w driver that doesn't require
the regulatory daemon in ~2 months after the initial Intel release. Given that
and the fact that there's already the Intel GPL'd driver available wouldn't
it make sense for someone to 'fix' the GPL'd driver to not require the daemon?
Jim.
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On 10/09/06 12:11:28AM +0100, Stephen Gran wrote:
> This one time, at band camp, Jim Crilly said:
> > Most people are willing to deal with firmware since they don't run on the
> > host CPU but only on the card that they're controlling. Intel's daemon
> > isn
On 10/09/06 08:38:46AM +0200, Reinhard Tartler wrote:
> Jim Crilly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Intel's daemon isn't as bad as the Atheros HAL or nVidia's blob
>
> Could you please elaborat on that? why is ath_hal.ko or nvidia.ko worse
> than inte
lan to make it work in the package.
>
That's good, I had forgotten that you can change the ownership/permissions
of files on sysfs. I'm just a little surprised that no one but the OpenBSD
guys care enough to figure out what the daemon does and work out a free
solution.
Jim.
t; so removing it is unsupported.
> Please tell me what to do! (Put "bash" into Depends: ?)
Tell your users not to do that.
Jim.
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mozilla and gaim.
>
>
You don't need 1 xterm per shell, using screen I usually have anywhere
between 10 and 20 shells going at once.
Jim.
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ter in the boot process and
caused problems with syslog-ng remote logging. Apparently when syslog-ng
can't connect to one of it's destinations on startup it fails completely,
this is probably a bug in syslog-ng but it's definitely been exacerbated by
the default ifupdown configuration in etch.
Jim.
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On 12/19/06 11:52:50AM +0100, Gabor Gombas wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 18, 2006 at 06:36:49PM -0500, Jim Crilly wrote:
>
> > I would agree, when I did an install of etch a few weeks ago the use of
> > allow-hotplug caused the network to come up later in the boot process and
> &
; An even better idea is, on the upgrade introducing persistent interface
> names, to write rules which reflect the current names no matter what
> configured them.
But won't that miss any devices that aren't in the system right at that
moment, such as PCMCIA/USB wifi cards?
Jim.
--
T
atever in front of variable names, and makes quoting strings an
> optional construct, and does string variable substitution inside string
> constants unless you force it not to with odd escape characters.
> A non-scripting language is one which has simple, clear-cut lexical
> conventions and parsing syntax."""
Well I guess that means Python isn't a scripting language since it fails to
meet at least the 'variable usage requires sigils' criteria.
Jim.
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...
> filenames have the form --.
> e.g.: ab-cd-1.23a-45678.tar.gz
> Field Separators:- - .
> Field Contents: ab-cd 1.23a 45678 tar.gz
...
> - Counting to the right from that point, the first '.' encountered
> separates REV from EX
limpse_3.6-1
upgraded dpkg_1.3.14 --> dpkg_1.4.0
installed dpkg-dev_1.4.0
upgraded fvwm95_2.0.42a-2 --> fvwm_2.0.42a-4
installed guile_0.4.0-3
upgraded compface_1.0-1 --> compface_89.11.11-2
Weird eh?
I guess I'll switch back to GNU emacs for know.
- Jim
to
the debian-devel list.
Sign me up for mandelspawn - sounds about my speed. Not too
mission critical for anyone I hope (in case I screw up). :-)
Cheers,
- Jim
> Didn't we use to have a PGP package?
>
I noticed that it disappeared a few days ago too. What's up?
Did I miss an announcement or something?
- Jim
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when it's done, it would
> seem to make sense to use the projected `libdpkg' for this sort of
> purpose. But I see absolutely no reason to constrain ourselves to the
> format we already have just because we already have it.
I have no problem with that. I just thought it should be mentioned.
> Hoping I've written at least something useful,
Yes, you sure have, thanks for joining in to the debate!
