Eduard Bloch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> If you installed the xmms-aalsa plugin - remove it, it is broken.
Bummer. I've built mine from source and it also has problems. Hm.
Anyone got a better one?
-chris
Not sure if you're having the same problem, but in my case the
Geforce3 would not work in any mode higher than 16bpp. Nvidia
acknowledged this as a bug (but only after I'd spent a week on the
it, gaah).
-chris
Aaron Traas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I just got a new GeForc
What's Schutzverletzung and Bock?
-chris
Eduard Bloch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Linux rebootet man in drei Fällen:
> Neuer Kernel, neue (Board-)Hardware, neue Partition angelegt
>
> Aber Windows rebootet man auch in drei Fällen:
> Schutzverletzung, Bluescreen, keinen Bock...
Good question! For me the attraction is that I live in a small
apartment so I don't really have room for a separate TV/DVD
player. Oh, and also money. My 17" ViewSonic CRT + Pinnacle PCTV card
+ lirc + xine + xawtv makes a very good tv/vcr. Plus I already have
the cable for f
I should probably post this on gnu.emacs.gnus, but I'm too lazy to read
that whole newsgroup in addition to this list.. Anyone know how to do
a "followup" to an nnimap group (in this case, the debian-user list)
in such a way that the list, rather than the OP, appears in the To:
header?
-chr
dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sun, Sep 23, 2001 at 08:04:43PM -0400, Akintayo Holder wrote:
> | hi,
> | I am trying to install palm dev tools on woody. I would like to knwo
> how
> | you set the search path for the GCC compiler ? any information about
> | where i can find the env va
Jason Boxman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sunday 23 September 2001 02:28 pm, Krzys Majewski wrote:
> > Anyone run a matrox g450?
> > I've got one working with kernel 2.4.8 and X 4.1.0, but it did
> > hang my box once. Maybe I should be using the drivers fr
Anyone run a matrox g450?
I've got one working with kernel 2.4.8 and X 4.1.0, but it did
hang my box once. Maybe I should be using the drivers from the
Matrox site instead? The Matrox drivers need the code for X
4.0.2/4.0.3 to compile. I know, I know, I should just try it and see,
but
Hi folks
I've got a (highly customized) debian/potato box.
(If you're tempted to reply at this point with
"why the hell aren't you running debian/unstable",
don't.)
One day the current unstable glibc2.2 debian will become
stable (or maybe it has already?) and I will want to
upgrade.
I don't want
> > Bottom line for me is, it's my box, I need to override Debian
> > occasionally. There used to be (still is?) this thing called `equiv'
> > for registering locally installed things with dpkg, but it's more of a
> > hassle than I'm willing to put up with for every tarball I
On 1 Jul 2001, Mario Vukelic wrote:
> On 01 Jul 2001 10:53:56 -0700, Krzys Majewski wrote:
> > 1. How can I `hold back' packages so Debian doesn't upgrade them?
>
> use dselect. You can put pkgs on hold with "="
Thanks. Is this persistent, in the sense th
1. How can I `hold back' packages so Debian doesn't upgrade them?
2. Does apt-get/dpkg always overwrite existing files, or only if their
timestamps are older than the corresponding file in the .deb?
I run a customized potato box. Usually I keep custom stuff separate
from Debian by installing
will trillich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sat, May 26, 2001 at 03:41:38AM -0600, John Galt wrote:
> > In vi, :1267 works...
>
> Also, for vim, start your editing session right at the exact line
> you're interested in via
>
> vi +1267 filename.here
>
The correct solution is
emacs
M
Andrew D Dixon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Another solution would be to use cpio to make an archive of the file
> system and then expand this out onto a clean machine. I recently did
> this and found it to be relatively painless. I did only use one large
> partition (well two but I'm not count
See
http://bytesex.org/bttv/index.html
for linux tv card support.
-chris
"A. Demarteau (linux rules!)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> hi,
> are the following 2 cards supported yet:
> Matrox MARVEL G450 (card has onboard tv-tuner)
> Matrox G450
>
> thanx
> ---
> Andor Demarteau
> [EMAIL
mikepolniak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Once you get that far , if you have the latest KDE installed you can enjoy
> the beauty of anti-aliased fonts. Once you see them you won't go back to
> ugly fonts.
