On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 19:37 -0500, Todd Pytel wrote:
> After doing a rather lengthy sid upgrade (it's been a few months, at
> least), my Sun java plugin is no longer working in Iceweasel.
Aha... not so tricky after all. The problem is that the alternatives
system still points to the
On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 19:21 -0600, Javier Vasquez wrote:
> Please notice these combinations require experimental besides
> unstable, :-) And to make the dependency handling easier, I just use
> aptitude in ncurses mode, since safe or full upgrades will mislead...
I always use aptitude anyway, but
On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 19:07 -0600, Javier Vasquez wrote:
> Well, for me the next combination of packages just works well (at some
> point in the past I needed to add experimental to have the latest
> combination of packages). This is openjdk + icedtea:
How are you running two different versions o
After doing a rather lengthy sid upgrade (it's been a few months, at
least), my Sun java plugin is no longer working in Iceweasel.
Alternatives is set correctly and Iceweasel sees the plugin, but it's
marked INVALID in pluginreg.dat and never loads. I Googled around a bit
and it seems like Firefox
Thanks for the link and comments Bob. Just mknod'ing the appropriate
device nodes was enough to get back a proper /boot and then get the
kernel updated. The nodes show up properly now.
--Todd
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Tro
On Thu, 2010-12-30 at 07:35 -0600, Todd Pytel wrote:
> Alternatively, could I just mknod the appropriate nodes
> for the moment in order to get the kernel sorted out?
Gave it a try, and this works fine, at least as a temporary solution.
We'll see if finishing the kernel upgrade can
On Thu, 2010-12-30 at 01:31 -0700, Bob Proulx wrote:
> If you are just now getting the grub 2 upgrade in Sid then it has been
> a *long* time since you last upgraded. At least ten months? Since
> before last February? (I can't quite remember when it went through a
> brief search didn't refresh m
I recently began updating my desktop, a Sid install which I only update
infrequently - the last update was a few months ago. As I usually do in
this situation, I started by pulling down the various non-X/GNOME
libraries and basic admin, devel, and text tools. Before too long, I did
a reboot to test
I recently began updating my desktop, a Sid install which I only update
infrequently - the last update was a few months ago. As I usually do in
this situation, I started by pulling down the various non-X/GNOME
libraries and basic admin, devel, and text tools. Before too long, I did
a reboot to test
I used to be able to mount USB devices without any problem as long as I
was part of the plugdev group. No need for fstab entries or anything
else. Now I'm getting messages from gnome-volume-manager saying that I
don't have sufficient privileges to mount the volume. I'm not sure
exactly when this st
I've got some video clips (AVI's with XVid + AC3) that have very low
volume levels. I would like to boost the volume, preferably doing as
little transcoding as possible. I've used "normalize" in the past to
serve this purpose (after demux'ing the AVI), but it only works for
WAV's and MP3's. Is it p
of your questions implies that you're missing
out on some key concepts of how DNS and BIND work. I'd recommend reading
the DNS/BIND section in O'Reilly's TCP/IP Network Administration for a
good introduction.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ipsets and
such. Does anyone have any pointers as to known-good USB/Irda adapters?
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
FS-shared user /home's, for example). Windows was born
on desktops, and never really left them in philosophy. You need a
network browser for Windows because its natural environment is one with
many resources spread across relatively powerful desktops. Very
different roots, and thus
ce to have the
power if you need it, but silly to reinvent a perfectly good wheel.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
r
filesystem. Trust me, I've done it. It was a stupid exercise, entirely
not worth the trouble.
I don't know if Xandros can use Christian's repo (see marillat.free.fr
for details), but please use it if you can. You have better things to do
with your time...
--
Todd Pytel
---
boring, time-consuming, constantly outdated, and just not
much fun. Your whining about it on the list will not change those facts.
You cannot *make* volunteers do something, and they have *absolutely* no
obligation to do what you desire. Why do you not understand this?
--
Todd Pytel
tive feedback. I'm certainly *not* saying "Go away,
you dumb noobie and leave us alone to our cult." The volunteer,
non-commercial nature of Debian does not suit everyone's needs, nor does
it proclaim to. If it doesn't work for you, use something else. But
don't waste
Deathmatch round in 15-20 minutes and get
a nice sense of closure. Adventures and RPG's are the stuff I leave for
the weekend when I can play for a couple of hours. I don't mind the
thought in adventure-type games, it's just that they don't lend
themselves well to break-time.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Tue, 6 Jan 2004 21:43:28 -0700
"s. keeling" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Which tool? I believe perl's would be...