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpvogDHeyJBQ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
> Jim Pick wrote:
> > Even if we wrote one, I doubt the KDE guys, especially Matthias Ettrich,
> > would
> > be willing to use it. Really an unfortunate situation, IMHO. :-(
Noel Maddy wrote:
> Berate me for missing the obvious, but couldn't KDE just be compiled
> On Tue, 13 May 1997, Jim Pick wrote:
>
> > If someone wants to contribute to an effort to clone a toolkit, they'd
> > probably be much better off contributing to the WINE project (Windows
> > emulator) or Jolt project (Java clone - kaffe, biss-awt, guavac, etc.).
uff in Canada (or reg's exempt free software --
whoopee!). That would be good -- there currently isn't a mirror
of the crypto stuff on this continent. I'll try to set it up by
the end of this week.
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpjFqvKKnqvb.pgp
Description: PGP signature
it easier for the Debian
developers. However, we may collectively decide that the ability to have
cryptographically signed packages is so important that it is worth rushing
it.
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpurUXkgLk2n.pgp
Description: PGP signature
adding such a feature
> for Debian?
>
> Chees,
>
> --Amos
Check out Klee Diene's dpkgcert package (in experimental). You might have to
write to him to find out where to get the certificates that go along
with it. It really helped me recover from drive corruption.
Cheer
s.
BTW, if you believe the axiom, "A bug can be changed to a feature by
documenting it", then we really have 10000 features. :-)
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpAnNhALeZVt.pgp
Description: PGP signature
406 2.14% distribution:SLS
12445 65.68% distribution:Slackware
1484 7.83% distribution:Others
(looks like we beat Red Hat, go figure...)
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpVLP06DEKzU.pgp
Description: PGP signature
was neat. Anyways, the Linux Counter doesn't seem to
have the capability to change the settings for systems already registered
-- so all my systems are going to be listed as Slackware. You're right,
statistics lie. :-)
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpPRb8iMozY2.pgp
Description: PGP signature
the data files for the actual game (levels, sounds, so on). Those still
> have a non-free copyright. So there will probably be a abuse-libs package
> that is in non-free, which will stick abuse, which will depend on that
> package, right back in contrib, where it is now.
Sounds like the libs can go into the free section. Cool.
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpLacEnIAZ72.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ing.
Maybe we need to build an "expiry date" into dpkg? ie. dpkg will not
install any packages that are newer than the expiry date, other than dpkg
(and friends).
Cheers,
- Jim
pgpELcLG5fYK3.pgp
Description: PGP signature
I agree 100% with what Ian says. (Let's do it)
Cheers,
- Jim
pgp1CVGyswT6R.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On 08-Mar-2000 Jim Westveer wrote:
Anyone know how to get a message to Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ???
his package w3-el-e20 in slink, needs to be updated for 2.1r5.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- .forwards to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] -- bad emai
Hi,
Also... could someone please forward me all logs in regard to this spam,
as well as the original posting as it was received by the list (i.e., with
all headers intact? I intend to take action on its basis.
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch Finger for pgp key
as Laney College CIS admin: [EMAIL
If debian puts a 2.4 in, they will have to spend time testing it.
there's enough to do without more stuff that we don't even know will be
out...
If you want 2.3 or 2.4, build it yourself. Look into kernel-package.
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch Finger for pgp key
as Laney College CIS admi
mony.
I bring him up because a collaboration may be possible. If there
is interest, I will contact him to see if he is also interested.
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch Finger for pgp key
as Laney College CIS admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.laney.edu/~jim/
as Debian developer: [EMAIL PRO
funet.fi/pub/linux/PEOPLE/Linus/) I don't know if
> it will go anywhere as it based on an obsolete monolithic design but some
> people seem to like so it might be a good addition to Debian. The license
> is GPL so it can go in main.
>
> Let me know if anyone is working
l packages in
debian would be compiled with pgcc for i586 architecture.
I have heard discussion to this effect, so I suspect that some work
or at least exploration of this possibility has been done. I don't
know its status.
(All: does anyone know curr stat of any such?)
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch
Hi,
So the original question remains: is there a simple pgcc available somewhere?
