W.D. McKinney wrote:
Thanks Derrick,
I have tried to Gordon Pape's qmail but no go due to unable to remove
exim ?
# apt-get remove --purge exim
Reading Package Lists... Done
Building Dependency Tree... Done
The following packages will be REMOVED:
exim* mutt*
0 packages upgraded, 0 newly insta
Aaron wrote:
I don't want the hassle of running a hybrid Woody/Sarge system, just
because I'm too lazy to deal with the depedencies, but I don't mind a
few bugs in exchange for a more recent version of KDE/gAIM/whatever.
One disadvantage of moving away from stable is that you don't have the
securi
Louie Miranda wrote:
Exchange was designed to work with the Microsoft Outlook mail client, so
if you want access
to the Exchange server from within Linux you will need an Exchange aware
mail client.
Without further context, the above is bullshit; Exchange speaks POP and
IMAP just fine.
Found this
Leif B. Kristensen wrote:
Hi,
I'm still fairly new to Debian and am trying to find my way around the
system. I've got some gripes about the naming practice and poor
documentation of Perl modules. As an example, I started out today to
find a package which I have used a lot on my W2K system, named
D
Paul Johnson wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Jun 12, 2003 at 06:19:02PM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
Mmmm, what if I have two machines that are on the same LAN segment,
having a conversation of interest, but I want to run my sniffer from,
say, a Linux server on the
Paul Johnson wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Mon, Jun 09, 2003 at 11:43:40AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
>
>>I take minor issue with this blanket statement: a switch doesn't really
>>gain you anything unless you're getting
Paul Johnson wrote:
>
>
> [1] Switch would be better.
>
I take minor issue with this blanket statement: a switch doesn't really
gain you anything unless you're getting enough traffic for collisions,
and takes away your ability to monitor everything (tcpdump, ethereal)
that's going on from one p
Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> Karsten M. Self wrote:
>
>>
>> By using symlinks, filehandle open to the old library will continue
>> to work while they are open.
>
>
> Are you *sure* this is a reason to use symlinks? I really thought
> old librarie
Will Trillich wrote:
>
> but the odd part is, they didn't just come in from the top
> (first uri was not "/"). it reflects either a) the result of a
> prior drill-down or 2) an exact echo of my previous request, but
> somehow coming from outside in the internet.
>
You may have already done th
Karsten M. Self wrote:
on Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 10:18:46AM +0100, Jeff Elkins ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Is there one, or if so is it perceptible? For instance, I compiled kde and qt
to live in /opt. If I moved /opt to /usr/local/kde31 and made /opt a symlink
would this create overhead a human
Pigeon wrote:
>
> On the modem box I do
> echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
> ipchains -A forward -s 192.168.1.1/32 -d 0.0.0.0/0 -j ACCEPT -b
> ipchains -P forward ACCEPT
> pon ukonline
> ping 195.40.1.36 (this is a ukonline DNS server)
> ... and it works.
>
> I go back to the main b
Steve Lamb wrote:
> On Wed, 05 Feb 2003 09:47:22 -0500
> John M Flinchbaugh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>i need:
>>a) to get squirrelmail to do ssl
>>b) get uw-imapd to not require ssl
>>c) find an imap implementation that actually works with squirrelmail.
>
>
>
>>any recommendations?
Pigeon wrote:
[cut]
in the meantime I still want it to copy data
from one serial port to the other so I can continue to dial out as
normal from the main box.
Of course, Linux can't run my DOS program. But there's a package
called snooper which seems to do the same thing. So I installed it on
the
Mike Mimic wrote:
Hi!
I have installed an Amavis system for Exim
(amavis-exim). I have configured the Amavis
and Exim and now e-mails are scanned and correctly
filtered.
But there is a problem. Exim now accpets e-mail
even for non-existent users. It than scans e-mails and
than it refuses them i
Pigeon wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 19, 2002 at 01:00:57AM -0500, Brian Nelson wrote:
>
>> Ehem. Mail-Copies-To: never. Doesn't mutt respect that header?
