On 9/24/25 17:13, Van Snyder wrote:
This might NOT be a Debian problem but this list almost surely has
knowledgeable correspondents, so here goes…
I upgraded my computer with a new MSI Z90 board,
I do not see a "Z90" motherboard on the MSI web site (?). Please
provide a URL.
Is your moth
Van Snyder wrote:
> I upgraded my computer with a new MSI Z90 board, Intel I9-14900K, 32
> GB, 1 TB NVME drive.
Intel CPUs are known to exhibit issues if they draw more power than specified,
especially when overclocked or under heavy load.
https://www.reddit.com/r/intel/comments/17wcr1p/comment/
>> That was not the experience reported in the link I sent. And I'd expect
>> a RAID rebuild/scrub should result in large sequential operations, which
>> should not trigger the usual SMR weakness. Maybe it depend on specifics
>> of how the rebuild/scrub proceeds?
> We might be wandering rather of
On 9/24/25 10:38, Nicolas George wrote:
Andy Smith (HE12025-09-24):
It's not normally hard in 2025 to tell from specs what is and isn't an
SMR drive though.
A pointer would be appreciated.
Seagate UK publishes a list of CMR vs. SMR, etc., drives:
https://www.seagate.com/gb/en/products/cmr-
On 25/9/25 08:13, Van Snyder wrote:
Debian 12 started crashing — display virgo intacto, but mouse frozen,
keyboard frozen with num lock and scroll lock lamps flashing, can't
SSH to it, can't HTTP to it,….
I had the same symptoms on my Ryzen motherboard but the same problem
occurs on Intel
This might NOT be a Debian problem but this list almost surely has
knowledgeable correspondents, so here goes…
I upgraded my computer with a new MSI Z90 board, Intel I9-14900K, 32
GB, 1 TB NVME drive.
Debian 12 started crashing — display virgo intacto, but mouse frozen,
keyboard frozen with num l
> I find even startpage.com which pays Google to use their search has
> failed to find things that the same search on Googles site brings up.
I expect you can say the same about any two web search services.
IOW anecdotal evidence doesn't say much, here.
BTW, for all you (or I) know, there's a we
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 12:08:59PM -0700, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
I just tried displaying a JPEG file with ristretto. Rather than popping
up right away, there was a delay of 30 seconds or so before the image
finally appeared. Running ps, I found a process called tumblerd, which
appeared to be cons
>> > If I will use the kernel of Debian Trixie or more recent, do I still
>> > need to worry about SMR drives, or will they just work?
>>
>> They should just work (see
>> https://www.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder/comments/14nz7ow/extensive_testing_smr_results_with_raid_rebuild/
>> for example), but be
I just tried displaying a JPEG file with ristretto. Rather than popping
up right away, there was a delay of 30 seconds or so before the image
finally appeared. Running ps, I found a process called tumblerd, which
appeared to be consuming system resources. A bit of web searching
revealed that ot
Andy Smith (HE12025-09-24):
> It's not normally hard in 2025 to tell from specs what is and isn't an
> SMR drive though.
A pointer would be appreciated.
Thanks to everybody who provided accurate information here.
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 12:55 PM Tom Browder wrote:
>
> In order to download and compile simple-scan, it seems I need to
> install the Flatpak development environment. Is that going to cause
> any problems with the normal Debian install//update environment?
Try "Building Manually From Sources" i
Hi,
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 11:35:41AM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > If I will use the kernel of Debian Trixie or more recent, do I still
> > need to worry about SMR drives, or will they just work?
>
> They should just work (see
> https://www.reddit.com/r/DataHoarder/comments/14nz7ow/extensive
On Wed, 24 Sep 2025 14:35:26 +
Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 09:30:44AM -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
> > In order to download and compile simple-scan, it seems I need to
> > install the Flatpak development environment. Is that going to cause
> > any problems with the norm
On 24/9/25 20:59, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 07:52:30AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 9/24/25 5:23 AM, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
Ditching google is still a good idea, though.
Not really a great solution atleast today. I find even startpage.com which
pays Google to use t
Hello. I'm Korean and use debian 13.
fbterm can show hangul. But i cannot write hangul at tty
i can input hangul in x windows. But I can't write hangul at tty.
How can I solve this?