That sounds interesting, can you elaborate? Is this a hardware feature
of the card?
Uses syslinux, busybox, and make.
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~majewski/giab/
-chris
I am unable to mount/umount anything after messing with my /etc/mtab
last night (I had removed a floppy without umounting it, and was
getting "Device busy" when I tried to remount/umount it, so I nuked
the floppy line in mtab, without backing it up, yay). Now when I try
to mount or umo
I'm finding the OS really sluggish when using my parport zip100 drive
(imm driver). This is a 2.4.2 kernel. Here's what happens when I
modprobe parport_pc:
May 14 08:41:24 mi kernel: 0x378: FIFO is 16 bytes
May 14 08:41:24 mi kernel: 0x378: writeIntrThreshold is 9
May 14 08:41:24 mi ker
Anybody know how to do kernel rebuilds in such a way that existing 3rd-party
kernel modules (ie those not included in the kernel src tree) aren't
removed from /lib/modules/... ?
-chris
I would like to NFS-mount a directory on a remote host located behind an
ipmasq'ing gateway/firewall. The gateway runs 2.2.17, the remote box
runs 2.4.2, the local box runs SunOS-5.8-i386. I tried adding trivial
rules to my ipmasq script, copying the ones for sshd and replacing the
sshd por
Dig this:
3 root 20 0 00 0 SW 0 74.0 0.0 672:35 kapm-idled
10858 root 10 0 35540 8332 1628 S 0 0.5 6.5 0:03 X
4208 root 9 0 968 964 744 S 0 0.3 0.7 0:14 dozed
31364 krzys 10 0 1492 1492 692 R 0 0.3 1.1 0:00 t
Will all X 3.3.6 binaries run on X 4.0.2? What about the other way around?
What other files are dependent on the server version? For example,
if I upgrade the server from 4.0.2 to something else, which tarballs
do I need to get besides Xxserv.tgz and Xmod.tgz?
(This may sound off-topic, but someo
Haha. Yes!
-chris
Christopher Mosley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I just had an idea. Did you ever hear the story of the "Princess and
> the Pea". No mattter how many matresses were placed between the Princess
> and the pea, she was still disturbed by the presence of the pea. Your
> being bo
Oliver Payne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sun, Mar 25, 2001 at 11:19:19PM -0800, Krzys Majewski wrote:
> > Noise.
> > -chris
>
> You might want to look at http://www.quietpc.com . They claim their CPU
> fans are practically inaudible. I ordered a SilentDrive
Noise.
-chris
On Mon, 26 Mar 2001, Roberto Diaz wrote:
>
> Why do you want to burn you CPU? a fan is very cheap.. less than $15 some
> models. You can buy one in all computer stores.
>
> Just curious.. why do you want to make this? (maybe you have other
> solutions)
>
> > This is strictly n
"S.Salman Ahmed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >>>>> "Krzys" == Krzys Majewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Krzys> What's with the "failed to initialize X shared memory
> Krzys> extension" stuff? How can
Pentium CPU's generally come with fans, so it's clearly not a price
issue.. I would have thought that at least one advantage of not
having a cpu fan is obvious, but if not, then feel free to view this
as a strictly theoretical problem..
-chris
On Mon, 26 Mar 2001, John Griffiths wrote:
This is strictly non-Debian but I haven't found any info on this
anywhere so maybe someone can help: can I run a PIII with the CPU fan
unplugged, provided I underclock it? I ran my Katmai 500MHz processor
with the fan unplugged for a whole day, underclocked to 333MHz, it
didn't even bl
Krzys Majewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So the DeCSS-enabled xine compiled. Has anyone got a dvd (.vob??) file
> I could try it on before I install a DVD-ROM and go rent a movie?
>
> -chris
OK, another update.. I managed to download a .vob file after an
hour of searchin
Krzys Majewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Thanks for the response! I've downloaded the xine-0.4.01 source. I can
> get this to build no problem. I then downloaded the same source with
> the DeCSS descrambler built into it. I get this error, similar to the
> erro
"S.Salman Ahmed" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Xine is an excellent DVD player and I'd suggest you check it out first:
>
> http://xine.sourceforge.net/ (main website)
> http://xine.cjb.net/ (Xine resource page)
> http://www.nott.ac.uk/~psystrj/XINE-FAQ.html
t it works on one of your machines is a fluke, and
there is a bug in the openssh code that prevents it from working if
the DSA keys are missing.
