Hi,
Mike Kupfer wrote:
> I used sha256sum instead of sha512sum, but I otherwise followed
> the above instructions. The checksum from the dd pipeline does not
> match the checksum of the original .iso file.
That's not good.
Especially we do not have to show up at grub-devel as long as the test
US
Hi,
i wrote:
> > And as said previously, BIOS does not expect any partitions.
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> experience taught me that many BIOS implementations wrongly
> expect an MBR partition entry with the boot flag set in order to boot from
> the disk.
You are right (and those firmwares are wrong
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On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 12:58:04AM +, davidson wrote:
> I have a problem: The more frequently I browse a web site, the more I
> notice all the things I hate about its web pages.
[...]
I think you're looking for a HTTP proxy.
Cheers
- -- t
-B
On 2018-05-14 16:56, Joe wrote:
On Sun, 13 May 2018 14:43:55 -0500
If your micro-installation contains them, gksu and gksudo are graphical
equivalents of su and sudo. I start Synaptic from a menu entry, which
uses gksudo.
gksu is now deprecated as insecure,
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugre
deloptes writes:
> Nicolas George wrote:
>
> I doubt there is something meaningful beyond bayesian spam filter. It is the
> most efficient way. Neural Network is a method, which would not apply very
> well to spam detection as it is more sophisticated and leads to unjustified
> overhead. This is m
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 23:29:43 (+0200), Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 14/05/2018 à 02:02, David Wright a écrit :
> >On Sun 13 May 2018 at 19:08:48 (+0200), Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> >>
> >>Most of my early experience with UEFI boot comes from a rather old
> >>Intel motherboard. Beside crippled UEFI su
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 23:39:06 (+0200), Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 14/05/2018 à 16:33, David Wright a écrit :
> >
> > "Don’t do UEFI-native installs to MBR-formatted disks, or BIOS
> > compatibility installs to GPT-formatted disks (an exception to the
> > latter is if your disk is, IIR
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 11:56:11 (-0400), Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > Yes, documentation of firmware is almost unknown in my experience
> > (since probably 30 years ago). That's why I took the least invasive
>
> It's documented to the extent that it says "implements UEFI" and that
> UEFI is documented
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 08:01:05 (-0500), Richard Owlett wrote:
> Only 1 of the four machines within arm's reach are physically
> capable of connecting to the internet. Is there a way to block
> internet access for members of one group - similar to how "dialout"
> might have been used when connectiv
Chris Ramsden wrote:
> On 2018-05-14 01:21, songbird wrote:
>> Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>> ...
>>> I agree with the author. If you want to keep the existing EFI Windows
>>> installation and have a convenient dual boot with GRUB, you'll have to
>>> set up your favourite distribution to boot in EFI m
I have a problem: The more frequently I browse a web site, the more I
notice all the things I hate about its web pages.
And I seem to have a partial solution to this problem: I can make XSLT
stylesheets[1] that will transform a web page A, as received from a
remote site, into a XHTML document B t
Mike Kupfer wrote:
> Since the OP's problems were with 9.4, I haven't tried a more recent
> ISO, but I'll download an image and test it. (If this turns out to be
> fixed in 9.4, I will be very embarrassed and will happily buy y'all
> a meal if you're ever in the Bay Area.)
I just tried 9.4, usin
Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Mike Kupfer wrote:
> > If I plug the stick into the laptop when it's running, the stick is
> > mounted okay. [...] didn't notice anything odd, but then I'm not familiar
> > with the contents of a hybrid image ISO.
>
> They have about the best verification support you can w
On Mon, 14 May 2018 21:26 + (UTC), Long Wind wrote:
> i've just installed the package, how to use it?
> in firefox of stretch, click Edit -> Preferences -> Content -> Advanced
> i'm unable to see the new font
> how to use it in firefox? Thanks!
First select it under 'Fonts & Colours', as you
Nicolas George wrote:
> Hi.
>
> For years I have been using bogofilter as my main spam filter. But
> nowadays, neural networks and machine learning have made enormous
> progress.
>
> I wonder if there is somewhere in Debian a spam filter (working on the
> same principles as bogofilter: a stand-a
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> AFAIK, google's voice recognition / transcription works that way (by
> sending the sound to a server and letting the server translate the voice
> to text), and then sending the text back to the smartphone.
bingo!
and you accepted the license, which gives exclusive rig
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> Once it has been fine tuned, it was less
> than a minute's job to calculate the next[1] buy & sell orders for a given
> portfolio.
