Germán A. Racca wrote:
> How to know if I'm using an xterm or a gnome-terminal from command line?
>
> The output of "echo $TERM" is "xterm" from both of them.
>
> How to know?
Well, it looks as though gnome-terminal sets $COLORTERM, whereas xterm
doesn’t. But xterm doesn’t unset it, either, so i
Paolo Galtieri wrote:
> Run
>
> ps axlw | grep term
>
> This will show you which one you are running
It may do.
It may show which ones you are running, or which ones other users on the
same machine are running.
And (which I should have thought of in my last email, too) it’s quite
possible that
Daniel B. Thurman wrote:
> I am trying to get a handle on how to properly
> assign DNS PTR records, given these conditions:
>
> 1) Single machine containing:
> a) DNS Server
> b) Sendmail Server
> The problem here is assigning the PTR, since
> only ONE reverse IP address is allowed. In
>
Tod Thomas wrote:
> I yum upgraded to FC12 recently and now my machine is locking up hard a
> couple of times a day. I've upgrade two other boxes similarly and they
> haven't had this problem. Is there any way to debug this? I can
> provide more information as requested.
What graphics card d
Michael Miles wrote:
> I can't wait to see the Bulldozer series in action ( 16 cores
> Hyperthreaded) yeah baby..
Unfortunately, Bulldozer doesn’t do conventional SMT (which is what
Intel usually¹ means by hyperthreading). It has two integer cores
sharing a wide floating point engine and
Michael Miles wrote:
> Thank's for the clear up. My question is with Hyperthreading that is if
> each core does double duty so to speak by looking after two threads
> would it not do basically the same work as one core full bore on one thread.
> Is there a speed difference (faster, slower)
Good
JD wrote:
> Correct James. The clobbering of the cache by 2 different threads
> does not depend on whether or not the cpu is hyperthreaded.
> Any two threads can achieve this clobering on any cpu, and it is
> often the case.
This last sentence is true, but with normal multitasking, and no
multi-th
Robert G. (Doc) Savage wrote:
> While comparing installed F13 rpms on a 32-bit laptop with a 64-bit
> laptop I found that apmd is not installed on the 64-bit machine. After
> trying to install it with yum I found that there are apmd rpms in
> Everything/i386 and Everything/source but not in Everyth
Ken Smith wrote:
> I've seem problems like this reported in various forums. I have a i7
> Asus MB system with FC13 x64 and I'm using a PS2 keyboard and mouse.
> They are old but they work well.
>
> After the machine has been running for around 10-15 mins all input from
> the keyboard and mouse
John Mellor wrote:
> Interesting. I have the opposite problem on my abit motherboard. The
> PS2 mouse happens to work and my preferred USB mouse just locks up about
> 5 times per day.
>
> Is this a known problem with a simple fix?
I presume that unplugging and replugging the USB mouse fixes it
Joachim Backes wrote:
> I heard that such sticks are only usable if the partitions are formatted
> in fat32; formatting the partitions in ext3 or ext4 makes such
> partitions and the total stick unusable, that means, the partitions
> can't be mounted.
Michael Cronenworth wrote:
> I'm not sure who
Phil Meyer wrote:
> Fedora releases usually don't update major kernel numbers. The idea is
> to start a release as near current as reasonable and then patch that up
> as it goes go along.
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/KernelStatus lists the maintainers’ plans:
Fedora 14 “Will follow 2.6.35.x s
updog wrote:
> Independently pcspkr works fine for the PC speaker, and snd_hda_intel
> for the internal speakers, however the two modules don't work
> together. Loading snd_hda_intel after pcspkr is in and working causes
> loss of the terminal beep.
>
> It's a problem in FC13; not sure about older
updog wrote:
> "Terminal beep" also includes audible notifications from programs such
> as nedit and mozilla, e.g. search term not found.
OK – that’s a desktop environment thing. (Which desktop environment,
anyway?)
It will almost certainly consider the beeper a fallback to use if there
is no oth
JD wrote:
> I uninstalled it and there was no complaint of any dependency.