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch Finger for pgp key
as Laney College CIS admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.laney.edu/~jim/
as Debian developer: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.debian.org/~jwl/
t let me know
where I can get things upstream. Also, if I want to find out if a
particular source tree available upstream has already been packaged
for debian, I can find that out also. This would help me. It can
also help someone new to debian but experienced with linux outside
of debian.
-Jim
--
thinking
about the outer layer can begin once the inner layer is complete.
-Jim
---
Jim Lynch Finger for pgp key
as Laney College CIS admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.laney.edu/~jim/
as Debian developer: [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.debian.org/~jwl/
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Hi,
In my (potato) /var/cache is...
apache/ apt/ bind/ cracklib/ man/ man2html/ xfstt/
-Jim
on #debian to use
anything not released for production. If I see it, you get devoiced
QUICKLY.
-Jim
riate bugs against the
relevent packages.
-Jim
want to -pay- me to take the support load
for a limited period of time, I'll open the door, for a limited period
of time. I'm a volunteer there, you already know what a volunteer is if
you have anything at all to do with debian.
-Jim
>
> Date:03 Jan 2001 15:23:09 +0100
> To: debian-devel@lists.debian.org
> From:Peter Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: bugs + rant + constructive criticism (long)
>
> Jim Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > If you want to adv
OTECTED]>
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> X-Home-Page: http://peter.makholm.net/
> Xyzzy: Nothing happens!
> In-Reply-To: Jim Lynch's message of "Wed, 03 Jan 2001 08:03:02 -0800"
> Lines: 28
> User-
>
> Date:Thu, 04 Jan 2001 11:06:43 +1100
> To: Jim Lynch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> cc: Erik Hollensbe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, debian-devel@lists.debian.org,
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> From:Craig Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: bug
gin working together on a solution. The usual thing that happens a
lot, is both packages were uploaded, but one didn't make it that day;
looking in incoming might reveal what you're looking for.
-Jim
laces and have yet to see the answer to my questions.
These are:
1) how do I boot from a non-IDE root disk?
2) How do I control what goes into initrd in a more reasonable
way than nothing/most/all. (and what does most do, anyway?).
Jim Penny
Mathieu Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> About http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=183858
>
> Given the information I previously provided, I do not even understand
> how it's possible to think that the bug 183858 is a kernel issue.
The problem is that the kernel provides no way to
get
GNU Autoconf can be configured with this
tool. You really mean:
A tool, similar to GNU Autoconf, for configuring software
Admittedly this is ugly. It may also be really inaccurate. I have no
idea of how similar to GNU Autoconf the tool is. I hope that it is not
very similar at all.
Perhaps:
A tool to configure software (GNU Autoconf also has this purpose)
Jim Penny
red-carpet has an on-disk cache so I still have the debian
packages. (or I'd be in trouble).
Jim
--
Jim Mintha Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
System Administrator Work: +31 20 525-4919
Informatiseringscentrum
t does not function at all. But it is also somewhat
difficult to test for many uses. Further, when the unconfigured
system fails to start, the failure is completely silent. This adds
to the problems.
Jim Penny
>
> --
> Steve Langasek
> postmodern programmer
>
On Wed, 2 Jul 2003 15:57:01 -0500
Steve Langasek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 02, 2003 at 10:50:29AM -0400, Jim Penny wrote:
> > On Tue, 1 Jul 2003 20:40:02 -0500 Steve Langasek
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > On Tue, Jul 01, 2003 at
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 22:25:26 +0200
Thomas Viehmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jim Penny wrote:
> > Now, this breakage happens to be somewhat benign, in that without
> > configuration, it does not function at all. But it is also somewhat
> > difficult to test for man
nal copyright cartel, and the RIAA in
particular. They have written "cease and desist" letters to anyone who
has a file names deCSS on their system. This is an attempt to make such
a filename so common that these letters are pointless, and possibly
evidence of illegal activity.
Jim Penny
ser
system, you get a better set of bones piles, because you have no idea of
what killed the adventurer, and probably no idea of whether anything is
worth picking up and risking the possibility of a curse.
