On 02/14/2016 07:08 PM, Fred Smith wrote:
On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 07:03:07PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
On 02/14/2016 06:56 PM, Fred Smith wrote:
On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 01:07:09PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
Downloaded google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm from google
Yeah, google messed up. They do
On Sun, 14 Feb 2016 20:56:33 -0500
Fred Smith wrote:
> Yeah, google messed up. They don't seem to care, it's been like that
> for quite some time.
As near as I can tell the lunatic paranoia about not allowing
more than one package to "own" a directory is entirely in
the head of dnf/yum. Last time
On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 07:03:07PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
>
>
> On 02/14/2016 06:56 PM, Fred Smith wrote:
> >On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 01:07:09PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
> >>Downloaded google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm from google
> >Yeah, google messed up. They don't seem to care, it's been like
On 02/14/2016 06:56 PM, Fred Smith wrote:
On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 01:07:09PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
Downloaded google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm from google
Yeah, google messed up. They don't seem to care, it's been like that
for quite some time.
If you can find the right forum at google
On Sun, Feb 14, 2016 at 01:07:09PM -0700, jd1008 wrote:
> Downloaded google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm from google
Yeah, google messed up. They don't seem to care, it's been like that
for quite some time.
If you can find the right forum at google, there is a loong thread
on problem with
On Sun, 14 Feb 2016 22:23:27 +
Richard Ibbotson wrote:
> Hi
>
> I did a dnf update on my F23 workstation. After rebooting to make
> sure that the updates were working properly I find that I can't get
> to the login screen. I see the blue Fedora logo for a split second.
> Then the command l
Hi
I did a dnf update on my F23 workstation. After rebooting to make sure
that the updates were working properly I find that I can't get to the
login screen. I see the blue Fedora logo for a split second. Then
the command line appears with a message to do Ctrl-D or login as root.
Nouveau dr
Hi
I did a dnf update on my F23 workstation. After rebooting to make sure that
the updates were working properly I find that I can't get to the login screen.
I see the blue Fedora log for a split second. Then the command line appears
with a message to do Ctrl-D or login as root. Nouveau driver
Downloaded google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm from google
and tried to install it, got
# dnf install google-earth-stable_current_x86_64.rpm
Last metadata expiration check performed 0:42:30 ago on Sun Feb 14
12:22:13 2016.
Dependencies resolved.
=
On 12/02/16 22:24, Go Canes wrote:
> I'm trying to convert my wife's laptop from Windows 7 to Fedora 22
> running KDE 5. However, when she browses the web, occasionally the
> page will scroll as fast it can - either up or down - with no input on
> her part, other than loading the page.
Nothing
Quoting jd1008 :
SOme websites which provide files for download, refuse wget
They send a file robots.txt instead.
In that file I see:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
Allow: /lang/*
Allow: /$
So, I ask if anyone knows how to use wget to get those files without the use
of FF ?
wget -e robots=off --wa
SOme websites which provide files for download, refuse wget
They send a file robots.txt instead.
In that file I see:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
Allow: /lang/*
Allow: /$
So, I ask if anyone knows how to use wget to get those files without the use
of FF ?
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Hello,
I have a pretty standard (I thought) optical mouse which has a wheel in the
middle that I use for scrolling also. However, this mouse has stopped scrolling
(continuously) in Firefox (only, from what I can tell, since the latest update)
without clicking. The scrolling behaviour is fine on
On Sun, 2016-02-14 at 14:36 +, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> Jon LaBadie wrote:
>
> > I believe the UNIX program (actually BSD) you are thinking of is
> > "script". All terminal i/o is saved to file "typescript".
>
> Thanks, that was it.
I very much doubt that would work for a GUI program, but I
Jon LaBadie wrote:
> I believe the UNIX program (actually BSD) you are thinking of is
> "script". All terminal i/o is saved to file "typescript".
Thanks, that was it.
--
Timothy Murphy
gayleard /at/ eircom.net
School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin
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users mailing list
users@lists.
Joe Zeff wrote:
> Go into the firefox Preferences and look at the password. If it's
> wrong, tell it to forget that single password. Then, go to your bank's
> site, make sure you've got it right and tell it to save the password.
> (If you want to be careful, don't tell it to save the password un
Tim:
>> While I haven't used that plugin, that*kind* of thing is a godsend.
>> When you set a password, you really want to be sure what you're setting.
>> It took me ages, once, to crack a typing error. There were so many
>> combinations that could have gone wrong. The type it in twice things
>>
On Sat, 2016-02-13 at 21:48 +0100, Niels Kobschaetzki wrote:
> Ever thought about a password manager? They generate the passwords
> for you and you just copy&paste. And later they auto fill. More
> secure, less to remember, less errors.
Yes, but I use too many different computers, and I don't want
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