Yeah, each one works a little different. Perl's the best all-around,
IMO, but I'll add grep...
grep '(pg\.
inly not anything like a solution. I would be
willing to dig around some more, though - if I could get this KVM
working perfectly, I would be very happy. Do you remember even where you
might have heard this?
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
hat effect.
I've heard good Linux reports for the Avocent units also.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ried moving .gvimrc to .vimrc and saw
some odd behavior. For me, the font was still correct. But, using
.vimrc, gvim ignores my "syntax off" line. Using .gvimrc, it honors it.
Strange.
So it does sound like there's a bug in config file handling to me. B
On Sat, 27 Dec 2003 23:21:20 +0100
Tom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * [27/12/2003 20:26] Todd Pytel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
>
> > > What's wrong? Is this a bug? Or what am I overlooking? Is there a
> > > way have the default (Metacity) back?
>
le to kill
the openbox process and start up a metacity process from an xterm. It's
just that the momentary loss of a WM can make input difficult if you
don't do it correctly.
And FWIW, Openbox 3 blows Metacity out of the water as a GNOME WM. You
may want to check it out. IMHO, of course...
ing it, since I need to use it with Windows machines at work.
But I've had no problems at all with using it under 2K/XP/Debian. From
what I've read, it's one of the faster units around as well.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
e visor driver in /proc/bus/usb/drivers or a cradle device in
/proc/bus/usb/devices.
The more I look at this, the more I think my cradle went bad.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Fri, 12 Dec 2003 17:03:39 -0600
Todd Pytel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Have you rebooted in that time?
>
> Yes, I rebooted today after I noticed the problem, wondering if the
> cradle had maybe temporarily flaked out. No difference.
Sorry - I realize you're rea
On Fri, 12 Dec 2003 16:57:00 -0600
Lance Simmons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> * Todd Pytel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [031212 16:35]:
> >
> > Hardware-wise, nothing at all has changed in the last 3 weeks. No
> > new devices, same kernel, same modules.
>
>
. The Visor support is
compiled into the kernel, shows up at boot, and doesn't return any
errors. But plugging or unplugging the cradle doesn't generate any event
notification in messages or syslog. Should I see messages there? (I
don't remember if I used to
ewhere and being read in
after /etc/profile, overwriting PS1. Perhaps in /root/.bashrc or
/root/.bash_profile?
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
an't skip ahead or back in the stream, either. IIRC, I used to be
> able to do that on Windows with RealPlayer. (Again, maybe that's an
> issue with the server.)
Again, Realplayer does this correctly.
> BTW -- is there a way to down
ng that quite a few web lately cause mozilla to
> eat all cpu -- where I have to killall mozilla-bin to the machine
> back.
Could be a Mozilla thing - apart from one poorly behaved Flash page, I
haven't seen any problems with Firebird.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
/ testing main
I find gxine to be the most generally useful plugin for Mozilla - much
less temperamental than mplayer for everything but quicktime, which it
doesn't handle so gracefully. But there are a few Real clips that only
realplayer can deal with, so I keep it around as well.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
I never had much luck with that plugin - but
both realplayer and gxine stream the audio just fine from moz-firebird
for me.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
;s built-in
filtering to sort mail to different folders, you can set which account
is the default based on the folder. I looked briefly, but didn't see any
obvious way to do this in Thunderbird.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
folders and cannot be moved.
There have been many, many requests for it though and there's an open
Wish List bug at Ximian that you may want to sign on to. Too bad Evo
can't do this - it's a show-stopper for me as well as many others.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
and how much was technical I don't
know. Still, I think it could have taken off and been useful with more
cooperation.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
and
> login in order
> for it to show up for the first time.
Give it a little time - it will refresh eventually. If you're impatient
and don't want to logout, you can do a "killall gnome-panel".
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
27;ve noticed that sometimes the
libGL.so.1 symlink gets trashed, causing problems like you describe.
I would guess that the nvidia GL package and the X11 GL package are
stepping on one another's toes during upgrades.
- --
Todd Pytel
-
Signature attache
s are doing
is getting past a spam filter that whitelists aaa.com.
Also, see the link below as to why this is not a good idea.
> Also how can I avoid having mail with empty
> sender addresses entering the queue?
You don't. See the following for answers t
On Sat, 18 Oct 2003 15:13:12 -0500
Todd Pytel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hmm... whois tells me that ns1.lightwaveaccess.net is also an
> authoritative nameserver for you. At first, I dug at it and came up
> with the address for ns1.helpfulhome.com successfully. A minute or so
&
f
your whois listings. That might be a problem, but I'm not really
certain. If you want, post or mail me some of the domains you host and I
can try some MX lookups. That might reveal some more details.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On Wed, 15 Oct 2003 21:48:10 +0200 (CEST)
Johan Braennlund <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Todd Pytel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> If you don't mind compiling, you might try
> > Openbox 3. AFAIK, it's not in any apt repositories yet since it's
> >
s being loaded from /home/.xinitrc or /home/.xsession.
