tion tests>.
p.d.o has a pretty good search function, this should point you in the
right direction: <https://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=memtest>
hth
dt
--
Dave Thayer / Denver, Colorado USA / d...@thayer-boyle.com
Whenever you read a good book, it's like the author is
ed.
> It remains a concern for me, but regardless the tool has worked very well.
>
It looks like rdiff-backup has a new maintainer as of February 2016, sol1. See
<http://rdiff-backup.org/>. There may be some progress forthcoming
after all.
dt
--
Dave Thayer / Denver, Colorado USA / d..
t;. Commenting this out cured the emergency mode
problem. I'm not sure why this was in there in the first place, but a
google search suggests it was some sort of kludge to get an ancient
version of virtualbox to behave.
hth
dt
--
Dave Thayer / Denver, Colorado USA / d...@thayer-boyle.com
W
have a look at the "logger" command. It
will let your script send messages to the system logs, and you can
pipe command output into it for use in the log entry.
For example, if I type:
date | logger
I get:
Apr 22 20:13:47 hedorah dave: Tue Apr 22 20:13:47 MDT 2014
in /var/l
API.
In PDF jargon this index is known as the PDF's bookmarks.
According to this <http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/17065>
discussion, pdftk should do the trick. You will need the version from
experimental (1.45) in able to update the bookmarks, but the version
in stable should le
te.
>
Oddly enough, while Yahoo! charges for POP access, they enable IMAP
access on the free accounts. I'm guessing that's for mobile device
support. Icedove knows the right thing to do, or look up the
instructions on the Yahoo! help pages.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever yo
plaintext with thunderbird, and
Icedove should be the same:
<http://kb.mozillazine.org/Plain_text_e-mail_%28Thunderbird%29>
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talk
haven't
> looked at Libreoffice Base in a looong time).
>
You might want to have a look at the Dabo framework
<http://dabodev.com/>. Written in python by some ex-foxpro devs with
data-oriented RAD in mind.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it'
system for quite some time until my last HD upgrade.
Unfortunately, virtualbox is unhappy in such a system, so you have to
set up a 64-bit chroot. There's information on the VB wiki here:
<https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Setup_Jail>. It's kind of a PITA, but
it works.
HTH
dt
--
Dave
x27;t
be supported.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books. - Jack Handey &qu
1.debian.i386.deb
I suspect these same steps would be needed installing in an i386
system anyway as the ln & mkdir changes reflect locations in newer
systems and the "--force all" is required, erm, normally.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good boo
yes working...
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books. - Jack Handey "De
``watch du'' to be very useful.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why I don't like to read
| go
he resulting PDFs into
a single file.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good book
by umounting an
already removed drive.
I prefer to use a combination of udev rules and automount to handle
removable media, since I generally avoid using desktop managers.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right
On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 04:00:03PM +, T o n g wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Jul 2010 22:32:09 -0600, Dave Thayer wrote:
>
> >> The camera is the same. Something get changed on Debian side? How can I
> >> fix it? (photos are from mounted SD card via SD card reader).
> >
&
systohc --utc
hwclock --hctosys --utc
My rockboxed ipod shows files with timestamps off by the time
difference between localtime and UTC, as if the tz=UTC option was
selected in mount, and when I apply the work-around in the bug report
things are straightened out.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer
device on /var/autofs/usb/zodiac, when it
> is accessed.
>
It should be noted that the --ghost option of automount will create
an appropriate "ghost" directory for the device's mount point. For the
above auto.master stanza you could use:
/var/autofs/usb /etc/auto.usb --ti
in the bounds of the DE world. I'm kind
of a retro-grouch, so these things don't do me a whole lot of good.
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-b
devices such as my ipod generate spurious device names during
plugging, so there's a delayed test of the mountpoint, and if it's
bogus autofs will remove it.
This script contains more than its fair share of crockery, and could
use improvement, but it works for me.
dt
--
Dave Thayer
automount map is created for /media/auto/rsnapshot_backup/.
When unplugged, the map and mount directory is removed.
My script still has some rough edges, It contains a fair amount of
crockery to deal with devices which generate multiple add events, such
as my ipod.
