%% Dirk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
d> I get "421 Service not available, remote server has closed connection"
d> when I log into my ftp server.
Typing that message into Google gives all sorts of hits: most of them
seem to feel that your server is not authorizing users properly.
d> It worke
%% Mike McCarty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mm> I am glad to see that the FSF has at last recognized that
mm> one-letter switches instead of keyword-driven command line parsing
mm> is a bad thing, and have started instituting common and
mm> entire-word style options, like "--help" across t
%% Michelle Konzack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> I'm looking for a very simple RSS feed "server" (either standalone or
>> something with Apache; CGI or mod_* or whatever). Basically what I want
mk> A RSS-Feed is only a XML-File and can be served by any web
mk> server. It can be a CGI w
Hi all;
Maybe someone has a suggestion for some software that can do this
(preferably already packaged for Debian! :-)).
I'm looking for a very simple RSS feed "server" (either standalone or
something with Apache; CGI or mod_* or whatever). Basically what I want
to be able to do is have a local
%% "Patrick Wiseman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pw> I'm sure there was some good reason for the change
Indeed: "kernel" is too generic a term.
People are trying to create Debian distributions on a FreeBSD kernel,
and Hurd microkernels, and Solaris kernels, etc., not just on the Linux
kernel.
Hi all;
I have an SRPM that I want to build on my Debian "testing" box. It has
a TON of patches which I definitely don't want to have to try to apply
by hand.
So, I've installed rpm (4.4.1-4) and I installed the SRPM. When I did
this I got a bunch of errors:
# rpm -i .src.rpm
rpmdb: un
%% Richard Lyons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> You may have to log out of your Xsession and log in again to get
>> shells spawned using the new/updated group assignments. (Is there
>> a more efficient way to do this? This seems really inelegant.)
rl> More than that, I logged out and ba
%% Joachim Fahnenmüller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jf> It should read:
jf> if [ ... ];
jf> then command;
jf> else other_command;
jf> fi
jf> (mind the semicolons!)
Actually, you don't need ANY of those semicolons.
Bourne syntax is very regular, so it's pretty easy to know when
%% Michel Loos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ml> Is NIS reliable?
Sure. Enterprises have been deploying it in huge environments for 10-15
years or more.
ml> It seems to me that NIS is being obsoleted, since using a secure
ml> LDAP is much more secure. How stands Solaris when using a PAM/LDA
%% Tshepang Lekhonkhobe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
tl> Wow!!! So Solaris kernel is generally technically superior... and
tl> what a post.
Of course, that's nowhere close to what I said. The fact that you
summed it up this way makes me wonder if you're a troll.
I _DID_ say that in a few sp
For desktops, and even smaller servers, I really prefer Linux. Sure,
99% of the tools on Linux can also be compiled for Solaris. But it's
WORK to do that! Trust me, I maintained a repository of GNU and other
F/OSS tools for our company for years: it's a big pain in the rear to
manage it all your
%% Jon Dowland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jd> On Mon, Oct 17, 2005 at 10:39:40PM +0100, marc wrote:
>> GUI !=> mouse use a lot of folk imply that, but I don't understand
>> why. Funnily enough, I tend to use the mouse more in KDE than Windows
>> - but that's probably because I have migrat
>From your various responses you seem to be advocating using a shallow
set of functionality that is easily translatable across most
applications, so you can switch to a new one without much effort
rewiring muscle-memory, etc. That's the way you like to work, and
that's fine.
Myself, and other peo
%% Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
sl> If gnus were truly "all that and a bag o' chips" as they say then
sl> the concepts and way of doing things could be thrown into a
sl> seperate package for all to enjoy. 10 years and counting by my
sl> experience. Something tells me if it were
%% John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jh> Steve Lamb wrote:
>> Personally I can only go back as far as my first unix experience
>> which is 10 years ago. I know that screen existed then as I used it all
>> the time on Netcom. However since that's as far back as I can personally
>
%% marc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
m> I know, but here's a 'for example'. I've loaded xemacs and opened
m> gnus. It merrily waltzes off and downloads stuff from
m> new.gmane.org... then presents me with two ngs: nndraft:drafts,
m> nndraft:queue. Well, I presume they are ngs, although my
%% marc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> Maybe this would be easy to answer if I could find any usable
>> documentation ,,,
m> The perennial Linux weakness :-(
Depends on where you look... Emacs and Gnus have pretty good docs :-).