>>
>> "Robert L. Harris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>
>>> Thus spake Brian Nelson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>>>
>>>
http://kmself.home.netcom.com/
Nathan E Norman wrote:
On Fri, Dec 06, 2002 at 11:57:08AM -0600, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
I looked in the crontab stuff, but couldn't figure out what makes these.
Might be nice to be able to add stuff. :-)
Thanks in advance.
Check out /etc/cron.daily/standard
Doh! How did I miss
I looked in the crontab stuff, but couldn't figure out what makes these.
Might be nice to be able to add stuff. :-)
Thanks in advance.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bill Moseley wrote:
I've got a Debain machine running exim acting as a MASQ machine on a pppoe
connection (e.g. the machine has two NICs).
The hostname is "burn". The domain, for this example, is "burn.foo.net"
The problem is if I send mail to outside machines:
echo "hello" | mail [EMAIL PR
Tim Verry wrote:
Nope, just installed from 3.0_r0/i386/debian-30r0-i386-binary-1.iso
This:
http://packages.debian.org/cgi-bin/
search_contents.pl?word=smbfs.o&searchmode=searchfiles&case=insensitive&version=stable&arch=i386
tells me that smbfs.o is in the 2.2.20 kernel image package, so that
Michiel Brendel wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hello,
After updating squirrelmail, according to [SECURITY] [DSA 191-1] New
squirrelmail packages fix cross site scripting bugs . I encounter a problem
viewing the options page ( /src/options.php )
This is the error message:
Fatal error
Vittorio wrote:
In a magazine I've found a CD with many ttf files for the use
with Photoshop under windows.
What's the straightforward way to install those ttf files under debian
woody for the use with gnome 1.4, OpenOffice, and - above all - the
Gimp?
I think you'll want to check this out:
ht
Sonny Kupka wrote:
I have the need and desire to compile some programs myself.
I want to keep these up to date and keep my distribution Woody in sync.
I wanted to recompile (as an example) qpopper
I went through the steps to get the sources.. apt-get source qpopper
I then edited the qpopper*/d
Rodney Green wrote:
Example:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If the accounts are dependent on a system user account there can only be one
webmaster account. Of course, an alias
can be setup that points [EMAIL PROTECTED] to a different local
system user like webmaster2. With some
e-mail systems I've seen (Wind
Price, Erik wrote:
-Original Message-
From: David A. Rogers [mailto:darogers@;speakeasy.net]
Sent: Monday, October 21, 2002 11:47 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Two Debian 3.0 reviews at Slashdot
I did a quick check on the xfree86 site. It doesn't look
like the intense3d
is su
Kurt Yoder wrote:
> Hey list
>
> I recently tried to set up diald, but can't get the automatic internet
> connection to work. I've definitely got a working internet connection if I
> start it manually using pon. I have diald installed, and all the configs
> look OK to my inexperienced eye. What e
Andy Saxena wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 11, 2002 at 09:23:25AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
>
>>Andy Saxena wrote:
>>
>>>I don't think Squirrelmail allows access to POP mailboxes.
>>>
>>
>>Check out squirrelmail's web page. Look at the plugins
Andy Saxena wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 10, 2002 at 10:03:05AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
>
>>Andy Saxena wrote:
>>
>>>I am a happy squirrelmail user, but I think the above solution is an
>>>elegant solution for a large user base. It's low-maintenance and
&
Joey Quevedo wrote:
> Oki wrote:
>
>>What do you have in /etc/ppp/options?
>
>
> I leave mine as is-default config. Should I change it?
>
>
>>How do you set your /etc/ppp/options.ttyS?
>
> I set mine with :. Both in the same network of
> course.
Try this:
ipcp-accept-remote
in your option
Andy Saxena wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 03, 2002 at 01:33:29PM -0400, Matthew Weier O'Phinney wrote:
>
>>I actually do all this, too (except the squirrelmail part -- I just use
>>mail2web with the IMAP options for web access). It *is* a beautiful
>>setup -- can't recommend it highly enough!