It's fairly short so I'l
:
@reboot root test -L /dev/disk/by-uuid/4823-93A9 && fsck.vfat -a
/dev/disk/by-uuid/4823-93A9 && mount /mnt/usb8gig
(all on one line, with terminating newline)
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | autho
If you don't mind working inside a web browser, a TiddlyWiki can do
all of this and a lot more. <http://tiddlywiki.com/>
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@th
problem, you could be getting bit by this
CUPS bug: <http://bugs.debian.org/519265>. Simplest solution for me is
to use a2ps for my plaintext printing needs.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right ther
ostscript" available for free download at
<http://www.rightbrain.com/pages/books.html>
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why
olves a fair amount of effort, so if you can
borrow CD versions of your LPs or find a cheap used CD you're better
off ripping the CD than spending a lot of time in Audacity trying to
get a clean LP rip.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denv
m USB and Firewire
devices when they are plugged in. Since it has some fairly long lines,
I am attaching it rather than including the text in-line.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room t
edit your xorg.conf to set up the nv
driver as a fallback.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you, which is why I don't like to read
, you can use pretty much any DVD
authoring method you like. I stuck with kdenlive for the editing and
then, since I have mythtv installed already, used mytharchive for a
quick and dirty DVD.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA |
60.0 56.0
>320x24060.0
>
These look like the basic VESA resolutions. I wonder if you could
force any additional resolutions by adding custom modelines to your
xorg.conf file.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Co
g similar to text.ps from the psprint package in CTAN
<http://www.ctan.org/get/dviware/psprint/unix/text.ps>
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle.com | you,
rtunately it won't get fixed[1].
According to our friends over at redhat, switching to an analog VGA
cable might help things [2].
[1] https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3654
[2] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=469224
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a g
ter_list.cgi>. According
to this database these models all work "mostly" under linux.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@thayer-boyle
won't need a powered hub.
>
> So I guess the better strategy is to get a powered hub so that you can connect
> _any_ USB accessory to it--powered or not--thereafter?
>
>
One nice bonus about having a powered hub is that it can be used to
recharge gadgets such as cellphones
dip - handle dialup IP connections
I'm not sure how long ago dip disappeared from Debian, the manpage is
dated 1995.
Cheers,
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d..
pports several such services, and
"apt-cache search shoutcast" gives several other candidates.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
d...@tha
er has a linux support page for this model at
<http://solutions.brother.com/bsc_ph/os/linux/linux_ql500550.html>
I bought mine refurbed about a year ago for about USD$30, and I see
that here in the States buy.com has them new for $35 shipped.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you re
n Debian, what
could possibly go wrong?) You get redirected to a fake malware scan
site which, big surprise, indicates that you need to download and
install Antivirus 2009 which is a fairly well known mallware.
Cheers,
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like
n SI units). For details see the wikipedia article
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Technology_Attachment#Drive_size_limitations>
There's a good chance that you will have to spring for a new controller.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like th
n if you don't intend to
install a full-blown myth setup.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
d debugging environment similar to
Borland's Turbo C and Pascal family. It has many features including
the ability to start many compilers, linkers and debuggers from a
menu-based interface or using keystrokes.
[...]
Debian has a package for damn near anything!
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whe
ages you need to use Christian Marillat's
repository at <http://debian-multimedia.org>. Carefully follow the
setup directions on that page so that you won't get bugged with a lot
of authentification warnings.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it
en patched, but it's still
a theoretical possibility that someone could come up with a exploit
which would work for mutt.
I'm not losing any sleep worrying...
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right ther
ic Keyboard"
InputDevice"Synaptics Touchpad"
InputDevice "USB Mouse" "CorePointer"
EndSection
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | au
ges) nor cygqin
> (because its can't go through a firewall that requires authentication).
>
Portableapps <http://portableapps.com/apps/office/openoffice_portable>
has OOo which, although intended to be run from a USB stick, works
just fine when unpacked to a local directory.
HTH
ernel for a low-spec machine such as a router, but you are doing it
on your higher powered workstation and then copying over the deb. You
wouldn't want or need an entire kernel tree on your target machine in
this case.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's
f the net
> that requires a mouse and a flash plugin), you can use an HTTP proxy for
> that. I think Squid can do what you need, but I haven't used it myself.
>
Squid + SquidGuard appears to be able to do this
<http://www.squidguard.org/Doc/extended.html#times>
HTH
dt
--
Da
might have a look at Freecoins <http://freecoins.sourceforge.net>.
It has a export module to create CSV and QIF. I have tried it but not
used it very much because I'm not really organized enough to use such
a program.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's lik
ot available in Debian, you need to download it from opera.com and
> install it with dpkg -i for example.
>
You can use apt-get or aptitude if you follow the instructions at
<http://deb.opera.com/>.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denve
then
n=1
while [ -e "$autofs_mount_dir/$mountpoint.$n" ]
do
let "n += 1"
done
mountpoint=$mountpoint.$n
fi
# Add map for device using FS appropriate options
if [ "$ID_FS_TYPE" = "vfat" ]
then
echo "$mountpoint"
tp://preview.tinyurl.com/37o2bz>
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books. - Jack
ill be
> thankfully appreciated,
Have a look at the official "DOOM III GNU/Linux FAQ"
<http://zerowing.idsoftware.com/linux/doom/> It contains the link
you're looking for as well as a bittorrent tracker link. Of course,
you'll want to read the other information there too...