> It must have been a remnant from F13 when performed the
> upgrade to F14, and the next yum update simply installed
> updated the F13 version to F14.
Without nspluginwrapper, Firefox plugins run in the same process as
Fire
Aaron Gray wrote:
> I am trying to set up a network and gateway on 192.168.1.x that I am using
> for BOOTP'ing servers.
> But I cannot seem to get HTTP or other services to work on 192.168.1.x
>
> I have the existing 192.168.0.x network and was wondering how gateway
> requests should get from 192
Aaron Gray wrote:
> I am trying to set up a network and gateway on 192.168.1.x that I am using
> for BOOTP'ing servers.
> But I cannot seem to get HTTP or other services to work on 192.168.1.x
>
> I have the existing 192.168.0.x network and was wondering how gateway
> requests should get from 192.
Lázaro Morales wrote:
> But the user is an Active Directory user in an existing domain, so when I
> try
>
> http://DOMAIN\user:pass@proxy:8080
>
> The environment variable take the value:
> http://DOMAINuser:pass@proxy:8080
>
> It's seem that \ is not accepted and can't authe
g wrote:
> latest flash is 10.2.159.1.
>
> anything prior has security and crash problems.
Craig White objected:
> the implication being that the specific version mentioned doesn't have
> known security and crash problems which I think both have been found to
> be incorrect implications.
JD asked
I asked:
> Do you have forwarding turned on on the gateway?
Aaron replied:
> No
I said:
> That might be a good place to start.
Aaron replied:
> Okay is that IPTables or routing ?
Both, really. Since you’re behind a router, I’d start by turning
iptables off, and then
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/
Richard Shaw wrote:
> My computer got restarted (presumable by my 3 y.o. daughter) and now
> all of a sudden my keyboard doesn't work in GDM.
>
> Works fine in the BIOS, plymouth, it will even wake up the monitor
> when it goes to sleep, but when GDM comes up I can't do anything. Not
> even numloc
Chris Kloiber wrote:
> I run 8 workspaces, 4 across, 2 high. Email on screen 4 (upper right)
> personal stuff on 8 (lower right) and up to 6 different work tickets on
> the others. It's important for me to directly access any of them with a
> click on the panel so I can jump back and forth from
Fernando Cassia wrote:
> "A U3 flash drive presents itself to the host system as a USB hub with
> a CD drive"
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U3
This page mentions:
U3 Tool is an open-source management tool (for Windows and Linux)
that allows the locked U3 partition to be removed or replace
JUSTIN TAYLOR wrote:
> I recently upgraded from Fedora 14 to 15 via yum. After the upgrade,
> my parallel-attached HP1100 printer no longer worked. I deleted the
> printer, thinking I would just rebuild it, but I do not see an option
> to add a parallel printer. Am I overlooking the obvious?
ht
John Poelstra wrote:
> I'm running sshd on a high (>1024) port number and cannot find a
> clear step by step guide for configuring this correctly on Fedora 12
> on google I've come across lots of random bugs and forum
> questions, but nothing that starts at the beginning of the process
> throug
Jim wrote:
> FC12-X86_64/KDE
>
> Yum update is crashing.
> I did a yum clean all, but that doesn't help.
Jim Cromie (it’s evidently a James thread!) wrote:
> what happens if you update 1 package ?
> (pick a simple one, w/o lots of deps)
Come to that, the error message sounds like yum didn’t like
Vitaliy T wrote:
> I was surprised by the performance JFS in Ubuntu 10.04 alpha on my
> laptop. As I understand it everything is fine with the license and JFS
> also works with SELinux. Why drop support for JFS from the kernel and
> made it as a module? I do not want to argue about that JFS is bett
Antonio M wrote:
> I am helping a friend of mine to set up his machine with Fedora 12
> 1) we installed by DVD and it was o.k
> 2) after rebooting we set up the user
> 3) we started to upgrade with latest updates (but at the moment we
> have not yet upgraded kernel) with Package kit
> 4) we are exp
Patrick Dupre wrote:
> Hello,
>
> digikam work when I am root, but not as a user:
> Failed to connect to the camera. Please make sure it is connected
> properly and turned on. Would you like to try again?
