RE: old laptop I need ugly fast Xwindows please

2003-08-14 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: old laptop I need ugly fast Xwindows please





> 
> All, 
> I have a crappy old Compaq Presario 1210, and KDE runs like a 
> dog on it.
> I really only need a couple of xterminals, and mouse functionality.
> 
> What version of Xwindows is light and fast on older boxes. I 
> dont care how 
> ugly it is.
> 
> Will I need to run xdm, or kdm?
> 
> Do i even need an xsession manager?
> 
> Thanks
> -Will
> 


I use Fluxbox (with Gkrellum) on my old Compaq Armada 4130T (133mhz, 32mb ram, 1gig hdd) and have been pleased.


IceWM, Openbox, Fluxbox, and even Blackbox are good choices (and their not even ugly).


--
Preston





RE: Newbie Modem Q

2003-08-14 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: Newbie Modem Q





> 
> I prefer internal modems because it limits my cable mess.  :)  I know
> plenty of people who prefer external modems because they are easier to
> debug.
> 


another point is that most external modems have a power/reset switch that comes in handy when dealing with flakey ISP's.  get a modem hang with an internal and you have to reboot, with an external you push the button and redial.

Preston





RE: which woody-iso ?

2003-08-15 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: which woody-iso ?





> I downloaded the LordSutch.com ISO image[1] which is about 10 MB,
> burned, booted, and installed the rest over the net. It works great if
> you've got a broadband connection.


Actually it is bearable with a dialup connection also (as long as you don't mind waiting).


Would probably not do it if I had to pay by the minute, but with a small install it is nice.





3COM PCMCIA Modem

2003-08-22 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: 3COM PCMCIA Modem





I have to get a new modem for my notebook and was hoping someone had experience with the 3COM 3ccm156 56K Glob.V90 PCMCIA modem.  I have found it for roughly $25 (US) and was about to order when I thought I would ask.

Although I have not ever had a problem with the couple of modems I have used (Zoom mainly), there is always a first time.

Also, what are the best steps to configuring this modem with Woody?  Since it is treated as a port would I "need" to re-run the modem setup?

Thanks,
Preston


--
Main Entry: Microsoft Firewall
Function: noun


1. "a hard crunchy shell with a soft, chewy center"





RE: pppd and Debian...

2003-08-27 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: pppd and Debian...





> I have a problem . My modem is detected by Linux, but when
> I try to connect by wvdial, this message is shown on console:





> 
> Hmm... a prompt. Sending "ppp". 
> ppp 
> PPP: Not enabled 
> 


try wvdial as root.  I don't think you have your permissions set correctly for everything wvdial "touches".


Preston





RE: memory not pro-actively marked free?

2003-11-20 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: memory not pro-actively marked free?






> 
> P.S. is that the usual way to get rid of X windows if in case one
> wants just to use the humble console?  I know there is a startx
> program, but no stopx.
> 
> 
"CTRL+ALT+Backspace" will kill the X-server.





RE: Need a user-friendly, low-requirement desktop

2003-11-25 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: Need a user-friendly, low-requirement desktop






> >>In this particular case, however, I'm dealing with a Pentium 233 MHz
> >>with 32 MB of RAM. 





I read of another choice called (if i remember correctly) XPed.  I am going to look this up myself over our holiday and see how well it works.  It will give the machine a _very_ distinct XP look which should help new users work easier in "our" world.  Again, I haven't used it but it looks promising.

I personally use Fluxbox and I also like IceWM.  I use Fluxbox and Gkrellum on my old Compaq laptop (4130T, 133mhz, 32mb) and can say it suits my mobile needs.

Preston





RE: Debian Investigation Report after Server Compromises

2003-12-02 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: Debian Investigation Report after Server Compromises






>Though I am somewhat concerned about the following bit from the message:
> 
> "Please understand that we cannot give away the used exploit to random
> people who we don't know.  So please don't ask us about it."
> 
> I'm afraid I'm part of the group that just doesn't understand. This
> snippet reeks of security through obscurity for me. If the 
> hole has been
> identified and, presumably, fixed, why not tell people about it?
> 


I agree.  I support and recommend Debian to my peers and clients on the basis that Debian is a stable and secure distribution.  Therefore when something (such as this) happens I want to have full disclosure so I can confidently deploy Debian on our network.

Preston





Sarge with lilo?

2004-10-14 Thread Preston Boyington
I've been trying off and on to install Sarge onto a Gateway Solo 1150 laptop without 
great success.  Each time I would complete the install, the computer would reboot, and 
the laptop would hang at GRUB's boot loader.  Since I know that the installer is still 
evolving, I didn't think much of it.

Well after trying the latest netinst and Official Snapshot cdrom 1 today (again 
without total sucess) I decided to try an older Woody netinst cdrom I had.  Long story 
short it installed very quick and painless.  I am wondering now if it was just the 
difference between LiLo and GRUB.  

If this is the case how would I go about finding out why GRUB doesn't seem to work?

Thanks all,
Preston



RE: Sarge with lilo?

2004-10-14 Thread Preston Boyington
Andreas Janssen wrote:
> Hello
> 
> Preston Boyington (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> 
>> I've been trying off and on to install Sarge onto a Gateway Solo 1150
>> laptop without great success.  Each time I would complete the
>> install, the computer would reboot, and the laptop would hang at
>> GRUB's boot loader.  Since I know that the installer is still
>> evolving, I didn't think much of it. 
>> 
>> Well after trying the latest netinst and Official Snapshot cdrom 1
>> today (again without total sucess) I decided to try an older Woody
>> netinst cdrom I had.  Long story short it installed very quick and
>> painless.  I am wondering now if it was just the difference between
>> LiLo and GRUB. 
>> 
>> If this is the case how would I go about finding out why GRUB doesn't
>> seem to work?
> 
> The Sarge installer (at least the version I used, on DVD)
> allowes you to
> choose between Grub and Lilo. Maybe you have to select expert mode to
> make that choice available. 
> 
> I am also not sure when exactly your Sarge hang - at the Grub screen,
> or the moment you tried to boot the system from Grub. If the
> latter is the
> case, then it is maybe a kernel problem.
> 
> best regards
>  Andreas Janssen
> 
It happens when Grub starts to boot my system.  I see the following:

root (hd0,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinz-2.6.8-1-386 root=/dev/hda1 ro
initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.8-1-386
savedefault
boot

after that, nothing.



RE: Sarge with lilo?

2004-10-15 Thread Preston Boyington
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Preston Boyington wrote:
>> Andreas Janssen wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> It happens when Grub starts to boot my system.  I see the following:
>> 
>> root (hd0,0)
>> kernel /boot/vmlinz-2.6.8-1-386 root=/dev/hda1 ro
>> initrd /boot/initrd.img-2.6.8-1-386
>> savedefault
>> boot
>> 
>> after that, nothing.
>> 
>> 
> 
> Why not boot CD#1 again, do expert, and select lilo?
> 
> Hugo.

That's what I (basically) did this last time (except I used an up-to-date netinst 
cdrom for the base install).  I was hoping to figure out the glitch in the setup with 
Grub since that seems to be the "default" bootloader now, but I don't have the time to 
devote to it (and who needs to reboot that often anyway?).

Also, for my setup I had to use a combination of the 2.4 kernel and Lilo.  The 2.6 and 
Lilo/Grub didn't work and the 2.4 with Grub didn't work.  Strange, but it's an old(er) 
laptop (Gateway Solo 1150) and the install was almost painless.

Thanks everyone.

Preston



RE: USB Generic Drive Storage

2004-10-04 Thread Preston Boyington
Ryan Waye wrote:
> Hello,
> 
> I am attempting to use a USB Flash drive on my 2.6.7 Linux box.
> Debian seems to detect it, here is the entry from
> /proc/bus/usb/devices file:

> So it appears to have been detected, but how do I access it?
> 
> Sincerely,
> Ryan Waye

maybe try as root:
mount /dev/sda1 /mnt/sda1



dpkg/apt question

2004-07-22 Thread Preston Boyington
i have "inherited" an existing debian box and want to change the packages to suit me 
and the office that it will now be used.

i would like to take the installed packages listed from:

dpkg --get-selections > packages.txt

and edit the file to reflect what i actually want/need on the box.

after i get the edited list prepared, is there a command i can issue that will 
instruct apt or dpkg to add/remove the programs to reflect my changes?

on a fresh install i would do:

dpkg --set-selections < packages.txt

then:

apt-get install

but i don't know the command to do this from a existing setup.

would someone shed some light on this for me?

thanks,
Preston



RE: dpkg/apt question

2004-07-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Monique Y. Mudama wrote:
> 
> Is there any particular reason that you don't want to use aptitude or
> dselect to interactively change the installed packages?
> 
> --
> monique

sorry, there was more to the story than i guess i led you to believe.  here's a bit 
more information.

the existing debian box that i was given is basically a test machine.  the company 
wanted to see if there was an efficient way of getting machines used here to a 
"baseline" setup.  if this could be done without reinstalling then we could keep the 
machines running Debian.  if not, then another distribution would be chosen (i don't 
pretend to understand the reasoning for their thinking about changing).

wanting to establish a "baseline" for the packages we took a fresh box, loaded only 
what would be used, and generated a package list.

using the commands with the generated package list:

dpkg --set-selections < packages.txt
apt-get dselect-upgrade

we showed how easy it was to totally change the test bed of machines (initially one, 
then five).

we are now going to roll out these changes to all our machines in this complex (30+) 
and another 15-20 machines in two satellite offices.


thanks all,
Preston



RE: Resize partitions urgent help

2004-08-03 Thread Preston Boyington
David Baron wrote:

> When I bought a big disk, I put in several Windows paritions and a
> Linux one. No sweat, installed Knoppix and onwards. If I get around
> to dividing Linux things up, I will probably use it again.