Jim Penny
who has in past lives spent far too many hours playing nethack
, google
points them to Debian to get this sheet music, and the act of asking
reinforces google's notion that debian is a good place to get the music!
Jim Penny
gt; there is nothing you can do about it", then please speak up. On
> > > the other hand, if you agree with me, let your voice be heard!
> >
> i'm interested only in the debian kernel without 2.5/2.6 IPsec. in my
> mind this should be vanilla kernel + debian fixes.
>
But 2.5/2.6 include IPSEC in the vanilla kernel!
Jim Penny
ons are going to be hard coded into the init
replacement, then there's really no choice.
>
> I still support a tmpfs /run, but not because it gives the admin any
> particular control.
Jim.
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64bit windows and get the applications they want.
>
And don't forget games. Game developers will start releasing 64-bit binaries
and gamers will eat them up just because 64 > 32. So the Win64 market will
have a fair amount of users in the not too distant future.
> > We'll sur
On 04/10/07 10:19:02PM +0200, Robert Millan wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 09, 2007 at 06:39:16PM -0400, Jim Crilly wrote:
> > And don't forget games. Game developers will start releasing 64-bit binaries
> > and gamers will eat them up just because 64 > 32. So the Win64 market will
&g
p://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=426224
-jim
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Renato S. Yamane wrote:
> Tejun Heo wrote:
> >Renato S. Yamane wrote:
> >>Jim Paris wrote:
> >>>For Debian, I don't think there are any complete solutions yet.
> >>>The related bug is
> >>>http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?
pygresql.
Jim Penny
> This is not strictly orphaning, more infanticide. I'm not sure
> conventional orphaning fits, since the source package is not being
> orphaned.
>
> The PostgreSQL python interface (python-pygresql) has been separated
> upstream into its own source tr
On Fri, 7 Nov 2003 15:55:25 -0500
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I don't know if you are virused, or if your sender has been spoofed, or
what. Anyway, you might want to look into this. You appear to be
spewing odd word documents people you don't know.
Jim Penny
>
>
> >
reciated,
by anyone interested... Interested?
- Jim Gettys
On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 09:46, Michel DÃnzer wrote:
> On Tue, 2003-11-11 at 13:11, Andrew Suffield wrote:
> > On Tue, Nov 11, 2003 at 01:14:30AM +0100, Michel D?nzer wrote:
> > > > > I found this ide
Subject says it all.
-Jim
--
Jam sessions community web site: http://jam.sessionsnet.org
is is the Xft2/fontconfig stuff deploying.
This is a fundamental change in X architecture, which has been
underway for over 18 months.
- Jim
On Sun, 2003-12-14 at 11:34, Andrew Suffield wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 02:14:05PM +1100, Ben Burton wrote:
> > Is
eased something like 16
months ago.
It does represent a major architectural shift in X; the reasons
for it are outlined in our Usenix paper.
- Jim
On Sun, 2003-12-14 at 19:52, Cameron Patrick wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 14, 2003 at 05:20:41PM -0800, Jim Gettys wrote
the
computer origin of the term. 19th Century.
http://ei.cs.vt.edu/~history/Daemon.html
Jim Penny
be taking care of.
There has been dicussion of removing python1.5. But this is because
there are very few packages left that depend on it. Debian does not
historically remove packages easily or without thought.
Jim Penny
>
> Laura Creighton
>
>
>
> --
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>
ce release, 2.2.2 will be issued some time later this year.
>
But Zope 2.5, one the more popular applications, requires 2.1.3.
Can we be more aggressive in changing default versions than Zope?
Jim Penny
> I don't expect 2.3 to reach maturity until mid 2003.
>
> -
.1 as default. That cannot be
undone, it is released, and at the time the decision was made, 2.2 was
way too close to the cutting edge for comfort.
Moreover, we would not recommend that the target audience of
Python-in-a-Tie run sid. Sid breaks things occasionally, sometimes
badly. Sid tortures small defenseless things for a hobby!
2.2 is available in woody already. Invoke it using /usr/bin/python2.2.