Hi,
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 09:30:44AM -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
> In order to download and compile simple-scan, it seems I need to
> install the Flatpak development environment. Is that going to cause
> any problems with the normal Debian install//update environment?
Can I ask why you need to c
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 02:07:45PM +0100, alain williams wrote:
As for how you use them: if you do a lot of writing to the disk then do not use
SMR.
*non sequential* writing. If you have one thread writing big chunks at a
time there's no real difference between SMR and CMR.
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 04:44:31PM +0300, static char wrote:
> I can't find a libqt5scxml5 package in official Debian13 repos.
> However other qt5 packages are present.
> Also I was unable to find any information in global web
> Is this an error, or libqt5scxml5 package was not released for some s
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 02:58:37PM +0200, didier gaumet wrote:
> I am not at all knowledgeable on theses subjects.
I found this explantion good:
https://www.howtogeek.com/803276/cmr-vs.-smr-hard-drives-whats-the-difference/
As for how you use them: if you do a lot of writing to the disk then do
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 07:52:30AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 9/24/25 5:23 AM, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > Ditching google is still a good idea, though.
> > >
> >
> > Not really a great solution atleast today. I find even startpage.com which
> > pays Google to use their search
Hello Nicolas,
I am not at all knowledgeable on theses subjects.
From a quick research, it seems that SMR technology is already
not-so-new, and can be found among others technologies on the market.
Some workarounds seem to still be developed (search SMR on github) and
Seagate indicates it i
On 9/24/25 5:23 AM, Kevin Chadwick wrote:
Ditching google is still a good idea, though.
Not really a great solution atleast today. I find even startpage.com which
pays Google to use their search has failed to find things that the same
search on Googles site brings up.
I've been using Duck
Hi All,
Perhaps my question speaks to Linux development generally, but it is
aimed for developers here.
Likely tied to Google recently losing an antitrust suit around its search
tool, the company removed direct access to google search for many lower
graphics and open source browsers.
Tools like
ср, 24 сент. 2025 г. в 16:46, Nicolas George :
> I mean, if some hard drives are unusable with RAID, at some point the
> authors of the kernel will implement work-arounds to make them work
> anyway, and the manufacturers will tweak their firmwares to avoid
> cutting themselves from the server mark
On 2025-09-24 03:25, Dan Ritter wrote:
Karen Lewellen wrote:
Instead, I am seeking, where I can actually ask the question, to get
a
sense of what Debian developers charge for their services.
Neither the Links, or elinks developers list are places to which I
have
access.
If being financiall
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 01:46:26PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I am in the market to buy a pair of non-identical ≥ 10 tera-octets hard
> drives to use as mdadm RAID1. There this info floating around that some
> large hard drives use a technology named “SMR” and are bad for RAID.
Find o
Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Hi Andy,
> You are entitled to your opinion.
> Thanks for our perspective.
> If you are confused by the question, and seemingly are unqualified to
> answer, perhaps simply ignore this thread then?
You originally asked:
"How much would it cost to pay a developer to upg
Le 24/09/2025 à 12:10, didier gaumet a écrit :
[...]
a) if you do not already have a elinks.conf file, copy /home/
didier/.elinks/elinks.conf to /home/didier/.config/elinks/elinks.conf
(replacing 'didier' by your username
[...]
Sorry for posting this nonsense (I am absent minded), what I s
On Wed, Sep 24, 2025 at 11:08:56AM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Will Mengarini (HE12025-09-24):
> > FWIW, I'd also like to see this fixed. Servers usually
> > have no graphics system installed, so Googling some
> > random thing while standing in a server room has now become
> > impossible. I've
Maybe the most simple option, but it works for me when I want
concatenate PDF's:
gs -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -q -sDEVICE=pdfwrite -sOutputFile=$OUTPUTFILE.pdf
$FILE_IN1.pdf $FILE_IN3.pdf
Toni Mas
Missatge de Tom Browder del dia ds., 20 de
set. 2025 a les 16:48:
>
> I have a new HP all-in-one printer I
Whilst it doesn't specify rates (perhaps that's an area for
improvement?), The Debian website does maintain a list of Consultants:
https://www.debian.org/consultants/
--
Jonathan Dowland
j...@debian.org
https://jmtd.net
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