Thank you Andreas, this already helped me!
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 9:00 PM, Andreas Rönnquist
wrote:
> On Sat, 13 Jul 2013 17:48:19 -0300,
> msl09 wrote:
>
>>Hi, I wish to help a debian team with the triaging of the bugs of a
>>package and a few questions arose:
>>
>>How do I get a neat list of t
Do you share memory with the graphics?
Regards,
Ralf
PS:
Just for the record, some voodoo I experience.
What ever distro I use, I'm always missing 256 MiB.
$ hwinfo --memory | grep Si
Memory Size: 3 GB + 512 MB
$ uname -m
x86_64
My RAMs are all ok, 4 GiB are installed - 256 Mib framebuffer =
On 07/13/2013 03:17 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/13/2013 3:09 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
And don't
forget that as the BIOS self tests it only finds 2.8 GB even though all
4 memory chips are detected.
Finally we're getting somewhere.
The entire length of this thread I was assuming you were seeing 4
On Sat, 13 Jul 2013 17:48:19 -0300,
msl09 wrote:
>Hi, I wish to help a debian team with the triaging of the bugs of a
>package and a few questions arose:
>
>How do I get a neat list of the installed dependencies of a package[1]
>on my system. My wish is to compare the dependencies that a user had
Hi guys,
I found this link here.
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-networking/printer-problems-samsung-scx-4300-windows-7-64-bit/6887e47b-56cc-4b55-926a-3ce236875b34
Someone, February 15, 2011, post the thread title:
-
Hi Roger,
I tought I had the paper with the printed error with me, but I hadn't.
So I tried to print something hoping the printer won't work.
Funny that hoping it won't work is not as frustrating as hoping it would.
Now, after 5 minutes of waiting, with the read light blinking and the
printer sa
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 07:10:34PM -0300, Beco wrote:
> I have this laser printer (Samsung SCX-4200) since august 2007, and it
> saw some Debian versions already, among others.
>
> It always printed ok. Its plugged via USB on a print server computer,
> with Wheezy now, with CUPS.
>
> Since Wheezy
On 7/13/2013 3:09 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
> And don't
> forget that as the BIOS self tests it only finds 2.8 GB even though all
> 4 memory chips are detected.
Finally we're getting somewhere.
The entire length of this thread I was assuming you were seeing 4GB at
POST. You never stated otherwise, a
On 07/12/2013 12:35 AM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/11/2013 9:49 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
On 07/11/2013 06:10 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/11/2013 6:10 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
Sorry, I've already done this with all possible permutations. They all
seem to be working fine. If I install a pair they sh
Dear linuxers,
I have this laser printer (Samsung SCX-4200) since august 2007, and it
saw some Debian versions already, among others.
It always printed ok. Its plugged via USB on a print server computer,
with Wheezy now, with CUPS.
Since Wheezy upgrade, I got a funny inexplicable problem:
When
I back up 20 or so hosts and have about the same story as Gary. As with any
backup solution, I do spot-check backups on occasion, just to make sure
that in your moment of need, the files are really there. :)
I use the default location of /var/lib/backuppc as my default location for
my file store a
On 07/12/2013 12:35 AM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/11/2013 9:49 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
On 07/11/2013 06:10 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/11/2013 6:10 PM, Gary Roach wrote:
Sorry, I've already done this with all possible permutations. They all
seem to be working fine. If I install a pair they sh
On Tue, Jul 09, 2013 at 09:20:18AM +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Tue, 2013-07-09 at 08:54 +0200, basti wrote:
> > Or set Windows to use UTC, don't know if it still works.
>
> And what should people do that don't use Windows, but need a correct
> local time for software that does run without an O
On Sat 13 Jul 2013 at 13:44:43 -0700, John Conover wrote:
>
> Where is the firmware-b43-installer package?
There is a packages section on the Debian home page. I trust you need no
help to find the website. :)
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On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 21:54 +0100, Dom wrote:
> > No wrecked DLT tapes?
>
> A couple caused by faulty old drives.
It's the same for DAT. A faulty old DVDRAM drive usually doesn't damage
the DVDRAMs.