BTW: is the PIAT consortium going to offer any DSFG free software?
Jim Penny
rade. I don't know which version of vacation I *was*
using, but this one is kapoot. The only things that I can see having
changed related to this setup are 1) libdb3 2) vacation
Here's my story. I have a user named jim that can send and recieve mail
via smtp(postfix)/pop(pop3d) from
Sean,
Thank you for taking the time to look at my problem.
Can you add/change to \jim, "/pathto/strace -o /tmp/vacation.err
/usr/bin/vacation jim"
That is a GREAT idea. I changed it to the below and ran
d
reply. Apologies to anyone who's inbox was burdened by my email.
Back to stressing out about normal things,
Jim Weller
PS Hail open source
PS2 Try it by hand before you trust your web app ;)
ty now. For me, Gentoo
> was more stable, even their 'development' version.
Please provide support for this statement... stability is not subjective;
are you saying debian crashes more often?
-Jim (no need to CC: me; I'm subscribed)
tical because we have a
lot of political units (aka PEOPLE) who are acting as developers. I
don't think Gentoo has as many developers as we do.
You can partially blame Andrew Suffield's presence as a developer on
me: I advocated him.
-Jim
Not enough info in your question, and the list you should post to
(!after! reading README in kernel source dir, and kernel howto, and
man make-kpkg after installing kernel-package) is
debian-user@lists.debian.org
On Fri, 22 Nov 2002 10:19:27 +0600
"chanka perera" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
prior experience
with that particular person, and seeing that he seems to
like stirring things up and watching the result. He's done
it before, and is doing it now: notice he hasn't participated
in the discussion he started?
-Jim
), but it won't ever achieve Debian's
> stability.
(small point on kde 3.1 final existing before announcement disposed of:
it won't be "final" until it's "announced". by definition. also, there
may be current reasons why the announcement has not been made.)
Yes, that's exactly right. But debian's build system has never failed to
work for me, and it has in every other dist I ever ran (which was mostly
SLS, early slackware and redhat). So, I contend here with you because
there's nothing wrong with debian's build system. In fact, the build
depends introduced in woody probably make debian a better choice. Here,
you have a -build- system that enjoys debian's stability. That's not
easy to beat...
> -Mark
-Jim
But what are you actually going to -do-? If I recall correctly, you've
said on IRC that you aren't or don't want to be a coder (correct me if
I'm wrong), and a previous attempt on your part to become a developer
left NM with the question of what you intended to do crossed with what
you had the ski
ho understand what's going
on; perhaps debian ports representing optimized arches will benefit from
gentoo's work. Other than that, gentoo is simply linux plus userland with
BSD-like "ports" [quoted, because this is different from a debian port.]
> My pennys worth
>
> Jon
-Jim
On Mon, 25 Nov 2002 19:07:07 +0100
Eduard Bloch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> #include
> * Jim Lynch [Mon, Nov 25 2002, 09:54:10AM]:
>
> > > What we need to accept is there is a (percieved??)
> > > problem, or problems, with Debian as it stands today,
> > &
On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 21:30:30 +1100
Hamish Moffatt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 11:48:15AM -0800, Jim Lynch wrote:
> > But I have performed many debian installs with the boot floppy setup,
> > and I found that it still suffers from problems. One pro
On Wed, 27 Nov 2002 22:52:16 +1100
Andrew Lau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 25, 2002 at 08:01:26AM -0800, Jim Lynch wrote:
> > But what are you actually going to -do-? If I recall correctly,
> > you've said on IRC that you aren't or don't want to be
sion, which is hardly ever going to be given, they
must be considered non-free. (This is, of course, logically forthright.)
Moreover, according to the non-free removal proponents, we should not
even distribute the un-modified copies of these files.
Yet, unicode is supposed to be the canonical character encoding scheme
for debian.
Does this mean every unicode text editor belongs in contrib (depends on
something non-free)?
What an interesting anecdote!
Jim Penny
On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 04:53:00PM -0500, Branden Robinson wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 04:23:51PM -0500, Jim Penny wrote:
> > > I see no problem with this license as far as it goes, but it doesn't go
> > > far enough.
