On Wed, Mar 13, 2019, 00:38 Default User wrote:
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 12, 2019, 04:49 Ivan Ivanov wrote:
>
>> Well, I know a good solution that will work 100%: switch from Debian
>> to Devuan to avoid this SystemD. sadly Debian does not provide the
>> init system freedom, but if you'd switch to its'
On Tue, Mar 12, 2019, 04:49 Ivan Ivanov wrote:
> Well, I know a good solution that will work 100%: switch from Debian
> to Devuan to avoid this SystemD. sadly Debian does not provide the
> init system freedom, but if you'd switch to its' brother distribution
> (Devuan) it still provides all the b
On Tuesday, March 12, 2019 05:09:11 PM bw wrote:
> 3 min later (I am driving with one hand trying to up the lcd brighntness
> so I can see) two or more prompts about grub and some issue, whatever hit
> enter, ok another prompt, hit space, then enter, try not to hit another
> vehicle.
I hope you
On 3/11/19 11:13 AM, deb wrote:
I saw this question come up
and it set off bells.
Someone asked what the status of WRITING to NTFS drives was.
That it was not yet supported (?) .
*MY* Assumptions:
* MIXED NETWORK, with Win, Mac, Linux (EXT4 formatted).
* many portable 1-5TB drives
On 3/11/19 3:35 PM, Thomas D Dial wrote:
On Mon, 2019-03-11 at 14:13 -0400, deb wrote:
I saw this question come up
and it set off bells.
Someone asked what the status of WRITING to NTFS drives was.
That it was not yet supported (?) .
*MY* Assumptions:
* MIXED NETWORK, with Win, Mac,
On Tue 12 Mar 2019 at 19:20:34 -0400, deb wrote:
> Fortunately Brian has blocked me,
Eh? You'll have to explain.
--
Brian.
On 3/11/19 3:47 PM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 11.03.2019 23:13, deb wrote:
I saw this question come up
and it set off bells.
Someone asked what the status of WRITING to NTFS drives was.
That it was not yet supported (?) .
*MY* Assumptions:
* MIXED NETWORK, with Win, Mac, Linu
On 3/11/19 5:08 PM, Mart van de Wege wrote:
And yeah, Debian is an upstream distribution, so you will have a lot of
people who are being overly purist about Linux solutions, because they
have the luxury of working in homogenous environments. Unfortunately a
lot of them are lousy communicators.
I have installed Stretch on an SSD, with uefi, without any trouble.
Me, as well (9.8).
Here's one thing to watch out for.
Unlike Ubuntu, MInt, etc, debian will not install non-free drivers by
default.
In the virtualbox scenario you had before, VB does an excellent of
emulating the ne
I see this with an apt-cache search but I drew back when
I saw that it wants to include "john-data" to crack passwords.
*`tiger *- checks system security but uses john-data, which cracks
passwords`
I look forward to comments from those who have used either or want to
suggest an alternative
On 3/12/19 11:05 AM, David Wright wrote:
On Tue 12 Mar 2019 at 15:01:32 (+0100), Mart van de Wege wrote:
Stefan Monnier writes:
OP has a point though. The real world happens to have a huge amount of
heterogeneous networks, and asking for tools to keep those systems safe
is legitimate.
I di
On 3/12/19 2:03 PM, Erwan David wrote:
When upgrading my lenovo T530 I was warned that nvidia-driver does not
support anymore my graphic card. Thus I chose to not upgrade in the dialog.
Now I have partially installed packages for nvidia driver, so what
should I do with this ?
And what should
Curt wrote:
> I don't follow how this follows from your erroneous attribution.
try harder ;-)
On Tue, 12 Mar 2019 19:03:12 +0100
Erwan David wrote:
Hello Erwan,
>And what should I have done ? Install non working drivers ?
You should have read the warning; It tells which version of the legacy
packages you need to install.
I'm guessing, based on the fact that you updated today, you're u
When upgrading my lenovo T530 I was warned that nvidia-driver does not
support anymore my graphic card. Thus I chose to not upgrade in the dialog.
Now I have partially installed packages for nvidia driver, so what
should I do with this ?
And what should I have done ? Install non working drivers ?
Hey,
My name is Klara Mauger and I'm interested in a position.
I've attached a copy of my resume.
The password for the document is 1234
Thank you!
--
Klara Mauger
<>
On Tue 12 Mar 2019 at 15:01:32 (+0100), Mart van de Wege wrote:
> Stefan Monnier writes:
>
> >> OP has a point though. The real world happens to have a huge amount of
> >> heterogeneous networks, and asking for tools to keep those systems safe
> >> is legitimate.
> >
> > I did not perceive the OP
Stefan Monnier writes:
>> OP has a point though. The real world happens to have a huge amount of
>> heterogeneous networks, and asking for tools to keep those systems safe
>> is legitimate.
>
> I did not perceive the OP's request to be about the case where you
> administer lots of machines and yo
On Tue 12/Mar/2019 09:39:53 +0100 didier gaumet wrote:
> Wikipedia makes a comparison of Linux antivirus:
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_antivirus_software#Linux
It's astonishing that there is an "Email Security" column, with random yes/no
contents. I wrote a note on that:
http
On 03/12/2019 05:44 AM, Joe wrote:
On Tue, 12 Mar 2019 08:20:31 +0330
"Iman P." wrote:
Dear Sir/Madam
First thanks for your time.
I have an Acer laptop (Aspire E1, x64, amd i7, ram 16, vga 2).
My base tasks are using virtual machines.
I use dual boot for Win10 & Debian 8.6 & the type of
On Tue, Mar 12, 2019 at 12:25:34PM +0100, Jonathan Sélea wrote:
> NGINX was recently acquired by F5:
>
> https://www.nginx.com/blog/nginx-joins-f5/
>
> I came to think of when Oracle bought MySQL and it was switched from
> debian in favour of MariaDB instead. Would NGINX get the same fate in
> f
NGINX was recently acquired by F5:
https://www.nginx.com/blog/nginx-joins-f5/
I came to think of when Oracle bought MySQL and it was switched from
debian in favour of MariaDB instead. Would NGINX get the same fate in
favour or (example) Tengine (http://tengine.taobao.org/)?
What is your thought
On 2019-03-10 14:58, deb wrote:
Starting assumption: I do want to run A/V.
* I get that it may actually INCREASE attack surface.
* But I have Windows & Mac stuff going back and forth to Debian 9.8
and just want to check.
* (Clamscan already caught 4 things)
I'm of the opinion that window
Iman P. wrote:
> I use dual boot for Win10 & Debian 8.6 & the type of Bios boot is “Legacy”.
>
> I gonna change my HDD to SSD & install just Debian 9.8 (so need at least
> two primary partitions).
>
> My mainboard supports both legacy & uefi mode.
>
> I know uefi mode just run on GPT not MBR.
>
On Tue, 12 Mar 2019 08:20:31 +0330
"Iman P." wrote:
> Dear Sir/Madam
>
> First thanks for your time.
>
> I have an Acer laptop (Aspire E1, x64, amd i7, ram 16, vga 2).
>
> My base tasks are using virtual machines.
>
> I use dual boot for Win10 & Debian 8.6 & the type of Bios boot is
> “Legacy
On 2019-03-11, deloptes wrote:
> Curt wrote:
>
>> I don't believe he did, actually. I believe that's what Reco wrote.
>
> but there is no secure OS, as soon as you get connected to the network, and
> if you have a server with multiple users ... well. We used to put sensitive
> servers in DMZ aside
Wikipedia makes a comparison of Linux antivirus:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_antivirus_software#Linux
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