> A few out of several hundred. I've had worse failure rates from other media.
The same as for D
On Sun, Jul 14, 2013 at 12:10:48AM +0300, M.Atıf CEYLAN wrote:
> Hi all,
> How can I learn big servers Ip addresses when outgoing for dns.(google dns or
> others). I could not find any list on their web sites.
>
> Yurdum Yazılım
You want to do DNS lookups? You need the `dig` utility from the dns
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 01:44:43PM -0700, John Conover wrote:
>
> Where is the firmware-b43-installer package?
>
> Thanks,
>
> John
>
> --
>
> John Conover, cono...@rahul.net, http://www.johncon.com/
In contrib, you need to add it to your sources.lst.
http://packages.debian.org/
Where is the firmware-b43-installer package?
Thanks,
John
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Hi all,
How can I learn big servers Ip addresses when outgoing for dns.(google dns or
others). I could not find any list on their web sites.
Yurdum Yazılım
On 13/07/13 21:17, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 20:58 +0100, Dom wrote:
DLT has a single spool in the cart (the other being in the drive), a
fast moving tape and stationary read/write head. The tapes are also
much bigger and wider. I've found them to be very reliable over the
years.
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 08:39:10PM +, Hendrik Boom wrote:
> For some reason, chromium seems to have got it stuck in its head that
> slashdot,org is at 69.165.131.134. At least, when I try to browse to
> slashdot.org using chromium, the displayed contents are identical to the
> contents at 1
Hi, I wish to help a debian team with the triaging of the bugs of a
package and a few questions arose:
How do I get a neat list of the installed dependencies of a package[1]
on my system. My wish is to compare the dependencies that a user had
installed on a bug report with the one on my debian.
I
For some reason, chromium seems to have got it stuck in its head that
slashdot,org is at 69.165.131.134. At least, when I try to browse to
slashdot.org using chromium, the displayed contents are identical to the
contents at 16.165.131.134, which contains my personal web site.
Firefox and chrom
On Jul 13, 2013, at 1:27 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Spaghettied tapes are a common issue for DAT, since DDS is the
> same I won't trust it and I suspect DLT doesn't differ much.
Yes, it does. DLT is quite different from DDS -- it's not a helical system like
VHS and DDS. It has several tracks on
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 20:58 +0100, Dom wrote:
> DLT has a single spool in the cart (the other being in the drive), a
> fast moving tape and stationary read/write head. The tapes are also
> much bigger and wider. I've found them to be very reliable over the
> years.
Thank you, I already have seen
On 13/07/13 20:27, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 12:18 -0600, Glenn English wrote:
On Jul 13, 2013, at 3:08 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
I'm interested in experiences of others. In my experience CDs and DVDs
more likely will fail, than HDDs do.
My 10 DLT tapes
I don't know DLT, but
Something strange has started happening recently. For a long time I have
used ISO-8859-1 as my character mapping in text consoles.
dpkg-reconfigure console-setup
and I have had no difficulty, except when using the ssh client to connect
to a remote system which uses UTF-8. The box-drawing cha
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 20:56 +0200, Hans-J. Ullrich wrote:
> Harddrives are cheap now, but as Ralf already mentioned, if they fall
> down, you get a brick.
It wasn't me, I'm using an USB drive, I just removed gvfs to avoid
spinning down and up again and again, when the drive is connected and
most o
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 12:18 -0600, Glenn English wrote:
> On Jul 13, 2013, at 3:08 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>
> > I'm interested in experiences of others. In my experience CDs and DVDs
> > more likely will fail, than HDDs do.
>
> My 10 DLT tapes
I don't know DLT, but many people I know and myself
Huh, and I forgot to mention "back-in-time". Based on rsync, nice tool, and
there is a debian package available.
Hans
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> This seems not to be a solution for most of us.
>
> Regards,
> Ralf
Yeah, it was just an idea. :) However, for backup purposes, my solutions are
the following:
Solution 1:
If you have another server available, use rsync and make two copies. First
one, just copy all files to a folder on the
Gary Roach grabbed a keyboard and wrote:
> I'm suprised that it took so long for someone to mention backuppc. I've
> been using it for some time and the biggest problem is forgetting its
> there. I set mine up to backup 3 systems, all debian wheezy and used
> rsyncd as the transport agent. You can
On Jul 13, 2013, at 3:08 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> I'm interested in experiences of others. In my experience CDs and DVDs
> more likely will fail, than HDDs do.