>>
>
>
> I
Erik Price wrote:
>>Unfortunately, I couldn't access my company email account
>>from Linux, and using Lynx to access this freebie Yahoo account
>>didn't
>>work because Lynx doesn't yet support https.
Check out lynx-ssl, or even links-ssl, from the non-US section of Debian.
>>
>>Because upon res
Andy Saxena wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I use Cyrus as my IMAP server. When I transfer email from my ISP to
> Cyrus I use a procmail recipe. Before any of the procmail rules are
> applies I backup all email into a backup folder. I would like to be able
> to run a cron job to automatically delete messages fr
Andy Saxena wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 04, 2002 at 10:45:48AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
>
>>Actually, I just use fetchmail to download from my ISP's POP3 store to
>>my local Cyrus IMAP server (via procmail).
>>
>>So your situation is completely different
Andy Saxena wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 03, 2002 at 10:58:01AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
>
>>
>>You might want to try this. I don't know if it makes any difference or
>>not, but cyrdeliver is picky and not well documented, and I notice that
>>I always use the u
John Joe wrote:
> i install woody but X and sound do not work.
I have the exact answer, but won't yield it, because I'd like you to go
to another distro.
--
"Buy this magazine or we'll shoot this dog."
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble?
Matthew Weier O'Phinney wrote:
> -- David P James <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
> (on Wednesday, 02 October 2002, 11:05 PM -0400):
>
>>I've recently started using mutt remotely when I'm on campus to check
>>for email that Mozilla is automatically downloading to my Debian box at
>>home
>
> Not to
Andy Saxena wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I tried under a different subject heading that may have been misleading.
> So here goes another try:
>
> I am trying to use procmail for local delivery. My setup consists of
> exim and cyrus from sid.
>
> Calling the localuser director before procmail I am easily ab
Bill Wohler wrote:
> "Keith G. Murphy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>>Bill Wohler wrote:
>>
>>> I was under the impression that one could simply install foomatic and
>>> then CUPS would then be able to present the available printers and
>
Bill Wohler wrote:
> I was under the impression that one could simply install foomatic and
> then CUPS would then be able to present the available printers and
> drivers to the user. CUPS would then call foomatic-configure on behalf
> of the user to automatically put together a ppd file. T
Bob Proulx wrote:
> will trillich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-29 23:30:31 -0500]:
>
>>okay, apt-get is wonderful and all that -- but when sticking
>>with a tried-and-true potato setup, it's hard to get feature
>>updates without some extra-apt activity...
>
>
> Wait, wait, wait. Did you say "s
Matt Price wrote:
> Hi,
>
> So I have a couple of small websites I'm trying to move over to
> linux. Up to now I've managed them with dreamweaver, which has two
> great features:
>
> -- templates that you can update, i.e. you can build a site around one
>set of templates, with one 'look', a
That leads me to this thought: if you really want access to a GUI
desktop on your home machine, and/or don't want to carry an Putty floppy
with you...
What about installing (Tight)VNC on your Linux machine, and use its
HTTP/Java capabilities to get to your machine from any
Internet-connected
Colin Watson wrote:
On Tue, Jun 25, 2002 at 09:53:07AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
I noticed the announcement of the patch to SSH (version 3.3) in
security-announce. I tried to upgrade to the patched Potato version.
This was the pertinent line in my sources.list:
deb http
I noticed the announcement of the patch to SSH (version 3.3) in
security-announce. I tried to upgrade to the patched Potato version.
