On Sun, November 8, 2015 12:32 am, Stuart Longland wrote:
> On 07/11/15 23:59, Renaud (Ron) OLGIATI wrote:
>
>>> Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
>>>
>> It does, and I have used them on my IPCop box for years; better burn
>> out an USBToRJ45 adapter than the motherboard when there is a
On 07/11/15 23:59, Renaud (Ron) OLGIATI wrote:
>> Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
> It does, and I have used them on my IPCop box for years; better burn out an
> USBToRJ45 adapter than the motherboard when there is a storm strike on the
> ISP coax.
Hang on, this is a wireless hotsp
ray composed on 2015-11-07 19:29 (UTC-0800):
> Felix composed...
>> That "somewhere" looks to be e.g.
>> /etc/X11/Xsession.d/my1920x1080toOverride3840x2160Xsetup in Wheezy or Betsy.
>> Before you try that, I fail to notice evidence you tried my 2015-11-01 22:11
>> -0500 thread suggestion to appe
On 11/7/15 3:36 PM, Dennis Wicks wrote:
Greetings;
I have a number of older PCs that I use for testing/local webservers,
fileservers, backup machines and other stuff. A couple of these have
"glass ttys", ie. no graphics at all, and others have old low-res
monitors of 800x600 at best. Also, th
On Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 10:30:05 AM UTC-6, Felix
> That "somewhere" looks to be e.g.
> /etc/X11/Xsession.d/my1920x1080toOverride3840x2160Xsetup in Wheezy or Betsy.
>
> Before you try that, I fail to notice evidence you tried my 2015-11-01 22:11
> -0500 thread suggestion to append the vi
On Sat, November 7, 2015 8:26 pm, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> On Sat, November 7, 2015 7:50 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
>> IIUC, according to the user guide it should be seen as a network
>> interface. Can you identify the device with lsusb ?
>
> Bus 002 Device 003: ID 0846:68e1 Netgear, Inc.
So
Is this mailing list active?
On Fri, Nov 6, 2015 at 12:56 AM, Dev Guy wrote:
> Hello while using my system with the KDE desktop manager, my system
> became unresponsive for about 30 seconds, after I was able to only
> move the mouse around but nothing else was accessible. I could still
> see all
On Sat, November 7, 2015 7:50 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> IIUC, according to the user guide it should be seen as a network
> interface. Can you identify the device with lsusb ?
Yes:
Bus 002 Device 003: ID 0846:68e1 Netgear, Inc.
rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
>
> But is the Verizon-Netgear AirCard 791L a "GSM/3G modem"?
IIUC, according to the user guide it should be seen as a network
interface. Can you identify the device with lsusb ?
Le 08/11/2015 00:27, Jochen Spieker a écrit :
Sven Arvidsson:
On Sat, 2015-11-07 at 19:21 +, Alan Chandler wrote:
[...]
How can I find out why dpam is falling over
If it's the same dspam that was previously in Debian, it has been
removed and is apparently no longer developed, so maybe look
On Sat, November 7, 2015 3:02 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
>> and then I stall, at the dialog asking configuration type for RED
>> interface. The options are:
>>
>> - analog modem
>> - GSM/3G modem
>> - ISDN
>> - PPPoE
>> - PPTP
>> - static
>> - DHCP
>>
>> What now?
>
Sven Arvidsson:
> On Sat, 2015-11-07 at 19:21 +, Alan Chandler wrote:
> [...]
>> How can I find out why dpam is falling over
>
> If it's the same dspam that was previously in Debian, it has been
> removed and is apparently no longer developed, so maybe looking for
> alternatives would be a bet
On Saturday 07 November 2015 14:24:41 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Saturday 07 November 2015 18:48:34 Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Saturday 07 November 2015 09:44:34 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> > > > On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 11:21:18 +
> > > >
> > >
Dennis Wicks writes:
> I want to force these systems to support hi-res 1680x1050 or better so
> I can VNC to them from my main machine and be able to use graphic
> software to operate and maintain these machines.