-chris
On Sun, 25 Mar 2001, Luigi Fabio wrote:
> On 23 Mar 2001, at 20:52, Krzys Majewski wrote:
> > What happens if you ssh -v -v -v to b
OK I'm about to re-open the dvd can of worms. The video place down the
street rents them out, and since I don't have a tv or a vcr, this
might be an elegant solution to the movie problem (yes, I know about
the MPAA, sigh). Is anyone playing DVDs succesfully in linux? I don't
have any micro
Ethan Benson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> lyx requires non-free software, thats a showstopper.
It does? Which?
-chris
"Michael Soulier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> standards. If you want WYSIWYM (What You See Is What You Mean), use LyX.
LyX rocks, too bad its latex conversion is not invertible:
foo.lyx -> foo.tex -> bar.lyx != foo.lyx
In fact, the example I tried (some random thing I was typing) broke
hope
is
On Sat, 24 Mar 2001, Shawn Yarbrough wrote:
> Krzys Majewski wrote:
> >
> > OK, so these are official kernel.org patches then? Or something else?
> >
>
>
> Here is the README.Debian file from kernel-source-2.2.18pre21:
> (yes it looks like somebody forg
ktb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > If these Debian patches are so great, why aren't they in the official
> > kernel source?
> >
>
> Because the patches didn't exist when 2.2 was released. That is the
> nature of a patch. For the most part patches are created to fix
> bugs that were unknown
On Sat, 24 Mar 2001, Shawn Yarbrough wrote:
> Use the 'kernel-source' packages and you will get extra features and
> bugfixes patched in by Debian which are not in stock Linux. For example
> 'kernel-source-2.2.18pre21'. When installed the archive gets put into
Is this anything like RedHat's cu
There is an official debian way to recompile kernels, but I don't
bother.. download the kernel source from debian.org or kernel.org
(avoid minor versions which are not divisible by 2, like 2.1.* or
2.3.*) read the README in /usr/src/linux, and you're go. Basically
make menuconfig
ma
What happens if you ssh -v -v -v to both the good machine and the bad
machine? The output below suggests that the bad machine is choking on
both your rsa key and your dsa key. The good machine only chokes on
the dsa key, so maybe it's using whatever rsa key you give it (and
perhaps this is
I know nothing about satellite internet connections, but FWIW I'll
guess that getting this to work should have little to do with which
official Debian release you're running. Maybe you can find out what
other satellite users with unixlike operating systems are doing, and
try to imitate
Anyone taught a redhat box to use .deb packages instead of .rpm's?
I'm helping administer 100+ redhat boxes, and investigating the
possibility of using dpkg/apt-get, rather than rpm, for propagating
local customizations. Since the redhat file structure would probably
need to be preserved, I'm
Anyone have a good way to register local customizations with the
Debian package mechanism? For example, suppose file X is provided by
Debian package Y.deb, and I patch X to provide some functionality
local to my domain. I would now like to protect X from being
completely ov
I've never seen the errors you describe, but I do run 2.2.17 on a
firewall/router with two NICs. I accomplish this by passing the
arguments
ether=10,0x300,eth0 ether=3,0x280,eth1
to the kernel.
-chris
Steve Doerr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello.
> I just rebuilt the 2.2.17 ke
I use a combination of 'hdparm -y' and 'apm --suspend', run via a
script that sits in the background checking if the cpu is idle and
there has been no typing on the console recently. Details on request.
-chris
Enrico Zini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello,
>
> I would like to know if
I use /usr/sbin/arp.
There are programs that build WOL packets out there - look for
ether-wake.c, for example,
-chris
c-3 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> For WOL you need to know the node adress of the network card in
> the computer you want to wake up. Under Windows you can easily
> ge
"Mike Egglestone" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi all.