I have moved to using QTParted.  It's on the Knoppix cdrom and works very well.  Just 
open a terminal, type "su" and then "qtparted" (no quotes of course).

I like using a LiveCD to repartition my drives, rather than a program that is 
installed on a drive.  It always seemed like trouble waiting to happen when I used a 
program to partition the disk it was running on.



RE: network install via dialup?

2003-12-18 Thread Preston Boyington

> -Original Message-
> From: James Miller
> Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2003 12:20 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: network install via dialup?
> 
> 
> I'm thinking of recommending Debian to someone who has only a dialin
> connection to the 'net.  For various reasons, a network 
> install would be
> the best option for them.  Is it reasonable to expect them to 
> be able to
> do a network install over dialup?  I should also explain that 
> this will be
> a fairly minimal system.  What I would recommend them to do 
> is to install
> the base system, then XFree (using tasksel) and a lightweight 
> window mgr
> and maybe browser (e.g., Links - maybe Dillo).  That's the 
> way the initial
> install would look, in my thinking.  Other programs could be added as
> needed, via apt-get.  Would this be feasible to do over 
> dialup?  Probably
> would take several hours, wouldn't it?  Oh, and I should ask 
> whether the
> install-base routine can resume broken downloads (in case the 
> modem drops
> the connection or the ISP kicks them offline or something)?
> 
> Thanks, James
> 

I used one of the mini iso's to load Woody on my Compaq laptop.  I like the
mini iso because it has a complete system and after loaded you can "apt-get"
any other program you wish.  check the debian.org site and look for "net
install" or similar.  The one I used was the "Lord Sutch" mini iso and now
this is the only way I load Debian on my computers.  It will take a while to
download things like KDE and GNOME (if you use those), but apt will resume
broken downloads.  The install will mainly take time and patience with a
dialup, but is really not that bad (if you don't mind connecting before you
go to bed).

good luck,
preston
 


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RE: mp3 file cutter

2004-01-07 Thread Preston Boyington


> -Original Message-
> From: LeVA [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2004 9:44 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: mp3 file cutter
> 

> 
> Uh.. I have lame. I don't need Lame packages, because I've 
> compiled it 
> from sources. I just said, that this CueSheetMaster program doesn't 
> work. This is not because it can not find lame, it's 
> because.. I don't 
> know why.. Anyway, I just need another tool to cut mp3 files. It 
> doesn't matter what program it needs, I will get it, just 
> want to get a 
> working cutter program.
> 
> -- 
> LeVA
> 
> 

as far as "cutting" an mp3 file, i am guessing that you have a large audio
file and wish to make it into smaller pieces or remove/add sections.  if
this is the case then you want something like audacity.  it will work on
mp3, ogg, wave, etc.

hope this is close to what you want.

preston


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RE: Important!

2003-07-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: Important!





> 
> On Wednesday 23 July 2003 23:59, rayhab wrote:
> > I need to get an operating system to fit on one rw cd.
> You can try knoppix. It's based on debian. For more 
> information look at
> http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index-en.html
> 
> There you will also find information where to get iso-images...
> 
I'm not sure I quite understand your problem.  If you are looking for a bootable Debian cdrom you can create one with Jigdo (see debian.org/cdrom) to install Debian on your computer.  Also, you can use a mini install cdrom (about 200mb) and do a minimal install.  afterwards you can apt-get what ever you need when you attach to the internet.

If you need a livecd (operating system that runs from cdrom) then look at Knoppix (or mini-livecd's like morphix).


Could you be a bit more clear on what you need?  


Preston





RE: Wanted to build: bare minimum Debian system

2003-07-25 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: Wanted to build: bare minimum Debian system





> I have Woody installed on an IBM 340CSE laptop with a 486/50, 
> 12MB of RAM,
> and a 10GB drive.  It currently boots, but hits swap the 
> instant I start the
> PCMCIA card services to bring up wireless networking; even a 
> "ps axw" starts
> grinding in single-user mode.
> 
> Now, I don't expect wonders from this little machine.  I just 
> want it up
> enough to use as a thin X terminal with no programs running locally.
> 
> I've already built a new 2.4.21 kernel without initrd and 
> with everything
> non-vital removed.  Is the 2.2.x series significantly smaller?
> 
> Can I reduce the hard drive cache?  RAM is *much* more 
> valuable to me than
> buffered reads and writes.
> 
> Is Debian even reasonable on this tiny box, or should I be 
> looking at a
> slimmer distribution?  If so, any suggestions?
> 
> Many thanks - I await running my 640x480x256-color Mozilla with bated
> breath.
> -- 
> Kirk Strauser
> 


I have a compaq 4130T laptop with 32mb ram and a 133mhz processor.  I would recommend that (if possible) you up your ram.  I use a 2.2.2 kernel on this thing and have had no problems.  slow, but no problems.  I avoid running Mozilla, Gnome, KDE, Evolution, etc. and instead use Fluxbox, Lynx/Mozilla-Phoenix, Sylpheed/Mutt, and also use TightVNC to control some of the other machines on my network.  Mp3Blaster plays all my music (over the network) and I use the bigger programs through that.

Debian can be as slim as you want, so I would just concentrate on your tasks at hand.


Preston





RE: books-manuals

2003-07-25 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: books-manuals





Hy debian users


A question from a beginner.


Any recomendations on a good Debian-linux guide, with administration tools
and basic setups??


Thanks


Tiago Cunha


you may also want to check:


http://www.debianuniverse.com/


Preston





RE: kernel compilation question

2003-07-28 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: RE: kernel compilation question





> Now that I'm fully moved over to Debian :-), I'm looking at start
> tinkering with kernel compilation.
> 
> I would "assume" I'd need the kernel-source package of my 
> choice? But it
> are there any other package(s) I'd need to download to get started?
> 


also take a look at:


http://www.debianuniverse.com/


there is a step-by-step on building a kernel.  i haven't had time to check it, but it should help.


Preston





RE: CD Boot Problem

2003-07-30 Thread Preston Boyington




sounds like the cd media 
you burned has an error.  this can be caused by a manufacturing error on 
the cd.  burn another cdrom and give it a try.  also, try not burning 
at full speed.  sometimes people burn disks that are rated 12x at 30x+ and 
will make cd's that behave like you describe.
 
Preston

  -Original Message-From: Mustafa Al-Shawaf 
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2003 8:49 
  AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: CD Boot 
  Problem
  I am trying to install Debian on my 
  computer.  I used jigdo to get the iso.  Then I burned the iso to 
  cd.  When I try to boot from the cd, the drive spins up then spins down a 
  lot.  Sometimes I get a message from the BIOS that there was a boot 
  failure.  Other times, It starts booting, but then I get a message from 
  the software on the cd that there was an error and that I should try 
  again.  When I try to access the cd on another os, It is accessible, but 
  it spins up and down a lot.  Also when I try to small text files on the 
  cd sometimes there is a long delay (45 sec or more).  The drive works 
  well with other cds though.  I'm not sure what is wrong.
   
  MA


video card, dvd/vcd

2003-07-31 Thread Preston Boyington
Title: video card, dvd/vcd





I am thinking about buying an all-in-wonder card to convert some old vhs tapes to vcd/dvd.  I would like some suggestions/experiences from the group for software or hardware.

I don't care if it is command line or gui, I just want good results (baby's first birthday, etc.).  I wouldn't mind being able to mix some ogg files into the video and insert titles/graphics.

Suggestions?
Preston





RE: Console only box?

