You're mostly right, I'm not terribly sorry, but I don't use it on every email
or post I make -- on debian-user typically only the first post in a thread I
might start or possibly in the first comment I make to a thread.
I've fixed the sig separator.
But let me ask you, do you complain to those
Thanks to all who replied. With only 4 GB, I'm not interested in that laptop,
but I was maybe most concerned about S-mode (in Windows).
I assume that would not keep me from installing Linux, I mean, presumably I
can still get into the BIOS (or the newer (to me) style of BIOS) and load
Linux fr
Ahh, ok, thanks -- that's pretty clear that there is no memory slot, and, even
though I wouldn't use the laptop for much -- to demo some software "on the
road", 4 MB is very limiting.
On Saturday, November 23, 2024 06:39:12 PM George at Clug wrote:
> The link you provided about the Laptop states
Oops, failed to send to the list -- resending.
On Saturday, November 23, 2024 06:15:45 PM George at Clug wrote:
> On Sunday, 24-11-2024 at 07:44 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Ahh, with respect to RAM, there is an empty SODIMM slot and at least one
> > site has installed an 8 GB stick there for a t
Ahh, with respect to RAM, there is an empty SODIMM slot and at least one site
has installed an 8 GB stick there for a total of 12 GB -- I'm not sure what
the maximum additional RAM could be. (The factory installed 4 GB is soldered
in).
On Saturday, November 23, 2024 03:38:56 PM rhkra...@gmail.
I see an attractive deal on a laptop that is shipped with Windows 11 in S-mode
(link below).
I assume (I know), but am not sure that I will be able to load Linux on that
laptop -- can anyone tell me for sure?
PS: I'd also want to expand the RAM and I have to find out if I can do that.
cc'ing m
On Friday, June 02, 2023 11:34:58 AM Mario Marietto wrote:
> Excuse me,but there is something within your argumentation that I don't
> like and I want to express what it is. Let's take Linux as an example of
> what I want to say. Linux is well known to be an OS that can be installed
> on the old ma
Intentionally top posting:
Thanks to all who replied, I got the Arris DG2470A modem (/ router) working in
bridge mode with my existing router (Ubiquiti Edge Router X).
I made a dumb mistake -- I had my router and another computer plugged into the
Arris (I used the other computer to configure th
Oh, I meant to add that compacting is typically useful when record (email?)
storage is in something like an mbox file -- it saves the need to rewrite the
file each time a single file is deleted (for example).
On the other hand, with storage in something like mdirr files (right name --
one em
On Sunday, April 30, 2023 06:24:14 PM Default User wrote:
> > What is 'compacting', what is it meant to do?
The definition of compacting as I "grew up" with it (not sure where I first
encountered it is the idea that in some applications, the act of "deleting"
something doesn't actually delete i
Some key phrases / sub topics:
* Astound (cable based) ISP in eastern Pa. area
* Arris DG2470A modem / router in bridge mode with Ubiquiti Edge Router X
* Ubiquiti Edge Router X in DMZ
Aside: I'm in a catch 22 -- my new, cable-based ISP (Astound / RCN) says my
questions are out of scope
On Wednesday, April 19, 2023 05:02:16 PM Default User wrote:
> sudo cp -r from the live usb.
Recently I've been trying to get in the habit of using cp -aru because those
options do what I usually want:
* -a preserves dates (and ownership and permissions), and doesn't follow
(copy from) sym
On Saturday, April 15, 2023 03:37:54 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> I think it's either "Stupid Wild-Ass Guess" or "Silly Wild-Ass Guess".
In my experience (and usage) it was "Scientific Wild Ass Guess".
--
rhk
| No entity has permission to use this email to train an AI.
On Thursday, April 13, 2023 10:36:08 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Anyway, here's the POSIX documentation section:
>
> https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#t
> ag_18_13
>
> And the relevant piece of text:
>
> [ If an open bracket introduces a bracket expression
On Saturday, April 08, 2023 01:44:48 PM Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> I was never a fan of Dijkstra's "Go To Statement Considered Harmful"
> and perceive modern spaghetti inheritence as more obscure than any goto
> noodling.
Good point!
--
rhk
(sig revised 20230312 -- modified first paragraph, some
On Saturday, April 08, 2023 09:55:14 AM Emanuel Berg wrote:
> Okay, can you boil it down to some one, two, maybe three main
> things that can answer the question why these languages have
> taken the different directions they have taken?
I think that in some | many cases, especially in the early da
On Tuesday, April 04, 2023 10:33:26 PM Felix Miata wrote:
> Now it seems nearly everything has adopted varied foreground colors that
> are inadequately contrasty.