--
%% marc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> You can run Emacs in X mode and it's basically text but with useful
>> windows stuff (you can select articles with the mouse, popup menus
>> for odd things, etc.)
m> GUI !=> mouse use
m> a lot of folk imply that, but I don't understand why.
Well,
%% marc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
m> Sorry for not having responded to this thread yet, but I'm still
m> trying out all the suggestions. I thought that Pan would do, but it
m> has a couple of flaws that I can't live with.
I didn't see the original thread so I don't know if anyone suggeste
%% William Ballard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
wb> OpenBSD makes a smokin firewall. One floppy, an old P90 laptop w/
wb> 90MB of ram, a few questions, a few lines of pf.conf, and I
wb> haven't touched it in a year. Absolutely rock solid. It makes
wb> Linux look absolutely amateur for th
%% Byron Hillis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
bh> I'm just trying to get a basic C++ program to compile, but I have
bh> no idea what is going wrong.
It's very simple.
You're using the C compiler front-end to compile and link C++ code.
Don't do that.
You should use the C++ compiler front-end t
%% Kai Grossjohann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
kg> Maurits van Rees <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> On Fri, Sep 02, 2005 at 02:03:15PM +0200, Kai Grossjohann wrote:
>>> David Jardine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>>
>>> > nuhup somecommand > somefile & sleep 1; tail -f somefile
%% Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
rj> On Fri, 2005-08-26 at 10:10 -0400, Paul Smith wrote:
>> There are a large number of 100% web-based tax programs available.
>> These work very well on Linux.
rj> Am I the only person who has seen all of t
%% John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jh> Roberto C. Sanchez writes:
>> But do you intend to file electronically? If so, then the server
>> housing (or at least initially processing) the transaction and
>> information is publically accessible over the net.
jh> But it won't be an
%% Sam Rosenfeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
sr> On Fri, 26 Aug 2005, Paul Smith wrote:
>> What exactly are you looking for?
sr> Something with the features of TurboTax or TaxAct or Kiplinger,
sr> etc. All the commercial ones do whatever I need, with only
sr&g
What exactly are you looking for?
There are a large number of 100% web-based tax programs available.
These work very well on Linux.
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools
"
%% Wulfy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
w> When I get a personal e-mail from someone, I expect the Reply-To
w> button to reply to them. When I get an e-mail from a *list* I
w> expect the Reply-To button to reply to the *list* as that is where
w> the e-mail came from.
No it didn't. Mailing
%% "David R. Litwin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
drl> Well, I made that particular modification before you sent
drl> that. So, do you recommend that I un do this? If so, how?
You didn't quote so I don't know what you're talking about here.
If you mean the chmod +x, it doesn't matter: either
%% Bryan Donlan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
bd> chmod u+x ~/.profile
Your shell setup files like ~/.profile, ~/.bashrc, etc. don't need to
be, and in fact arguably shouldn't be (because it confuses how they're
used), executable.
Cheers!
--
%% kamaraju kusumanchi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
kk> Do you have any firewall installed between the your machine (at
kk> home) and the server? Then that could be the problem. My guess is
kk> that ssh connection is automatically disabled after certain period
kk> of inactivity.
That's def
What's with my subject line here? Geez, I must have been drunk! :-).
Better one above.
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools
"Please remain calm...I may be mad, but I am
I have an extremely annoying problem I hope someone can help me with, or
at least make some suggestion. The environment is complex,
unfortunately, but...
I work remotely from home. I'm running Debian "sarge" on both the local
and work systems.
I do a lot of work in Emacs, and rather than start
%% "Benjamin Sher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
bs> 2) I have alredy downloaded "netinstall" (rc3). I thought that was
bs> for the testing distro.
No. Typically there are never any CD images etc. created for
"testing". "Testing" is not a release; it's a state.