This was the pertinent line in my sources.list:
deb http://security.debian.org stable/updates main contrib non-free
^^
After
Brian wrote:
I am using a Seagate Travan 10 GB uncompressed tape drive to backup a
file server, (on the same machine). Does anyone have problems with this
drive and/or the driver? Sometimes it will return with an I/O error and
a tape is in the drive. Another time it will work fine. Or it may
Michael Madden wrote:
>
> I've setup mgetty & pppd to allow incoming connections to my home computer
> with a broadband connection. I can successfully dial up, login, and
> obtain an ip address, but I can only connect (ping, ftp, telnet, etc)
> to the box I dialed into. I cannot connect to other
DSC Siltec wrote:
>
[cut]
>
> One scan attack attacked my proxy server's proxy port, from 1031,1032,
> 1033,1034, 1035... and expired about 8 minutes later.
>
[cut]
>
> I also have a windows system -- and, sometimes using the same network
> connection [manual plug-over] a macintosh, and it is
Mike Thompson wrote:
>
> at the end of /etc/exim/exim.conf write
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" Ffr
>
> or similar.
>
Also, look at the really nice rewriting rule that is commented out at
the end of the default exim.conf provided in the Debian package. It
uses /etc/email-addre
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi all, Im working ina medical group that uses Microsoft Access,
>
> is there any software that can interact with Access?
>
If you're thinking about doing some lightweight work with Access from
Linux, and it's OK for it to be Perl-based, you might want to check out
D
Paul 'Baloo' Johnson wrote:
>
> OK, to whomever piped the latest message on debian-announce through
> razor-report, I wish to officially declare you a moron.
>
I agree, but that's what's kept me from using it (Vipul's Razor, I
assume you mean): what keeps morons from doing this and causing a bunc
I've downloaded libkrb53 and krb5-user from testing.
I immediately get segfaults upon running either kpasswd and kadmin.
Is there some known problem here? Has anyone else tried to use these?
There's a very good chance I don't know what I'm doing...
stan wrote:
>
> But isn't there soem way to make the associationpermanent, so I don't
> have to deal with this popup evry time?
>
Last time I looked, there was a checkbox on that dialog that asked you
something like "Always use helper application" or some such. Have you
seen/tried that?
Does anyone have a clue how to build the ldap-utils (particularly
ldapsearch) in testing with Kerberos support?
What libraries would I need to download, how to point ldap-utils to it
...
Mainly, has anyone here done it?
TIA.
Benjamin Krueger wrote:
>
> * Branden Robinson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [020126 01:05]:
> > On Wed, Jan 23, 2002 at 10:59:04PM -0500, Charles wrote:
> > > I have published multiple radio stations from a single box using 22khz
> > > stereo
> >
> > Kindly get this bullshit thread off of debian-x. In all
Bruno Boettcher wrote:
>
> Hello!
>
> despite their promise, iname.com/mail.com will now charge for the
> forwarding service they offer, forcing myself, at least for a
> transitional period to assert who is using my address there to use their
> webmail interface (which is ugly, slow and full of a
Dmitriy wrote:
>
> On Mon, Jan 21, 2002 at 09:05:44PM -0500, alex wrote:
> [snip]
> >
> > If an ISP doesn't use a SPAM blocker service, the message passes but
> > then a filter that directs the mail to a Debian
> > mailbox may instead treat it as general mail, depending on how the
> > filter is
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I'm tryng to set up my woody machine to send faxes (as a clinet to an
> existing Hylafax server).
>
> I edited /etc/hylafax/hyla.conf and added:
>
> Host: black
>
> Where black is the servers name.
>
> But whn I run sendfax, I get the following error:
>
martin f krafft wrote:
>
> also sprach dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002.01.09.0231 +0100]:
> > | echo .muttrc | vim -
> >
> > ls .muttrc | xargs vim
>
> aha, the '-' is the problem.
>
> > I didn't think that would work (once I straightened out my
> > understanding of the stdin stuff), but it does.
"Keith G. Murphy" wrote:
>
> "Paul A. Thomas" wrote:
> >
> > > Given that you're still in windows (and you want to view the docs
> > > on-line) I recommend the HTML format :
> > >
> > > http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/t
"Paul A. Thomas" wrote:
>
> > Given that you're still in windows (and you want to view the docs
> > on-line) I recommend the HTML format :
> >
> > http://newbiedoc.sourceforge.net/tarballs/newbiedoc-html-0.3.0.tar.gz
> >
> > They also have the HTML docs available directly on their web server
Brian Nelson wrote:
>
>
> Besides, isn't this the debian-user mailing list, for discussions
> among debian users?