2004-06-11 Thread Preston Boyington
David Haughton wrote:
> Steve Lamb wrote:
> 
>> David Haughton wrote:
>> 
>>> Then you have "elm" and "lynx" for email and web and that's pretty
>>> much all you need, eh?
>> 
>> 
>> s/elmg/mutt/
>> s/lynx/links/
>> 
> 
> I still prefer lynx over links (or links2 or whatever).

agreed.  and i use mp3blaster for my oggs/cds/mp3 audio...



sources url wanted

2004-06-18 Thread Preston Boyington
recently there was a post in which someone posted a url to their apt sources.list.  
the one i saw began as such:

#
# My source.list that covers all versions of Debian
# usually uptodate, some backups are present if some fail
# which do on occasion. Usually a 3rd party site.
#

would someone mind posting this address again so i can update my bookmarks?

thanks,
preston



Home Debian "Mirror"

2004-08-17 Thread Preston Boyington
I would like to set up a home "mirror" (i386 archive) to run my installs from.  I am 
on dial-up and a friend has offered to download the 13 CDs of Sarge for me to help get 
started.

What is the best way to take the CDs and "convert" them into a working APT archive?  
Is this something I would use apt-mirror for, or is there another program?

This is new territory for me, so if someone could point to a good howto I would 
appreciate it very much.

Thanks for the time.
Preston



RE: Best iso image for unstable

2004-08-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Joris Huizer wrote:
> 
> As far as I know, there are *no* debian/unstable iso images (it'd be a
> nightmare to keep those updated... )

Sarge has (currently) 13 disks.  Look on Debian.org for links to the images (I think 
under "CD Images" or some such).

I've had to go this route only because I don't have a good internet access at home.  I 
am going to use them to set up a local "mirror" and rsync it once every couple of 
weeks from a friends house.

> Just use an debian/woody or debian/sarge iso, let it install the basic
> system

I would agree.  The latest Net-Installer is great if you have a fast connection (it's 
also manageable on dialup if you are patient) and install it that way.

Preston



RE: LAN APT-GET ?

2004-08-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Grant wrote:
> Hey,
> 
> Just wondering if i was to download all debian woody cd's
> could i copy
> the contents to a folder on my Intranet server and use that as an
> apt-get source... as every UK apt-get source seems to give me errors
> or is missing parts.
> 
> It would only be for LAN access and would be accessable from
> a url like
> http://server1/debian
> 
> Thanks
> Grant.

see http://www.debian.org/CD/faq/#lan-install for the information..  It will tell you 
how to set up the apt sources for iso images from your LAN.
it's something like:
deb http://192.138.1.1/cd1/  stable main contrib
deb http://192.168.1.1/cd2/  stable main contrib


also check out www.apt-got.com, debmirror, anonftpsync, and of course 
http://www.debian.org/mirror/ as they will be able to answer most questions.

Preston



Real Debian LiveCD?

2004-09-01 Thread Preston Boyington
I am involved with a project that is (currently) using Knoppix as a base for a LiveCD. 
 The end result of the project is having a "trial" cdrom that can then be installed as 
a real Debian system.

I know that there are projects like Morphix (which is what the Debian Non-Profit is 
based on) and that there are several tutorials on converting Knoppix/Morphix into a 
Debian system, but is there a better "variant" out there?

Thanks,
Preston



RE: Real Debian LiveCD?

2004-09-01 Thread Preston Boyington
Paul Johnson wrote:
> 
> Since when is Debian based on Morphix?

not Debian.  Debian-NP.  it's a Custom Debian Distribution (CCD) for non-profits.

http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-nonprofit/

information on the Bootable CD is here:

http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-nonprofit/News/2003/20031129



Sarge install hangs on reboot

2004-09-07 Thread Preston Boyington
I am trying to install Sarge on a Gateway Solo 1150 laptop and it is hanging after I 
reboot.  Specifically it hangs on bootup when I see "boot" on the screen.  I am using 
the Sarge disks (downloaded iso's) from debian.org and there doesn't seem to be a 
problem with the initial base install or hardware detection.

I have Librenet (2.7?) installed on the machine currently, but was planning on a 
re-partition and a fresh Sarge install.  Anyone have a guess as to what I can try?

Thanks,
Preston



What is the minimum RAM needed for 2.4?

2004-03-09 Thread Preston Boyington
I haven't seen a minimum, but I was wondering since there are a couple of 133's here 
with 32meg of ram that I want to update.  They are currently running kernel 2.2.20 
which I want to upgrade to whatever is the latest kernel-image available (adding a 
wireless card to one and it was suggested I upgrade the kernel).

Also, are any "gotchas" I need to be aware of with this kernel migration?  Current 
Googling only speaks of adding a line in /etc/lilo.conf to say "initrd=/initrd.img" 
(sans quotes) but I am still looking.

Worst case I want to be able to boot the old kernel if I fudge up the 2.4 install.

Thanks all,
Preston


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RE: What is the minimum RAM needed for 2.4?

2004-03-09 Thread Preston Boyington
> 
> Seems the 2.4.18-1.586tsc or maybe 2.4.18-1.686 packages are what you
> need (if you use Woody).
> 
how up to date are the patches in the kernel from debian.org?  i've never patched a 
kernel, so it will be something new/fun to do.

i am planning on compiling a kernel next, wish me luck.

Preston


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PPP config with external modem

2004-03-22 Thread Preston Boyington
This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new installer.  My only 
"problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my external modem it will activate the 
modem (dial and apparently connect) but I can't get apt-setup to connect to any 
sources to download programs.  I "su" in to "pon" my provider, but can't "poff" 
without changing into the /usr/sbin/ directory and intitating the command there.

I am wondering if it may have something to do with DHCP that was setup during the 
install.  How do I change it to a static IP address and try it that way?  Have others 
experienced something similar?

I will Google as time allows today, but I hope someone has some pointers to pass along.

Thanks,
Preston



RE: PPP config with external modem

2004-03-22 Thread Preston Boyington
John Hasler wrote:
: Preston writes:
:: This weekend I installed a base Debian system using the new
:: installer. My only "problem" is after using pppconfig to setup my
:: external modem it will activate the modem (dial and apparently
:: connect) but I can't get apt-setup to connect to any sources to
:: download programs. 
: 
: Tell us _exactly_ what you did and _exactly_ what happened.  Try 'ping
: www.debian.org' and 'ping 192.25.206.10'.
:: I "su" in to "pon" my provider...
: 
: You wouldn't need to do that if you had added your non-root
: user as a ppp
: user.  In pppconfig do 'Change->->Provider->Advanced->Add
: User' and follow
: instructions.
: 

tried the "add user" feature and was not able to initiate "pon" unless i was root 
(will verify when i get home).

:: ...but can't "poff" without changing into the /usr/sbin/ directory
:: and intitating the command there.
: 
: Looks like 'poff' is in /usr/sbin (it should be in /usr/bin)
: and PATH is
: not correct.
: 

i will double check, but i am almost sure i was in /usr/sbin instead of /usr/bin (will 
verify when i get home)

:: I am wondering if it may have something to do with DHCP that was
:: setup during the install.
: 
: No, but why was DHCP set up?  Do you need it?  It has nothing
: to do with
: dialup.
: 

it (installer) automagically configures DHCP if a network card is present (unless run 
as "expert")

:: How do I change it to a static IP address and try it that way?
: 
: Pppd takes care of its own IP numbers.  DHCP is not involved.
: 
: 
: --
: John Hasler
: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
: Dancing Horse Hill
: Elmwood, Wisconsin
: 
: 



RE: Cloning

2004-01-29 Thread Preston Boyington

> Subject: Cloning
> 
> 
> Hello all!
> 
> I'm about to install Debian on 12 computers (i*86). They will use the
> same setup regarding software, but the hardware differs somewhat
> between them.
> 
> I would like to know if there is possible to, for example, install and
> configure one box and then somhow "copy" the install to the others. Or
> is the debian installer maybe scriptable?
> 
> Well, I have never done anything similar before- suggestions, anyone?
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> --ph
> 
 One of the best things about using Debian is the ability to make a list of
installed packages and have the computer install them on a system with a
simple command. This is great for loading a new computer. I use a dpkg
command to make a list of my installed packages which I archive. That way I
can install all my packages that I want on a system with just a few
keystrokes.