Let me try to make things cl
%% "Benjamin Sher" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
bs> So, I am willing to download the CD image by FTP. But I
bs> have tried several times to find the iso image and have
bs> failed. I tried ftp.debian.org and cdimages.debian.org and I
bs> just can't find the iso image.
I'm not sure where
%% John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jh> Tom writes:
>> It's login shell is /bin/false
jh> I wrote:
>> Doesn't matter to su.
jh> That isn't true.
Correct, BUT the GNU version of su is significantly more useful than the
traditional version (how anyone made the original su, newgrp
%% "Chris F.A. Johnson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
cfaj> On 2005-07-06, Paul Smith wrote:
>> The disadvantage of the pipe-to-while method is that each element
>> in the pipeline is run in a subshell, so variables set inside the
>> while loop (for ex
%% Marty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
m> Paul Smith wrote:
>> Obviously I can script this up somehow, if need be. My question is,
>> what's the "approved" way of doing stuff like this in Debian?
m> You may want to add an entry to /etc/udev/udev.
%% Dexter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> find . | while read file; do ; done
d> I tried before something like:
d> F=$(find .);for I in $F;do ; done
Besides breaking on filenames with embedded whitespace, this method has
the other major disadvantage that it collects the entire output into
%% Dexter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
d> But I want to use bash function instead of command.
You can't.
d> Problem is not, that command "find" runs in different environment, and
d> doesn't know variables and functions from parent shell.
Yes it is.
d> Because i tried:
d> A="XXX"
d>
%% Bill Wohler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
bw> Jules Dubois <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> 'apt-get upgrade' is restricted (and therefore safer) in that:
>>
>> under no circumstances are currently installed packages removed, or
>> packages not already installed retrieved and instal
So, since I upgraded my system to Sarge+Linux 2.6, I'm using udev to
manage /dev. It's great, BUT I have some non-free software (required
so I can log into work from home, unfortunately) which is not
udev-knowledgeable.
When I install the software it creates a device in /dev. Of course,
when I r
%% Rick Friedman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
rf> Is anyone else subscribed to that list?
Yes.
rf> If so, have you received anything from it in the last day or so?
No. It gets traffic very rarely: I've received 5 messages in the last 5
days, and none since Monday.
rf> Is there a better m
I was reading some of the potential Etch goals on debian-devel, and
there's one thing that I've wanted for years and years, since like the
second day I started using Debian:
http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=32877
Anyone have any idea on when something like this will be availabl
%% Redefined Horizons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
rh> "Your session only lasted less than 10 seconds. If you have not logged
rh> out yourself, this could mean that there is an installation problem or
rh> that you may be out of disk space. Try logging in with one of the
rh> failsafe session
%% Joey Hess <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jh> This is a mistake in the CD build. That text is intended to appear on
jh> development CD builds but be removed from the final build, but
jh> apparently noone remembered to remove it.
Sounds like a perfect candidate for the "Things To Do Before Re
%% Mike Ward <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mw> If there was ever a thing that taught me to not get relaxed and
mw> take it for granted that apt-get would handle everything nicely
mw> for me, this is it.
APT can't help you with bugs in the software or packaging. If you don't
want an "unstable
%% Carl Fink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
cf> http://www.xmission.com/~jstanley/ilo256/
Hm. I wonder if I should try a different kernel, just to see if it
works? Of course, it won't help me in the long run since I can't swap
out kernels but at least I'd know where I stood.
cf> Does it use
%% Carl Fink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> According to everything I can find, you don't need any special
>> drivers. For example, it says that in Windows >98SE you don't need
>> to install anything, it just works.
>> Because of this, I'm ass-u-me-ing it uses a standard filesystem/etc.
%% Carl Fink <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
cf> On Tue, May 31, 2005 at 05:05:21PM -0400, Paul Smith wrote:
>> My wife bought me a Rage MP 256M MP3 player for my birthday.
cf> I can't find a reference to this player in Google. Could you post the
cf> manufacturer
Hi all;
My wife bought me a Rage MP 256M MP3 player for my birthday. I'm having
a devil of a time getting my Linux system to recognize it so I can stock
it up with k00l t00n3s. When I plug it in, I get messages like this in
/var/log/syslog:
May 31 01:17:09 homebase kernel: usb 4-3: new high s
%% "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
rcs> I'm sorry, but this is wrong, as I have I done it. As long as
rcs> your invocation of make-kpkg uses the same append-to-version as
rcs> the previous invocation, then it will work. You may be
rcs> experiencing trouble becuase you ar
%% "Roberto C. Sanchez" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> What do I need to do to use make-kpkg to build my kernel packages, but
>> avoid having to run "make-kpkg clean" between every build? I'm
>> upgrading to a 2.6 kernel and I'm tweaking and poking at my config.
