On 18/10/10 22:23, Alan Bell wrote:
>On 18/10/10 22:20, Will Bickerstaff wrote:
>>
>> There is an open streetmap plugin for wordpess that can place multiple
>> markers using a flat file.
>>
>> http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/osm/
>>
>> http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Wp-osm-plugin#adding
Just a reminder that the next full team meeting is scheduled for this
evening 19th October at 20:00 UTC (2100 BST) and will be held in
#ubuntu-uk-meeting on irc.freenode.net
Regards
Dan
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UK
On 13/10/2010 12:08, John Matthews wrote:
On 13/10/10 11:49, chris cundy wrote:
I think the point of any Linux desktop distro is not that everything
will work perfectly with every combination of hardware available but
to work with most hardware. The issue with computer users is not that
they
I know you said you were looking to spend around £120, but if I were in your
position I'd spend the extra £25 for http://www.ebuyer.com/product/237052
You say the main reason for an upgrade is to improve video rendering. Whilst
I've got no experience with Kino I suspect it uses ffmpeg or mencoder
Here are some of the pictures from the event last year:
http://picasaweb.google.com/alanbelltolc/UbuntuUK
Alan.
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
On 18/10/10 19:54, Alan Bell wrote:
I would rather not do a pub evening for this (but we should do
one some other time).
Agree, Hub much nicer :)
Paula
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
On 19/10/10 10:24, Gordon Burgess-Parker wrote:
On 13/10/2010 12:08, John Matthews wrote:
On 13/10/10 11:49, chris cundy wrote:
Installing Ubuntu IS as easy as installing Windows and a darn sight
faster to get a fully-functioning machine.
Once you have installed Windows you THEN have to inst
On 19/10/10 10:42, Alan Bell wrote:
Here are some of the pictures from the event last year:
http://picasaweb.google.com/alanbelltolc/UbuntuUK
Alan.
OMG were there any women at all?
Paula
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.
On 19 October 2010 12:48, pmgazz wrote:
> On 19/10/10 10:42, Alan Bell wrote:
> Here are some of the pictures from the event last year:
> http://picasaweb.google.com/alanbelltolc/UbuntuUK
> OMG were there any women at all?
>
Yes.
At least three in this picture alone.
http://picasaweb.google.c
On 19/10/10 12:22, pmgazz wrote:
Agree, Hub much nicer :)
Paula
OK, several votes for the Hub then! I would rather go for the Kings
Cross Hub as the Islington one has about 8 flights of stairs and no
lift. I gave them a call, they are thinking of doing a shared event for
several smaller
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 10:27 +0100, Adam Bagnall wrote:
> I know you said you were looking to spend around £120, but if I were
> in your position I'd spend the extra £25 for
> http://www.ebuyer.com/product/237052
Ooh I hadn't considered that I'm really tempted. The cost is
not the real
Yes.
At least three in this picture alone.
http://picasaweb.google.com/alanbelltolc/UbuntuUK#5418430093759282834
Al.
What a relief! Missed that one . . .
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
On 19 October 2010 13:36, Barry Drake wrote:
> Plus it's got nice things like a parallel port,
> and I still have a couple of nice printers that I could use hmmm
> I'm going to re-read the spec a few times but I'm almost sold on
> that one. Thanks.
>
Looking at the spec I think the p
On 19 October 2010 13:55, Adam Bagnall wrote:
> On 19 October 2010 13:36, Barry Drake wrote:
>>
>> Plus it's got nice things like a parallel port,
>> and I still have a couple of nice printers that I could use hmmm
>> I'm going to re-read the spec a few times but I'm almost sold on
>>
On 19/10/2010 12:47, pmgazz wrote:
And the bizarre rituals for installing USB peripherals so XP doesn't
lose the driver.
I could NEVER understand that. Even in Win 7, insert a USB stick you get
"installing device drivers". Remove it and insert another make of USB
stick into the SAME USB
Apologies for bringing this dead thread back to life.
Would just like a quick opinion from someone on this...