:
device hp:libusb:002:004' is a Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 62x0C flatbed
scanner
I'm running sid with kernel 2.6.18-2-k7.
FWIW, I've found the 6200c's USB performance to be somewhat flaky;
sometimes I have to power-cycle the scanner to avoid getting error
messages from scanimage.
te?
>
If you're not adamant about using OpenGL drivers, electricsheep is a
gorgeous screensaver. It doesn't need OpenGL because it uses frames
rendered by machines all over the internet.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colora
says it
works with linux:
<http://www.geeks.com/details.asp?invtid=BLK-MP3-1GB&cat=MP3>
Disclaimer: I have no experience with this particular unit, but i have
purchased other cheap players at geeks.com in the past which were OK.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it
cks.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books. - Jack Handey "Deep Thoughts"
On Sat, Mar 10, 2007 at 10:15:29PM +0100, Jhair Tocancipa Triana wrote:
> David Baron writes:
>
> > Anything on line. The "man" is unreadable.
>
> http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/
>
This is also packaged in Debian for your disconnected convenience:
apt-get install
ot;0=Standard" to "0=Standard vt7" in the "[servers]" section of
gdm.conf. Mind you, this was a long time ago, but it's worth looking
into.
dt
[1] http://groups.google.com/group/linux.debian.laptop/msg/c92a24076c69749f
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good
grief loosing maildirs as well.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books. - Jack Hande
ngly
challenging to configure, but it does the job and is extremely flexable.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
u considered using the left and
right channels seperately for the audio sources? You might be able to
get by with some mixer software trickery to run L & R independently.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right t
t;festival" software is running. The maps are autoselected for best
resolution depending of your position. All Garmin GPS reveiver with a
serial output should be usable, also other GPS receiver which supports
NMEA protocol.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good
method is adequate for many applications.
[...]
Should be just what you need.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
managed to
mangle the keyring database in jpilot somehow. I ended up moving
.jpilot/Keys-Gtkr.pdb out of the way and letting jpilot download a fresh
copy from the palm.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there,
ns, xbiff replacement
$ sudo apt-get install melon
HTH
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good books.
the here text (unless you want your outfile to
contain " Some words" rather than "Some words") and the limit string
("EOF").
See <http://www.tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/here-docs.html#INDENTEDLS>
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book
oking for
/dev/hd*,
6) Rebooted and crossed fingers.
I am probably leaving some critical stuff out here, but hopefully this will
get you going in the right direction.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, i
>
FWIW, I've been using the RT2500 based Zonet ZEW1501 with good results.
Newegg has them for $19.50.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you
On Thu, Feb 16, 2006 at 11:02:36AM +0100, Cedric BRINER wrote:
>
> the reason to this, is that sysadmin can unlock screensavers of users.
>
An ugly, brute-force method to do this would be to log into a VC or ssh in
and (as root) kill the xscreensaver process.
dt
--
Da
t a fairly late priority (S90 or so) so that
it gets called after the networking and pcmcia initscripts have run.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, whi
On Thu, Sep 22, 2005 at 11:07:08PM -0400, Michael Spang wrote:
> aptitude install xchm
FWIW, gnochm also looks pretty nice, but the OP needs something text-based
which probably would rule these out.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver,
lists the contents of a chm file
chm_http - simplistic web server to allow browsing of chm files
without extracting them
These tools seem to be fairly crude, but you may be able to do somethng
useful with them.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a
ed version in his repository so you can
give it a shot without too much hassle.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
df which can be used to
concatinate single page TIFFs (from sane or xsane) into a single multi-page
tiff, and then convert it into a PDF. It should be a fairly simple task to
write a script to handle this.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Color
ACPI to monitor the power button. Acpid will do a clean shutdown and
power-off on most modern machines, not just laptops.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you,
n vipw:
[vipw] will set the appropriate locks to prevent file corruption
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to r
/prod/oet/cf/eas/reports/GenericSearch.cfm
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | Whenever you read a good book, it's like the
Denver, Colorado USA | author is right there, in the room talking to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] | you, which is why I don't like to read
| good b
7;t turn anything up though. I use
> 1.1.2dfsg1-3.
>
The version in sid has open bugs on this: #284480 and #288708.
I ended up downloading the 1.4 linux binaries from openoffice.org and
installing them in /opt as a temporary measure until these bugs are closed.
dt
--
Dave Thayer
ytime I open a window/shell, it gets executed. That is not
> what I want.