>> Running a build after a
Hi all;
Well, I went through the thread earlier this month about this subject,
because I have EXACTLY the same issue with make-kpkg, and I was
disappointed in the outcome (which, as far as I could tell, just
wandered off into the weeds). I'd like to restate it and see if we can
close it out:
Wha
%% Maurits van Rees <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mvr> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ : > temp
mvr> Does anyone know any other uses for this ':' command?
The most common usage these days is in conjunction with :=, like this:
: ${TMPDIR:=/tmp}
The := form assigns the value if the variable is empty,
%% Colin Ingram <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ci> This is not a debian specific question but I thought some of you
ci> could help. I am writing a shell script to parse a CSV file
Why would you choose bash to do this? The shell is great for running
commands, but it's really poor at parsing tex
If you're looking for the power of Debian packaging with the
installation, support, timely releases, etc. of something like Mandrake,
then there's only one place to go:
http://ubuntu.com/
I've played with this on a few test systems and I really like everything
about it, including their philos
%% Andy Firman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
af> He loves the feeling of browsing the repository, picking out games
af> and educational tools for his kids, and having me install with
af> apt-get.
Why do you have to install it? Put Synaptic onto his system, then he
can install anything he wan
%% "Jeremy Brooks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
jb> We use a Contivity VPN switch where I work. There is a linux
jb> client from Apani that works just fine with kernel >= 2.4.21. And
jb> they have a beta that works with 2.6.8, but ONLY on
jb> RH/Fedora/Suse. When used with Debian, it jus
%% Clifton Sluss <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
cs> does anyone out there have systematic approach to making
cs> ximian-connector work for evolution?
Unfortunately Debian doesn't have a good story for this software (yet?)
I heard that Evo 2.0 was going to be release RSN; maybe they're waiting
t
%% "Paul Akkermans" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pa> I have installed Debian(from a distribution cd) on my Pentium 2
pa> and I am wondering how I can see which version of gcc I have
pa> installed on my system. Can anybody tell me how I can see this and
pa> how to upgrade this (if this is po
%% John Summerfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
js> and another
js> http://www.gnu.org/software/hurd/hurd.html
js> It is not ready for production use, as there are still many bugs and
js> missing features.
While not ready for production, it is bootable and working in a
developer/hacker/ea
%% Paul Tsai <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pt> Ok, it is agreed that Linux shared no code from Minix, that is
pt> well supported. But it is also well established that Linus was
pt> trying to make a Minix-like OS with more features.
If by "Minix-like" you mean a kernel that runs on an i386 an
%% Darryl Luff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dl> The package is called evolution-exchange, and there seems to be
dl> only a powerpc deb there.
Hm. At one time, at least, there as an x86 deb because I installed it.
Maybe it's not been updated.
--
--
%% John Summerfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
js> Pls do not cc: me. I'm on the list.
Sorry...
js> I don't recall that you said fetchmail works with the same folders
js> Evolution fails on.
The error is that login fails, so it doesn't get far enough to specify a
particular folder.
js
%% John Summerfield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
js> Paul Smith wrote:
>> The very bizarre thing is that I also use fetchmail to download one of
>> my IMAP folders from the same account, leaving the other folders for
>> Evo, and fetchmail connects every single t
%% Andy Firman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
af> apt-cache search ximian-connector shows nothing.
af> How do I get his packages in?
apt-get install evolution-exchange
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMA
Hi all; I'm using Evo 1.4.6 on a Debian sid box. I'm connecting to an
Exchange 5.5 server using IMAP and normal password authentication (I've
tried ntlm, which my server supports, but that doesn't work either).