>
> How can I solve this issue?
What sort of camera (brand, model), and how is it connected
Arthur Dent wrote:
> I tried taking out (commenting out) the tls stuff. No joy. I tried
> altering the "from"... Success! I changed it to be "m...@mydomain.org".
> "mark" is a valid user on this machine. Is that what the problem was? If
> that is the case I didn't spot anywhere that it was a requir
nomnex wrote:
> I also read that (most?) vendor will allow Secure boot to be switch off
> on the BIOS.
>
> When I purchase a notebook (Prior to Secure boot), I erase the
> partition. I boot from a Live CD. If everything seems to work, and if I
> like the DE, I install the OS.
>
> And that's my qu
Dave Cross wrote:
> I can't be the only person with this problem.
No, you aren’t.
> I have a Nexus 7. The Nexus runs Android Jellybean. Recent versions of
> Android (like Jellybean) have removed support for USB mass storage and
> the Nexus now connect to my Fedora 17 desktop using MTP.
>
> This
Tim wrote:
> Proxying can only speed things up, for you, if you access something that
> someone else has already accessed before you. *And* if that data is
> cacheable.
In general, true.
It doesn’t sound as though this service is conventional proxying,
though. It sounds like they’re dynamically
Tim wrote:
> Proxying can only speed things up, for you, if you access something
> that someone else has already accessed before you. *And* if that
> data is cacheable.
I replied:
> In general, true.
>
> It doesn’t sound as though this service is conventional proxying,
> though. It sounds like t
Philip Rhoades wrote:
> Is there some way of doing this? - even for a simple situation like
> opening a text file in Vim?
Depends on what you want.
If what you’re after is to tell after the fact that a file has been
accessed, you should look into auditd, or just turn on atime on your
filesystem (
Nick Urbanik wrote:
> I have installed Fedora 18 on seven machines using yum distro-sync,
> and am happy with the result.
>
> On my son's machine, however, gdm presents a fuzzy rectangular patch
> instead of the Fedora logo. This is also the case with the icons at
> the top right of the gdm scree
Jared K. Smith wrote:
> Yes, as I understand it the kernel key is used for module signing.
> The most obvious new use for module signing is Secure Boot, so
> that the kernel will only load modules signed with its key.
JD wrote:
> If what you say is true, then the kernel config option
> CONFIG_MODV
Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> Ah, startx. well I don't think it was installed as I typed in start
> and hit the tab and nothing completed. I have since done a
> reinstall and figured out how to 'properly' get gnome installed.
Did you hit tab twice?
If there are multiple possible completions, bash w
Alex wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have an fc17 system with two LCD monitors and an HDMI output to my
> TV using a Radeon HD5700 card. The TV is in a completely separate
> room. I also have a USB cable running to that room, and have a
> wireless keyboard and mouse connected, so I can control my PC from the
>
Kevin Wilson wrote:
> What do you mean by repeatable environment.?
The environment is the Fedora install, with all RPMs, configuration, and
files in home directories – everything that could potentially affect the
RPM build process. A repeatable environment is one that you can specify
and be sure t
Terry Polzin wrote:
> I created a /run/ddclient folder, no help.
> Anyone have an idea?
and:
> ddclient will start from CLI and and run persistently as a daemon. It
> seems that it just won't start at boot correctly as a service.
I don’t use ddclient, but I presume that when you say you created
Freak Trick wrote:
> Is there a way I can skip Gnome and go directly into CLI (barring
> systemd). Win 98 had a wonderful feature that allowed direct entry
> into CLI by pressing F8 at boot and selecting appropriate option.
> Sadly neither XP nor Fedora seems to provide such an option.
http://fedo
jdow suggested:
> iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --syn --dport 22 -m recent --name
> sshattack --set
> iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 22 --syn -m recent --name sshattack \
> --rcheck --seconds 60 --hitcount 2 -j LOG --log-prefix 'SSH REJECT: ' \
> --log-level info
> iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport
g wrote:
> viewing "source", "header" can be read, but not able to read "body"
> because of 'base64'.