+1
--
rhk
Abbreviated sig.
| No entity has permission to use this email to train an AI.
On Saturday, April 01, 2023 10:22:24 AM debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I don't remember the name of the utility that I used to use in the
> > Microsoft world, but it was very nice in showing changes within lines
> > or paragraphs, using underline and crossout (wro
On Saturday, April 01, 2023 09:07:47 AM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Friday, March 31, 2023 11:37:30 PM Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> I don't remember the name of the utility that I used to use in the
> Microsoft world, but it was very nice in showing changes within lines or
> paragraphs, using underlin
On Friday, March 31, 2023 11:37:30 PM Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> Suppose I wrote a book book1.txt. I then send it to an editor who
> corrects the initial mistakes, altering some lines while doing so,
> renaming to another file book2.txt.
>
> When I receive the editor's correction, I don't accept the
On Friday, March 31, 2023 12:13:33 PM Susmita/Rajib wrote:
> There is a package called diffoscope but it has to install a long list
> of dependent packages in my present Debian system installed from
> "Official Debian GNU/Linux Live 11.6.0 lxde 2022-12-17T11:46"
It's been quite a while since I act
On Sunday, March 26, 2023 04:21:00 PM Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> One last thought is I read somewhere that ISPs, especially smaller
> ones, have been caught throttling users based on type of usage even
> though the same ISPs label their services as unlimited. Conspiracy
> theories tossed aside, that
On Saturday, March 18, 2023 03:33:46 AM Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> But if that same project, in addition to those two text files, also
> within each code file contains a statement that I, Jonas, am copyright
> holder and grants the rights of BSD-3, then those files are licensed as
> BSD-3. If nothi
On Sunday, March 12, 2023 09:02:26 PM cor...@free.fr wrote:
> When such a debian (the digital product) is authentic, should we say it
> "real debian" or "true debian"?
>
> I am not sure about this statement.
My guess is that Corey is a French speaker, and is unsure about the best way
to (simply)
On Friday, March 10, 2023 02:54:39 AM Nicolas George wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com (12023-03-09):
> > Didn't you mean "of course"?
>
> I meant the rest of the paragraph and the ones after that.
Ahh, ok.
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 09:16:18 PM Corey Hickman wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 9:44 AM wrote:
> > I'm much happier with a "real" email client.
>
> what real email client do you use? :)
> I am using Mac as the regular desktop, Mac's Mail App is hard to use.
> Though my server is debian sys
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 08:05:24 PM Corey Hickman wrote:
> Thanks
> (btw, gmail does use top-posting by default, I don't know where to change
> it.)
(1) I rarely use the gmail webmail client, but (2) when I do, it is not easy
to bottom post, from memory, what I do is click on the place near t
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 04:16:14 PM Nicolas George wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com (12023-03-08):
> > The question: Suppose disk corruption corrupts one block in the data
> > storage area of a LUKS partition / filesystem (I'm not asking about
> > corruption in the headers or some other area of "me
On Thursday, March 09, 2023 04:03:20 PM David Christensen wrote:
> I believe I changed a byte somewhere in the middle of file blocks on
> disk using dd(1) and then I saw a bad byte somewhere in the middle of
> the file with less(1).
>
>
> I suggest that you repeat the experiment. Just going thro
Thanks to all who replied -- two clarifications requested below:
On Wednesday, March 08, 2023 09:45:33 PM David Christensen wrote:
...
> A few years ago, I did a "bit rot" experiment.
Thanks for doing that experiment!
...
> I wiped a disk, applied
> a partitioning scheme, created a partition,
I am curious about the integrity of LUKS (that is, the ability to preserve
data in the event of corruption on the disk or such).
Aside: I know that backups are a solution / requirement (and I have some
(well, one, atm)), and I know that there is the ability to backup (and
restore) the LUKS head
On Monday, February 20, 2023 04:05:19 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 02:42:59AM -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > On Mon, Feb 20, 2023 at 2:27 AM wrote:
> [...]
>
> > > That's what Microsoft calls them. I prefer the RFC's IP4LL.
> >
> > And Wireshark (https://wiki.wireshark.
On Saturday, February 11, 2023 10:55:15 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> Is there a reason you don't use a pure USB pathway for keyboard
> and mouse?
>
> i.e. does your target computer not have a USB port available to
> take the KVM's input?
Hmm, that's an interesting thought -- yes that computer does hav
Background: My KVM switch (and a keyboard) died in two (freak)A(ccidents)BKAC.