Yes but this is more or less a closed domain, while for mailing things look
different.
On Mon, 14 May 2018 13:16:01 +0100 Darac Marjal said:
> Or, in other words, while it may take several CPU-decades to train an AI
> what a dog looks like, once it has learnt that, recognising a dog then
> becomes a trivial task.
I can confirm to this. Once I was upto a pseudo-AI[0] project for
Le 14/05/2018 à 17:50, Thomas Schmitt a écrit :
And as said previously, BIOS does not expect any partitions.
In theory. All it should expect is the MBR signature 0xAA55. But as said
previously, experience taught me that many BIOS implementations wrongly
expect an MBR partition entry with the
Le 14/05/2018 à 16:33, David Wright a écrit :
"Don’t do UEFI-native installs to MBR-formatted disks, or BIOS
compatibility installs to GPT-formatted disks (an exception to the
latter is if your disk is, IIRC, 2.2+TB in size, because the MBR
format can’t handle disks that big
Le 14/05/2018 à 02:02, David Wright a écrit :
On Sun 13 May 2018 at 19:08:48 (+0200), Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Most of my early experience with UEFI boot comes from a rather old
Intel motherboard. Beside crippled UEFI support (no UEFI boot from
USB or SATA in AHCI mode), it had a couple of annoyi
Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Does the live image always succeed and the netinst image always fail ?
> Is always the same USB stick affected ? (Or do you have one for each ISO ?)
> How do you actually "select" between installer and live ?
I made some changes between the initial attempts and what I'm do
Thanks Pascal,
mdadm.conf says metadata=1.2.
root@file2:~# blkid /dev/md2*
/dev/md2: PTUUID="41440b8b-c8dc-489c-9f03-e85d8d309302" PTTYPE="gpt"
/dev/md2p1: UUID="1c3642c6-c51c-4bd1-b952-5a77665e3d18" TYPE="ext4"
PARTUUID="eb6ee4f4-95ec-449e-a9e8-1bca9a837afb"
root@file2:~#
root@file2:~# file -s
Hi,
David Wright wrote:
> I read it as meaning that the USB stick works as a live system
> (first boot), but not as an installer (second boot).
Hm ... re-reading Mike's mails ...
Mike Kupfer wrote in his first mail:
> > > using a netinst image and a live image.
and today:
> > If I select the in
Hi,
So, I removed xtables-addons-source:
apt-get remove xtables-addons-source
And reinstalled xtables-addons-dkms:
apt-get install --reinstall xtables-addons-dkms
That built the module, and things started working again.
Thanks Reco!
On 9-5-2018 10:38, Reco wrote:
Hi.
On Wed, Ma
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 18:13:08 (+0200), Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Mike Kupfer wrote:
> > I'm booting using EFI.
>
> So this could be a problem with GRUB about how it leaves the USB stick
> after having loaded kernel and initrd from it.
>
> The volatility of success and failure still gives
Hi,
Mike Kupfer wrote:
> I'm booting using EFI.
So this could be a problem with GRUB about how it leaves the USB stick
after having loaded kernel and initrd from it.
The volatility of success and failure still gives me riddles. But if you
can reproduce failure within a bearable number of tries,
On Monday, May 14, 2018 06:23:07 AM Darac Marjal wrote:
> I'm no expert in AI, but it was my understanding that, while you need
> massive amounts of data and processing of that data to CREATE an AI
> model, the model itself can be relatively modest to run.
I believe the above.
> This, I
> believ
> Yes, documentation of firmware is almost unknown in my experience
> (since probably 30 years ago). That's why I took the least invasive
It's documented to the extent that it says "implements UEFI" and that
UEFI is documented.
>> Same here (basically for the same reason: the behavior of the firm
Hi,
Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > the behavior of the firmware
> > and OS when faced with a disk that has both a GPT and an MBR partitions
> > is largely unspecified and will vary depending on your system).
David Wright wrote:
> I've yet to see a GPT disk that didn't have a protective MBR.
> I though
>>I have the following error when activate flyspell-mode (with hunspell
>>set as the default dictionnary):
>>
>>"Error enabling Flyspell mode:
>>(UTF-8)"
>>
>>My flyspell configuration (below) worked flawless for years.
>
> No one is affected by this bug in debian sid?
> I tried different ways to c
On 2018-05-14 14:55, David Wright wrote:
> Would I be correct in thinking that the BIOS POST boot screen is
> what you get when you hit F12 sufficiently quickly after switch-on?
> So are you choosing between UEFI and Legacy (compatibility) mode.
