thank you Marko for your advice,
I wanted to do (myself) something similar what you suggested.
Unfortunately my experience with linux does not allow me yet to work with
such a level of detail.
I would be happy to try your way (this would help me to accumulate some
knowledge and experience, that
On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 1:25 PM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> If you need to do that every time you boot, you can simplify things by
> putting that into /etc/rc.d/rc.local and making sure that rc-local.service
> is enabled. My understanding is that systemctl automatically enables it if
> the file exists, bu
On 12/08/2014 12:15 PM, Greg Woods wrote:
In order to get my remote to work with my MythTV system, I have to execute
# echo lirc > /sys/class/rc/rc0/protocols
If you need to do that every time you boot, you can simplify things by
putting that into /etc/rc.d/rc.local and making sure that
rc-
On Mon, 8 Dec 2014 15:04:41 -0500
Justin Moore wrote:
> but can
> anyone give me tips on what I might be overlooking and/or missing
Total speculation: Have you checked to see if some "helpful" new
feature is grabbing control of the remote? (Though I'm not sure
how to check for such a thing). Mayb
On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 1:04 PM, Justin Moore
wrote:
>
>
> === start relevant lsmod
> ir_lirc_codec 13021 0
> lirc_dev 19504 1 ir_lirc_codec
> mceusb 28026 0
> rc_core27490 13
> ir_sharp_decoder,lirc_dev,ir_lirc_codec,ir_rc5_decoder,ir_nec_
Hi,
I recently did a clean install of F20 on a new system, and now I'm trying
to get a remote control working. The remote is a Harmony 670 emulating a
Hauppage 350, talking to a Phillips (but Microsoft-branded) receiver. This
remote works beautifully on my old F14 system (and has since 2007 going
On Mon, 08 Dec 2014 10:02:59 -0800
Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 12/08/2014 09:35 AM, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
> > But always (in each of the above cases), the command "systemctl
> > get-default", provides as output "grafical.target".
> >
> > I tried the command: "systemctl isoltate graphical.target", but
On 12/08/2014 09:35 AM, Angelo Moreschini wrote:
But always (in each of the above cases), the command "systemctl
get-default", provides as output "grafical.target".
I tried the command: "systemctl isoltate graphical.target", but, after a
short time when it flashed the graphic symbol of Fedora (s
On 12/08/14 06:19, Michael Schwendt wrote:
Alternatively, you can also open the tkremind program with your favourite
text editor and edit it yourself to apply the changes you see in the patch
file. Lines in the patch file starting with '+' are to be added, lines
starting with '-' are to be delet
Hi,
currently my system (Fedora 20) start with the "command line interface",
and though I try to change the "target units" using I never get the GUI (Gnome) .
But always (in each of the above cases), the command "systemctl
get-default", provides as output "grafical.target".
I tried the command:
before moving on.. i want to fully understand the issue, why it's
occurring, the cause, etc - not just punting...
thanks
On Mon, Dec 8, 2014 at 10:09 AM, Ranjan Maitra
wrote:
> I don't use CentOS, but why do you think that the issue will persist with
> Fedora? Fedora has newer kernels so may
I don't use CentOS, but why do you think that the issue will persist with
Fedora? Fedora has newer kernels so may have already addressed this issue.
Perhaps, if you want to try it out, try out one of the LiveCDs first with
Fedora 21, due out tomorrow, and see if the issue still carries over?
Ju
Hi guys.
Dealing with a centos 6.5 that's going to be moved to fedora, but I'm
trying to resolve an issue before it gets moved.
The box is running centos 6.5, completely updated. The box is running
NetworkManager, and connecting to a wpa2 wireless network. The wifi is
usb rt5370 ralink. The box h
Dear friends,
I compile a LaTeX file and then see the following message when I read the dvi
file:
Warning: Missing charsets in String to FontSet conversion
kpathsea: Running mktexpk --mfmode / --bdpi 600 --mag 1+57/600 --dpi 657 zgmb8r
mktexpk: don't know how to create bitmap font for zgmb8r.
m
On 12/08/14 06:19, Michael Schwendt wrote:
You are expected to give it the _filename_ of the patch file, NOT the
contents of that file.
Alternatively, you can also open the tkremind program with your favourite
text editor and edit it yourself to apply the changes you see in the patch
file. Line
On Sun, 07 Dec 2014 10:57:37 -0500, Bob Goodwin - Zuni, Virginia, USA wrote:
>
> On 12/07/14 10:18, Bob Marcan wrote:
> > cp /bin/tkremind /tmp
> > cd /tmp
> > patch < patch.file.name
> > ./tkremind
> >
> > BR, Bob
>
> Well, if nothing else I've learned that "patch" is a bash command and
> has
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