I use this sequence of commands (found on Debian Planet to my best
recollection)

Do this command on the source system to create a list of packages:

dpkg --get-selections > list.txt

Do this command on the target system to load the list of packages:

dpkg --set-selections < list.txt

Do this to install the packages:

dselect install

Also, you can name the list whatever you want and direct the output to
wherever you want. I just showed it as "list.txt" and have it going to my
"/" directory instead of "/home/foo/documents/list.txt"

you may also want to look into having the target systems "apt-get" from your
source machine's cache.  that way only one system is downloading from the
internet and the rest look to it for updates and such.

others may give better or more automated answers, but this is what i have
used in the past when we roll out a new workstation that has different/newer
hardware, but the same software.

preston


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RE: Creating a hardware Firewall

2004-02-16 Thread Preston Boyington


> -Original Message-
> From: David Clymer
> Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 12:41 PM
> 
> 
> On Thu, 2004-02-12 at 11:49, Bojan Baros wrote:
> > Hello.
> > 
> > I am looking into creating a firewall for my home network.  So far I
> > have a simple Internet router (Netgear) that protects my win and deb
> > boxes, but I would like to replace it with something more 
> substantial.
> > 
> > My requirements are:
> >  - CD or Floppy bootable
> >  - Ease of configuration (no time to play around with IP Tables, and
> > various settings), hopefully browser based
> >  - If possible, to run on an old Sparc box (even though I could find
> > an x86 box if necessary)
> >  - Support for IPv6 (sparked by Comcast + v6 thread)
> >  - NAT, DHCP required
> > 
> > Well, after searching, I narrowed my choices to freesco (
> > http://www.freesco.org ) and LEAF ( http://leaf.sf.net ).  
> Obviously,
> > there might be some more that I am unaware off.
> > 
> > What do you guys think?
> 
> You could look into Debian + shorewall. You would still have to play
> around with some config files, but they are pretty easy to understand
> and the iptables stuff can stay hidden from you if you dont feel like
> fooling with it.
> 
> -davidc
> 
> 

maybe something like adamantix?...
http://www.adamantix.org/


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netgear/linksys/microsoft wireless pcmcia card? (also a quick apt .conf question...)

2004-02-16 Thread Preston Boyington
i am in need of a wireless card for an older laptop running woody 3.0.  i
have three different brands available in my area (netgear, linksys,
microsoft), although i possibly could order a card in the two week's time
available to me before i _have_ to have it.  i currently use a cabled 10/100
netgear card, and had no trouble with it so it (netgear) is currently my top
choice (if i don't hear otherwise).

i have heard good things about an oronico (sp?) silver/gold card, but
haven't seen them on a shelf anywhere (office depot, office max, wal-mart).

also, the company will be using a proxy server (if i understood correctly)
and is willing to let me do my "linux update thing" (sysadmin's words) if i
can go through their server.  i believe i just need to create a apt.conf
file in /etc/apt/ and place http_proxy=192.168.1.100:8080 (or whatever their
proxy and port is) inside.  is this correct?

thanks for the information,
preston


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Re: Firefox \ Iceweasel Differences?

2007-07-30 Thread Preston Boyington
Jose Luis Rivas Contreras wrote:

> What changed is the name and logo in compilation time, nothing else

also be aware that some extensions don't like Iceweasel as opposed to
FireFox or SwiftFox.  this will hopefully change in the near future
since i suspect that it is looking for some type of "signature" or
browser ID to be passed along.


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Re: efficiency of windows managers

2007-09-27 Thread Preston Boyington
Javier Vasquez wrote:
> 
> Don't know about windowMaker, but you might try:
> 
> fluxbox
> icewm
> pekwm
> fvwm2
> 
> You might find some pretty light, and some besides offering lots of
> fun and good looking features...  I use fluxbox and a machine with
> 512M main, and 64M ati-rage is performing pretty well...
> 

I am also a fluxbox fan, but recently I have started playing with
fvwm-crystal (http://fvwm-crystal.org/) on my Toshiba laptop and it is
pretty nice.

and fyi, i use debian with fluxbox on my P133, 16mb, compaq laptop. :D


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Re: efficiency of windows managers

2007-09-28 Thread Preston Boyington
didier gaumet wrote:
> On Thu, 27 Sep 2007 16:59:56 -0500, Preston Boyington wrote:
> 
> [...]
>> and fyi, i use debian with fluxbox on my P133, 16mb, compaq laptop. :D
> 
> Hello Preston,
> 
> what version of debian are you talking about? On a P133, 32MB, Dell Laptop
> it seemed to me that the last Debian version usable (speed...) was Potato.
> 

actually i am using Woody on that particular machine with a 2.4 kernel.
 at the moment i forget "why" i went with Woody... maybe at the time it
was "testing"?

probably in the near future i will go a "debian from scratch" route and
see how well i can get the little thing working.  i no longer use it for
my day-to-day and now it sees most of its time wirelessly streaming
music from my server.


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Re: Debian may lose a user

2007-09-28 Thread Preston Boyington
Kent West wrote:
>
> Girl-Friend. (I used to understand the concept of girlfriends better
> before Debian came along )
> 

...that lives in another town and can't come to dance (prom, graduation,
party) because she always seems to get sick or help her parents.  :D


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Re: Apt-Get or Aptitude

2007-10-29 Thread Preston Boyington
Daniel Burrows wrote:
> 
>   Identical behavior to apt-get has never been a goal for me, so the
> answer is almost certainly "yes".  (not that I gratuitously break
> apt-get compatibility; it's just not something I track one way or the
> other unless I get bug reports)
> 

one thing i noticed from my recent switch was the difference between how
apt does searches:

apt-cache search foo

and how aptitude (non curses) does the search:

aptitude search ~dfoo

with aptitude i need to add the "~d" before my criteria to be sure it
looks in the package descriptions.

i only find it odd because i would have expected it to maybe be like so:

aptitude search -d foo

not an issue, just a difference that i though was not as intuitive as it
could have been.

that said, thank you very much for this wonderful package.  my
transition to it was flawless on my mixed source laptop and i am gaining
comfort with the curses interface daily.

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Re: Inspiron b120 wireless

2008-03-07 Thread Preston Boyington

Celejar wrote:


What's the chipset (appropriate excerpt of 'lspci')?...


If nothing shows with 'lspci' then also try 'lsusb'.  I have found that 
some cards show up as a USB device (Realtek nics on some Toshiba laptops 
comes to mind).


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Re: Debian Installation Process ?s

2008-03-19 Thread Preston Boyington

Rick Kalkowski wrote:


I've got an old WinXP  lap-top I'd like to resurrect for my son to use


What is the brand and model of the laptop?  places like:
http://www.linux-on-laptops.com/
are usually a good place to start.

> When I crank up the PC now,

it's asking me for an admin password (that's been long since forgotten).


I would wager if it is a BIOS password there should be some way to reset it.


a little more information would help us...


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Re: want to speed up laptop

2008-03-31 Thread Preston Boyington

Douglas A. Tutty wrote:



xfce used to use gtk1.  It now uses gtk2 which is far more bloated which
makes it slower.  It also uses more memory...



Icewm does not, and OpenBox may not either.  You could try those.



currently i use FVWM-Crystal as my default desktop environment with 
Fluxbox as my "secondary".  i _really_ like FVWM-Crystal now after i 
finally took the time to set it up.  it gives me just enough 'eye candy' 
without the bloat.


other than the quake terminal i use xfce4-terminal for most everything. 
 largely for the configuration options and especially since it won't 
annoy me when i press 'F10' while using midnight commander.


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Re: [Solved] Re: Unable to remove trousers (package!!!)

2008-07-09 Thread Preston Boyington

jpk wrote:




I really hate this thread... Now I am sitting in a corner, crying like a
little girl... ;)



--



Julian Knauer


yes, but it has brought so much joy to others.  i even forwarded it to 
people not on list. :D


Preston

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auto update headers

2008-07-16 Thread Preston Boyington
why is it that after a round of updates via aptitude i have to go in and 
install things like linux-headers afterwards?  how can i tell it to 
automatically update them along with the kernel?  i was under the 
impression that if i had them installed then aptitude would update them 
as it does any other package.


usually i need this on my laptop.  i use module assistant to compile the 
madwifi and fglrx support.  without the headers installing i lose wifi 
on reboot and have to go through several steps to get it working again 
(not difficult, just more trouble than i would think it should be).


if the headers were automatically installed i could open a terminal, run 
m-a, and then have my network up in just a minute or so.


thanks all,
Preston

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Re: debian/unstable: iceweasel segmentation fault

2008-07-22 Thread Preston Boyington

Bruno Voigt wrote:


I just found

[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/# cat /etc/iceweasel/iceweaselrc
# which /dev/dsp wrapper to use
ICEWEASEL_DSP="auto"

I changed it to none and everything is fine now :-)



lol, mine was different.  for me i had to use:
ICEWEASEL_SDP="auto"

i think my problem was that Iceweasel was trying to use "psdsp" 
(Pulseaudio?) and i don't have that set up yet.  i keep hoping that a 
meta package will automagically take care of it for me.  :D


anyway i opened a terminal and typed:
sudo gedit /etc/iceweasel/iceweaselrc
and changed the "psdsp" to "auto" and now it seems to work fine.

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Re: ping

2008-07-22 Thread Preston Boyington

Ron Johnson wrote:


It appears that something blocked my l.d.o email for about 16 hours.
 It's all flowing now, though.



maybe you need a gmail account...