For what it’s worth, you can read base64 encoded text by piping it to
openssl enc -d -base64
James
--
E-mail: james@ | You can accept the existence of rain without denying the
aprilcottage
Tom Horsley wrote:
> So if you have to opt in to this, what have I been watching
> videos with on my phone? It is android 2.2, and doesn't have
> flash, yet youtube has been working fine.
Android has its own Youtube app which doesn’t need Flash (since both
Android and Youtube are Google products,
Andreas M. Kirchwitz wrote:
> Freshly installed Fedora 16 for 32 bit (i686) from DVD on a Pentium 4
> with 1 GB RAM. Why does Fedora 16 installs a PAE kernel by default?
> Previous versions of Fedora (on that machine) did not install the
> PAE kernel but the regular one.
Does your Pentium 4 have N
linux guy wrote:
> Has the cronometer provided broken the rules of the GPL by enhancing
> it and turning it into a web application and not providing the course
> code back to the user base ?
>
> If so, where and how should this be reported ?
The generally accepted answer (including by the FSF) is
Steven Stern wrote:
> I keep meaning to edit the sudo config files to block things like
>
> sudo su -
> sudo bash
>
> but I get lazy. Someday, this will bite me in the ***.
Note for anyone considering this: it’s virtually impossible to make this
watertight, because there are too many ways fo
don fisher wrote:
> If one discovers a missing piece in the system, to which mailing
> list should it be reported? For example, trying to run
> grub2-mkrescue results in the error:
>
> /usr/bin/grub2-mkrescue: line 310: xorriso: command not found
http://bugzilla.redhat.com , except
https://bugzil
don fisher wrote:
> I guess I am not sure which level it is. I linked
> /lib/systemd/system/multi-user.target to
> /etc/systemd/system/default.target. It may be level 3. The system
> used to work until a crash. I restored the system, but something is
> amiss in the login verification.
Did you res
Peter Lesterhuis wrote:
> Hi,
> When I boot all seems to go well at first. But after the log-in
> screen a message pops up: "Oh no! Something has gone wrong" etc. I
> am advised to log out and back in again, but the problem occurs
> every time. The weird thing is that when I hit the windows-key the
stan wrote:
> Mystery solved.
>
> $ rpm -q --filesbypkg libcap-devel
> libcap-devel /usr/share/man/man3/cap_to_text.3.gz<--
The reason yum whatprovides didn’t tell you that would be the .3.gz at
the end: something like
yum whatprovides "/*/cap_to_text*"
would have told you that.
Beartooth wrote:
> I tried yum reinstall firefox, and yum claimed to have done so.
> But that didn't help.
Setting up a new Firefox profile might help. Either run
firefox -p
or rename the ~/.mozilla/firefox directory.
Hope this helps,
James.
--
E-mail: james@ | “It was rare to catch
Bruno Wolff III wrote:
> While it is possible you are receiving packets that claim to come from
> 10.*.*.* addresses, most likely the source is local to your network.
Tim wrote:
> Or, perhaps, internal to your ISP. To get an attempt from an address
> like that, it'd have to be on one side of the
les wrote:
> The need to click to get to the computer is annoying at its very best
> and a real vocabulary expander in normal use. Every time I use one
> application and I want to access another I have to click
> "activities"
Or press the Windows key
> my windows shrink
> an
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> I think it may depend on the version of Android;
> my phone (a newly acquired Samsung Galaxy S2) is running Android 2.3.3 .
This phone is probably supported by the CyanogenMod rebuild of Android:
http://www.cyanogenmod.com/devices/samsung-galaxy-s2
http://wiki.cyanogenmod.c
Paul Smith wrote:
> I would like to send several e-mails from a GMail account and with the
> same content but with a different opening for each recipient. Is it
> possible to accomplish it with Fedora?