As you know my pc kept shutting down mysteriously. I took it into a local pc
shop who are telling me that a faulty hard drive is causing the shut downs.
I seem to recall the pc shutting
On 19 October 2010 14:03, javadayaz wrote:
> Apologies for bringing this dead thread back to life.
> Would just like a quick opinion from someone on this...
> As you know my pc kept shutting down mysteriously. I took it into a local pc
> shop who are telling me that a faulty hard drive is causing
Yes thats what i meant. The expert has "located" to the problem to a faulty
hard drive which is why it kept shutting down. Im not convinced though.
I should still be able to boot my pc up with no hard drives attached and
just a CD rom correct?
On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 2:11 PM, Colin Law wrote:
>
On 19 October 2010 14:14, javadayaz wrote:
> Yes thats what i meant. The expert has "located" to the problem to a faulty
> hard drive which is why it kept shutting down. Im not convinced though.
> I should still be able to boot my pc up with no hard drives attached and
> just a CD rom correct?
I
Aloha folks just thought I'd drop you a line with some information on
how to get involved during UDS-N even if you can't be present we still
want to have you taking part and contributing.
HOW TO GET THE MOST FROM SESSIONS
1- The first thing you should do is register your attendance for remot
Hello all,
Apologies for joining and posting to the list all in one day, but we have a
project going on that we thought you might be interested in getting involved
with (and Alan said we should post on here...).
I'll stick a link at the bottom of the post to a more detailed version, but
in short
On 19/10/10 15:06, Laura Czajkowski wrote:
>Aloha folks just thought I'd drop you a line with some information on
> how to get involved during UDS-N even if you can't be present we still
> want to have you taking part and contributing.
>
>
> HOW TO GET THE MOST FROM SESSIONS
>
> 1- The first
I have just purchased a TC65T to use with my monitoring server to send out
text alerts. I've tried using the serial port terminal to communicate with
it but there is no response. I think that the PC's serial port is not
working correctly with Ubuntu. can anybody give me a hand to get it working
pro
Hi
The scenario is as follow:
1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you can NOT
reset it
4. This router is a "home" / consumer router like Netgear, Linksys, etc. S
On 19 October 2010 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
Is
> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
and
> 5. You need to brows to the routers config web page to make some changes
not mutually exclusive? I.e. you're saying you're not allowed to
administer the LAN but you're going to anywa
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 16:54 +0100, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> Hi
> The scenario is as follow:
> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
> 2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
> 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you
> can NOT reset it
>
On 19 October 2010 16:46, Jacob Mansfield wrote:
> I have just purchased a TC65T to use with my monitoring server to send out
> text alerts. I've tried using the serial port terminal to communicate with
> it but there is no response. I think that the PC's serial port is not
> working correctly wi
Try the usual suspects (192.168.1.1 / 192.168.0.1 / 192.168.1.254 etc
etc). If that doesn't work, google the model for it's default IP and
hope no-one changed it ;)
Paula
On 19/10/10 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
Hi
The scenario is as follow:
1. You have permission to work as Admin on a La
On 19/10/10 17:05, Alan Pope wrote:
> On 19 October 2010 16:54, Cornelius Mostert
> wrote:
>
> Is
>
>> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
>
> All of which probably contravenes rule 1 you set out.
As I read it, you appear to have misread parent.
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
htt
the modem uses the standard AT command set, and setserial is now installing.
I'll let you know if it works now
Jacob Mansfield
Programmer
On 19 October 2010 17:17, Simon Greenwood wrote:
>
>
> On 19 October 2010 16:46, Jacob Mansfield wrote:
>
>> I have just purchased a TC65T to use with my m
On 19/10/10 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> Hi
> The scenario is as follow:
> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
> 2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
> 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you
> can NOT reset it
> 4. This route
On 18/10/10 14:25, Gordon Burgess-Parker wrote:
>
> Have a look at TeamViewer - it's very very easy to use and needs nothing
> installed on their machine. There's a Linux version of it been released
> recently.