My 10 DLT tapes have had no failures in 10+ years. And they don't seem to care
much about being dropped (on a carpeted floor; I haven'
On 07/12/2013 07:52 AM, Rob Owens wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "David Guntner"
I've been religiously backing up my Windows machine for years with a
program called Acronis True Image. It works well, lets me backup my
system to a second hard drive in the computer, and will do a week
Thank you Hans,
nice information to learn something new :), but I suspect they don't
make sense for home usage.
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 17:26 +0200, Hans-J. Ullrich wrote:
> Worms look like DVD's, its capacity is about 10GB. Those are used by some
> German government to store important data like p
Hi all,
I installed some firmware introduced via official mirror from Debian, and
last time I updated my Debian Testing x86-64 with *apt-get upgrade*, I end
up with this following error:
Setting up firmware-b43-installer (1:017-2) ...
No chroot environment found. Starting normal installation
--20
Am Samstag, 13. Juli 2013 schrieb Ralf Mardorf:
> I forgot to mention that we experience floppy disks as very reliable,
> but useless for data of modern computers, because of the low amount of
> data that can be stored.
Don't know, if these are already mentionened. There are Datadisks called
"wor
On Saturday 13 July 2013 09:40:38 Anne Forker wrote:
> I have had this post-invoke test error before when I executed apt-get -f
> dist-upgrade with some libs preloaded (I moved the libc6.so following
> http://blog.i-al.net/2013/03/a-copy-of-the-c-library-was-found-in-an-unexpe
> cted-directory/). H
On Sat, Jul 13, 2013 at 08:23:56AM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> I installed tin and once I got it connected to my news server and got all
> of the preliminaries out of the way I used rtin and tried to do a search
> for alt.astrology-moderated. I tried with the (/) and later with the (s)
> to s
I installed tin and once I got it connected to my news server and got all
of the preliminaries out of the way I used rtin and tried to do a search
for alt.astrology-moderated. I tried with the (/) and later with the (s)
to search for and subscribe to that newsgroup. I couldn't do it since as
That was a really bad idea. Your system is most certainly wrecked now.
I've not checked the info on the url you submitted ( though it looks
appealing )
Why did you start such a gigantic leap ? Why no upgrade to wheezy first,
then add apt repo's for testing and/or unstable with apt pinning to
I forgot to mention that we experience floppy disks as very reliable,
but useless for data of modern computers, because of the low amount of
data that can be stored.
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On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 04:42 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
> Drives are subject to mechanical wear and electrical failure. They can
> fail even when not being used because bearings can stick, etc.. Drop
> one and it may become a paperweight.
>
> I don't even trust HDs in my computer, which is why I only
On 13/07/13 04:12 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 04:04 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
However it's a lot easier to make multiple copies of a
disc than it is to make multiple copies of a tape or hard disk drive.
Duplicating by e.g.
cp -pr hard_disk_1 hard_disk_2
IMO is easier and fast
Hi all,
I have tried to update squeeze to the next 'unstable' dist and thereby turned
it into a non-functioning state:
[...]
Reading changelogs... Done
Extracting templates from packages: 100%
Preconfiguring packages ...
Setting up libc6 (2.17-7) ...
Configuration file `/etc/ld.so.conf.d/i486-l
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 04:04 -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
> However it's a lot easier to make multiple copies of a
> disc than it is to make multiple copies of a tape or hard disk drive.
Duplicating by e.g.
cp -pr hard_disk_1 hard_disk_2
IMO is easier and faster than split and burn a CD or DVD. A har
On 13/07/13 01:53 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Sat, 2013-07-13 at 09:06 +1000, Charlie wrote:
I think it's a lot about where you store them that affects their
lifespan?
Correct but even some that were in the sunlight for around 10 years here
still are ok, OTOH some that were protected are broken
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