> > What if we're elitist and don't want newbies like you switching to Linux
> The ml is not the place for you to be a jackass. Take it elsewhere
*gasp*
How long till this whole community just figures it hates itself and
vaporizes to dust? I'll be there and fuel the vaporizer.
On Sat, 17 Apr 2010 16:22:28 -0700, Rob Bean wrote:
> Has anyone else stripped HAL completely out of their Arch install?
Thats exactly why heresy was started. ( http://hereticlinux.org/ )
Its archlinux minus hal/dbus/rapekit.
Search the list for "Whats wrong with dbus anyway" under the thread
On Sat, 6 Mar 2010 15:09:24 +0530, Gaurish Sharma
wrote:
> This GDB was configured as "x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu".
If you care about flash enough to not just uninstall it, try a 32bit
chroot. There should be plenty stuff on google from the time they
didnt have a 64bit version.
On Sun, 21 Feb 2010 05:57:36 +0100, Sebastian Köhler
wrote:
> I've two problems with ifplugd and net-auto-wired. When ifplugd is
> started during boot my speakers make a weird and very loud "moep"
> sound. When started from a console after boot no such sound occurs.
Intel and via sound chips hav
Apparantly i chose the wrong IPS. My upload is extremly tiny. When i
upload something with only 5kb, my dowload rate dies.
I assume that's because Acks don't get through in time.
Anyone got an idea how to give those priority?
On Thu, 11 Feb 2010 01:24:30 -0500, andrew james
wrote:
> has anyone else a funky thunderbird vers 3?
yes, see some older thread on the ML.
> any switch values to cause it to work quicker?
enabling "offline reading" seems to fix some of my issues
> alternatively,
>
> what is your favoured
On Sun, 10 Jan 2010 13:08:10 -0500, Jeff Horelick wrote:
if someone actually posts patches or other constructive stuff, please CC
me. We're rewriting pacman anyway and looking for a solution to handle
this mess in particular.
Right now the only idea i got is versioned deps which is sort of flaw
On Sat, 6 Feb 2010 17:32:32 -0500, Jim Pryor
wrote:
> There's a qgtkstyle-svn in AUR. Is it broken?
its outdated. QGtkStyle is now part of qt, so its harder to maintain the
non-gnome patch.
But thanks for posting. Reading from the comments, it seems a
suprisingly high amount of people ran into
Hi,
i was wondering if anyone maintained a QGtkStyle for use outside
gnome. Would be duplicated work and i guess i'm not the only one who
uses gtk styles but not gnome.
--
Arvid
On 02/04/2010 02:33 PM, Thomas Bächler wrote:
I'd like you to find any modern Linux distribution that doesn't do it
this way. Good luck with that.
HereticLinux :P
On 01/28/2010 10:15 AM, Joerg Schilling wrote:
I cannot use a license that is missinterpreted by too many people and that for
this reason is used to attack the project.
like, the CDDL?
Seriously, you should have seen that comming.
Debian has a Master degree in Gnu zealotery and disinforma
AlannY,
Recently, I've found that Arch mounts tmpfs on /dev. And, as you may see,
this makes big problem to some applications.
i'd call it annoyance, but i cant see big problems for the typical arch
user who are loving udev/hal/etc..
Is there anything particular you are experiencing issues
On 01/19/2010 08:09 PM, Dimitrios Apostolou wrote:
sorry for hijacking your thread but speaking of dark themes, I have been
looking for ages for a nice reverse theme for gtk+ but every single one
I remember wasn't perfect... Anyone 100% happy with a reverse theme?
i like NOX from murrine-theme
On Mon, 11 Jan 2010 21:33:20 -0700, Steve Holmes
wrote:
> If bottom-posting is so passionately desirable, then may I suggest
> people trim down the history of a thread.
One is supposed to add their answer to the bottom of
the _quote_ not the mail. People who do otherwise are indeed
worse then
On 01/06/2010 12:03 AM, Jim Pryor wrote:
Hi this is the author of yacron again.
I've just heard from Matt Dillon, he says he's happy for me to take over
development and maintainership of dcron.
Congratulation. That's good news. I liked Yacron for maintaining
minimalism while still meeting mo
On 01/02/2010 09:20 PM, Lars Tennstedt wrote:
Qt4 applications behave like KDE4 applications. The printer recognizes
the job and all it prints is a blank paper, sometimes with headline but
always without the body.