Use ssh -X to forward the X connection. Then you can just run your
applications on
On Nov 7, 2015, at 1:36 PM, Dennis Wicks wrote:
> I have a number of older PCs that I use for testing/local webservers,
> fileservers, backup machines and other stuff. A couple of these have "glass
> ttys", ie. no graphics at all, and others have old low-res monitors of
> 800x600 at best. Als
rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
>
> I have on my desk a 791L with the USB cable. And I have a spare
> desktop machine here -- in good running order -- with which to
> experiment. Finally, I have an IPCop 2.1.8 installation CD.
(...)
> and then I stall, at the dialog asking configuration type for R
Greetings;
I have a number of older PCs that I use for testing/local
webservers, fileservers, backup machines and other stuff. A
couple of these have "glass ttys", ie. no graphics at all,
and others have old low-res monitors of 800x600 at best.
Also, they are all in the basement, which is a t
On Sat, November 7, 2015 1:46 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> The USB device I'm talking about is the Netgear
> AirCard 791L hotspot in "tethered" mode. So all you may need to buy is a
> USB cable with the proper connectors at each end if you don't already
> have one, to connect the USB port on the ho
On Sat, 2015-11-07 at 19:21 +, Alan Chandler wrote:
[...]
> How can I find out why dpam is falling over
If it's the same dspam that was previously in Debian, it has been
removed and is apparently no longer developed, so maybe looking for
alternatives would be a better option?
--
Cheers,
Sven
rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
> On Sat, November 7, 2015 12:13 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
>> These are serial ports, not network interfaces. With the proper driver,
>> an ethernet over USB device
>
> Such as the Apple usb-to-ethernet adapter?
Maybe, if the chip inside is supported. But why do
I run a small raspberry pi as my home mail server.
Over the last couple of days, my wife has reported to me that she hasn't
seen any mail for a while.
After a bit of investigation I found that if I did
service dspam status
It would show its status as active(exited).
In order to start it aga
Thank you, Reco.
On 11/7/15, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 09:56:14 +
> rajiv chavan wrote:
>
>> Sat Nov 7 10:05:00 UTC 2015
>>
>> A message at apt-upgrade:
>> __
>> The following package disappeared from your system as
>> all files have been overwritten by other packages:
On Saturday 07 November 2015 18:48:34 Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Saturday 07 November 2015 09:44:34 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> > > On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 11:21:18 +
> > >
> > > Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > > !!! In which country do ordinary hardw
On Saturday 07 November 2015 09:44:34 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> > On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 11:21:18 +
> >
> > Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > !!! In which country do ordinary hardware stores stock _slightly_
> > > arcane IT products?? Or, come to t
On 11/7/2015 10:56 AM, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
Living in Darkest Paraguay, I have had no problem getting Trendnet
USBToRJ45 adapters sent from Amazon.
The local Apple Store has an adapter for US$30.
And in context that could rea
On Sat, November 7, 2015 12:13 pm, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Why would you need a USB 3 port ? Doesn't a USB 2 port provide enough
> throughput ?
I do not know. If USB2 provides reasonable performance, then I am satisfied.
...
> These are serial ports, not network interfaces. With the proper dri
On Saturday 07 November 2015 08:59:35 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:26:18 +0100
>
> Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> > Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
>
> It does, and I have used them on my IPCop box for years; better burn
> out an USBToRJ45 adapter than the motherboard w
rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
> On Sat, November 7, 2015 4:26 am, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>> Doesn't your i386 machine have an available USB port ?
>> Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
>
> It has a USB-2 port; and I suppose I can purchase a PCI card with a USB-3
> port at the computer s
On 11/07/2015 06:30 PM, Ed Jabbour wrote:
> Tried - and failed - to install Wheezy on an old - late 2008 -
> Macbook.
Why not Jessie ?
> Any pointers, hints, solutions, etc. appreciated.
>
Just in case you didn't see this link:
https://wiki.debian.org/InstallingDebianOn/Apple
Tried - and failed - to install Wheezy on an old - late 2008 -
Macbook. It's an Intel machine running Mavericks. First, I used
OSX's diskutil to create a 120 GB partition formatted fat32. Ran the
netinst installer. created 3 partitions, root, home and swap. So the
disk had 6 partitions -
Hi all,
I'm on sid, and since a couple of weeks I'm experiencing random freezes;
pretty bad, I have to hard reset the machine. I suspect it is the ugly
wifi proprietary driver:
===
03:00.0 Network controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8192EE
PCIe Wireless Network Adapter
# aptitude show
> On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> Living in Darkest Paraguay, I have had no problem getting Trendnet
> USBToRJ45 adapters sent from Amazon.