:D


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Re: compiled madwifi module, how to 'reload' without rebooting

2008-08-01 Thread Preston Boyington

H.S. wrote:


On a Debian Testing I just compiled the new module from madwifi-source. 



I've got to where I am using Module Assistant for this stuff.  It is 
super easy and if you open a terminal and type "sudo m-a" you will be 
able to do everything you need in just a few minutes.


check it out.

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Re: --

2008-08-01 Thread Preston Boyington

Frank McCormick wrote:




well said, Frank. well said...


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Re: Benefits (and risks) of using Sid

2008-08-08 Thread Preston Boyington

Damon L. Chesser wrote:



I think I will once more look it over, if for no other reason then Ron
Johnson will not snicker at me.



well i don't "know" Ron but given what i have read i wouldn't bet on 
that. :D


I moved from apt-get to aptitude and now I don't even think about it 
anymore.  This was a while back and it seemed like aptitude wanted to 
remove everything and start over.  After a bit of research and some 
alcohol I dove in.  Now I use aptitude in place of apt-get at the 
command line.


Instead of:

sudo apt-get install foo

i do:

sudo aptitude install foo

there are a few differences in searching and the like, but i almost 
never use "apt-get" anymore.


there's an (older) blog about it on my site that you could take a look 
at.  it really needs updating, but might give you an idea of some of the 
differences.


it's called "I've got a new Aptitude"


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Re: Benefits (and risks) of using Sid

2008-08-08 Thread Preston Boyington

Daniel Burrows wrote:

If you just mean that
you have to learn the keystrokes ... that's probably not going to
change; with the limited screen real estate on a terminal, I can't
afford to put in buttons on everything.


Although I haven't delved into aptitude as deeply as I probably should, 
I would like to have an easier (keystroke) way to cycle through the search.


As it stands, I press "/" enter my search criteria and then press 
"enter" to access the packages.  Then I press "/" again and "enter" to 
go to the next found item.  I don't know of a way to cycle through 
otherwise so if I miss a package I have to cycle through the whole list 
to get back to it.  Something like the "previous" and "next" feature in 
how aptitude resolves dependencies would be nice.


If there is already a means in place please let me know.


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Re: Benefits (and risks) of using Sid

2008-08-08 Thread Preston Boyington

Bob Cox wrote:
On Fri, Aug 08, 2008 at 12:11:06 -0300, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: 


Preston Boyington wrote:

As it stands, I press "/" enter my search criteria and then press
"enter" to access the packages.  Then I press "/" again and "enter" to
go to the next found item.  I don't know of a way to cycle through
otherwise so if I miss a package I have to cycle through the whole
list to get back to it.  Something like the "previous" and "next"
feature in how aptitude resolves dependencies would be nice.

If there is already a means in place please let me know.

Use 'n' to go to the next result, and 'N' for the previous one. (This
last one is not particularly intuitive.)
 
It's the same as in 'less' and 'vim' so is what many of us would expect.




Ah, that's why I didn't know.  I haven't used 'vim' much at all and I 
use 'less' for piping stuff into.


Thanks for letting me know.


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Re: how th generate like oficial site from packages (or CD's)

2008-04-11 Thread Preston Boyington

Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:


Indeed, reprepro is a lot better, I tried it yesterday, and faster too.
I invoke reprepro from a C++ program to generate a local mirror of all 
the packages that a system contains, generated by dpkg-repack, if 
anybody is interested.


Hugo


I am very interested.  How can I get more information?

Preston

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Re: difficulties updating Etch

2008-05-16 Thread Preston Boyington

Mumia W.. wrote:

On 05/15/2008 07:29 PM, Celejar wrote:


Nitpick - the apt-get command doesn't need to be run as superuser if
it's just printing uris.



:-O

Why you're right!

Now I might be able to use apt-get to experiment with potential changes 
without damaging the system. Thanks.




actually you can do:

apt-get  --dry-run

and it will show you exactly what will happen.  since i have started 
using aptitude for my package manager i now try to use:


aptitude --simulate install foo

of course all this is done with the 'sudo' command.


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Re: difficulties updating Etch

2008-05-16 Thread Preston Boyington

Daniel Burrows wrote:

On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 07:31:21AM -0500, Preston Boyington <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
was heard to say:

actually you can do:

apt-get  --dry-run

and it will show you exactly what will happen.  since i have started  
using aptitude for my package manager i now try to use:


aptitude --simulate install foo

of course all this is done with the 'sudo' command.


  There's no need to run "aptitude -s" as a superuser, and I would
recommend against it in order to avoid accidental slipups...



whoops, i meant all _installs_ done with the sudo command.  i got ahead 
of myself.



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Re: apt-get dist-upgrade failure

2008-05-16 Thread Preston Boyington

Manu Hack wrote:

Hi,

I decided to upgrade my etch box to lenny/sid but an apt-get 
dist-upgrade got stuck.  Please let me know what could be done here.


Thanks a lot.

Manu




i wonder if you could do this:

dpkg -i --force-overwrite 
/var/cache/apt/archives/libbonobo2-common_2.22.0-1_all.deb


i've had to use --force-overwrite from time to time...


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Re: Assumed bug in Debian Sid: monitor cannot be reconfigured with dpkg-reconfigure

2008-05-19 Thread Preston Boyington

Uwe Bugla wrote:
I am running the latest Debian Lenny / Sid combination and wanted to adjust a 
workstation to another monitor.


Traditionallly that works by the following command:
dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg.

If I run that command, the script ends up with the question whether to emulate 
a 3-button mouse or not.


Can someone reading this reproduce this bug?
Can you please fix it?



I can verify the same.  after running 'dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg' we 
could reconfigure keyboard and mouse but nothing else.  the xorg.conf 
file says something like "pre-configured device" (not at machine 
currently) for monitor and video card.


my question is where are the actual configuration settings located if 
they are no longer in /etc/X11/xorg.conf?  i want to help set up a 
friends ATI video card and i normally edit the xorg.conf file to load 
the modules for 3D output.


i thought my friend was crazy last night when i was trying to help him 
over the phone and he couldn't find the xorg.config section i was 
telling him to go to.  now i will have to buy him a beer or something... :-/



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Re: [debian-user] How to copy a laptop HD?

2008-05-20 Thread Preston Boyington

Javier Vasquez wrote:



I have an old laptop with a 10G HD...and changing the HD on the only
IDE slot is getting less fun each time


i really like using a livecd for these things and my current favorite is 
the gparted-clonezilla livecd.  couple that with a usb laptop drive 
enclosure and things will be much easier for you.


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Re: Sliding OT

2008-06-04 Thread Preston Boyington

Douglas A. Tutty wrote:

On Tue, Jun 03, 2008 at 12:13:09AM -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:

Ron Johnson wrote:

On 06/02/08 23:28, Marc Shapiro wrote:
[snip]
 

Wine is fermented from fruit.
Distilled wine is brandy.
Beer is fermented from grain.
Distilled beer is whiskey.
   

Corn beer?
 

Technically, yes.


Put it in your car and drive it.

Doug.



do so carefully and best as an additive... it will burn holes in the top 
of the pistons.  :D



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Re: Sliding OT

2008-06-05 Thread Preston Boyington

Marc Shapiro wrote:

Ron Johnson wrote:

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 06/04/08 11:24, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
 

On Wed, Jun 04, 2008 at 09:40:20AM -0500, Preston Boyington wrote:
   

Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
 

On Tue, Jun 03, 2008 at 12:13:09AM -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:
   

Ron Johnson wrote:
 

On 06/02/08 23:28, Marc Shapiro wrote:
[snip]

   

Wine is fermented from fruit.
Distilled wine is brandy.
Beer is fermented from grain.
Distilled beer is whiskey.


Corn beer?



Technically, yes.
  

Put it in your car and drive it.

do so carefully and best as an additive... it will burn holes in the 
top of the pistons.  :D
  

Isn't Corn Beer the same as the standard Ethanol that is already added
to gasoline? 


It obviously has ethanol in it, but -- like all beer -- it has a
very low percentage of alcohol.  That's why it must be distilled, no?
  
Yes.  At only 3% - 4% alcohol in beer, the remaining 96% - 97% is water 
and stuff that will coat and clog the inside of your cylinders.  And it 
wouldn't mix well with gasoline.  Not a good thing.  Gasoline containing 
ethanol contains 10% pure ethanol.




sorry, i was actually eluding to the "corn beer distilled into whiskey".

i've noticed the same (or similar) effect of burning the holes into the 
pistons while using too much acetone.