> I trying to do a backup of my system and I think I might have the
> backup part rightcorrect me if I'm wrong
> I could use this command
>
> tar -cvzf hda2.tar.gz /
> ( I don't need to add this ... --exclude hda2.tar.gz do I
OK here's the deal
I'm trying to make a bare-bonez floppy distribution with networking
capability. I'm testing it on my usual workstation. This machine
uses the 3c59x driver for eth0. Now, I've compiled the 3c59x driver
into the kernel on the floppy distro, but when I run ifconfig I get:
nto the kernel, you only have to do:
> ifconfig eth0 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0 up
>
> asuumed that your kernel detects your card correctly.
>
> Greetz,
> Sebastiaan
>
>
> On 11 Feb 2001, Krzys Majewski wrote:
>
> > So I'm trying to teach my
So I'm trying to teach my boot floppies to do networking..
I try to insmod my NIC driver, 3c59x.c, but I get this:
3c59x.o: init_module: Device or resource busy
What now? With my usual kernel this module is loaded with no options,
and I'm trying this on the same hardware. insmod reports no m
For those of you who have been following with baited breath the
ongoing saga of my boot floppies: I am now loading a kernel from
floppy #1 and a compressed root image from floppy #2, at which point I
get a shell enabling me to mount floppy #3 and copy additional goodies
from it. Ha
I've been trying to roll my own boot/root floppy with syslinux. So far
I've managed to put a kernel on one floppy, a root fs on another
floppy, boot the kernel, mount the root fs. The snag I've run into is
that the root floppy isn't big enough for libc, /bin/sh, and whatever
stuff I'd like
"Michael P. Soulier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Mon, Feb 05, 2001 at 11:30:51PM -0800, Krzys Majewski wrote:
> > Why does 'update-modules' give:
> >
> > depmod: not an ELF file?
> >
> > I've done a dist-upgrade but no j
> > Do your ssh and sshd versions match?
>
> I have a slink machine with sshd 1.2.26 and a woody machine with sshd
> version OpenSSH-1.2.3 and ssh version OpenSSH-1.2.3. All login attempts
> are made from the woody machine (OpenSSH). Connects to the old ssh
> daemon on the slink machine work, co
Why does 'update-modules' give:
depmod: not an ELF file?
I've done a dist-upgrade but no juice.
-chris
Why does 'mke2fs /dev/fd0' give
mke2fs 1.18, 11-Nov-1999 for EXT2 FS 0.5b, 95/08/09
mke2fs: error in loading shared libraries: mke2fs: undefined symbol:
e2p_edit_feature
?
I've done a dist-upgrade but no juice.
-chris
I'm using syslinux-1.50 to roll my own boot/root floppy. So far, I know how
to put a kernel on one floppy, rdev it to /dev/fd0, and mount a root
fs located on a second floppy. What I would like to do is mount the root fs
from a file system image file on the first floppy. I tried to do this,
passi
o compile my own
custom vtwm if I change machines. The other option I was thinking
about is to run some kind of preprocessor, like cpp or m4, from my
.xinitrc for example.
-chris
On Mon, 20 Nov 2000, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
>
> On 19-Nov-2000 Krzys Majewski wrote:
&
Try putting
Option "DPMS"
in the Monitor section of your /etc/X11/XF86Config. Though be warned
that, as others have mentioned, DPMS may do weird bad things with X4, like
crash your X server.
-chris
Michael Abraham Shulman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
>
> Does anyone have any i
kmself@ix.netcom.com writes:
> You want to re-set your routing tables with your network configuration
> scripts. There are mechanisms in place for doing this with the ifup and
> ifdown commands -- directories in which scripts are placed to be run at
> when an interface is en/dis abled. Firewall
How can I set things up so that, if the eth0 interface can't be upped
(for example, the cable modem is unplugged, or something is broken on
the remote end), diald is started? I guess I could put an "if
ifconfig eth0; then ..." in /etc/init.d/diald. But is this the best
way? Just now
Mats Eriksson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi !
>
> Does anyone know a way to mount a remote file systems
> over ftp ?
> I found something called "userfs" but it seemed
> incomplete and out of date.
> (I guess "sitecopy" is another way to do what I want
> to do but mounting would be cooler.)