How big a database?
Thing is, this sounds like bulk emailing: if it’s large enough that you
wan
Michael D. Setzer II wrote:
>I've fount that the vncserver doesn't start correctly after a power
>outage or non-normal shutdown. It appears that file in the
>/tmp/.X11-unix directory is left after the reboot, and causes the
>startup to fail.
>
>My solution at the moment is to
Joe Zeff wrote:
> Why? All of the Microsoft fanbois will have it and you'll be able
> to use it on your Mac. Like it or not, that's well over 90% of the
> market, and to Adobe, that's all that matters.
Not any more: they’ve never had Flash on iPhone or iPad, a lot of
Android devices don’t have i
Brian Johnson wrote:
> Thank you all for the responses. I went to reboot my laptop into the old
> 3.2.2 kernel to confirm that it was having the same issue, and it boot into
> it with no problem. I then reboot my laptop and let it start up with the
> latest 3.2.7 kernel, and it, too, started with n
Mikkel L. Ellertson wrote:
> One other thing - homer the TMP variable. Not so much for system
> programs, but for user programs. I have a tmp directory as part of
> /etc/skel, so every user gets a tmp directory as part of their home
> directory structurer. The I set TMP as part of the login script.
R Logeshwaran wrote:
> Hi I'm a research scholar doing my research in networking for that i use
> NS-2 package (ns-allinone-2.29). it will work good in Fedora-9 which uses
> GCC-4.3.
> My system is a new one it is not possible for me to install Fedora-9. So i
> have installed Fedora 16, but now NS.
Martín Marqués wrote:
> That's all I want (what's in the subject).
>
> I've had some headaches with preupgrade, basically, I guess, because I
> have /var on another partition.
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_use_PreUpgrade
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Common_F16_bugs#preupgrade-bootloader
Joachim Backes wrote:
> having a weird effect (in F16, [F17 too]): during some CD operations,
> ejecting for example, or clicking on the CD symbol by nautilus if a new
> CD is inserted in the drive, my system freezes, so my desktop is
> insensitive for some seconds.
>
> Somebody sees this too, an
Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> Fedora (not just 16) leaves junk in /tmp. It's also using some of that
> junk, for example keyring-PRgjGV/.
>
> So what's the best way to reduce the clutter? Is there a service?
One option is tmpfs. Put something like this in /etc/fstab:
none/tmp
Aaron Konstam wrote:
> The only way you can get a prompt containig root is by using su - .
> su will only produce a root prompt by starting as root. It it not
> posible to do this:
>
> [bobg@box6 ~]$ su
> Password:
> [root@box6 bobg]#
Emilio Lopez wrote:
> Im
Martín Marqués wrote:
> That's the question. How can I redirect potgresql logs using systemd?
> In the old System V times, I just edited /etc/init.d/postgresql and
> looked for the line that had the execution of the server and jus
> redirected the output to the file I wanted to have the logs
> (/va
Bob Goodwin wrote:
>Can the log-in screen background be changed to be blank, plain
>blue perhaps and how to do so?
Usual question – are you using Gnome or something else? Are you using
GDM to login?
If so, I’ve got a file called /etc/dconf/db/gdm.d/01-local-settings
containing the
Martín Marqués wrote:
> Can someone tell me why one can't configure StandardOutput in systemd
> to go to a file?
suvayu ali wrote:
> I could.
>
> $ systemctl status sshd.service > /tmp/bla
That’s standard output of systemctl, not StandardOutput the directive in
systemd unit files.
I suspect the
Frantisek Hanzlik wrote:
> And more - at several important machines when I want reboot
> them, I press for logging off and then login on for this only
> "shutdown -r now" command. And by then I at these machines not
> observed problems with bash history. Maybe it is speculation,
> but seem for me a
Bill Davidsen wrote:
> Another thing you might try is the "Live-CD" install if the object
> is just to get it working. Without firing up another system I can't
> remember if the P4 has PAE or not, do know that about yours before
> trying the install.
Yes, it does.