> (I would like to know how Dell handles what I've be
Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Just to make it clear:
> Was this kernel loaded from the very same USB stick which it then cannot
> inquire properly and in some cases cannot read from ?
Yes.
Oh, and I tried it again this morning, after the laptop had been off all
night, and this time it worked
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 09:14:23 (-0400), Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > That said, there are other statements that are odd:
>
> Not sure what you find odd about them:
>
> > "I really can’t recommend strongly enough that you do not attempt
> > to mix UEFI-native and BIOS-compatible booting of
>
Hello Greg,
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 3:35 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 03:29:22PM +0200, Javier Barroso wrote:
>> Maybe you can improve the script talking / sendind pull request? with
>> żupstream? żhttps://github.com/scop/bash-completion?
>>
>> Thank you !
>
> Not likely to
On Mon 14 May 2018 at 13:28:56 (+0100), Chris Ramsden wrote:
> On 2018-05-14 01:21, songbird wrote:
> > Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> > ...
> >> I agree with the author. If you want to keep the existing EFI Windows
> >> installation and have a convenient dual boot with GRUB, you'll have to
> >> set up
On 08/05/18 13:06, Pétùr wrote:
I have the following error when activate flyspell-mode (with hunspell
set as the default dictionnary):
"Error enabling Flyspell mode:
(UTF-8)"
My flyspell configuration (below) worked flawless for years.
No one is affected by this bug in debian sid?
I tried d
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 03:29:22PM +0200, Javier Barroso wrote:
> Maybe you can improve the script talking / sendind pull request? with
> ¿upstream? ¿https://github.com/scop/bash-completion?
>
> Thank you !
Not likely to happen.
> == OFF TOPIC ==
> An annoying bug on debian (at least for me):
>
On 05/14/2018 02:13 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
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On Sun, May 13, 2018 at 02:51:49PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 05/13/2018 09:26 AM, bw wrote:
On Sun, 13 May 2018, Richard Owlett wrote:
The result I wish to achieve is to click on the icon f
Hello Greg,
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 3:19 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>> local included=$( command sed -ne
>> 's/^[[:blank:]]*[Ii][Nn][Cc][Ll][Uu][Dd][Ee][[:blank:]]\{1,\}\([^#%]*\)\(#.*\)\{0,1\}$/\1/p'
>> "${configfile}" )
>
> So, "included" is a string variable containing the ouput of sed.
>
>
> local included=$( command sed -ne
> 's/^[[:blank:]]*[Ii][Nn][Cc][Ll][Uu][Dd][Ee][[:blank:]]\{1,\}\([^#%]*\)\(#.*\)\{0,1\}$/\1/p'
> "${configfile}" )
So, "included" is a string variable containing the ouput of sed.
If I'm reading that regex correctly, there'll be one pathname per line.
>
> That said, there are other statements that are odd:
Not sure what you find odd about them:
> "I really can’t recommend strongly enough that you do not attempt
> to mix UEFI-native and BIOS-compatible booting of
> permanently-installed operating systems on the same computer, and
>
On 05/14/2018 02:56 AM, Joe wrote:
On Sun, 13 May 2018 14:43:55 -0500
Richard Owlett wrote:
Is "sudo" and cousins an appropriate tool?
I would have said so. In order to make changes to a computer, both
GParted and Synaptic (and aptitude, apt-get etc.) *require* root
privileges. There's n
On 2018-05-14 01:21, songbird wrote:
> Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ...
>> I agree with the author. If you want to keep the existing EFI Windows
>> installation and have a convenient dual boot with GRUB, you'll have to
>> set up your favourite distribution to boot in EFI mode. If you want to
>> go
On 05/14/2018 06:42 AM, dft wrote:
When clean-installing Debian 9.4 from "debian-9.4.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso" using the
text-based interface, the following dialog appears.
| Software selection
|
| At the moment, only the core of the system is installed.
| To tune the system to your needs, you can cho
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 12:02:10PM +, Curt wrote:
On 2018-05-14, Darac Marjal wrote:
I'm no expert in AI, but it was my understanding that, while you need
massive amounts of data and processing of that data to CREATE an AI
model, the model itself can be relatively modest to run. This, I
be
On 14/05/18 23:42, dft wrote:
> It seems that the following three combinations have exactly the same
> effect, but I am not sure. Please confirm whether the following three
> combinations have exactly the same effect.