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Re: How to install a small graphic manager

2008-06-10 Thread Preston Boyington

abelahcene wrote:

Hi,
I have a miniPc, can't install the heavy  gnome or kde on it . I want to 
install a just graphic , in fact I want to use it , just to display a 
window . Any small WM will be OK.




i have Fluxbox running on a 133mhz/16mb compaq laptop.  with gKrellm and 
a few scripts i use it quite often.


So I have to install the system whitout X, and complete it with small X 
later, I don't know what are the required packages to run correctly the X.




shouldn't be a problem.  use aptitude to help yourself out when 
installing.  just stay away from the meta packages if you are concerned 
about space.



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rhythmbox issue

2009-07-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Hello all,

I did an upgrade the other day and now rhythmbox throws an error when it
opens an mp3 (can't find codec?) then WILL eventually play.  Also it
takes quite a while for it to start a new song after the previous is
finished.

All other system sounds, videos, game sounds play just fine.

I'm running squeeze (if I remember correctly) with debian.multimedia in
my sources.

I have an image (Clonezilla rocks!) from a few weeks back, but would
rather figure out the problem and correct it.

(apologies for not posting my 'ps aux'.  I'm away from the laptop.)


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Re: [SOLVED] Lenny Installation from USB Memory stick using DVD .iso image

2009-07-30 Thread Preston Boyington
Mark wrote:
> Thanks J.  Found an 8 GB drive for $16 so I'm moving forward with this,
> I figure it's worth a try.
> 

Just curious but have you tried UNetbootin?
http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/

it's also available in Debian:
http://packages.debian.org/search?suite=all&keywords=unetbootin

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Re: wi-fi security?

2009-08-05 Thread Preston Boyington
Paul E Condon wrote:



> I am having some difficulty with network-manager. Aptitude says it is
> installed on my Acer Aspire one...

Paul, seriously take a look at wicd.  network-manager is now the second
thing I uninstall on my Debian/Ubuntu machines (the first being the
update-manager because I prefer to use Aptitude).

wicd has been flawless for me since i started using it.


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Re: wi-fi security?

2009-08-06 Thread Preston Boyington
Manon Metten wrote:

> ...when I tried this, aptitude asked if it should remove
> 'network-manager-kde'. As I'm using that app and don't have wireless,
> I cancelled the installation.
> 

yes, this will also happen if you are running the gnome network manager.
 it's sort of 'all or nothing'.

another option for wifi (and wifi only) is wifi-radar.  i used to use it
with great success, but didn't need to after switching to wicd since it
handled all network connections.

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Re: about a feature which I found in Gnome

2009-08-07 Thread Preston Boyington
Paul E Condon wrote:


> I like the way I can plug a USB device into a USB socket and have it
> mounted automatically within a few seconds. I expecially like the way
> a device that has a label given to it is mounted on a mount-point that
> is named with that label, and when I un-mount the device that mount
> point is removed from /media - all automatically.

I have used several different desktops and window managers, but recently
I've moved to using LXDE.  The file manager PCFileMan is extremely user
friendly.

I also have Compiz installed with LXDE.  I don't mind a little eye candy
occasionally, but I turn it off when watching movies in Smplayer.

a quick google shows this (older) article about the desktop.  you can
see the filemanager and such there.

http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7428727466.html

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Re: Fast booting for a Debian system - and suggestions for said system

2009-08-31 Thread Preston Boyington
Lisi Reisz wrote:


> XFCE is currently looking like the front runner, but I fear that it may be en 
> route to getting bloated.  Opinions, please.

well, it's going to be a little bit of a trade off since I'm seeing more
GNOME libs and such.  still it will be faster and less bloated than GNOME.

> Because of Knoppix, I have had 
> a good look at LXDE, but so far it does not appear to be very malleable, and 
> support seems a bit thin on the ground.

heh, this is actually my default GUI now.  :)

> ***I would be very grateful for help in speeding up the boot process, and 
> suggestions for a suitable DE or WM.***  

I now do a netinstall THEN add my packages.  I opt out of the 'Desktop
Computer' choice in the install which has made me much happier with my
results.

after install I always do the following:
remove netatalk (if installed)
install nullmailer (i don't need a mailserver on my desktop or laptop
machine)

i still use GDM for my manager, but might try Slim again...

anyway, my boot time goes from GRUB to GUI in less than 40 seconds using
a 1.6ghz laptop.


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Re: install problem

2009-09-16 Thread Preston Boyington
Jan Willem Stumpel wrote:
> This is really an embarrassing question for an old Debian hand to
> ask, but how do I install Debian?
> 
> I just bought a "netbook" which has no CDROM drive, but which can
> boot from a USB stick. I could dd an Ubuntu image to the stick and
> then boot from it. But I prefer just plain old Debian.
> 
> I found (through the Debian home page) an image called
> debian-503-i386-netinst.iso. I dd'd it to the stick. But the
> netbook does not boot from it.
> 
> There must be something very elementary which I did wrong. But what?
> 

honestly, since I started using UNetbootin I haven't looked back.

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Re: Starting MTA:

2009-09-17 Thread Preston Boyington
Dale wrote:
> 2009/9/17 K. Jantzen :
>> Hello
>>
>> in the booting sequence of Debian lenny I see a line  saying
>>
>> Starting MTA:
>>
>> It  "takes ages" until  Debian comes up with "exim4". Thus booting takes
>> quite some time.
>>
>> What does that mean?
>> Do I have to have that?
>> If not, how can I get rid of it.
>> Thanks.
> 
> 
> If you just got a desktop or laptop setup you don't really need a mail
> server running. So removal is very simple all you have to do is:
> 
> apt-get remove --purge at bsd-mailx exim4 exim4-base exim4-config
> exim4-daemon-light
> 

alternatively you could just install 'nullmailer'.

sudo aptitude install nullmailer

it will remove Exim4 and take care of the stuff easily.

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pinning question

2009-09-17 Thread Preston Boyington
I have a laptop that functions 'just right' hardware wise so I have no
interest in upgrading the compiled kernel (2.6.26 I believe), xorg, or
rhythmbox (11.6).  Newer kernels seem to break my fglrx and madwifi
setups along with the newer rhythmbox giving me grief.

I am looking into apt pinning for the first time and while I'm reading
up would like a little clarification.

Is pinning going to be the best way to hold these specific packages
indefinitely?  What is the specific  After pinning will I be able to
'aptitude dist-upgrade' without worry of overwriting these packages?

It seems that in /etc/apt/preferences I just need to put:

Package: rhythmbox
Pin: version 11.6*
Pin-Priority: 1001

and that will hold Rhythmbox at the current installed version.  Will
marking the packages in Aptitude 'manual' do the same thing?

Ideally once I finish this exercise I will be able to do a dist-upgrade
to Testing (Squeeze will be listed in my sources.list) and not worry
about changing these particular programs.  This is pretty important
since I will be giving this machine to a friend that will not be able to
troubleshoot if something breaks X or wifi.

Anyone doing something similar?

Thanks.

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Re: Suggestions for desktop manager: [was Re: Fast booting for a Debian system - and suggestions for said system]

2009-09-29 Thread Preston Boyington
Kevin Ross wrote:

> If you want auto-login, and fast startup with minimal dependencies, then
> skip the display manager, change your getty to rungetty and configure it to
> autologin, and add startx to your ~/.bash_profile.  Then of course you put
> whatever window manager you want into ~/.xinitrc.
> 
i did this back when i ran Fluxbox and it worked great.

another option would be 'SLiM' for your login manager.

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Re: Anyone using the CAD packages?

2009-04-28 Thread Preston Boyington
Paul Johnson wrote:
> Alan Shutko wrote:
>> Aryan Ameri  writes:
>>
>>> Well, I always thought that AutoCAD was the equivalent of Windows in the 
>>> CAD world. And I thought that for more professinal stuff ( i.e 
>>> designing BMW cars) businesses use more sophisticated products (which 
>>> again I always thought) run on Unix workstations.
>> Yes, basically.  Although the big packages also run on NT.  (I used
>> to work for Unigraphics, which is one of the high-end packages.)
>>
>>> It seems I was wrong though. AutoCAD is the only CAD product which I 
>>> have ever heard it's name (OK, aside from QCAD). 
>> High-end CAD is not a very common occupation.  Many more people use
>> AutoCAD than have ever used UG, CATIA or Pro/E.  The high-end licenses
>> cost about the same as a small car per seat, so it's natural many,
>> many more people talk about AutoCAD.
> 
> I know this is digging up old news, but I have to wonder if the
> situation has changed in the years that this was originally posted, now
> that AutoCAD costs more than I have ever paid for a car, and still
> doesn't work in Wine.
> 
> 

The short answer (AFAIK) is "no".  I would dearly _love_ to be able to
run Solidworks, AutoCAD, MicroStation, plus their related
Civil/Mechanical softwares on a Linux machine, but that is just not
happening.