> http://www.teamviewer.com/download/index.aspx
Team viewer certainly seems a good faci
On 19 Oct 2010, at 17:21, Tim Dobson wrote:
> On 19/10/10 17:05, Alan Pope wrote:
>> On 19 October 2010 16:54, Cornelius Mostert
>> wrote:
>>
>> Is
>>
>>> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
>>
>> All of which probably contravenes rule 1 you set out.
>
> As I read it, you appear to
On 19/10/10 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> The scenario is as follow:
> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
> 2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
> 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you can
> NOT reset it
> 4. This router is a "
On 19 October 2010 18:18, Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
> On 19/10/10 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> > The scenario is as follow:
> > 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
> > 2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
> > 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use
On 19 Oct 2010, at 16:54, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> Hi
> The scenario is as follow:
>
> 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you can NOT
> reset it
>
> 5. You need to brows to the routers config web page to make some changes (you
> assume the default admin and pass
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 16:54 +0100, Cornelius Mostert wrote:
> Hi
> The scenario is as follow:
> 1. You have permission to work as Admin on a Lan
> 2. You do NOT have any documentation from the previous Admin
> 3. You find a router / WiFi Router that is in use and therefore you
> can NOT reset it
>
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 13:55 +0100, Adam Bagnall wrote:
> Looking at the spec I think the parallel and com ports are in the form
> of pins on the board. There's no parallel or com port in the picture
> and they're listed under the "Internal I/O Connectors" section.
I've downloaded the full manual.
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 12:47 +0100, pmgazz wrote:
> Totally agree, takes a fraction of the time and botheration 95% of the
> time.
That's my experience exactly! I've installed various incarnations of
Windows and it's been a real pain! Compared to that, Ubuntu is just
S simple.
My biggest an
All,
Please find the minutes of the loco meeting held on 19th October at
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/LastMeeting
Regards
Dan
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
I am always keen to update to the latest releases of Ubuntu.
However, can I ask - if I were to stick with a LTS version such as 10.4 long
term - would this version eventually receive updates to upgrade to the latest
versions of, say, FireFox and OpenOffice when they become available?
Or, are th
With the LTS versions they have "mini" updates. So eventually it goes to:
10.04.1, then 10.04.2...with these will come the stable builds of new
software :)
Daniel
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
On 19 October 2010 23:32, Tony Doherty wrote:
> I am always keen to update to the latest releases of Ubuntu.
>
> However, can I ask - if I were to stick with a LTS version such as 10.4 long
> term - would this version eventually receive updates to upgrade to the latest
> versions of, say, FireFo
On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 23:58 +0100, Matthew Wild wrote:
> On 19 October 2010 23:32, Tony Doherty wrote:
> > I am always keen to update to the latest releases of Ubuntu.
> >
> > However, can I ask - if I were to stick with a LTS version such as 10.4
> > long term - would this version eventually rec
On 19/10/10 21:29, Barry Drake wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 12:47 +0100, pmgazz wrote:
>> Totally agree, takes a fraction of the time and botheration 95% of the
>> time.
>
> That's my experience exactly! I've installed various incarnations of
> Windows and it's been a real pain! Compared to tha
Hi folks,
I figured I'd post this in case anyone lives near (or in) Exeter.
The Devon & Cornwall Linux User Group are having a meeting (well it's
more of a get together to chat about FLOSS, drink lots of tea/coffee and
maybe play with the LTSP kit) on Saturday 23rd October 2010 from 2pm to
6pm
On 20/10/10 00:07, Chris Coulson wrote:
>
> Well, the LTS *will* get a new version of Firefox in the future (once
> 3.6 is end-of-life), although it will most likely skip 4.0.
>
> Regards
> Chris
no, don't think 10.04 LTS will get a new version of Firefox, however if
you install 10.04 you will b
HA Urdu! Hey i can follow the Urdu instructions...although not a great fan
of the font!
On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 12:19 AM, Rob Beard wrote:
> On 19/10/10 21:29, Barry Drake wrote:
> > On Tue, 2010-10-19 at 12:47 +0100, pmgazz wrote:
> >> Totally agree, takes a fraction of the time and botheration
48 matches
Mail list logo