>
> | [*] Debian desktop environment
> | [ ] GNOME
>
> | [ ] Debian des
On 2018-05-14, Darac Marjal wrote:
>
> I'm no expert in AI, but it was my understanding that, while you need
> massive amounts of data and processing of that data to CREATE an AI
> model, the model itself can be relatively modest to run. This, I
> believe, is how smartphones can now boast "AI proc
When clean-installing Debian 9.4 from "debian-9.4.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso" using the
text-based interface, the following dialog appears.
| Software selection
|
| At the moment, only the core of the system is installed.
| To tune the system to your needs, you can choose to install
| one or more of the
Hi,
i wrote:
> > [6.997775] usb 1-2: New USB device found, idVendor=abcd,
> > idProduct=1234
> > They are missing in the good log. Other kernel version ?
> The good and bad logs are both
> for the same kernel--they're different attempts to boot the same ISO
> using the same USB stick.
Er.
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
...
> I agree with the author. If you want to keep the existing EFI Windows
> installation and have a convenient dual boot with GRUB, you'll have to
> set up your favourite distribution to boot in EFI mode. If you want to
> go back to legacy boot, including for Windows, yo
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 09:45:16AM +, Curt wrote:
On 2018-05-13, Nathaniel Suchy (Lunorian) wrote:
Have any spam filters attempted to use neural networks? How well did
that work out?
Apparently, they work quite well (but it seems you need mucho processing
power--an "enormous collection
On 14/05/18 21:51, Javier Barroso wrote:
> Hello Hector,
>
> It work for me:
>
> $ grep "Include\|testing" /etc/ssh/ssh_config ; cat /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
> Include /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
> Host testing
> Hostname 1.1.1.1
>
> $ ssh test => testing
> $ dpkg -l bash-completion
> Deseado=desconocido(U)/
On 14/05/18 18:09, Richard Hector wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I recently started using the Include directive in my .ssh/config file -
> so all the definitions are now in .ssh/config.d/.
>
> Now bash completion of hostnames no longer works. Is this expected
> behaviour? Anyone know how to fix it, without
On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 11:51 AM, Javier Barroso wrote:
> Hello Hector,
>
> It work for me:
>
> $ grep "Include\|testing" /etc/ssh/ssh_config ; cat /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
> Include /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
> Host testing
> Hostname 1.1.1.1
>
> $ ssh test => testing
> $ dpkg -l bash-completion
> Deseado=de
Hello Hector,
It work for me:
$ grep "Include\|testing" /etc/ssh/ssh_config ; cat /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
Include /etc/ssh/ssh.d/test
Host testing
Hostname 1.1.1.1
$ ssh test => testing
$ dpkg -l bash-completion
Deseado=desconocido(U)/Instalar/eliminaR/Purgar/retener(H)
|
Estado=No/Inst/ficheros-Co
On 2018-05-13, Nathaniel Suchy (Lunorian) wrote:
>
> Have any spam filters attempted to use neural networks? How well did
> that work out?
>
Apparently, they work quite well (but it seems you need mucho processing
power--an "enormous collection of computers"; "massive amounts of
hardware and mass
On 14/05/18 20:49, john doe wrote:
> On 5/14/2018 8:09 AM, Richard Hector wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I recently started using the Include directive in my .ssh/config file -
>> so all the definitions are now in .ssh/config.d/.
>>
>> Now bash completion of hostnames no longer works. Is this expected
>>
On 5/14/2018 8:09 AM, Richard Hector wrote:
Hi all,
I recently started using the Include directive in my .ssh/config file -
so all the definitions are now in .ssh/config.d/.
Now bash completion of hostnames no longer works. Is this expected
behaviour? Anyone know how to fix it, without revertin
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On Mon, May 14, 2018 at 08:56:47AM +0100, Joe wrote:
> On Sun, 13 May 2018 14:43:55 -0500
> Richard Owlett wrote:
>
>
> >
> > Is "sudo" and cousins an appropriate tool?
[...]
> If your micro-installation contains them, gksu and gksudo are graphic
On Sun, 13 May 2018 14:43:55 -0500
Richard Owlett wrote:
>
> Is "sudo" and cousins an appropriate tool?
>
>
I would have said so. In order to make changes to a computer, both
GParted and Synaptic (and aptitude, apt-get etc.) *require* root
privileges. There's no way around that. The point abo
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On Sun, May 13, 2018 at 02:51:49PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 05/13/2018 09:26 AM, bw wrote:
> >
> >
> >On Sun, 13 May 2018, Richard Owlett wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>The result I wish to achieve is to click on the icon for either GParted or
> >>Synapt
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