> > >
> > > There is no p
On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 05:34:20PM -0800, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
> On Wednesday 27 November 2002 02:03, Roland Mas wrote:
> > Current candidates include:
> >
>
> hey how about something much less cryptic like "forge". Nothing worse than
> having to guess what woman's name some silly coder na
On Thu, 28 Nov 2002 11:58:38 +1100
Andrew Lau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 27, 2002 at 12:21:40PM -0800, Jim Lynch wrote:
> > > A bit hypocritical of you pointing out that I was
> > > participating in my own thread late.
> >
> > Not at all
On Fri, Nov 29, 2002 at 11:37:41AM +0100, Bernhard R. Link wrote:
> * Jim Penny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [021128 03:35]:
> > So, according to Branden, international standards are supposed to allow
> > debian the right to modify them and to distribute the modified versions.
>
On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 11:06:12AM +1300, Nick Phillips wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 30, 2002 at 12:35:25PM -0500, Jim Penny wrote:
>
> > > I think you are missing the points here.
> > >
> > > First of all, DFSG applied to the standard does not want to change the
> &
On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 11:10:09AM +0100, Bernhard R. Link wrote:
> * Jim Penny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [021130 18:43]:
> > Huh? If I change the text of the standard, I have changed the standard!
> > For example, if I have :
> > 0332;COMBINING LOW LINE;Mn;220;NSM;;
On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 07:30:57PM +0200, Richard Braakman wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 11:16:07AM -0500, Jim Penny wrote:
> > On Sun, Dec 01, 2002 at 11:06:12AM +1300, Nick Phillips wrote:
> > > There are all sorts of reasons why you might wish to create derivative
> &
On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 10:43:42AM -0800, Thomas Bushnell, BSG wrote:
> Jim Penny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Now, where in the Unicode license does it give you permission to create
> > derivative works? The license does say "Information can be extracted
>
be "annotations",
"descriptions", "character names", or are they maintained in a separate
table? How do you use the name programmatically if you don't know the
language they are in?
I did some googling, but could not find the French trasnlation files. Is
there an URL?
Jim Penny
ssions are at http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr18/)
Can the program be in debian main?
In other words, does the program "require ... non-free packages or
packages which are not in our archive at all for ... execution"?
Jim Penny
ewcvs.cgi/python/python/dist/src/Tools/unicode/makeunicodedata.py?rev=1.17&content-type=text/vnd.viewcvs-markup
Both show that these projects (at least) are mechanically deriving
their internal unicode tables from UnicodeData.txt.
Jim Penny
guess that even with a perfect oracle, it would be
essentially imposible to reverse engineer the Unicode data files, much
less the ancillary algorithms. That is, a 32 bit search space with at
least 36 properties to be discovered per data point is whopping big.
Jim Penny
h
> long release cycles, such as libgcc1 and libc6.
Not often. Most slow release libraries are strongly backwards
compatible. When it does become a problem, it can be terrible for a
few weeks. Lots of packages need to be rebuilt. Unstable becomes,
well, unstable. Then things get back t
Daniel Stone,
You need to update your people skills. Given your present arrogance and
attitude, maybe you shouldn't be a debian maint. Why should you be trusted?
-Jim
PostgreSQL now has a dependency on openssl/ssl.h in a fundamental
header file, postgresql/libpq-fe.h.
Does this mean that every piece of software which requires this
header file to compile will also have to be migrated to nonus?
Jim Penny
to define wrapper macros
(e.g., like those below, from fileutils/src/sys2.h)
and then use only the wrappers (upper-case names) from your code.
Of course, the following assumes you have the right
definitions for STDC_HEADERS and HAVE_ISASCII.
You get those by using these autoconf macros:
AC_HEADER
I have a laptop with a webcam and would be willing to assist.
What version would i need to run. I am currently using lenny. I am willing
to upgrade to a newer version.
What documents would I need to familiarize myself with to be able to
assist. I am not a Debian Developer. But I am a UNIX admi
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