>
Hmmm, I'm right now using a mailer that is not running on Debian. Yet,
I am a Debian user. I'm not even a newbie. How can this be?
Open your mind to the possibilities...
Johann Spies wrote:
>
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2001 at 04:04:36PM -0600, DvB wrote:
> > God, I wish "YODA" would stop sending this crap :-(
>
> If you wish to address God about this issue, I don't think the list is
> the right place to do it.
>
That would be 'debian-devel'. ;-)
"Karsten M. Self" wrote:
>
> on Fri, Nov 23, 2001 at 04:59:12PM -0800, Petro ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > On Thu, Nov 22, 2001 at 09:40:37PM -0800, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> > > on Thu, Nov 22, 2001 at 02:12:17AM -0800, Petro ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> > > wrote:
> > > > > Bruce Schneier identifi
Matthew Daubenspeck wrote:
>
> We all know that the standard IMAPD is really too slow. I am planning on
> switching to something more effective. Reading webmail and such is quite a
> painstaking process with anything more then 30 messages in a folder.
>
> Should I choose cyrus or courier? Or neit
andreas wrote:
>
> Dear Debian users,
>
> on a testing/unstable system:
>
> 1. I wrote my own little patch for xmms. Next, I got the xmms sources with
> apt-get source xmms. However, from the source package itself I can't
> find out how to create a binary deb from the source.
>
> - Could som
dman wrote:
>
> On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 05:15:02PM -0600, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> | I have an old mouse from an outfit called IMSI. It has 3 buttons. I
> | can simulate a middle button with the "chord" X setting, but does anyone
> | have a clue or driver to get the
Ken Williams wrote:
>
>Hi Stuart,
>
> In addition to the helpful advice other people on the list
> have already given I'd also say it might be easier for you
> to obtain a linuxdistro from a linux-related magazine.
I hate to see that recommended, 'cause I've seen lots of problems on
these
I have an old mouse from an outfit called IMSI. It has 3 buttons. I
can simulate a middle button with the "chord" X setting, but does anyone
have a clue or driver to get the middle button to actually work?
It works OK now (other than the middle button) using the Microsoft mouse
selection under
Craig Dickson wrote:
>
> Since we seem to be talking about Mutt a lot today, there's one thing I
> haven't found the time to track down an answer to, so perhaps Karsten or
> someone else knows.
>
> When I get mail from someone who uses one of those nasty email clients
> that doesn't wrap lines (o
Shri Shrikumar wrote:
>
> Hi All,
>
> As the title suggests, are there any linux packages that can be used to
> access mdb files. Im running sid.
>
Can't access it directly, since it's proprietary Microsoft stuff.
If you have a networked Windows box available, run DBI::ProxyServer and
DBD::ODBC
"Justin R. Miller" wrote:
>
> Thus spake David J. Roundy ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>
> > I'm guessing you want to hit return.
>
> Actually, you'll want to hit 'space' to change into a folder, since
> Cyrus supports folders with both subfolders and messages.
>
You get the prize for right answer. You
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I have a Debian potato + Progeny box siting in my office, right next to a
> FreebSD box. Both are conected to the same network subnet. The FreeBSD box
> can get to the timeserver, Tthe Debian one cannot. I must be doing
> something really stupid here.
>
> Here is the info of
I'm using Mutt 1.3.12i on Potato against Cyrus IMAP. I can browse my
IMAP folders fine using 'c'. Question is, how can I see the *messages*
in a subfolder once I've navigated to it? Using TAB to get the message
view only takes me back to the messages in my top INBOX.