However, earlier P4s didn’t have
les wrote:
> HI, everyone,
> I am still having the update issue with gcc. I will follow this message
> with the error received from "yum update".
>
> Also my processor is periodically locking up. Is anyone else
> experiencing either of these errors? When it locks up, it is running
>
Michael Hennebry wrote:
> Stepping 9.
> No NX.
>
> Of course, the next question is whether the installer or installee require NX.
No, but it allows the kernel to block certain sorts of attacks. I’m
pretty sure Fedora kernels still use Exec-Shield on non-NX processors,
which should provide most of
Ed Greshko wrote:
> Edit /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-master.conf and comment the lines like so
>
>#address = localhost # allow plain imap only on localhost
>
> Do that for all the protocols you want to enable on an external interface...
A better idea would be to put that line into a
/etc/dove
I suggested:
> A better idea would be to put that line into a
> /etc/dovecot/conf.d/local.conf file and leave 10-master.conf alone. The
> local.conf file, since it sorts after 10-master, will over-ride the
> settings in 10-master.conf.
>
> This will leave the RPM-packaged 10-master.conf file alone,
Reindl Harald wrote:
> one of the odd defaults many are not using
>
> why should i have a group with the name of my user
> if it has only one user - or why should i put the
> user "caroline" in group "harry" except for chaos
>
> no idea who invented this silly default, however, do not
> assume al
Mark Haney wrote:
> I'm kinda confused by the sudo problem I'm having. I've edited the
> main file with visudo to include:
>
> ## Allow root to run any commands anywhere
> rootALL=(ALL) ALL
> markh ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL
>
> (obviously only the last line was my addition)
>
>
Bill Davidsen wrote:
> This is a really odd one, I have a keyboard and PS/2 mouse on a KVM
> switch, accessing four Linux system. All of a sudden the mouse
> sensitivity changed to "dead slow" on one machine. I checked the
> settings in preferences, and tried (a) another account and later (b)
> KDE
Patrick Lists wrote:
> I have an up-to-date F16 x86_64 box with 2 eSATA ports on the back
> powered by a JMicron JMB362 chip. When I attach an external SATA
> drive to the eSATA port and power up the drive it is recognized
> fine. But when I power down that drive, wait 2 minutes, and power it
> up
Reindl Harald wrote:
> sounds more you do not understand what ACLs are for
>
> how could a private user group replace ACLs?
> if you have different users and groups which needs
> defined permissions you will always need ACLs because
> chmod can only reflect the primary group
>
> for restrict acce
I asked Patrick:
> Does it work with older (pre 3.3) kernels?
Patrick Lists wrote:
> I don't have a pre-3.3 kernel as these are kickstart deployments of
> F16 + updates.
http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/packageinfo?packageID=8 has links to
all the recent kernel builds, including the last 3.2 Fe
Ashley M. Kirchner wrote:
> That's the odd part. The server that's producing those errors
> CAN resolve that host just fine. Note, that hostname has several
> round robin IPs, except I have not been able to get the .73.26 one
> that you came up with:
There are a whole load of weird things th
Tim wrote:
> There are throttling options for proxy servers, like Squid, so you could
> try browsing through it (when throttled) to see a slower network
> response. But that's not really a true test, slow networks have latency
> issues, too, not just slower throughput.
You could have a look at
ht
Timothy Murphy wrote:
> You are assuming that because your colleague's HP cost €800
> it is of "higher quality" than my daughter's under €300 Asus netbook,
> where by "higher quality" you apparently mean "will last longer".
>
> From my - very long but not broad - experience
> there is little or no
JD wrote:
> $ iwconfig wlan0
> wlan0 IEEE 802.11bgn ESSID:"Private"
> Mode:Managed Frequency:2.452 GHz Access Point:
> 00:AA:BB:CC:DD:EE
> Bit Rate=18 Mb/s Tx-Power=27 dBm
> Retry long limit:7 RTS thr=2346 B Fragment thr=2346 B
> Power Managemen
Mike Wright wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> There was a thread not too far back that explained how to type
> characters not on a keyboard by using the key but for the life
> of me I can not find it.