I would suggest removing .xinitrc and putting the single line
exec gnome-session
in .xsession. If that doesn't work, then there are deeply bizarre things
happening.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attache
ething is
seriously wrong with your session management. Probably some other
component isn't installed - do you see any errors of any sort in
~/.xsession-errors? You might also try wiping all the GNOME related
hidden directories in your home dir and starting fresh if
ger at all after removing Metacity but
before running Sawfish.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
t's still at Release
Candidate phase. But I've been running it and the "obconf" config tool
for the last week, and I'd say it's phenomenally better than the other
two.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
e is a better way?
Yes, you want to use jigdo.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
if you don't see it in your version try the version from unstable. I seem to recall
that in older versions, you needed to edit the configuration file manually for font
changes, and that it was kind of a pain in the butt.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attache
it says, you need those two kernel options. No, the kernel help for
them does not make this clear at all. It probably should...
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
e I used PLIP, but I seem to remember that the
default parallel port BIOS settings were not correct for me. I would
think that those settings would be "all-or-nothing," but it may be worth
checking into.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
R ^snd/.*PERMISSIONS root.audio 0660
> #REGSITER ^snd/controlC0 CFUNCTION GLOBAL symlink
> #/proc/asound/oss/sndstat /dev/sndstat
>
> Any devfs experts know how to fix this line properly?
Correct the typo in "REGISTER"?
W00t! I'm an expert...
--
Todd Pytel
are/doc I'd guess) to
be quite sufficient. Basically, just edit the files in ..horde/config,
..horde/imp/config, etc. The files have very detailed comments, so you
shouldn't have too much need to look things up.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature a
he server's printers in the *client's* CUPS web page. If
that much works, it's pretty easy to go from there.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
or me. While I prefer (g)mplayer's interface
for watching full length movies/TV, gxine is nice and simple - good for
catching a quick clip when you don't want to fish around for buttons and
menus.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
o that you can
at least have some modicum of control. Let me know if you want more
info, and I'll dig up some of my earlier posts on the subject. But be
warned that this is not a pretty task.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
>
> Yes. see 'man tar'.
To be just a tad more specific, check out the "-p" option to tar.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
he message through the spell-checker of your choice. That is,
if the Woody version has Actions - I think they are a somewhat recent
addition to the main branch.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
ible since it will apply to any interface
configured via DHCP.
--
Todd Pytel
Signature attached
PGP Key ID 77B1C00C
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Originally tried this at the linux-usb list, but didn't get anything.
Maybe other Deb users have hit this problem?
Having some issues with a USB 2 drive enclosure here. The USB controller
is the Via built into the Asus A7V333. I can mount the drive fine, and
(at one point - see below) I copied fi
Excellent comments by David. Just to add a few things...
On Fri, 01 Aug 2003 11:26:21 -0400
David Z Maze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Raffaele Sandrini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > I am not sure if it is possible for this three compnents (AFS,LDAP
> > and Kerberos 5) to interact together us
Tom,
On Fri, 01 Aug 2003 07:18:45 -0400
Tom Allison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wouldn't it be possible to utilize /opt for big packages (open office,
>
> mozilla, KDE, Gnome, Java) and still leave /opt for system
> administrators?
>
> I kind of like the idea of putting what you need for the b
On Thu, 24 Jul 2003 16:06:37 -0400 (EDT)
Faheem Mitha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Also, I'm using AFS on the University of North Carolina campus.
Much about AFS is specific to your institution. I'll make some guesses,
but you need to talk to your IT department.
> 1) When using an afs client, th
On 23 Jul 2003 10:07:41 -0700
"Jeff Wiegley, PhD" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Todd,
>
> I hope you don't mind but I'm copying your last message
> sent to me to the users lists because it did result in a
> solution. and its so simple that I want a permanent record
> of it in a searchable loca
Quoting "Jeff Wiegley, Ph.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Sorry, I'm being light on information because it seems to me
> that SMTP-AUTH is something a huge number of debian/sendmail
> users would want and therefor I expected it to be an easy
> item to configure (if not the default)...
>
> the /etc/mai
On 20 Jul 2003 19:42:27 -0700
"Jeff Wiegley, Ph.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But how and where do I configure this in debian's installation of
> sendmail/sasl? and what do I need to run to update/reload it
> once I've made changes?