The local Apple Store has an adapter for US$30.
On Sat, November 7, 2015 4:26 am, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Doesn't your i386 machine have an available USB port ?
> Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
It has a USB-2 port; and I suppose I can purchase a PCI card with a USB-3
port at the computer store.
In the IPCop manual, the only men
Hi.
On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 09:56:14 +
rajiv chavan wrote:
> Sat Nov 7 10:05:00 UTC 2015
>
> A message at apt-upgrade:
> __
> The following package disappeared from your system as
> all files have been overwritten by other packages:
> libaudit0
> Note: This is done automatically and
ray composed on 2015-11-07 07:32 (UTC-0800):
> Felix Miata wrote:
>> If a change from 1960 to 1920 does not help, try putting that xrandr
>> command in /etc/X11/ somewhere.
>> If still no joy, share an Xorg.0.log here.
> Thank you for the post. You are correct, the 1960 was just an email typo.
On Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 12:40:05 AM UTC-6, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> If a change from 1960 to 1920 does not help, try putting that xrandr command
> in /etc/X11/ somewhere.
>
> If still no joy, share an Xorg.0.log here.
Felix,
Thank you for the post. You are correct, the 1960 was just a
On Saturday 07 November 2015 13:59:47 Renaud OLGIATI wrote:
> On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 11:21:18 +
>
> Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > !!! In which country do ordinary hardware stores stock _slightly_ arcane
> > IT products?? Or, come to that, any IT products to speak of?
>
> Living in Darkest Paraguay, I h
On Sat, 7 Nov 2015 11:21:18 +
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> !!! In which country do ordinary hardware stores stock _slightly_ arcane IT
> products?? Or, come to that, any IT products to speak of?
Living in Darkest Paraguay, I have had no problem getting Trendnet USBToRJ45
adapters sent from Amazon
On Sat, 07 Nov 2015 11:26:18 +0100
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Or does IPCop2 just not include USB drivers ?
It does, and I have used them on my IPCop box for years; better burn out an
USBToRJ45 adapter than the motherboard when there is a storm strike on the ISP
coax.
Cheers,
Ron.
--
On Sat, Nov 7, 2015 at 5:09 PM, Pascal Hambourg
wrote:
>
> These devices provide ethernet connectivity to a USB host port.
> IIUC, the OP wants it the other way around : connect a USB device port
> and an ethernet host port.
>
Well, a vice-versa search solves this.
Google "usb modem to ethernet
Himanshu Shekhar a écrit :
> AFAIK there are small cables in market for this purpose. Like we have OTG
> to connect USB and smartphone, similarly there are USB to Ethernet cables.
> Their necessity comes in tablets, Ultrabooks where Ethernet is unavailable.
These devices provide ethernet connectiv
On Saturday 07 November 2015 10:43:38 Himanshu Shekhar wrote:
> AFAIK there are small cables in market for this purpose. Like we have OTG
> to connect USB and smartphone, similarly there are USB to Ethernet cables.
> Their necessity comes in tablets, Ultrabooks where Ethernet is unavailable.
> You
AFAIK there are small cables in market for this purpose. Like we have OTG
to connect USB and smartphone, similarly there are USB to Ethernet cables.
Their necessity comes in tablets, Ultrabooks where Ethernet is unavailable.
You could find it on an ordinary hardware store. It's really cheap.
Good
rlhar...@oplink.net a écrit :
> In order to provide Internet access to a LAN consisting of several
> computers in a location in which DSL is not available, I am in search of a
> reliable and inexpensive way to use the USB port of a G4 Wi-Fi "hotspot"
> to feed the WAN port of a router.
>
> In part
Sat Nov 7 10:05:00 UTC 2015
A message at apt-upgrade:
__
The following package disappeared from your system as
all files have been overwritten by other packages:
libaudit0
Note: This is done automatically and on purpose by dpkg.
__
Has libaudit0 been obsoleted?
Regards.
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