My spare KVM did not work, so I'm looking for another KVM. (For now, I'm
using the original KVM for switching the VGA video and keyboard, and have
separate mice plugged into each computer (only two in service (on a
On Friday, February 03, 2023 04:56:38 PM debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> > In my original post, I blamed those pop up texts (warning about an
> > external link) on noscript -- they are actually coming from kmail
> > itself. (I use an older version so it may not be a problem in more
> > up-to-d
In my original post, I blamed those pop up texts (warning about an external
link) on noscript -- they are actually coming from kmail itself. (I use an
older version so it may not be a problem in more up-to-date versions of
kmail.)
On Friday, February 03, 2023 12:55:02 PM rhkra...@gmail.com wro
(Intentionally top posting.)
Thanks to all who replied!
Yes, xev shows that does auto repeat (outside of the Firefox
browser).
I guess I need to look for a dumb web browser ;-)
On Friday, February 03, 2023 09:12:18 AM Nicolas George wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com (12023-02-03):
> > Is there a wa
Is there a way to setup auto repeat for the key? Or maybe I could
assign to some other key that already has auto repeat?
Background / motivation: I get emails that have a lot of external references,
and NoScript pops up a warning text box for each one which I must close (kmail
is frozen unti
On Tuesday, January 31, 2023 01:49:18 PM Pierre Willaime wrote:
> ... I am looking for a convenient way to
> "draw" some ASCII boxes such as
>
> #
> ## some title here ##
> #
> Do you know dedicated tools or text editor to do such things the easy
> way on a
On Tuesday, January 31, 2023 08:00:14 AM gene heskett wrote:
> It does, but we should all remember that TANSTAAFL is a universal law.
> It cannot be broken.
Aside: Not the purpose of my response here, so plaese do not reply, but I
believe that I am supplying some free lunches. If not, I'll have
On Tuesday, January 31, 2023 05:34:49 AM Pierre-Elliott Bécue wrote:
> There are also individuals making such donations.
>
> That being said, these donations can't be used to pay a Developer for
> its work in the project.
Well that may be true in the case of certain Debian organizations, but I d
On Sunday, January 29, 2023 01:59:51 AM Shalom Ben-Zvii Kazaz wrote:
> There is no ssh when its frozen
Hmm, I'm a little confused, and maybe you are, also.
I think the intent of the advice was to log into the frozen laptop from
another computer / device, using ssh *while the frozen laptop is not
On Wednesday, January 11, 2023 12:20:05 PM Linux-Fan wrote:
> > Or does one need to read every byte, allocated or not?
>
> AFAIK one needs to _power_ the device every once in a while and keep power
> connected for some time. Then, the controller can dos all the necessary
> actions in the backgroun
On Wednesday, January 11, 2023 11:11:04 AM daven...@tuxfamily.org wrote:
> Isn't ndiswrapper specific to networking/wireless network drivers?
> I don't think it just works for any kind of drivers. AS far as I can
> tell, it was designed specifically for WiFi cards.
I used it for Ethernet (not WiFi
On Saturday, December 24, 2022 09:44:49 AM Nicolas George wrote:
> Before asking for help about a command-line, type:
>
> unset LC_ALL
> export LC_MESSAGES=C
>
> … and re-run the command.
That sounds like good advice, but then the "user" (the person asking for help)
needs to know how to restore
On Thursday, December 15, 2022 11:35:04 PM George Olson wrote:
> I have an RX 6600 XT also. I use a 4 monitor setup and had to configure
> things so that it would work with 2 on top and 2 on the bottom. I can't
> remember exactly how I did it, but I first installed Bullseye and
> figured out it was
Thanks to David Wright and Greg Wooledge for their replies.
Thanks also to David for the reference to the article on Margaret Thatcher --
I'm trying to obtain a copy through my local library (ILL).
On Wednesday, December 07, 2022 11:53:18 AM David Wright wrote:
...
> Margaret Thatcher is a prim
On Wednesday, December 07, 2022 07:18:57 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Here's my version:
>
> rlart() {
> local day time path
> find "${1:-.}" -type f -printf '%T@ %TY-%Tm-%Td %TT %p\0' |
> sort -zn |
> while read -rd '' _ day time path; do
> printf '%s %s %s\n' "$day" "${time%.*}" "
On Tuesday, December 06, 2022 09:53:11 AM Richard Owlett wrote:
> It worked acceptabily on Debian 9.13 . I have to read manual to see if I
> can make a cosmetic tweak.
If you describe the cosmetic tweak you need, I (or someone else) *might* be
able to help.
--
rhk
If you reply: snip, snip, and
On Tuesday, December 06, 2022 07:01:07 AM Richard Owlett wrote:
> I just tried it on both of my machines.
> It lacks ability to set the right margin. I want to insert a paragraph
> such that the effective LEFT margin [when line wraps at RIGHT margin] is
> the indent level.