Does the same failure appear when printing to pdf?
Also please try the following
On 01/02/2010 05:35 PM, Lars Tennstedt wrote:
I can print with Firefox, GIMP,
OpenOffice and GNOME applications but I cannot still with KDE 4 or Qt 4
applications.
please check if pure qt applications work, such as opera. If not, how
does the failure ocure?
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
On 12/28/2009 03:58 PM, nez...@allurelinux.org wrote:
Could you fix your date or whatever is wrong with your setup:
huh thanks. didn't notice.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
On 12/28/2009 03:39 AM, David C. Rankin wrote:
Guys,
After the recent discussion about arch working well on old hardware, I decided
to dump a suse 10.3 install on an old AMD K6-2/450 and install arch on it. I
downloaded the net install iso i686. I knew if it was truly i686 it wouldn't
install
On 12/21/2009 01:31 PM, Frédéric Perrin wrote:
Le lundi 21 à 18:57, Laurie Clark-Michalek a écrit :
And on the anal sex point... actually, I think it'd be better for the
convocation as a whole if we dropped that analogy.
On 12/18/2009 01:26 AM, Damien Churchill wrote:
Isn't this what POSIX was, albeit quite old now, but still a standard?
imagine that: some people out there still think posix is THE standard
and people should read the spec BEFORE reimplementing basics in the name
of making things "cross platfo
On 12/17/2009 07:20 AM, Dan Martins wrote:
I believe that the messages need to be indexed before you will get the
new thread summary view, or whatever you want to call it.
yeah exactly my suspecion. Looks like i never get a stable index here.
probably because
1) i have over 120K messages
2)
On 12/15/2009 11:43 PM, Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
It doesn't display '3-4' lines, it's the first sentence or so, you see
3-4 lines because of the screen width.
I don't even get any sentences, just the "..." (literally I see 3 dots
per message) as mentioned above. Looks like I'm alone on this...
same h
On 12/15/2009 07:37 AM, Jürgen Hagemann wrote:
The new TB update from today enables and installs lightning by default.
Bugreport: http://bugs.archlinux.org/task/17510?project=1&pagenum=1
This is a bad idea, because some people don´t want it.
Mozilla doesn´t recommend to set the calendar flag on b
Allan McRae wrote:
The comment two below that starts "From what I can tell, that patch is
horrendously incorrect".
I have never heard "horrendously incorrect" describe a good patch before...
shows why we disagree on patches.
The proposed patch may compile, but the abi break had a reason and
Hussam Al-Tayeb wrote:
On Mon, 2009-12-14 at 12:01 +0200, Marti Raudsepp wrote:
Hi arch-general,
I'd like to point your attention to the Inkscape package: Inkscape
version 0.47 was released on November 25. This is a very significant
release that many Inkscape users have been waiting patiently.
Arvid Picciani wrote:
Sounds like either this discussion is worth discussing again.
i forgot to add: "or you're a rare exception, Jan."
thanks for at least trying to see the point here, much aprechiated.
i hope others follow.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Sounds like either this discussion is worth discussing again.
I'll try hard not to trip anyone...
Jan de Groot wrote:
Really, you're just having a 100% anti-dbus attitude, but somehow you're
fine with Bonobo.
> Maybe you didn't know, but Bonobo is worse than dbus.
> It's a complicated slow fr
Arvid Picciani wrote:
It's done. All i want is to settle this in a useful way.
Nathan Wayde wrote:
I originally identified you as a poisonous person and you just keep
confirming my theory.
a I found a problem
b I made aware of the problem
c I have provided patches
d I have pro
Denis A. Altoé Falqueto wrote:
2009/12/4 Arvid Picciani :
http://blogs.igalia.com/itoral/2006/03/30/adding-dbus-support-to-gedit/
priceless finding.
let me sum up:
"
- There is feature X which works very well
- He discovered it doesn't use dbus.
- He starts work on a very complic
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
> What does upstream have to say about this dependency? Does not seem
> 'necessary' to me
http://blogs.igalia.com/itoral/2006/03/30/adding-dbus-support-to-gedit/
priceless finding.
let me sum up:
"
- There is feature X which works very well
- He discovered it doesn't use dbus.
