Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Jonathan Kaye wrote:
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Hi,
I've tried now about 5 times to post a thread on an OCR that is
opensource a Debian package and works fantastic.
But the post does not show up.
What's up?
Hugo
Hi Hugo,
This message showed up. Did
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Jonathan Kaye wrote:
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Hi,
I've tried now about 5 times to post a thread on an OCR that is
opensource a Debian package and works fantastic.
But the post does not show up.
What's up?
Hugo
Hi Hugo,
This message showed up. Did you send this last one
Jonathan Kaye wrote:
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
Hi,
I've tried now about 5 times to post a thread on an OCR that is
opensource a Debian package and works fantastic.
But the post does not show up.
What's up?
Hugo
Hi Hugo,
This message showed up. Did you send this last one from the same account as
Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Tue,23.Dec.08, 07:37:18, Mark Allums wrote:
Release schedule for Debian seems to be, whenever they feel like it.
Maybe it's because I'm not a native speaker, but this sounds to me as if
Debian Developers would release according to their mood :)
It means that lite
On Wed, Dec 24, 2008 at 11:30:01AM -0500, H.S. wrote:
> Osamu Aoki wrote:
> >
> > Hmmm... current unstable lacks Chinese tasks???
> > No no it is under:
> > * Simplified Chinese desktop
> > * Traditional Chinese desktop
> >
> > e.g. Here:
> > i ttf-arphic-ukai
On 2008-12-25 01:40:35 -0800, lovecreatesbea...@gmail.c0m wrote:
> If this happenes on Debian, what can we do to bypass the erroneous
> init script during boot?
I don't think this is possible to bypass a script. But you can still
boot in single-user mode to fix the script.
--
Vincent Lefèvre -
Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Tue,23.Dec.08, 07:37:18, Mark Allums wrote:
Release schedule for Debian seems to be, whenever they feel like it.
Maybe it's because I'm not a native speaker, but this sounds to me as if
Debian Developers would release according to their mood :)
Regards,
Andrei
W
On 25 Dec 2008, Jonathan Kaye wrote:
> Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > I've tried now about 5 times to post a thread on an OCR that is
> > opensource a Debian package and works fantastic.
> > But the post does not show up.
> > What's up?
> >
> > Hugo
> Hi Hugo,
> This message showed up.
I wrote a init script containing this snippet, e.g.:
echo "`basename $0` stopping"
It's happened to be changed by another guy to something like this:
echo "`$0` stopping"
The machine just hung there after that. I had to press the power
button and the "i" letter on our CentOS whe
On Thu, 25 Dec 2008 11:10:34 +0200
Andrei Popescu wrote:
> On Thu,25.Dec.08, 09:55:32, Micha Feigin wrote:
>
> > for the hard disk look into laptop mode, it allows holding writing to disk
> > for longer periods (cache disk writes in memory for 20-30 minutes) which
> > allows the disk to spin do
On Wed,24.Dec.08, 23:47:41, Amit Uttamchandani wrote:
>
> I got an external hard drive to do some backup and it was formatted as
> FAT32, which is a logical choice. But I thought why should I use FAT32.
> I have a Debian Testing and a Mac Machine. I could use a more advanced
> file system that has
On Thu,25.Dec.08, 09:55:32, Micha Feigin wrote:
> for the hard disk look into laptop mode, it allows holding writing to disk for
> longer periods (cache disk writes in memory for 20-30 minutes) which allows
> the
> disk to spin down. Also allows playing with disk power management (look into
But
Amit Uttamchandani wrote:
So I decided to do a compromise. I formatted 100GB as Fat32 in case I
need to plug it in to a windows machine. But the rest is in ext3
format.
Different strokes for different folks - I'd format the whole thing in a
non-Windows file system in case it gets plugged into
On 12/25/08 01:47, Amit Uttamchandani wrote:
I got an external hard drive to do some backup and it was formatted as
FAT32, which is a logical choice. But I thought why should I use FAT32.
I have a Debian Testing and a Mac Machine. I could use a more advanced
file system that has journalling, etc.
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