Hello Paul,
On Thu, 2019-09-12 at 13:36 -0400, Paul Thomas wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I see that apt-offline is not part of buster. Is there any plan to
> add it?
>
It is currently out of Buster (and Debian Testing) because of bug:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=871656
I have hoped
John Hasler wrote:
> All clocks tick. "Tick" no longer means "emit a noise once per second"
> in modern chronometry.
+1
The clock frequency is produced by oscillator at 32.768kHz which means that
15 flops at this frequency produce 1sec. This is one tick.
On 2019-09-12 at 23:20, John Hasler wrote:
> The Wanderer writes:
>
>> Wherever you need to specify midnight in a form where specifying any
>> other time would get the "AM"/"PM"/"M"(eridiem) abbreviation.
>
>> To have a two-letter abbreviation for midnight but a one-letter one
>> for noon might b
The Wanderer writes:
> Wherever you need to specify midnight in a form where specifying any
> other time would get the "AM"/"PM"/"M"(eridiem) abbreviation.
> To have a two-letter abbreviation for midnight but a one-letter one
> for noon might be acceptable, although it would feel lopsided to me,
>
David Wright writes:
> Odd that they decided to employ that logic in the 21st century after
> (most) clocks had ceased to tick.
All clocks tick. "Tick" no longer means "emit a noise once per second"
in modern chronometry.
> But it is remarkable to use logic to prove a contradiction...
What con
On 2019-09-12 at 21:49, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 12:42:01 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> On 2019-09-12 at 12:03, David Wright wrote:
>>> It might be ambiguous if m were also an abbreviation for midnight,
>>> which I've never come across.
>>
>> Neither have I, but I also hav
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 14:13:19 (-0500), John Hasler wrote:
> rhkramer writes:
> > If 12:01 pm is two minutes after 11:59 am, then 12:00 is AM.
>
> AM means "before the meridian", that is, before the Sun crosses the
> meridian[1]. PM means after the meridian. Time is the ordering of
> events. Th
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 12:42:01 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2019-09-12 at 12:03, David Wright wrote:
> > On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 09:42:03 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> >> On 2019-09-12 at 06:30, Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> >>> There is only one sensible interpretation:
> >>>
> >>> If 11:59 AM is tw
Hi,
> > I see that apt-offline is not part of buster. Is there any plan to add it?
>
> Only the maintainer would know about that. It is unlikely he reads this
> list.
https://bugs.debian.org/871656 is what keeps apt-offline out of testing
and thus stable.
Alex
David wrote:
> I didn't bother with the heatsinks that came with it. I just wanted a
> fan and some ventilation instead of a sealed little plastic oven.
Yes, a similar was ordered and arrived as well. I tend to plan all of this
in my head and usually it works so well, that I do not have to run to
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 13:36:35 -0400, Paul Thomas wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I see that apt-offline is not part of buster. Is there any plan to add it?
Only the maintainer would know about that. It is unlikely he reads this
list.
--
Brian.
rhkramer writes:
> If 12:01 pm is two minutes after 11:59 am, then 12:00 is AM.
AM means "before the meridian", that is, before the Sun crosses the
meridian[1]. PM means after the meridian. Time is the ordering of
events. The Sun crossing the meridian is an event which we call noon:
everything
On Tue, 2019-09-10 at 07:18 -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 09 September 2019 23:06:27 Thomas D Dial wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 2019-09-09 at 12:21 -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
(unrelated material omitted)
> > > $PITA problem, raspian insists the first, usr 1000 is
> > > "pi". Is there a foolproof
Hello,
I see that apt-offline is not part of buster. Is there any plan to add it?
thanks,
Paul
On 2019-09-12 at 12:03, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 09:42:03 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> On 2019-09-12 at 06:30, Dan Ritter wrote:
>>> There is only one sensible interpretation:
>>>
>>> If 11:59 AM is two minutes before 12:01 PM, then 12:00 is PM.