On Thu, Dec 03, 2009 at 10:04:16PM -0200, Denis A. Altoé Falqueto wrote:
The *Kit family maybe could be replaced by a good set of ACLs, but
even that can be problematic, as not all the concepts that are
configured by PolicyKit or ConsoleKit are files. And the Unix security
model of Users/Groups
Heiko Baums wrote:
So why do you continue ranting about Arch?
I tried not to. All i wanted is a clear cut, but i think i'm alone with
that wish, so i'll stop beating it.
You're the ones who'll have to deal with this procedure over and over
again (not with me. no worries)
--
Arvid
Asgaard
Gerardo Exequiel Pozzi wrote:
Maybe is related to this (not sure, I didn't a deep research)
http://bugreports.qt.nokia.com/browse/QTBUG-4958
Under qt-4.5.3:
$ ./qt
point size: 10 -> 12.75
point size: 12 -> 15
But under qt-4.6.0:
$ ./qt
point size: 10 -> 16.67
point size: 12 -> 20
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
have to say about this dependency?
what i didn't mention, but is apparantly nessesary, is that i was
actually deep involved into the whole foodchain of kde and gnome before
they started acting like kids and thought they need to copy windows for
the greater good.
The Gedit
Pierre Chapuis wrote:
Take gedit for example. It is a text editor, and:
[23:44 TA|catwell] ldd $(which gedit) | grep dbus
libdbus-glib-1.so.2 => /usr/lib/libdbus-glib-1.so.2
(0x7f5df48bb000)
libdbus-1.so.3 => /usr/lib/libdbus-1.so.3 (0x7f5df467c000)
AFAIK i
Heiko Baums wrote:
Show me a more minimalist distribution than Arch and Gentoo. I guess
you won't find one. And if you did I suggest you switching to this
distro.
This is the entire reason i want arch to officialy state that these
users are not welcome. I want to move on, so we can split up t
Sébastien Leblanc wrote:
Please, stop filling my inbox with useless junk.
Please use the kill thread option of your MUA. Messages like this aren't
helping anyone, and are especcialy not helping to minimize the thread
length.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
f...@kokkinizita.net wrote:
On Fri, Dec 04, 2009 at 12:08:29AM +0100, Arvid Picciani wrote:
Please, can we stop beating it now, and just officialy tell
minimalists to fuck off so everyone can stop wasting their time?
Bad spelling and foul language.
Yeah once again i fail at not offending
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
I actually think the you've been over-focusing on a single part of the
'arch way', that its 'all about' minimalism.
then i suggest we remove the statement that it is all about minimalism.
Throughout this thread the vibe I've been getting for you is that you
somehow feel disa
Allan McRae wrote:
I personally think your mis-reading the "Arch Way".
So another person who mistakes the use of simplicity for minimalism. I
thought we had been through that many, many times.
Can we, independently of the technical details of dbus, agree all,
that I and some other people
Nathan Wayde wrote:
what does any of that have to do with dbus in a technical sense?
There are multiple incorrect answers to this.
I'm going to chicken out of this argument, until someone proofreads my
essay on this topic.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Aaron Griffin wrote:
Mechanisms have existed for like 20 years before dbus to communicate
with other programs.
and those don't require a user space daemon.
dbus is just another way to do it that has a
smell of "architecture astronomy" - as if they all scoffed at the
actual ways to do IPC on
Heiko Baums wrote:
Do you know what a bug report is and what it is for?
http://bugreports.qt.nokia.com/browse/QTBUG-5545
this is an upstream bug, and a workaround inaproppriate to apply to
archs main repo, as i said.
Please read mails entirely and assume good faith and intelligence,
as i t
Heiko Baums wrote:
If yes hal/dbus wouldn't do
any harm, too. Nobody detains you from using the keyboard.
Just for the sake of proving the legatimicity of this project for those
who still didnt get it:
as an example. do you follow the irc channel?
Somone just triggered the qgtkstyle bug t
Hey,
i'm trying to sign up for the wiki,
the confirmation link yields a page that says:
"Your e-mail address has now been confirmed."
though in the account preferences remains:
"Your e-mail address is not yet authenticated. No e-mail will be sent
for any of the following features."