>
> I've made changes to /etc/mail/sasl/Sendmail.conf.2 but t
On 20 Jul 2003 15:42:28 -0700
"Jeff Wiegley, Ph.D." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After two days I've discovered that sendmail is using something
> called sasl (sasl2 actually) to do the authentication and it
> requires something called "realms".
>
> Well, I don't want this. I want sendmail to use
On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 06:14:41 +0200 (CEST)
Roberto Sanchez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > I just installed it on my machine, but it starts automatically with
> > the GUI. I'd like it to start with the command line and start the
> > GUI myself once I log on.
> >
> > Any pointers on how to chan
On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 10:15:15 +0800
Zhao You Bing <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >>Sawfish does not use the settings in the gnome-control-center; you
> >need to>run sawfish-ui. Alt-F2, sawfish-ui.
> >
> >
> > Which is the same as "Applications" -> "Desktop Preferences" ->
> > "Windows"(I like
On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 21:12:35 -0800
"Rodney D. Myers" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> When I attempt to send mail, from the command line, the address after
> the "@" is knoppix.
>
> After I installed knoppinx to the hard drive, I've edited
> /etc/hostname to show the machine name "riverside".
>
> E
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 14:06:07 +1000
"Jennifer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Then I reboot the system and startx. But It looks like coming the same
> problem.
> Please see the attached log file...
No, it's a very different problem. You did read the log file, didn't
you? We see...
==) VGA(0): vi
On Thu, 17 Jul 2003 11:12:44 +1000
"Jennifer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> , then I use command to test X " startx", but I could not start X,
> rather I get the error message. Please see the attached file for
> details.
(II) LoadModule: "xtt"
(II) Loading /usr/X11R6/lib/modules/fonts/libxtt.a
Du
Mike,
Great - thanks for the info. I'll try it out tomorrow or Friday, and
report back if there are issues.
Cheers,
Todd
On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 16:34:13 -0700
Mike Fedyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 16, 2003 at 06:20:02PM -0500, Todd Pytel wrote:
> > On Wed,
On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 16:07:57 -0700
Mike Fedyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi D-U :)
>
> I'm going to switch from pop3 to imap, and I'd like to know what you
> guys think is the best debian packaged IMAP server, and why.
>
> I'd really like to use MailDir mailboxes.
>
> Thanks.
Courier is very
On Wed, 16 Jul 2003 16:04:29 -0700
Mike Fedyk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> # /etc/network/interfaces -- configuration file for ifup(8), ifdown(8)
>
> #auto br0
> iface br0 inet static
> address 10.0.0.122
> netmask 255.255.255.0
> broadcast 10.0.0.0
> gateway 10.0.0.1
> bridg
I'm looking to set up a transparent wireless/cat5 in the uncommon
direction - i.e. the network and rest of the world are on the wireless
side and the LAN is on the cat5 side. At some point, I'll probably go
with a hardware solution, but for the moment Debian is what I've got. I
don't need firewal
Perhaps you need to specify a backlight value for the client? That is,
it may be that the client is displaying perfectly well, but with no
backlight so that you can't see it.
Also, note that the lcdproc client has problems with CrystalFontz
displays - something having to do with character encod
I'm noticing a very peculiar behavior trying to translate menus. First
I tried using the example in /etc/menu-methods/translate_menus -
changing "Apps" to "Programs". Using the "subtranslate" directive
destroyed the subfolder hierarchy under Programs, so I tried using
"substitute" instead. This
On Sun, 6 Jul 2003 22:14:42 -0400
Antonio RodrHX <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After turning the level to debug, here is what I get, after stopping
> and starting again. I am attaching the relevant part. Thanks
< snip from attachment >
D [06/Jul/2003:22:01:13 -0400] foomatic-gswrapper: gs '-dSAF
That sure doesn't help much. Try turning up the log level to "debug" in
/etc/cups/cupsd.conf, and restarting cupsd or rebooting. Also check the
page and access logs if you haven't already.
--Todd
On Sun, 6 Jul 2003 19:29:30 -0400
TR <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> There is really not much there.
Check out the logs in /var/log/cups for hints. I think I've seen this
behavior with ghostscript problems, but it probably be any number of
things.
--Todd
On Sun, 6 Jul 2003 17:45:53 -0400
Antonio Rodr0X <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a HP Deskjet 895Cse pluged to /dev/lp0
> It shows config
On Sat, 5 Jul 2003 16:46:18 -0500
"Kelley Hilborn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> About all I can do at this point is ping my gateway computer. Am I
> missing
> something once again?