IF there were more of a push for Linux at the workplace (desktops not
just server room) then the "money factor" would help bring the
businesses around.  As it is, there's no real incentive to produce a
product that is cross platform when most of the users/businesses will
have a Microsoft OS on the machine anyway.

The last I saw was someone getting an old (ACAD 2000?) working on Linux
through WINE.  The other option is running it in a Virtual Machine, but
then you have a performance hit on top of running a Microsoft OS since
the software is not native.

That just is not good enough.

Preston

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Re: Anyone using the CAD packages?

2009-04-30 Thread Preston Boyington
Paul Johnson wrote:
> Preston Boyington wrote:
> 
>> IF there were more of a push for Linux at the workplace (desktops not
>> just server room) then the "money factor" would help bring the
>> businesses around.  As it is, there's no real incentive to produce a
>> product that is cross platform when most of the users/businesses will
>> have a Microsoft OS on the machine anyway.
> 
> Anybody who wants to hire me better get used to the "money factor" being
> an issue:  I charge employers an Asshole Tax if they honestly expect me
> to use Windows on the job ("Yah, what you're paying me now is about half
> what I'll do the job on Windows for.")
> 

LOL!  I wish I could do that.  Have a good employer though so...

That said, I meant "Industry as a whole" petitioning the software
companies.  Not individual employers.

>> The last I saw was someone getting an old (ACAD 2000?) working on Linux
>> through WINE.  The other option is running it in a Virtual Machine, but
>> then you have a performance hit on top of running a Microsoft OS since
>> the software is not native.
> 
> Especially when you need 2009 or 2010 to get the job done.
> 

Another downside (for me and my field) is that even if I were to get a
new version of AutoCAD (or Microstation) installed, it's doubtful that
any of the Civil Software that I use would smoothly run on Linux.  If at
all.

Preston

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Re: no sound

2009-06-10 Thread Preston Boyington
abdelkader belahcene wrote:
> HI,
> on my new laptop HP,
> I tryed  debian 5.0, ubuntu 9.04 , linuxMint 7,
> 
> the sound is not running on all, while the hardware is detected , the
> sound indicator is green correct, When I play a sound file, it plays
> normally, but no* sound is heard.*
> 
> here is the lspci :
> 
> *00:1b.0 Audio device: Intel Corporation 82801I (ICH9 Family) HD Audio
> Controller (rev 03)*
> 

I'm curious if your headphones work even though your built-in speakers
might not.

I am having a similar issue with an Acer Aspire One D150 (D150-1577
specifically) and am running the 2.6.26-2 kernel.

which kernel are you using?

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Re: puseaudio in Debian - is it ready?

2008-10-15 Thread Preston Boyington
H.S. wrote:
> Paul Johnson wrote:
> 
>>>   
>> Right up until it doesn't.  And when it doesn't, it's a severe pain to fix.
> 
> I noticed that in FC9, the sound was working quite smoothly even when
> the processor was quite busy (updating and installing stuff using yum).
> This was a surprise to me. With as busy processor in Debian, I usually
> get some sort an interruption in the sound. That prompted me to try out
> pulseaudio in Debian too. Soon discovered it is pretty cumbersome to
> install though.
> 

i'm dealing with this issue now.  i REALLY want to have my system set up
  so that multiple sound streams can play.  currently my base ALSA setup
doesn't allow that and it's annoying to have to kill one program to hear
another's sound.  now that i have some more time i am planning on
getting serious about finding a good solution.

keep in mind that i wasn't concerned about sound initially so i was
lumbering under the idea that Pulseaudio would be my saving grace...
which has not happened.

so how do i setup my system to play multiple streams with ALSA?  i'm
sure it is being done by someone, but i couldn't find a simple guide to
do so before i started this Pulseaudio adventure.

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Re: Mounting an old external USB drive

2008-10-30 Thread Preston Boyington
S D wrote:
> 
> Am trying to mount an old BusLink USB drive but can't determine what device 
> the USB drive is connected to, that is, the device that I'd pass to the mount 
> command. I tried "fdisk -l" but it only appears to show my other internal HDs.
> 


check your dmesg output also.


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Re: Speeding up Debian Boot

2009-01-12 Thread Preston Boyington
Dean Chester wrote:
> Hi
> Is there anyway i can speed up debians boot time. Its embarrassing that
> Vista boots up quicker than debian.
> Dean

I use nullmailer instead of Exim since I don't need/want to run a mail
server and I bring up my networks (wi-fi, lan) manually when I want them.

I used bum to stop stuff I didn't feel I want and that helped also.

My Toshiba laptop seems to boot in under 30 seconds now.

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Re: wireless gui configuration utility

2009-01-19 Thread Preston Boyington
Micha Feigin wrote:
> 
> My two problems with wicd (one of them is not an issue at the moment, but it
> was)
> 
> 1. the memory overhead of the client (why python? it's very good for daemons
> and such, not very memory efficient)
> root  4634  0.2  0.3  89776  7776 ?S00:51   3:23 python 
> /usr/share/wicd/wicd-daemon.py
> root  4975  0.1  0.2  71264  5848 ?S00:51   1:17 python 
> /usr/share/wicd/monitor.py
> micha 5440  0.0  1.1 197904 23068 ?Ss   00:57   0:37 python 
> /usr/share/wicd/wicd-client.py
> 
> 2. It doesn't support vpn which network manager does
> 
> on the other hand I couldn't find how to manually set an ip with network
> manager and the wireless connection was very unstable (very frequent
> disconnects requiring wireless system restarts to find the wireless network
> again).
> 
> So for the moment it's wicd for me (I have the memory to spare at the moment).
> 
> 

I typically use wifi-radar for my wireless but tried wicd this weekend
and it worked with no problems.

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Re: I don't need an MTA

2009-02-02 Thread Preston Boyington
Nuno Magalhães wrote:

> Can i have a regular desktop Debian without an MTA?
> 

yes.  install 'nullmailer' via aptitude.  i use it on my laptops.

(haven't read all the posts yet, so someone might have already suggested
this)

Preston


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Re: Cloning methods

2009-02-10 Thread Preston Boyington
Kelly Harding wrote:
> 2009/2/8 Stefan Monnier:
>>> What's the best method for cloning a partition? [searching for an
>>> open-source software alternateive for it :P]
> 
> If you use XFS the xfsdump/xfsrestore programs are very good.
> 
> Theres also clonezilla which should do the job.
> 

I've had good fortune with clonezilla from a LiveCD.  that way I'm not
using the drive I'm cloning.  I will be doing it tonight on my laptop
when I get back to the apartment.

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Re: recommended webcam?

2007-11-21 Thread Preston Boyington
steve wrote:
> Bruno Boettcher wrote:

>> i want to play around with ip-telephony and thus need a webcam...
>> so what webcam are there that are easy to get working under debian?
> 
> http://qce-ga.sourceforge.net/
> 
> drivers for logitech, well known, well supported, and widely available
> hardware.

also take a look at:
http://linux-uvc.berlios.de/

and even:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SkypeWebCams

i have found both sites helpful.


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Re: recommended webcam?

2007-11-21 Thread Preston Boyington
Bruno Boettcher wrote:

> so what webcam are
> there that are easy to get working under debian with more appropriate
> resolution and framerate?

as a quick update i have just got a Logitech QuickCam Pro for Notebooks
working with ekiga and luvcview.  the beta of Skype is giving me some
video errors, but the built in microphone is working great.  i am hoping
to get it fully working with Skype as i have time this weekend.

i also have a Logitech QuickCam Ultra Vision, but in quick tests it was
detected and only the microphone was usable.  again that will be a
project for a different day as i really want this camera to work.

oh, am running Debian laptop with 2.6.22 kernel and V4L2 drivers thus far.

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Re: Could you recommend file manager that are not based on KDE and GNOME?

2007-11-26 Thread Preston Boyington
Serena Cantor wrote:
 I have used Linux for 8 years.
 I have not found any suitable file manager(FM).
 I use twm. I don't use KDE or GNOME. so don't recommend any FM based
 on KDE or GNOME I still use command line. I will prefer GUI FM so my
 life can be a little easier. I use sarge and etch.

ROX
Thunar
Midnight Commander

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acidrip not showing status

2007-11-27 Thread Preston Boyington
i run debian testing and noticed today that acidrip is not showing any
status / progress in either the "full" or "compact" views.  since it
seems to work very well otherwise i am wondering if it is a permission
issue or something relatively simple to fix.

any help will be appreciated.

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external drive as partial mirror

2008-01-16 Thread Preston Boyington
I have been given an external drive and was wondering if there would be 
a problem with my making it a partial mirror.  Does the mirror require 
any particular permissions or can I leave the drive Fat32?


Has anyone done this from a Windows machine and could maybe give me some 
examples?