And i c
Piyush P Kurur wrote:
On Thu, Dec 03, 2009 at 01:54:10AM +0530, Raghavendra Prabhu wrote:
One thing I don't understand here is - why people crib that package B should
not have feature X. If you don't want that, ABS is for that. There are
plenty of packages which have additional dependencies like
Aaron Griffin wrote:
You know, I tried making a script to do this and it ended up going no
where. The intent was to use makechrootpkg (from devtools) to build
packages in a chroot and consequently install the package to the
chroot when completed. The only stipulation was that you needed to
manua
Aaron Griffin wrote:
On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 12:19 PM, Arvid Picciani wrote:
http://heresy.asgaartech.com/
Let me know if this solution works for everyone
and/or if anyone is offended by anything on that
site or the fact that it exists
and/or if anything should be added to it
http://heresy.asgaartech.com/
Let me know if this solution works for everyone
and/or if anyone is offended by anything on that
site or the fact that it exists
and/or if anything should be added to it.
Contributors very welcome :)
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Allan McRae wrote:
Arvid Picciani wrote:
Hey,
can you link me to a manual on custom repositories?
I couldn't find anything on the wiki.
Specifically what needs to be done on the server side to maintain the
package index.
Looks like that is all that's needed for a repo, is i
Hey,
can you link me to a manual on custom repositories?
I couldn't find anything on the wiki.
Specifically what needs to be done on the server side to maintain the
package index.
Looks like that is all that's needed for a repo, is it?
thanks.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Thomas Bächler wrote:
> I consider such statements an insult
Sorry Thomas,
my response was retarded.
can you help me find another term i should use
to denote the desktop idea, that is not offensive?
I'll propably need it for further discussion,
and prefer NOT to piss of people.
"gnomies" "mou
Piyush P Kurur wrote:
Okey so you agree that Arch != Ubuntu. Now we have a way forward.
heh yeah, sorry, that comparison is rather childish. I regret i
responded to Thomas mail...
Arvid's reply to me made me search for antidesktop (I did not know
about such a movement)
i have no idea
Thomas Bächler wrote:
Apologize for being an asshole.
I have not intended to insult arch developers,
and i apologize if i did,..
You can either apologize to me now or STFU
to everyone but you, just to anger you.
and get yourself another
distro
well i guess that settles any ultimatum pr
Piyush P Kurur wrote:
I use xmonad and share your dislike for hal/dbus. This
however does not justify not having a decent PnP particulary
it would ...
when you want to install it for non-experts.
.. if what i THOUGHT archlinux is about (experts) was true.
However you appear to agree tha
Piyush P Kurur wrote:
I am curious. What desktop do you use Arvid ?
None at all.
I used one of these desktops (kde3) a few years ago because terminals
started to age and lack modern features.
But then the antidesktop movement has lifted keyboard centric user
experience to a modern level,
Thanks to enough input i have learned two things of this thread:
1) The problem IS upstream related. Some packages do enable
dbus when it is available, for the convenience of those users
who do not understand what dbus is and hence need it.
Archs philosophy dictates, that if the upstrea
Heiko Baums wrote:
There is a second option regarding your dbus/wpa_supplicant example.
Why not file a bug report/feature request to upstream of networkmanager
to remove dbus from it? Of course you need to file this bug
report/feature request to upstream of every package which depends on
dbus. A
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
Design simplicity? How is --enable-dbus less simple than --disable-dbus
or the equivalents?
My argument was "--enable-dbus" vs "" ie the defaults.
Simplicity isn't a hammer with which to attack every package that
doesn't conform to minimalism by your definition.
Yes you
Allan McRae wrote:
While I am at it, lets see why your arguements just grepping for
"enable|disable" etc are idiotic. Take the gcc PKGBUILD:
i have pointed out myself that those do not form a valid argument.
Trying to disprove my other points by doing that _again_ does not work.
I personally
Allan McRae wrote:
Can you actually point out what is broken with dbus? That would
actually clarify why you want it removed from cups, because as I
commented in that bug report, the only advantage I see there is saving
4Mb of deps off your system.
I'm aware that minimalism is not a valid a
Jan de Groot wrote:
> Ah, so my intent is to put dbus support in every possible package in
> the repository.
This is in fact what i claim.
> Am I convicted now? What's the sentence?
That you read and reflect on the ideas archlinux was built on.
One of your
removed patches is one that integ
Jan de Groot wrote:
Dbus support in wpa-supplicant is not broken. A not working
networkmanager is broken. We have to make a choice here, and having
broken software isn't the right choice, is it?
dbus is indeed broken. so its a different tradeof then you suggest.