Se
Nate Amsden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> when exactly does it hang? ive seen a lot of hangs on startup if a
> working DNS is unreachable.
>
> nate
>
> Krzys Majewski wrote:
> >
> > Gr. Navigator 4.75 hangs on some pages, eating all the CPU, and ma
How do I tell inetd/tcpd to not log things like:
Dec 3 16:59:07 localhost ssh[17364]: connect from 127.0.0.1
-chris
Gr. Navigator 4.75 hangs on some pages, eating all the CPU, and making
all open netscape windows unuseable. This is on an i686, mostly
potato. Any patches/workarounds for this sort of problem? -chris
How can I set things up so that connections to a local port, say ,
are only accepted if they are coming from localhost? More generally,
how can I shut off all outside access to my machine, except for the ssh
daemon? I've got
ALL: ALL
in /etc/hosts/deny, and
ALL: 127.0.0.1
in /etc/hosts/
Ross Boylan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been trying to get some sound out of my Linux system, and am pretty
> baffled. I gather there are several different ways to do it, and would
> like to know if there is a preferred one. I have an ISA AWE-64
> soundblaster on a 2.2.17 kernel
metoo
>
David Z Maze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Gnus has a couple of nice features. One is automatic expiry: for
> selected groups (including all of the high-traffic Debian lists I'm
> on), mail sits around for about a week, then automatically gets
> deleted.
Will this work in conjunction with imme
"Lawrence H. Robins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm curious to know what strategies are used by regular subscribers
> to this list to deal with the high volume of messages (>250/day)?
All my mail is handled by a server at my school. On this server, I run
procmail (via ~/.forward and ~/.procmai
kmself@ix.netcom.com writes:
> When I get particularly behind, I just delete a few days (or weeks)
> worth of posts. Debian Weekly News tends to highlight significant list
> events.
What's this? Does it say things like, "This week Krzys Majewski posted
a really stupid que
Adam Shand <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> does it support disconnected mode imap? that is my one big remaining
> gripe about pine (and as far as i know mutt's imap support is more
> primitive then pines still).
Yes, it does. I tried it with 5.8.3 and it sort of worked (I can't
remember what
john gennard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've put together another box with items left over from upgrades plus
> a new 10.2G IDE hard drive. So far I've only installed Debian on
> boxes already having a running system (originally W95 and later just
> DOS 6.22 which I find easy to start with). Th
Andrew Dixon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi All,
> I'm thinking of buying a new computer and I was
> looking for information on getting a refund for
> Windows.
Hrm. A few months ago I bought a "custom" computer from the shop down
the street ("Hi, I'd like to buy a computer" "What kind?"
"Robert A. Jacobs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Just kinda curious...how important is it to place the new System.map file
> (created when you compiled a new kernel) in the /boot directory? I have
> compiled a number of kernels and, after looking at this discussion, I checked
> my /boot directo
Alson van der Meulen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Before that I tried two different NICs to no avail, which leads me to
> > believe NICs may be inherently flaky. So maybe try another one (I
> > convinced my local h/w vendor to lend me this one, slightly used, and
> > I ended up buying it)
How can I make update-menus coexist with my custom wm config files? For
example, I rolled my own ~/.vtwmrc. Now, I apt-get install xinvaders. I
would like a menu entry for xinvaders to appear automagically in my
window manager, without losing my other customizations.
The current behaviour is
Look in
/etc/X11/xdm/Xsetup
/etc/X11/xdm/Xsetup_0
/etc/X11/xdm/Xreset
/etc/X11/xdm/Xreset_0
Put something like
xset -dpms
xset s off
in one or some or all of these files.
-chris
FWIW I've got a working PIII/3c905b/terayon setup.
My only initial problem with it was dyslexia: 509 is not the same as
905! IOW, you need to use the right driver, which in my case means
alias eth0 3c59x
in /etc/modutils/aliases.
Before that I tried two different NICs to no avail, which lea
> Look in /lib/modules/x.y.z/ where x.y.z is your linux kernel version.
> If the modules are not there, you will have to compile them from the kernel
> sources.
> (first, check if they are not included as part of the kernel).
