Thank you stan
I investigated a bit more and the laptop's screen is on but black. If I
change to a tty using CTRL + ALT + Fn, it will show in the laptop's screen.
It's only the graphical environment that does not show up.
Nvidia is installed and updated. I tested that already. The Nvidia
configurat
Thanks very much for this clarification!
Best wishes,
Ranjan
On Sat, 11 May 2019 20:32:45 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 5/11/19 6:42 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > No, my question is different. I did not use to have a root password, not a
> > empty password (if I can explain myself) before I went
On 5/11/19 6:42 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
No, my question is different. I did not use to have a root password, not a
empty password (if I can explain myself) before I went in and added it. I was
wondering how one gets back to this state.
From the manual, is this the same thing as the -l option
On Sat, 11 May 2019 10:31:38 -0400 Sam Varshavchik
wrote:
> Ranjan Maitra writes:
>
> > Btw, is there a way to take out a root password once set?
>
> The manual page for the passwd command describes its options. One option
> sets an invalid password which means that the account cannot be logged
On 5/10/19 12:39 PM, sixpack13 wrote:
is this the same as what's in the recovery partition, *the complete configured
Win-Installation* (with all vendor driver's/settings and the bloatware, too) ?
I've never figured out how to use that partition, but I think that when
using the recovery USB,
On 5/10/19 3:38 PM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
Probably I had to specify also that in Windows 10 the partition I have
to shrink appears as bitlocker encrypted and in some places I found that
in this case the only option is to shrink from within Windows. But it
could be old info too..
If your wind
On 5/11/19 3:40 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
[bobg@bobg bobg]$ sudo tcptraceroute 118.214.253.200
[sudo] password for bobg:
Running:
traceroute -T -O info 118.214.253.200
traceroute to 118.214.253.200 (118.214.253.200), 30 hops max, 60 byte
packets
1 router.viasatmodem.com (192.168.1.1) 0.35
On 5/11/19 7:25 AM, ja wrote:
On Sun, 2019-05-05 at 00:12 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 5/4/19 11:42 AM, Chris Murphy wrote:
The grub2-mkconfig script detects EFI and creates a "System setup"
menu entry so the user can get into firmware setup (functionally the
same thing as an F key a
On 5/12/19 6:40 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 05/11/19 18:31, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> That "probably" is it. But just for completeness, what do you get for...
>>
>> sudo tcptraceroute 118.214.253.200
> .
> Supper time here, gotta go ...
>
> [bobg@bobg bobg]$ sudo tcptraceroute 118.214.253.200
> [
On 05/11/19 18:31, Ed Greshko wrote:
That "probably" is it. But just for completeness, what do you get for...
sudo tcptraceroute 118.214.253.200
.
Supper time here, gotta go ...
[bobg@bobg bobg]$ sudo tcptraceroute 118.214.253.200
[sudo] password for bobg:
Running:
traceroute -T -O in
On 5/12/19 5:26 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 05/11/19 17:16, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 5/12/19 4:49 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>>>
>>> On 05/09/19 07:23, Ed Greshko wrote:
Your Viasat Modem has 2 interfaces. The interface that connects to the
Radio Equipment,
does it have an IP addres
On 05/11/19 17:16, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 5/12/19 4:49 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
On 05/09/19 07:23, Ed Greshko wrote:
Your Viasat Modem has 2 interfaces. The interface that connects to the Radio
Equipment,
does it have an IP address? Do you know what it is?
.
No, I've decided that I probably
On 5/12/19 4:49 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
>
> On 05/09/19 07:23, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> Your Viasat Modem has 2 interfaces. The interface that connects to the
>> Radio Equipment,
>> does it have an IP address? Do you know what it is?
> .
> No, I've decided that I probably don't know what that addre
On 05/09/19 07:23, Ed Greshko wrote:
Your Viasat Modem has 2 interfaces. The interface that connects to the Radio
Equipment,
does it have an IP address? Do you know what it is?
.
No, I've decided that I probably don't know what that address is. I set
out assuming it was 192.168.1.1 like it
On Fri, 10 May 2019 07:24:02 +0300
Ester Muñoz wrote:
> Hi everyone.
> I upgraded yesterday my HP Pavilion from Fedora 29 to 30. Everything
> went wonderfully, thank you all. I have a second monitor attached to
> it via HDMI. All run perfectly and when I came back I realized the
> laptop's screen
On Mon, 2019-05-06 at 17:00 -0600, Chris Murphy wrote:
> A faster way to get where I'm going, but will erase any evidence of
> why you're stuck, is to just create a new grub.cfg and then reinstall
> the kernel you want.
>
> $ sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/efi/EFI/fedora/grub.cfg
I did the above an
I just upgraded one of my computers from Fedora 29 to 30 and after that
grub doesn't work any more as it should. Now when I boot up I get
briefly the following message
Booting from Hard Disk...
.
error: ../../grub-core/kern/misc.c:465:unrecognized number.
then it boots the default kernel. I was e
On Sun, 2019-05-05 at 00:12 -0700, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> On 5/4/19 11:42 AM, Chris Murphy wrote:
> > The grub2-mkconfig script detects EFI and creates a "System setup"
> > menu entry so the user can get into firmware setup (functionally the
> > same thing as an F key at boot time to get i
Ranjan Maitra writes:
Btw, is there a way to take out a root password once set?
The manual page for the passwd command describes its options. One option
sets an invalid password which means that the account cannot be logged in
directly, and the only way to do so is via some other means, li
On Thu, 9 May 2019 18:48:39 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 5/9/19 6:08 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> > Also missing from this report is the actual reason for getting dropped
> > into emergency mode.
> >
> > Emergency mode is not the issue here. The real issue is what caused the
> > emergency mode.
Tim:
>> Because most ISPs will only assign one IP to each customer.
Ed Greshko:
> My ISP gave me 4722366482869645213696 IP addresses.
>
> OK, they are IPv6 addresses. :-) :-)
Aussie ISPs are still dragging their feet on supporting IPv6. They
should have been getting it ready MANY years ago.
_
On 5/10/19 1:25 PM, Tim via users wrote:
> Because most ISPs will only assign one IP to each customer.
My ISP gave me 4722366482869645213696 IP addresses.
OK, they are IPv6 addresses. :-) :-)
--
Right: I dislike the default color scheme Wrong: What idiot picked the default
color scheme
__
On Thu, 2019-05-09 at 15:14 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
> On 05/09/19 07:23, Ed Greshko wrote:
> > So, your network kinda looks like the attached. (no switch in my
> > diagram)
> >
> > Your Viasat Modem has 2 interfaces. The interface that connects to
> > the Radio Equipment,
> > does it have a
On Friday, 10 May 2019 17:40:22 BST Rex Dieter wrote:
> Barry Scott wrote:
>
>
> > I just raised https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1706756
> > about this problem.
> >
> > KDE is complete dead after login on Fedora 30 with nouveau.
>
>
> This qt5-qtbase update may help,
> https://bodh
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