Additionaly, i don't intent t
Jan de Groot wrote:
Now you're propably saying numbers of downstream decisions doesn't say
anything. Very true, which is why i prefer arguing about "intent"
a...@andariel: ~ grep Maintainer /var/abs/core/dbus-core/PKGBUILD
# Maintainer: Jan de Groot
and "bias"
So, just because I'm the maint
Arvid Picciani wrote:
Aaron Griffin wrote:
If you have legitimate, actionable fixes for anything you take issue
with, please post them to the bug tracker. Until then, this is just
hot air.
I take that as an invite to post packages to the tracker that adhere to
the arch way. If this turns
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
All this 'fork this fork that' threatening is really quite sad.
A fork is not a "threat". It's a suggestion to resolve problems outside
the current project politics. I can't see why anyone would be offended
by this.
I know
its common in open source and linux in particul
Ray Kohler wrote:
What I personally am in support of, in the general case, is
"suckless.org-style" minimalism, rather than following upstream's
direction.
So if upstream changes the default to enable the hal and
dbus bits, I will then be in favor of Arch disabling them, and we'll
be in disagre
Ray Kohler wrote:
2009/12/1 Ng Oon-Ee :
When I started on here the mantra was "Arch is what you make it".
Packagers strive to make packages which are as vanilla as possible
(without breaking) and provide the utility expected of such packages. Of
course, if you want a system without hal/dbus, the
Aaron Griffin wrote:
On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 5:03 PM, Arvid Picciani wrote:
I take that as an invite to post packages to the tracker that adhere to the
arch way. If this turns out to be another false promise, i will add that to
the next iteration.
Assuming you meant "packages to the tr
Giovanni Scafora wrote:
2009/12/1, Ng Oon-Ee :
When I started on here the mantra was "Arch is what you make it".
Packagers strive to make packages which are as vanilla as possible
(without breaking) and provide the utility expected of such packages. Of
course, if you want a system without ha
Giovanni Scafora wrote:
2009/12/1, Arvid Picciani :
I take that as an invite to post packages to the tracker that adhere to the
arch way. If this turns out to be another false promise, i will add that to
the next iteration.
is this a threat? :-)
if patches are lethal, YES :D
--
Arvid
Aaron Griffin wrote:
On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 4:51 PM, Arvid Picciani wrote:
...stuff...
Not sure what just happened here. I thought we were having a
legitimate discussion about xorg-server and this ballooned into
something crazy.
You wanted detailed proof, here you are.
i doubt you have
Jan de Groot wrote:
On Tue, 2009-12-01 at 19:45 +0100, Arvid Picciani wrote:
nope. The hal crap has been added to X a while ago as "optional"
(meaning X would just freeze without it, but at least pretend to
start)
, but the forced dependency is new (as in, it doesnt start when
comp
Aaron Griffin wrote:
> Which package has patches to add these features? Looking at
> xorg-server, I only see one extraneous patch that simple replaces the
> default grey stipple pattern with black. The rest seem (at a glance)
> to fix real bugs
You have a point here, in that i have used a fuzzy
Aaron,
Oh shit, seriously? Looks like I'll have to rebuild this as well.
It's your distro. I fail to see the whole reason why you have always
been in support of KISS and the arch way, but never seem to take action
to enforce it. Maybe it's something social, which i tend to be ignorant
towar
Aaron Griffin wrote:
On Tue, Dec 1, 2009 at 10:51 AM, Daenyth Blank wrote:
2009/12/1 Arvid Picciani :
Arvid Picciani wrote:
warning: cannot resolve "hal>=0.5.13", a dependency of "xorg-server"
never mind my bitching. rebuilding xorg-server without hal was a matter
Arvid Picciani wrote:
warning: cannot resolve "hal>=0.5.13", a dependency of "xorg-server"
never mind my bitching. rebuilding xorg-server without hal was a matter
of abs,edit,makepkg
<3 arch
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Dieter Plaetinck wrote:
can you give some examples of sites worth reading that don't work in
webkit?
actually it looks like webkit wins over opera right now. The only quirks
i found were worse in opera. I'm amazed.
going for uzbl. yey.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Ng Oon-Ee wrote:
On Tue, 2009-12-01 at 12:43 +0100, Arvid Picciani wrote:
obviously i do NOT want to remove xorg-server.
i don't need evdev, but:
:: xorg-server: requires xf86-input-evdev>=2.2.5
so no removing it either.
the mirror i'm using has been updated today (December 1th)
obviously i do NOT want to remove xorg-server.
i don't need evdev, but:
:: xorg-server: requires xf86-input-evdev>=2.2.5
so no removing it either.
the mirror i'm using has been updated today (December 1th), and i'm not
using testing.
mirrors package versions:
xorg-server 1.7.2-2
xf86-input-evd
thank's for the first serious response...
