On Tuesday 30 August 2005 15:17, Greg Folkert wrote:
> Vi, even then it might just not be noticed. I am thinking that you are
> not clear as to what FAMD just is.
>
> ---
> Description: File Alteration Monitor
> FAM monitors files and directories, notifying interested applications
On Tuesday 30 August 2005 12:01, Ian wrote:
> I picked up a copy of it, now I'm surfing sans Ad-bar! It's an OK browser.
> I might use it sometimes.
>
> Anyone else's thought's on it?
I've used it for years. Non-exclusively, though, just for special purposes,
like browsing certain types of websit
On Tuesday 30 August 2005 05:46, Saverio Trioni wrote:
>
> Hi. I have the same problem. I don't dare to kill famd but it runs as
> my user. I think it should run as root...
>
Mmm, I did it once. I didn't kill it kill it. I just restarted the daemon and
all was well. I had no problems, but YMMV. If
Wu-Kung Sun wrote:
On 8/14/05, Ed Young <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Type "dmesg" at the command line.
Well there are several boot messages that don't appear in dmesg. Is
there a way to make dmesg exactly the same? Also dmesh quickly fills
with what I guess are iptables messages (I'm
ChPh wrote:
UNSUBSCRIBE UNSUBSCRIBE UNSUBSCRIBE UNSUBSCRIBE
Yeah, 'cause that never fails... :P
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Dave Ewart wrote:
OK, I understand. Given that you don't want to force *every* page to
follow your own choice, perhaps you should define your own basic CSS and
then use it for sites you deem 'poorly designed' by using the
WebDeveloper extension?
https://addons.mozilla.org/extensions/moreinfo.p
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