>
I'm ssh'ed in right now and see that the following variables are set:
SSH_CLIENT=
SSH_CONNECTION=
SSH_TTY=/dev/pts/0
You probably could wrap your cd command with a conditional testing for one
of
bunch of ex-Foxpro developers trying to
make a Python RAD environment with some of the better features of visual
foxpro. It's still fairly immature, but it looks real promising.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be
but for post win2k machines you
may want to use the linux cifs drivers instead. Somewhere in the /.
discussion of the recent smbfs exploit it was mentioned that smbfs has been
depreciated in favor of cifs, although cifs may still be a bit rough around
the edges.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WA
be noted
that in order to use these 'conduits' you have to hotsync your palm with the
computer, which means that palm desktop software would have to be installed
on each machine and the contents of your palm would be backed up to their
HDs. This is probably not something that you want to
n at
> certain threshold values):
Gkrellm can monitor sensors and run commands when thresholds are crossed.
The gotcha here is that it is not a background daemon, it has to be running
in somebody's X session. This may make it unsuitable for your needs.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNIN
On Wed, Oct 06, 2004 at 09:02:53AM +0200, Andrea Vettorello wrote:
> On Wed, 6 Oct 2004 00:33:54 -0600, Dave Thayer
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Mon, Oct 04, 2004 at 11:03:35AM +0800, Paolo Alexis Falcone wrote:
> > > On Sun, 03 Oct 2004 19:30:38 -0700, Paul John
3 FPS on glxgears on an AMD Athlon(tm) XP 2500+. Tuxracer
is playable -- barely.
Matrox is known for their high quality 2D, but for gaming you probably want
to look elsewhere.
HTH
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
jumpdrive_trio
/media/smartmedia -> /var/autofs/misc/smartmedia
I shortened the timeout in /etc/default/ to 2 seconds from 300, this may be
a bit too short but it hasn't caused problems yet.
I don't use KDE or Gnome, so for a visual indication of mounts I setup the
gkrellm file system kr
t;
Have you tried udevruler with this plugged in? I made most of my rules by
snooping around /sys using lynx, but the udevruler program looks a lot
easier.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
[EMAIL PROT
ail under mozilla (sid) works fine for me. Perhaps you have a
corrupted cookie or some other local setting.
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED
> message. (Lazy, done no research yet, but hoping someone can grunt a
> one word answer).
>
The munpack utility (part of the mpack package) will do this. It also
works as a pipe, so you can call it directly from your procmail recipe.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Pers
quot;%k", symlink="jukebox"
BUS="usb", SYSFS{product}="C2Z,D520Z,C220Z", NAME="%k", symlink="camera"
BUS="usb", SYSFS{product}="Palm Handheld", NAME="%k", symlink="pilot"
I use autofs to mount these, but the symlinks should work with fstab just as
well.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
ther providers of similar services, google will reveal all.
dt
--
Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
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On Tue, Aug 17, 2004 at 08:31:09PM -, John Conover wrote:
>
> I need to make a .cdr file of a sine wave at various frequencies.
>
Sox should be able to do the trick.
dt
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Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
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rting udev... do I have to reboot for the changes to take effect?
Another thing that bit me was some leftover lines in /etc/lilo.conf from
2.4.x kernels like ``append = "hdc=ide-scsi ignore=hdc.."''.
This was causing udev to not generate /dev/hdc*, let alone the symlinks.
--
cdrom and dvdrom drives and it didn't create any links for them.
>
The script /etc/udev/cdsymlinks.sh addresses this issue. Just copy the
usage example into whatever rules file you use for local configuration
(I use /etc/udev/rules.d/local.rules).
HTH
dt
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Dave Thayer | WAR
t; papers. I would like to know can this be done in Linux?
>
> (Frankly speaking I dont want to boot windows for just adding comments
> to a pdf file ;) )
I've successfully run an older version (v3.1 iirc) of Acrobat Exchange
under wine. I little bit glitchy but it gets the job
/dev/jukebox, /dev/camera) instead
of trying to keep track of what is on /dev/sda1 this time.
HTH
dt
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ff=[0|1]
Work this into a hotplug script and you should be good to go.
dt
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Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
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ich can take pdf as input
perform various transformations including cropping. This might be a little
easier than pdf2ps+gimp
dt
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Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
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have a matrox card.
HTH
dt
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Dave Thayer | WARNING: Persons denying the existence of
Denver, Colorado USA | robots may be robots themselves.
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e data wishes.
Here's my /etc/gpm.conf (trimmed of comments):
device=/dev/input/mice
responsiveness=
repeat_type=msc
type=imps2
append="-3"
sample_rate=
HTH
dt
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