Rogutės Sparnuotos wrote:
With what you wrote above - no, no options.
It sounds like you dump software as soon as you encounter any annoyance.
point, sadly the annoyances usually come in large bulk as feature
"improvements" together with crucial upd
Ionut Biru wrote:
IE.
ie combines all the flaws of the other browsers into one single browser.
i guess its a joke though.
> you run out of options here.
yeah ... i figured that much. i hoped there is a corner i missed
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Daenyth Blank wrote:
On Thu, Nov 26, 2009 at 18:51, Arvid Picciani wrote:
what is left?
lynx & co.
i had less problem with loosing all the image crap, but lynx can't even
follow redirects...
lynx ebay.com
HTTP request sent; waiting for response.
haha
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Dan Vrátil wrote:
Hi,
if you don't need extra features
no. i want a browser.
and you can live on just with basic browser
yeah
functions I can recommend lightweight GTK webkit-based browser called Midori.
for those who don't want to read my long text completely here a short
version:
Hi,
ever since ff3 turned firefox into unusable, i'm on the quest to find a
usable browser.
Chromium was quite decent for a while (after fixing the dbus dependency)
despite it deadlocks when you mouse-move tabs (fortunately i dont do
that anyway), but recently it started timing out on every sec
Daenyth Blank wrote:
I just saw a link on reddit this morning for "notmuch", a sup-inspired
mail reader. Might be worth looking into
http://keithp.com/blogs/notmuch/
well its really "not much". i wouldnt consider this a mua. its more a
search engine for muas. a pretty decent one though. mayb
Alessandro Doro wrote:
Patch the Makefile (you don't need to run ./configure) then make.
--- Makefile2009-11-17 21:36:47.0 +0100
+++ ../Makefile 2009-11-17 21:36:03.0 +0100
@@ -4,14 +4,14 @@
hey that compiled. thanks. i didn't realize it has a makefile despite
failed confi
Ionut Biru wrote:
On 11/17/2009 07:07 PM, Arvid Picciani wrote:
Mutt grows old and still doesn't do threads the way i want.
i've tried sup, but find it too early in development. Especcially it is
unusable slow.
Can somone recommend another MUA?
thanks
you could try thunderbird. t
Daenyth Blank wrote:
I just saw a link on reddit this morning for "notmuch", a sup-inspired
mail reader. Might be worth looking into
http://keithp.com/blogs/notmuch/
looks very promising. thanks for sharing. couldnt compile it, but maybe
someone less lazy them me can educate that dude that t
Antony Jepson wrote:
On 2009-11-17, Patrick Brisbin wrote:
In gmail's web interface a thread is vertical, sorted by time. However
here in mutt, I can see that I've replied to you in our own little
thread branch.
I definitely prefer the proper threading available in Mutt. I often find
myself na
Sergej Pupykin wrote:
Arvid Picciani wrote:
Mutt grows old and still doesn't do threads the way i want.
i've tried sup, but find it too early in development. Especcially it
is unusable slow.
Can somone recommend another MUA?
thanks
emacs/gnus
emacs/wanderlust
?
humm.. i d
Mutt grows old and still doesn't do threads the way i want.
i've tried sup, but find it too early in development. Especcially it is
unusable slow.
Can somone recommend another MUA?
thanks
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
Aaron Griffin wrote:
> You read my mind. I was debating adding a little rant here about the
> necessity of hal, consolekit, policykit, devicekit,
> whatever-the-hellkit to do the stupidest things. It's real
> counter-intuitive. And don't even get me started about linux audio -
> apparently the co
hollun...@gmx.at wrote:
The problem is that the Desktop Environments, GNOME and KDE, in their
quest for "integrated desktop experience" push more and more stuff
that's really only useful to those DEs deeper and deeper into the
system.
If you as a user need or want it or not, you get it.
I warn
RedShift wrote:
Conclusion
We are losing ground. We are losing it fast. Our competitors recognize
what the
user wants and delivered.
I can't remember fighting for that ground, and I'd be totally happy if
the people who do would just go away.
--
Arvid
Asgaard Technologies
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