs do people backup on an Ubuntu machine?
> I guess everything in my home directory -
Following on from an earlier thread, I now am about to (this weekend,
anyway) set up a backup policy for my machine using rdiff-backup.
So what files & dirs do people backup on an Ubuntu machine?
I guess everything in my home directory -- should I try for anything else?
Cheers,
Doug.
--
ubuntu-
2009/4/24 Gordon Allott :
> On Fri, 2009-04-24 at 14:14 +0100, Lucy wrote:
>
>> Also, due to the numbers of people expected, BBC security have asked
>> people to try to arrive by 7pm sharp,
>>
>
> I'll have to hop on an earlier train then and be slightly early, 20 mins
> early or so isn't a problem
On Fri, 2009-04-24 at 14:14 +0100, Lucy wrote:
> Also, due to the numbers of people expected, BBC security have asked
> people to try to arrive by 7pm sharp,
>
I'll have to hop on an earlier train then and be slightly early, 20 mins
early or so isn't a problem right?
--
Gordon Allott
signat
On Fri, Apr 24, 2009 at 02:35:47PM +0100, Alan Lord (News) wrote:
> On 24/04/09 13:03, Samuel Toogood wrote:
> Also, do check out rdiff-backup (It's in the repos).
>
> It does reverse incremental backups using rysnc:
> http://www.gnu.org/savannah-checkouts/non-gnu/rdiff-backup/
Dirvish is a simi
> Also, do check out rdiff-backup (It's in the repos).
I love it!
I'm going to have to rethink my original idea, due to the incremental vs
BackupExec files thing, but for a personal backup strategy, rdiff-backup
seems to be the ticket.
Nice & simple, like me!
(Okay, I'm not that nice.)
2009/4/24
On 24/04/09 13:03, Samuel Toogood wrote:
>
> doug livesey wrote
>> Hi -- I have a drive that gets a weekly backup of a Windows network
> stored to it, and I would like to have that backed up in turn remotely.
Also, do check out rdiff-backup (It's in the repos).
It does reverse incremental backup
Just to clarify with people, if you hadn't signed up on Facebook,
Yahoo or with me by 9am this morning then security will not let you
into the party.
Also, due to the numbers of people expected, BBC security have asked
people to try to arrive by 7pm sharp, otherwise it may be difficult to
get in.
2009/4/24 Gordon Allott
> On Wed, 2009-04-22 at 13:13 +0100, Lucy wrote:
> I'll be the guy in the two
> ubuntu shirts with the ubuntu lappy bag with long hair ;))
>
> -- Gord
>
>
I'll be the one with only one Ubuntu shirt, Ubuntu laptop bag and long hair.
I've got 45 CD's packed into my bag tha
2009/4/24 Gordon Allott :
> On Wed, 2009-04-22 at 13:13 +0100, Lucy wrote:
>> This is just a reminder that the Manchester Ubuntu Release Party is
>> happening this Friday.
>
> I'll be bringing a few USB drives with ubuntu on them, x86-32 and AMD-64
> versions, I was going to bring some CD's too but
On Wed, 2009-04-22 at 13:13 +0100, Lucy wrote:
> This is just a reminder that the Manchester Ubuntu Release Party is
> happening this Friday.
I'll be bringing a few USB drives with ubuntu on them, x86-32 and AMD-64
versions, I was going to bring some CD's too but I think people have
that covered
doug livesey wrote
> Hi -- I have a drive that gets a weekly backup of a Windows network
stored to it, and I would like to have that backed up in turn remotely.
When you say 'a drive', is that on a windows box, or a linux box or a NAS?
> To that end, I have an IP address that I wish to sync it
Michael Holloway wrote:
> There is a command line tool for windows i think called "robocopy" (im
> not in the office to check). On my network I use a scheduled task of
> robocopy to backup windows machines to a local samba share, and then
> rsync that to replicate remotely. I do an incremental back
David King wrote:
> I am trying to download Ubuntu Netbook Remix, after having recently
> bought an Asus Eee PC 901. I like Xandros (KDE mode), but its system
> space is so limited that I cannot do much with it.
>
> The UNR looks better in its design in easy mode than Xandros, but not
> much goo
There is a command line tool for windows i think called "robocopy" (im
not in the office to check). On my network I use a scheduled task of
robocopy to backup windows machines to a local samba share, and then
rsync that to replicate remotely. I do an incremental backup which is
normally pretty quic
I just found a link at
http://linuxtracker.org/index.php?page=torrent-details&id=4279352c9617c65879de268bd20bc8aaba6e1be9
David King wrote:
> I am trying to download Ubuntu Netbook Remix, after having recently
> bought an Asus Eee PC 901. I like Xandros (KDE mode), but its system
> space is so
I am trying to download Ubuntu Netbook Remix, after having recently
bought an Asus Eee PC 901. I like Xandros (KDE mode), but its system
space is so limited that I cannot do much with it.
The UNR looks better in its design in easy mode than Xandros, but not
much good if I cannot even download i
Of course, one thing I've forgotten is that the local backup that I wish to
sync is performed by BackupExec (something I doubt I could change), and so
maybe an incremental sync wouldn't be all that advantageous.
Unless BackupExec stores its backups in a manner that lends itself to weekly
syncing, w
On 24/04/2009, doug livesey wrote:
> Hi -- I have a drive that gets a weekly backup of a Windows network stored
> to it, and I would like to have that backed up in turn remotely.
Rsync will do that. However Rsync is not native to MS-Windows, neither
is SSH/SCP which Rsync can operate over. You ma
Currently the backup I'll be syncing comes in at ~140gib, so it shouldn't be
too hard to ensure that we have at least twice that on the sync drive.
& I'll look into the --inplace option, cheers.
Thanks very much for your advice, there -- good to know I'm on the right
track!
Cheers,
Doug.
2009/4
doug livesey wrote:
> [...]
> I'd really appreciate any advice that folks could give me on this -- am
> I wrong in my ideas? would this even work? are there any hideous
> pitfalls awaiting me? is there a better way to do it? etc.
Hello, Doug.
I manage a network of 31 Ubuntu-based bioinformatics
Hi -- I have a drive that gets a weekly backup of a Windows network stored
to it, and I would like to have that backed up in turn remotely.
To that end, I have an IP address that I wish to sync it to, and can setup
any machine/OS behind it that I want to.
What I was hoping to do was to have the bac
Dean Sas wrote:
> Rob Beard wrote:
>
>> If it was me, I'd backup /home (this is why it's good idea to have /home
>> on a separate partition ;-) and reinstall. Your bookmarks etc should be
>> kept then.
>>
>
> You don't need /home on a separate partition to preserve it on
> reinstall. See
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