>>>
>>> If 11:59 PM is tw
On Thursday, September 12, 2019 08:26:23 AM Nate Bargmann wrote:
> Not all Walmarts are like that. ;-)
>
> The one in Beatrice, NE is as you describe, at least the north most
> entrance. The ones in Marysviile, KS and Fairbury, NE are "normal",
> i.e. ingress on the right when outside the store
On Thursday, September 12, 2019 08:09:18 AM Michael Stone wrote:
> The railroads solved this more than a century ago: you just never use
> 12:00 and stick with 11:59 or 12:01. Sometimes communicating clearly is
> more important than being right.
I like that (but getting everyone to adhere to that
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 09:42:03 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2019-09-12 at 06:30, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > David Wright wrote:
> >>
> >> What surprised me is the use of 12am and 12pm in the States. When I
> >> was at grammar school (in the days of 12hour times), you lost marks
> >> for writing ei
Hi Dear,
How are you doing hope you are fine and OK?
I was just going through the Internet search when I found your email address, I
want to make a new and special friend, so I decided to contact you to see how
we can make it work out if we can. Please I wish you will have the desire with
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 13:48:07 (-), Curt wrote:
> On 2019-09-12, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 07:31:13PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> >> Even more astonishing is the fact that the US Government switched
> >> their am/pm meanings sometime between 2000 and 2008, which shows
>
On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 01:48:07PM -, Curt wrote:
> On 2019-09-12, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 07:31:13PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> >> Even more astonishing is the fact that the US Government switched
> >> their am/pm meanings sometime between 2000 and 2008, which shows
On 2019-09-12, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 07:31:13PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
>> Even more astonishing is the fact that the US Government switched
>> their am/pm meanings sometime between 2000 and 2008, which shows
>> just how ambiguous they are.
>
> [citation needed]
>
>
ht
On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 09:42:03AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
I take a slightly different approach, based on the apparent actual
meanings of the words for which "AM" and "PM are abbreviations.
It seems intuitively obvious to me that between 11:59 Ante-Meridiem and
12:01 Post-Meridiem must lie 12
On 2019-09-12 at 06:30, Dan Ritter wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
>>
>> What surprised me is the use of 12am and 12pm in the States. When I
>> was at grammar school (in the days of 12hour times), you lost marks
>> for writing either of these contradictions. It was either 12 noon,
>> 12 midnight, or
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 06:30:21 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
> >
> > What surprised me is the use of 12am and 12pm in the States. When
> > I was at grammar school (in the days of 12hour times), you lost
> > marks for writing either of these contradictions. It was either
> > 12
On Thu 12 Sep 2019 at 06:23:04 (+), Jan Michael Greiner wrote:
> On Monday, September 9, 2019, 1:55:06 PM GMT+2, Charles Curley wrote:
> >> On Mon, 9 Sep 2019 10:20:37+ (UTC) Jan Michael Greiner wrote:
> >> With Debian Stretch (9.8) I had the display running with 3840x2160
> >> resolution a
On Wed, Sep 11, 2019 at 07:31:13PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> Even more astonishing is the fact that the US Government switched
> their am/pm meanings sometime between 2000 and 2008, which shows
> just how ambiguous they are.
[citation needed]
On Thursday 12 September 2019 08:16:57 David wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Sep 2019 at 16:14, deloptes wrote:
> > My RPI4 arrived as well - need to pick up also power supply and
> > cables, which arrived too. Excited to see how it performs.
>
> I have one of the official cases as well but after setting eye
* On 2019 12 Sep 06:16 -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Now I consider establishments like Walgreens, Rite-Aid, Walmart, and others
> to
> be foreign infiltrators, as, when they have an In and an Out door side by
> side,
> the In is on the left. (Ok, Walmart is only a halfway foreign infiltr
On Thu, 12 Sep 2019 at 16:14, deloptes wrote:
> My RPI4 arrived as well - need to pick up also power supply and cables,
> which arrived too. Excited to see how it performs.