I hope this is not too off-
Stan Brown wrote:
>
> I'm runing potato + Progeny + 2.4.9 kernel packages. I'm using gnome, and
> have it set up to start the svreen saver after 5 minutes, which it does.
> However, sometime later the whole screen balnks. I've noticed that the
> 2.4.9 kernel packagges do not include apm, so I'm as
Andreas Leitner wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I hope this is not too offtopic here. I have now successfully set up a
> cyrus imap/exim based mail server using debian testing for my personal
> use. The goal is to use this server as my main mail archive. And there
> are lot's of mails in there, most come from
I just applied the suggested security update to htdig (running Potato).
I'm getting this error:
# htdig -iv
DB2 problem...: illegal flag specified to db_open
htdig: Unable to open/create document database
'/var/spool/htdig/db.docdb'
I got some similar errors during the install.
Anybody have a c
Ken Januski wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I've run into an odd problem over the last few months. More than half
> the *gz files I download from Netscape refuse to unzip with gunzip. I
> always get the message XXX is "not in gzip format."
> Running file on XXX gives me "GNU tar archive." Does anyone have any
I just applied the suggested security update to htdig (running Potato).
I'm getting this error:
# htdig -iv
DB2 problem...: illegal flag specified to db_open
htdig: Unable to open/create document database
'/var/spool/htdig/db.docdb'
I got some similar errors during the install.
Anybody have a c
"Karsten M. Self" wrote:
>
> on Tue, Oct 09, 2001 at 09:55:37AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
> wrote:
> > Rino Mardo wrote:
> > >
> > > "...you can check in anytime you want, but you can never leave..."
> > >
> >
Rino Mardo wrote:
>
> "...you can check in anytime you want, but you can never leave..."
>
> i sent an unsubscribe to the listbot three days ago and up to now it
> hasn't acted on it. failing that i sent a request to the list
> maintainer and that too hasn't acted on it.
>
Question to more savv
Barreto Barreto Jose Luis wrote:
>
> Les mando este mensaje para hacer una pregunta sobre la mejor versión de
> Debian que podría instalar en mi ordenador sin que se ralentize o tenga
> problemas. El ordenador que poseo tiene las siguientes características:
>
> -Pentium 100
> -24 Mb RAM EDO
> -40
dman wrote:
>
> On Fri, Sep 21, 2001 at 09:29:11AM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> | DvB wrote:
> ...
> | > You could always set up a tarpit:
> | >
> | > http://www.hackbusters.net/LaBrea/
> | >
> | How is this different from, or better than, CodeRedneck?
DvB wrote:
>
> "Brooks R. Robinson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > > > the worm wouldn't even know the difference, to it it looks like it would
> > > > hit microsofts site from your url if it tries those extentions.
> > >
> > > Not correct, it gets a Redirect as the response, and it's its
> >
Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> scanner help needed.
>
> I just installed a fresh Debian 2.2R3 and wanted to scan.
> So I installed sane.
>
> But when I run xscanimage it says it can't find any devices.
>
> That makes me wonder, because:
>
> During bootup the the BIOS finds my SCSI sc
Robert Waldner wrote:
> (swap is on hda3 and equals the size of my
> physical RAM (128 MB), I remember something about swap shouldn´t be
> more than physical RAM or the like, somebody could fill in hard facts
> on that?)
>
That's complete and utter bullshit, superstitious oral tradition.
You a
John Galt wrote:
>
> But Debian is God's Own Distribution :)
>
In the spirit of GNU's Not Unix, don't you mean:
GOD's Own Distribution?
:-)
Eduard Bloch wrote:
>
> #include
> James D Strandboge wrote on Fri Aug 17, 2001 um 07:52:52AM:
> > I recently bought an Epson Color Photo 780 printer because I read it
>
> I use 680 (aka 777) but the quality of the drivers is the same.
> First: don't take cupsys-driver-gimpprint from Sid, it's b
Ken Januski wrote:
>
> I'm wondering if I could have chosen something else in menuconfig that
> would interfere with parallel printing but if so I sure can't figure out
> what it is.