For the last year or so it's worked fine, but recently I upgraded to the
above versio
%% "Smith, Paul [BL60:SU40:EXCH]"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
sp> I have this same problem (mozilla-firefox fonts are very small) after
sp> upgrading to Gnome 2.6.
sp> I checked and I do have the gnome-settings-daemon running, so that's not
sp> what I'm missing.
I seemed to have solved th
%% cecil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
c> Maybe I should get a different laptop? Is a 150 mhz machine with 2 gig
c> hd and 32 meg ram going to be able to do the job? I'm worried now.
I seriously doubt you'll be able to run Office with that amount of
RAM... and even getting it installed (with th
%% David Mesler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dm> It's not necessary to pass options to gnome-settings-daemon. I
dm> just run it as "gnome-settings-daemon &" and it works fine.
dm> And yes, anyone not using gnome-session should start it up
dm> manually if you ever want to adjust your gtk2 a
%% Sridhar Srinivasan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ss> I had the same problem. Check out bug #250393 at
ss> http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=250393
ss> The solution is to install one of gstreamer-alsa, gstreamer-oss or
ss> gstreamer-esd.
Actually I had all those installe
%% David Mesler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dm> It didn't work for me either until I installed
dm> gnome-media. Specifically I think it might be dependent on
dm> gstreamer.
Thanks for the note. I checked and gnome-media is already installed,
and it's the latest version. I also looked and
I recently updated my sid box to all the latest stuff for the first time
in a month or two, which got me from Gnome 2.4 to 2.6. Once I
discovered that I had to kill the old services like gconf (which doesn't
happen normally when you log out) it seems fine.
Except one thing: the volume control app
%% Chris Black <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
cb> SID's install of Firefox uses ~/.firefox. Not ~/.mozilla.
That works!
Thanks.
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools
"Please rema
Hi all;
I have the latest FireFox from sid installed on my system, and I'm
invoking it with /usr/bin/firefox.
If I add plugins to the system plugin directory,
/usr/lib/mozilla-firefox/plugins, then they work fine.
But, I want to install some plugins in my local plugin directory;
according to all
So, who's going to ITP Connector for Debian? :-)
http://www.novell.com/news/press/archive/2004/05/pr04034.html
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools
"Please remain calm...I may
%% "Monique Y. Herman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
myh> I'll take a single document that I can search and eyeball-scan
myh> over multiple linked documents almost always. Example: the
myh> fetchmail man page. Yes, it's farking huge, but I can find what
myh> I need by searching on a key te
%% Mark Roach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mr> Yup. Install a key-sniffer, wait for the victim to unwittingly
mr> type his password.
>> Why would I type my password on your box? I would never do that,
>> that's not how Kerberos works.
mr> Yes it is. It is not how something like RSA sec
I know it went down during the compromise, but that was 6+ weeks ago!!
Does anyone have any idea when these services will be restored?
Thanks!
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tool
%% Mark Roach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mr> Yup. Install a key-sniffer, wait for the victim to unwittingly
mr> type his password.
Why would I type my password on your box? I would never do that, that's
not how Kerberos works.
As I said, if you can root my box then you can gain my credenti
%% Mark Roach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
mr> Note: if you tell me that he is going to boot off a knoppix CD and
mr> crack root on the box to su to userB, you must give me at least
mr> one example of an alternative that is not susceptible to an attack
mr> by a malicious local root
Any met
You can get DEBs created by Mikhael Goikhman (one of the FVWM
maintainers) at the fvwm-themes site:
http://fvwm-themes.sourceforge.net/
--
---
Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools
"Pl
%% "Smith, Paul [BL60:SU40:EXCH]"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
%% I wrote:
sp> Here's another Firebird problem (mozilla-browser 1.5-3, firebird 0.7-3):
sp> Now when I start it and I try to type into the URL box it immediately
sp> freezes.
Found it!!
It's because my sound daemon (esd) was h
%% I wrote:
sp> Here's another Firebird problem (mozilla-browser 1.5-3, firebird 0.7-3):
sp> Now when I start it and I try to type into the URL box it immediately
sp> freezes.