I have one of the official cases as well but after setting eyes on it
I never even bothered to try it, due to the thermal
* On 2019 11 Sep 11:28 -0500, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 09, 2019 at 07:15:16AM -0500, Nate Bargmann wrote:
> > I did manage to grab all of the available PDF files and then grabbed
> > everything in HTML for good measure in my personal archive. I could
> > pass along the needed PDF file
On Thu, Sep 12, 2019 at 06:30:21AM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
David Wright wrote:
What surprised me is the use of 12am and 12pm in the States. When
I was at grammar school (in the days of 12hour times), you lost
marks for writing either of these contradictions. It was either
12 noon, 12 midnight,
On 2019-09-12, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> But, ok, I'll try to burn that into my memory -- at night (when it is dark)
> 12:00 (midnight) is the beginning of morning (12:00 am). During the day,
> when
> it is light 12:00 (noon) is the beginning of night (12:00 pm).
>
>> If 11:59 PM is two mi
Thomas George wrote:
> At login after booting up there is a symbol like a gear below the
> password entry line. I moved the mouse and clicked on this symbol.
> Several options appeared and I decided to try Classic Gnome. This worked
> but the next time I booted up the mouse was frozen. The symbo
On Thursday, September 12, 2019 06:30:21 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
> > Even more astonishing is the fact that the US Government switched
> > their am/pm meanings sometime between 2000 and 2008, which shows
> > just how ambiguous they are.
Wow! I believe that, I just didn't realiz
Jan Michael Greiner wrote:
> Dear all,
>
> My laptop: Lenovo E520
> Graphics: Intel HD Graphics 3000 (kernel module i915)
>
> External display AOC U2879VF, 28 inch, connected by HDMI cable
>
> With Debian Stretch (9.8) I had the display running with 3840x2160 resolution
> at 24Hz reduced blank
David Wright wrote:
>
> What surprised me is the use of 12am and 12pm in the States. When
> I was at grammar school (in the days of 12hour times), you lost
> marks for writing either of these contradictions. It was either
> 12 noon, 12 midnight, or 12 o'clock (where there's no ambiguity).
12 o'c
eve-filter -veW -c
/home/zen/etc/email/sieve-dovecot-config.conf -o
mail_location=mbox:/home/zen/mail:INBOX=/home/zen/mail/Inbox:INDEX=:UTF-8:VOLATILEDIR=/tmp/dovecot-volatile/%2.256Nu/%u:SUBSCRIPTIONS=dovecot_subscriptions
/home/zen/etc/email/sieve.rc email-incoming-unsorted
# PS0 Timestamp: 2
Hi
I have a kind of same problem.
A monitor able of displaying at 1920x1080.
Intel HD Graphics 620 with driver i915/modesetting.
With old Stable (kernel 4.9.0-9) it was working fine.
With new Stable (kernel 4.19.0-6) it set max display 1024x768.
See https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?
The installer "NVidia-something-bla*.run" can be started with the
--uninstall tag.
Have fun
Hans
Am Thu, 12 Sep 2019 10:10:58 +0200, Dominique Dumont schrieb:
On Thursday, 12 September 2019 04:44:50 CEST Carlos Kosloff wrote:
> Probem is I cannot uninstall old version because dpkg halts
On Thursday 12 September 2019 02:14:06 deloptes wrote:
> Gene Heskett wrote:
> >> https://wiki.debian.org/RaspberryPiImages
> >> https://www.raspberrypi.org/documentation/installation/
> >
> > Potential timeline?
> >
> > Cheers, Gene Heskett
>
> My RPI4 arrived as well - need to pick up also power
On Thursday, 12 September 2019 04:44:50 CEST Carlos Kosloff wrote:
> Probem is I cannot uninstall old version because dpkg halts:
>
> Welcome to the NVIDIA Software Installer for Unix/Linux
uh, no. That's not dpkg, it Nvidia's own installer. You should ask this
question on nvidia user forum.
Al
On 9/11/19 8:41 AM, Thomas George wrote:
At login after booting up there is a symbol like a gear below the
password entry line. I moved the mouse and clicked on this symbol.
Several options appeared and I decided to try Classic Gnome. This worked
but the next time I booted up the mouse was froz
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