> Silver
Hrm no, I think the tap modules are aliases for something,
and
How do I fix this? More generally, where do I look if I'm
having problems of this form? -chris
Noflushd spins the disk up immediately after spinning it
down, unless I do a etc/init.d/sysklogd stop.
This the potato sysklogd and a noflushd compiled from the
sources in woody.
Presumably the problem is noflushd logging a "Spinning
down..." message, which gets flushed to the hard drive, heh.
N
Anybody have experience with old 486 power supplies?
I've got one here on my vintage 1993 486/33, I've unplugged
the fan on it coz it was noisy and I'm too lazy to go to the
basement, hunt for a voltmeter, soldering iron, and play the
old 12->7V conversion game again. So I'm wondering what are
the
Is there a DPMS-capable console blanker?
I'm running this machine strictly in console mode,
and the screenblank nicely after a while while, but I'm
a bit disappointed that the monitor power LED doesn't start
blinking and stuff. Maybe it's still sucking up lots of power
despite being dark? I'm at
Thanks Carel! This is exactly what I had in mind, but I
didn't know how to pull it off. Much nicer than my
/etc/init.d/tcp-pipes hack, though a bit more overhead
(slow on this 486/33, should be ok on the p3/500).
groetjes,
chris
> So I did it differently using tcp-wrappers/inetd, like this:
>
>
Where did the ssh2 in stable go?
-chris
Maybe see the ifconfig manpage.
-chris
"Michael P. Soulier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> In case you guys missed this one, check it out.
>
> http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/272
>
> I just increased my harddrive throughput by 5 times.
>
> Mike
Do you notice a difference though? I increased mine from about 3Mbps
to abo
I'm trying to compile ssh on an old (slink and pre-slink) machine
with some potato on it. I'm getting undefined references (e.g to
_sigintr), which symbol indeed does not appear in /usr/lib/libbsd.a
(this is the bugger being linked). On a whim, I did an nm on
/usr/lib/libc.a and, what
Damien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i've been meaning to ask you about you suggested power-supply quietening
> technique. you said you moved the power supply outside the case, in order to
> allievate the heat buildup inside the p/s case.
>
> yet on at least my machines, the powersupply has venti
"Scott V. McGuire" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Now that this thread has got me interested, could anyone explain how
> to use the test patterns?
The short answer is I don't know, the long answer is, if you see a
large rectangular grid on your screen, and it looks warped, twiddle
the dials on you
Damien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> i've been working on a stand alone music player for the last couple of months.
> it's currently a bit loud (being based around an old p166 with a very noisy
> hdd & powersupply fan.
I can't help wondering if you could do away with the hdd altogether,
e.g. bo
Damien <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Under DOS there was the possibility of treating some of your RAM like a
> > disk (hence the name ramdisk). Not sure if Linux can do this, but if
> > so, then just copy the binary to a ramdisk and run it from there.
Yes it can be done. You will need to enab
Philipp Schulte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Sat, Nov 04, 2000 at 08:58:01PM -0800, Krzys Majewski wrote:
>
> > Anyone have test patterns for help with adjusting the various
> > parameters of a CRT monitor?
>
> On http://www.heise.de/ct/ftp/ th
Anyone have test patterns for help with adjusting the various
parameters of a CRT monitor?
-chris
Jean-Michel Kelbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi !
>
> i am wondering if there is a way to make the computer less noisy at some
> moment (the NIGHT). What I mean is that the CPU fan does a lot of noise,
> and the Hd too. Is there a porgram to make the cpu fan less rotating (if
> the cpu doesn
"Claudette Woodgate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Corey,
>
> Where shall I send the case of beers and the strippers? I finally have my
> Xfree86 4.0.1 up and running, at 1280x1024x16bpp. Thank You !
OK I've never understood what's so great about high resolutions. The
higher the resolution,
Oh haha, a reading problem.
thanks,
chris
>-i, --interactive
> prompt before overwrite
Anybody else have this problem? /bin/mv -i and /bin/mv --interactive
do not prompt before moving. From the stable fileutils. -chris
"Ray Percival" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Of course since the .debs are apt-getable now would someone please explain to
> me the advantage of doing it by hand?
I didn't see any debs when I did it. Also I did the manual hero
install which let me see exactly what was files were being wri
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