> One other thing, do I need to input a nameserver anywhere?
> If so, where?
You're on the right track.
man res
On Fri, 4 Jul 2003 12:50:52 +0200
Raffaele Sandrini <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'd like to do a backup to another partition using tar. Here are about
> 9GB data to be saved. After a while tar complaints about a to big
> output file (i think max size is around 2GB). Is there a way to split
> the
On Fri, 4 Jul 2003 08:10:37 -0600
"John W. M. Stevens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 03, 2003 at 10:13:24PM -0500, Todd Pytel wrote:
> > I backed up my sources.list,
>
> OK . . .
>
> > changed it to unstable,
>
> "It"? Did
I don't see exactly what the fuss is. Fonts are fine for me - I do
remember previous updates (maybe a month ago) in testing breaking them
momentarily, however, so this may not be a GNOME issue. As for the rest
of the GNOME2 packages, they're just not here yet - deal with it. I
backed up my sour
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 23:47:41 -0500
Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Kent West wrote:
> >>
> > Ah, "nmblookup -S somePC" works just fine. Thanks!
> >
> >
> Then again, apparently not. The fourth octet appears to be wrong, so I
>
> suspect the address I'm getting is of some other machine alo
nmblookup is built for just what you describe. It's part of the
standard Samba packages.
--Todd
On Wed, 02 Jul 2003 23:15:39 -0500
Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How can I determine the IP address of "somePC"
> ("smbclient -L" still finds the PC; it just doesn't report the IP
> address
I'd suspect Galeon - I had no problem registering with Mozilla-Firebird.
--Todd
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
How about
for N in `seq 1 9`
do...?
--Todd
On Sun, 29 Jun 2003 09:55:00 +
Jonathan Matthews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 28, 2003 at 03:03:27PM +0100, David selby wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am writing bash a bash & sed script, it has been going suprisingly
> >
> > well. I n
I know how menu editing does (or rather doesn't) work in Gnome 2 -
vfolders, desktop files, and all that. What I can't figure out is what
defines the main menu itself. That is, when I click the foot, I see
Applications, Debian Menu, KDE Menu, Run Program, etc. What defines that
top-level menu? The
e location bar:
>
> about:plugins
>
> there you can see which plugins you have installed.
>
> Hope it helps!
>
>
> Todd Pytel wrote:
> > I grabbed the nifty xft-enabled Moz-Firebird package for testing
> > last week, but can't seem to get Java working
I grabbed the nifty xft-enabled Moz-Firebird package for testing last
week, but can't seem to get Java working on it. I was previously using
Sun's 1.4.1_02 package along with the compatibility deb for the old C++
library - that worked fine on Debian's Mozilla and on mozilla.org's
Phoenix/Firebird.
Clive,
OK, here's what I think should work. Bear in mind that
1) This is a pretty ugly business, and usually takes a lot of
testing to iron out. The following should give a rough outline to start
with.
2) This suggestion is not really suitable for a professional
installation - it's not particul
What are you showing here? Are "Hydra" and "Hydra_SAMBA_" different
machines? Why the "-B" with no address? nmblookup will broadcast by
default. I think what you see below is the system trying to resolve
Hydra_SAMBA_ into an IP address as the argument to "-B", i.e. you're not
specifying a lookup
Clive,
You need to be more specific about how things are set up, specifically
the Samba security level (share, user, domain, etc.). Generally
speaking, Samba and NIS don't really go together. Samba, in most
setups (there are many possibilities), authenticates its users against
the smbpasswd file
There shouldn't be any need for this - Debian's samba packages already
have PAM support. At least the woody ones and the .debs at samba.org
do...
--Todd
"Philippe Dhont (Sea-ro)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> I have the following problem, i already asked on samba and pam user
> lists but
I'm looking to pick up a USB hard drive enclosure for backup purposes,
and was wondering if there were any success/failure stories I should be
aware of. I need an enclosure (not an external drive) because I'll also
be backing up (via network) some OpenBSD machines, which don't support
USB 2 - so t
Richard Heycock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah I agree. I really liked the fact that you could dynamically
> create new virtual desktops which is of course gone.
Don't think Metacity does this... that was a nifty feature, though.
Metacity is intentionally minimalist, as you've seen with their
I noticed this also with Sarge. Looks like Sawfish is being moved to the
GNOME 2 version, which in my experience has always sucked tremendously.
Somehow, they took a nice, simple window manager that had just the right
options, reduced the number of options, removed the config tool, and
yet still le
1 - 100 of 112 matches
Mail list logo