I don't think this has anything to do with my user profile; I renamed
the ~/.phoenix/default directory and created
Here's another Firebird problem (mozilla-browser 1.5-3, firebird 0.7-3):
Whenever I visit this link my entire browser freezes solid:
http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php?id=792934018&fp=16&fpid=0
I can't even kill it with the window manager, I have to kill the PIDs.
Since then, my firebi
Sorry to hijack this thread, but I've searched high and low and I can't
find what I'm looking for.
So, I set up a Jabber server on my Debian box and it's all good. I put
in mu-conference in there, and that's good too.
Now, how do I create rooms?!?! Using GAIM I can create a temporary
room, but
%% Paul Morgan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pm> - however, my dumbest stunt came from an su to root:
pm> rm -fr /bin /usr
pm> instead of
pm> rm -fr bin usr
pm> ...that one's tough to beat on the scale of dumbness. Or on the
pm> scale of "negative system impact", as they say.
Heh. T
%% Tom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
t> I've read http://www.wiggy.net/debian/status/ but it's not clear if
t> the main archives are back up yet.
The system housing the main archive was not compromised, so it never
went down in the first place.
--
-
%% "David Palmer." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dp> Gnomes' Gnumeric has full excel functionality.
Is that true?
One thing that you can do in Excel that I know you can't do in OOo Calc,
for example, is create surface graphs; I've wanted to generate those
cool graphs from my iozone data (see htt
%% [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Haines Brown) writes:
hb> Johannes,
hb> Took your advice, and that seems to have worked.
hb> $ xhost +local
hb> non-network local connection being added to access control list
hb> $ su
hb> Password:
hb> #
Well this doesn't prove anything: you have to
%% Dasn Cups <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dc> If I use GNU's source code in my project but don't open my source,
dc> who will punish me?
If you use GPL'd code and you don't distribute the results to anyone
else, that's perfectly legal.
If you use GPL'd code and you distribute the results, you
%% Osamu Aoki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
oa> Thanks. Is there any occasion where disabling these makes life
oa> easier?
Well, it makes life easier if you want to use TTY applications that use
those keys for something else... like bash.
If course, alternatively you can always rebind the fun
%% csj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> In order to search command history in BASH, I can use Ctrl-R
>> (reverse incremental search) but so far am unsuccessful in using
>> Ctrl-S (normal incremental search).
Your terminal is set for terminal flow control. "Old" terminals allowed
you to halt
%% "Daniel B." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
db> Paul Smith wrote:
>> .. If you're using a graphical login manager like GDM or
>> XDM, then these methods of login never actually invoke a login shell,
db> Why not? (Why shouldn't logging in
%% David List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
dl> Regular logins and logouts. No su'ing or the like.
Just to be clear, when you say this you mean logins at the console, for
example, right? If you're using a graphical login manager like GDM or
XDM, then these methods of login never actually invoke
%% [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bob Proulx) writes:
>> BUT, when I type "dnsdomainname", it says I have no domain name
>> configured.
bp> With DHCP this is set in the server, not the client. The server
bp> tells the client the domain name. I don't know why your override
bp> was not having affec
When I plug my Debian laptop in at work and connect to our DHCP network
it all seems to work: I get DNS servers configured, get a network
connection where I can surf, ssh to other systems, etc., and everything
seems fine.
BUT, when I type "dnsdomainname", it says I have no domain name
configured.
%% "Smith, Paul [BL60:SB10:EXCH]"<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
%% Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pj> Either way, it hangs in boot.
sp> Just a thought, but are you using the latest VMWare? I'm pretty sure
sp> you need VMWare 4, which was just released in April, to use newer Linux
%% Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pj> Either way, it hangs in boot.
Just a thought, but are you using the latest VMWare? I'm pretty sure
you need VMWare 4, which was just released in April, to use newer Linux
kernels: 2.4.18 etc. won't work with VMWare 3 IIRC.
--
--
%% Paul Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
pj> On Fri, Aug 22, 2003 at 11:31:25AM +0100, Colin Watson wrote:
>> Can't you file a bug report about where you got stuck?
pj> The thing is, I'm not entirely sure what's going on to be able to
pj> properly describe it.
Is there a howto or othe
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