>
There are *three* options that need to be in place in the kernel build
(look in your .config file):
CONFIG_PARP
Petteri Heinonen wrote:
>
> >
> > Petteri Heinonen wrote:
> > >
> > > I've a problem with smbmount when trying to mount as ordinary
> > > (not root) user. I can mount samba shares if I mount them
> > > under ordinary users own home directory, for exmple in
> > > /home/orduser/mnt/ . Also, I can mo
Hall Stevenson wrote:
>
> > > > Well, to an extent. Sometimes when you
> > > > report a problem with a package, the
> > > > maintainer's reply is basically, "well, use
> > > > the latest one from unstable or wherever,
> > > > that should work, I'm not interested in fixing
> > > > the old version t
Todd Combs wrote:
>
> This doesn't totaly apply to Debian, but I figure maybe some nice person
> here can help :-)
>
> I SSH into my Debian box from windows, and I use Tera Term. My
> problem is I want to use vim, but it doesn't work quite like it does when I
> am "local". Specificly
will trillich wrote:
>
> On Thu, Aug 02, 2001 at 10:58:16AM -0700, Vineet Kumar wrote:
> > * Joost Kooij ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [010724 23:15]:
> > > On Tue, Jul 24, 2001 at 07:58:24PM +0100, Frank Zimmermann wrote:
> > > > I don't think you need to install X on your router. You fire up
> > > > webin
Andy Laurence wrote:
>
> > > OK, I've managed to get the default drivers installed
> > (driver-1.bin), but
> > > there is no 82559 driver
>
> >
> > No. It is the eepro100 driver, as Slaven Peles mentioned.
>
> I've tried that one ...
>
> --
>
> /lib/modules/2.2.19pre17-idepci/net/eepr
Andrew Laurence wrote:
>
>
> OK, I've managed to get the default drivers installed (driver-1.bin), but
> there is no 82559 driver :-(
No. It is the eepro100 driver, as Slaven Peles mentioned.
dman wrote:
>
> I setup exim on my system this weekend, but it's not working quite
> right. I had a school assignment to create a simple smtp client so I
> setup exim so I could test it without blocking the phone line. exim
> delivers locally just fine. However, it won't send any mail to other
Gast CPU20 wrote:
>
> Hey Boys and Girls!
>
> I want to achieve that my LaserJet 1100 provides printing for my
> windows-network. Unter Suse I did this with Samba and some
> printing-installing with Yast. Under Debian I heard CUPS is the right
> utility. So i installed Cups and tried to config
Ilya Martynov wrote:
>
> >> > Here's one for some of the perl guys
> >> >
> >> > I want to delete a directory that will have files in it...
> >> > I don't know the name of the files there for wildcards might
> >> > be needed
> >> >
> >> > I understand that "rmdir" will wipe out an empt
"Keith G. Murphy" wrote:
>
> Dave Sherohman wrote:
> >
> >
> > I use CUPS with a Stylus Color 880 and the stock stcolor.ppd from the
> > cupsys package. No ghostscript. No cupsomatic. It just works.
> >
> Good point. I do a lot of printing
Dave Sherohman wrote:
>
> On Tue, Jul 17, 2001 at 12:13:57PM -0500, Keith G. Murphy wrote:
> > Brian, what's been said about CUPS is true, and that's what I use.
>
> I guess you haven't heard all that's been said about CUPS...
I meant on *this* thread.
Brian McGroarty wrote:
>
> I've never configured a printer under Linux. I've got an Epson Sylus
> Color 740i hooked up via USB, and I've got it to the point where I can
> cat files directly to the device and see them printed.
>
> I'm a bit baffled by the number of choices of packages which are
>
will trillich wrote:
>
> On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 04:56:44PM +0200, Joost Kooij wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 04, 2001 at 09:57:42AM -0400, Walter Tautz wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > >
>
> i must say, that was the best laugh i've had in a looong time.
>
> (anybody have email brakage from this? my mutt had no
>
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