>
> e.g. to type a Spanish i with an accent mark it would be apostrophe i.
You might find
https://live.gno
> Is there any way to download all the required updates (on a machine that
> has Internet access, obviously) and save these downloads for the creation
> of the local repository you speak of? Let me clarify. The target system
> (with no Internet access) is in a customer site. The development s
Fulko Hew wrote:
> Just because there is no internet access, doesn't mean there isn't
> network access, and sometimes you need need to update to
> newer stuff when you change/update your own applications.
True, but you should actually think and make a reasoned decision.
Updates can cause problems
Antonio M wrote:
> I go to Nautilus, I click on Network, then on the name of my network,
> then on the shared folder list and I can mount it
> I have no problems with Nautilus, but I don't see shared folder in any
> save/open file application window
Ian Chapman wrote:
> It's also available und
Christopher Svanefalk wrote:
> I will have to install Windows on my desktop, which is currently running
> Fedora 17. The problem with this is that Windows overwrites the MBR (there
> is no way of opting out of this afaik), and hence my grub as well. How can
> I reinstall grub after I install window
Heinz Diehl wrote:
> Don't know if this is important, but if he uses Evolution as an
> Outlook replacement (this is what I do at work, to avoid using
> Wind*ws), Thunderbird won't fit his needs, because there is no mapi
> or Exchange support.
Unless Exchange has SMTP relay and either IMAP or POP3
John Wendel wrote:
> Is it possible to setup Fedora, using Fedora provided
> tools/software, with a read-only root partition?
As I understand it, /etc does have to be on /. So you will need to
either set up network user authentication, or live with any local users
not being able to change their pa
Aaron Konstam wrote:
> Well you arew almost right. If you hold down thew alt button on Gnome
> yout get poweroff, and reboot.
Or if you install gnome-shell-extension-alternative-status-menu .
Hope this helps,
James.
--
E-mail: james@ | Top Tip: If you are being chased by a police dog, d
ny6...@gmail.com wrote:
> I've been using mutt for years as my only email client, and I can tell you
> from personal experience that mutt is _much_ faster to get around in and
> read and process mail than one with a gui. In fact, that's it's chief
> selling point.
Mailing lists like this one are o
FROM address, not the
address in the header. (For example, once this message has gone through
the fedoraproject.org servers, it will have an SMTP FROM address of
users-boun...@lists.fedoraproject.org , so mailman should get any
bounces, but it will still have
From: James Wilkinson
up there, so yo
Dario Lesca wrote:
> How to use wine without get mono (44Mb of wine-mono)?
$ repoquery --whatrequires wine-mono
wine-0:1.5.8-1.fc17.i686
wine-0:1.5.8-1.fc17.x86_64
So the only packages in the repo that require wine-mono are the “wine”
packages themselves.
But yum info wine says:
In Fedora wi
Tim wrote:
> With the comments of I have no problems with them, versus I've nothing
> but problems with them, I wonder whether this is due to different people
> getting boards made for them in different countries. Or, a distribution
> channel that damages boards in transit.
Or different generatio
Michael Cronenworth wrote:
> Mono will be automatically downloaded by wine if you uninstall wine-mono
> as stated in my previous reply to the OP. You cannot avoid having Mono
> on your system with Wine.
I’m sorry, I don’t think you are correct. A quick Google gave me
http://wiki.winehq.org/Mono, w
Robert P. J. Day wrote:
> i suspect it's going to take some work just to figure out what's worth
> moving to the SSD for extra speed. i'm thinking that i can *start*
> with what you did -- install to the SSD only, but put /home on the
> second drive, then over time, decide what's worth migrating t
I wrote:
> What I’d recommend is putting an empty /home on the SSD too, mount the
> traditional hard drive somewhere like /home2 or /home/hard-drive,
Thinking about it, putting it under /home is likely to keep SELinux
happier.
James.
--
E-mail: james@ | I tried a home printer but the home
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