Thanks,
Preston

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indefinitely hold a package

2008-01-23 Thread Preston Boyington
Since I have been having an issue with the current xorg blowing the 
display on this HP dv5000 laptop, I wanted to keep the currently 
installed (stable) version.


Is there a way that I can let aptitude update everything else without 
having to worry about it automatically selecting xorg packages to be 
upgraded as well?  I am using the "hold" feature currently, but it seems 
that I am having to go through several steps when I open or update 
aptitude because I have to reapply the hold feature each time.


(There is an example of the issue I am having on my website)

Thanks all,
Preston

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Network Manager wants to access default keyring

2009-10-26 Thread Preston Boyington
I have Debian Testing with the Gnome environment setup on a friends'
laptop.  In an effort to make things easier to use I'm trying to stick
with Network Manager because of the PPP support for the USB cellular
broadband.

Each time the computer is started (GDM auto logins to user) NM asks to
access the default keyring.  How do I get it to automagically work
without having to input the keyring password each time?

Wicd does this automatically without this annoyance so how do I set NM
up to work the same way?

So far my searching hasn't found a good workaround.  Any help will be
appreciated.

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Re: Network Manager wants to access default keyring

2009-10-26 Thread Preston Boyington
(commented in-line)

On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 6:00 PM, Michael Biebl  wrote:

> You are using Debian testing, so I guess you use NM 0.7.

specifically 0.7.1-1

> If so, you have two options:
>
> Mark the connection as system connection in nm-connection-editor ("Available 
> to
> all users"). This way the key is stored system wide (in
> /etc/NetworkManager/system-connections/). That's basically what wicd does.

for whatever reason after I check the box (Available to all users) it
doesn't seem to "stick".

> The other option is, to use libpam-gnome-keyring. Set your keyring password 
> the
> same as your login password, and on login your gnome-keyring will 
> automatically
> be unlocked.

I've re-created my keyring and made sure that the libpam files are
installed.  Still the same message.

After rebooting I took a more careful look at the message:
"The application 'NetworkManager Applet' (/usr/bin/nm-applet) wants to
access the default keyring, but it is locked"

so is it actually talking about the little applet running in the
taskbar not having permission?  what's the workaround for this...
other than typing the password each time.


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Re: Network Manager wants to access default keyring

2009-10-27 Thread Preston Boyington
Mr. Wang Long wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 27, 2009 at 12:05, Preston Boyington
>  wrote:
>> (commented in-line)
>>
>> On Mon, Oct 26, 2009 at 6:00 PM, Michael Biebl  wrote:
>> 
>>
>> I've re-created my keyring and made sure that the libpam files are
>> installed.  Still the same message.
>>
>> After rebooting I took a more careful look at the message:
>> "The application 'NetworkManager Applet' (/usr/bin/nm-applet) wants to
>> access the default keyring, but it is locked"
>>
>> so is it actually talking about the little applet running in the
>> taskbar not having permission?  what's the workaround for this...
>> other than typing the password each time.
>>
>>
> 
> The default keyring should be automately unlocked if you are login by
> typing your username and password in gdm, did you enabled auto-login
> in gdm?

yes.  GDM is set to login automatically.

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Re: Network Manager wants to access default keyring

2009-10-27 Thread Preston Boyington
Michael Biebl wrote:


> As already said, setting gdm to autologin will of course not work. you 
> actually
> have to type your password once.
> If you are using autologin, you might just as well use a blank password for 
> your
> gnome-keyring (not that i recommend that).
> 

hmm, haven't thought about a blank password, but then i would need to
take the user out of the 'sudo' group.  no, i think i will just disable
autologin.

oh, i installed with the 'Desktop Environment' and have policykit
installed also.

man if wicd supported the broadband wireless card...
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Re: Giving a user root priveleges?

2009-11-17 Thread Preston Boyington
Zachary Uram wrote:


> But when I try to sudo as that user to root I get error:
> 
> $ sudo su root

I think there is some confusion.

I don't know of any reason to use both 'su' and 'sudo' in a command.
either you would 'su' to root or you would 'sudo' to run a singular command.

'su' is to change into superuser (root) until you exit.
'sudo' is to temporarily be superuser until the command is completed.

To use 'sudo' to run a command just type 'sudo ' and as long as
you have the user in the 'sudo' group ('adduser user sudo' as root) that
user will be able to run said command when they log back in.


> 
> We trust you have received the usual lecture from the local System
> Administrator. It usually boils down to these three things:
> 
> #1) Respect the privacy of others.
> #2) Think before you type.
> #3) With great power comes great responsibility.
> 

you will get this unless you add NOPASSWD:ALL to your sudo group.

you did uncomment the '%sudo' in the sudoers file, correct?

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Re: Problem in Debian 5 Installation

2009-12-10 Thread Preston Boyington
Anirban Patra wrote:
> HiI 've tried to install Debian 5 version but the problem is that*
> DVD is not detected by my PC.* I 've tried in other PCs , there it is
> running ok. But in my PC, other linux version (*SUSE 10,FEDORA 10) are
> running fine*.What should I do? My PC configuration is : Intel Dual Core
> 2 GHz Processor ; *1 GB RAM ; 160 GB Seagate SATA HDD & ASUS
> Motherboard*. I am eager to use Debian 5. Please help.

try the Netinstall if you have a decent internet connection.  it's only
about 180Mb.  it's all i use now.


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Re: QCAD Pro in Squeeze

2011-06-21 Thread Preston Boyington

Camaleón wrote:

On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 10:45:33 -0800, peasthope wrote:


RibbonSoft notes that QCAD Pro worked in Debian 3.1 and 4.0. Is anyone
using it in 6, Squeeze?  I'm wondering whether to stick with Generic
CADD 6.1 purchased years ago or switch to QCAD Pro 2.2.  Recommendations
appreciated.


JFYI, for a 2D CAD application there is also DraftSight. I've not tested, 
but I remember it was mentioned in the news months ago...


http://www.3ds.com/products/draftsight/free-cad-software/

And there is also Briscad but may be a bit expensive for home users:

http://www.bricscad.com/en_INTL/



I've also used various CAD programs through WINE with decent success in 
the past.


Codeweavers has a list here:
http://appdb.winehq.org/objectManager.php?sClass=category&iId=59&sAction=view&sTitle=Browse+Applications

keep in mind that some programs are dated.


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Re: Copying a bootable CD

2011-06-28 Thread Preston Boyington

William Hopkins wrote:

On 06/28/11 at 08:39am, Martin McCormick wrote:

I have a bootable live CD of an out-dated version of a
specialized distribution of Debian called Vinux. I never saved
the ISO image and I now want to copy from the CDRW it is on to a
CDR to use as a rescue disk on systems that can not read CDRW's.

The CDRW works fine so what is the best way to rip it
such that I end up with an ISO image I can burn to a CDR?


$ dd if=/dev/cdrom of=filename.iso bs=2048 conv=notrunc

then burn the ISO using your tool of choice (wodim, etc.)



you can also do this with cat:

cat /dev/cdrom > ~/image.iso



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Re: Game for toddlers

2011-07-05 Thread Preston Boyington

T o n g wrote:

Hi,

Do you have any *first hand experiences* of games available in Debian 
that toddlers of 2 to 4 can enjoy? 



while not exactly a game, my daughter enjoyed playing with TuxPaint. 
there are plenty of stamps, colors, and sounds that kept her entertained 
while getting her used to using the mouse.



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Re: Game for toddlers

2011-07-06 Thread Preston Boyington

Ralf Mardorf wrote:


P.S.  Be sure to give the kids their own accounts, because they will
drag panels all over the screen, add countless "Untitled Folder"s to
the desktop, etc.  My kids also liked the idea of having a secret
password to log in.  I used our last name, so they could practice
spelling it.

-Rob


+1 for tuxmath and especially for tuxpaint. When I worked for childcare
I installed Edubuntu 10.10 i386 on my machine. On my machine, not on the
machines of terres des hommes oberhausen :(, hopefully they checked out
to install the Windows version of tuxpaint.

I recommend http://www.edubuntu.org/.




alternatively, using a LiveCD or USB thumbdrive is a great way for kids 
to experience these programs without worrying about something going awry.


there is also a Debian-Jr list and packages that might be helpful.

http://wiki.debian.org/DebianJr
http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr/


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Re: Wheezy: Ctrl+F (find file) doesn't work in Konqueror?

2011-07-06 Thread Preston Boyington

lee wrote:

T Elcor  writes:


KDE 4.x.x looks like a horrible disaster that never ends. Time to
start looking for another desktop.


fvwm-crystal is pretty awesome




I used fvwm-crystal a good bit a few years back:
http://prestonboyington.wordpress.com/2009/04/19/crystal-clear/

I still play with it some, but now mostly use LXDE.


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