Just as a followup to my
On Tuesday, December 06, 2022 07:01:07 AM Richard Owlett wrote:
> I just tried it on both of my machines.
> It lacks ability to set the right margin. I want to insert a paragraph
> such that the effective LEFT margin [when line wraps at RIGHT margin] is
> the indent level.
I started to write a rat
Intentionally top-posting; Thanks to all who replied, I think I have a pretty
good understanding and I think the biggest thing I was missing was how a file
could be reconstructed using only the metadata, but I now see the explanation
that filesystems that can do snapshots are COW and now things
I'm not really clear on the concept of a snapshot (for backup) -- I've done a
little googling but haven't found an explanation that "satisfies" me.
In this email I want to hyptothesize on what a snapshot might be in the hope
that others can correct / amplify it when I go wrong.
Starting from a
On Thursday, November 10, 2022 09:06:39 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> If you need a filesystem that is larger than a single disk (that you can
> afford, or that exists), RAID is the name for the general approach to
> solving that.
PIcking a nit, I would say: "RAID is the name for *a* general approach to
> didier gaumet wrote:
> > I may be mistaken, but I think there is a confusion here about a
> > deduplication at filesystem level and at backup tool level.
I didn't (and don't) know much about deduplication (beyond what you might
deduce from the name), so I google and found this article which was
On Sunday, October 02, 2022 05:58:23 AM debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> If the document were maintained using technology such as a wiki (with
> restricted edit permissions) then the wiki underpinnings would maintain
> the edit history automatically. A link to the wiki page and a statement
> as
On Saturday, October 01, 2022 06:10:48 AM The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2022-10-01 at 05:46, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > Debian-user is a mailing list provided for support for Debian users,
> > and to facilitate discussion on relevant topics.
> I therefore reiterate my suggestion, from what I think wa
On Sunday, September 25, 2022 08:42:57 AM The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2022-09-25 at 08:22, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Oops, ignore that previous response ...
> >
> > On second thought, what hede wrote is correct, it is just stated in a
> > way that I wasn't famiiar with (and I haven't had my morni
Oops, ignore that previous response ...
On second thought, what hede wrote is correct, it is just stated in a way that
I wasn't famiiar with (and I haven't had my morning coffee yet)
Sorry for the noise!
On Sunday, September 25, 2022 07:56:08 AM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Saturday, Septemb
On Saturday, September 24, 2022 09:17:31 AM hede wrote:
> "Idempotent" means, that a task with the same input data and the same
> config (for example to remove a tag via exif-tool) results in the same
> output data. Is this the case here?
That is not my understanding of itempotent (nor of Wikipedi
On Thursday, September 22, 2022 03:52:39 PM Curt wrote:
> I don't believe I did anything else to get it to work.
Thanks to Curt and Gene -- that works fine!
I recently installed a new to me Brother HL-2140 printer on one of the
computers on my LAN. It has a USB interface. I used the Brother installer to
install it on that computer, and, after a few false starts, seems to be
working fine.
I now want to try to also install the printer on another co
On Saturday, September 17, 2022 04:28:40 AM David wrote:
> On Sat, 17 Sept 2022 at 16:07, Karen Lewellen
> Every other time when you have asked questions here, I have tried but
> been unable to find any information at all about shellworld.net.
A google search for shellworld.net provides hints (I
On Thursday, September 08, 2022 10:54:20 AM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Sorry, this is a test email. Not sure how to do it "off list" (more
> explanation later, maybe)
Interesting.
Sometimes when I'm working on a reply to an email, I try to "disable" the
address so that I won't accidentally sen
Sorry, this is a test email. Not sure how to do it "off list" (more
explanation later, maybe)
On Thursday, September 08, 2022 01:06:07 AM Jeremy Ardley wrote:
On Thursday, September 08, 2022 01:06:07 AM Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> On 8/9/22 12:29 pm, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > On Wed, Sep 07, 2022 at 10:31:37PM +0200, Sébastien Hinderer wrote:
> >> Currently I am using exim4 as mail transport agent (MTA).
...
> >> solution, although I find exim4 really big a
On Wednesday, August 10, 2022 08:55:20 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I.e., if a computer on the LAN contacted a computer outside the LAN, NAT
> > would allow incoming data from that external computer, but not allow
> > incoming data from other external computers.
>
> That's
On Monday, August 22, 2022 08:50:02 AM Tom Browder wrote:
> Can anyone recommend a good book on the general topic of VMs? Or one on a
> specific VM stack (using Linux as base)?
I applaud someone wanting / willing to read a book ;-) (I'm smiling, but I am
serious.)
I also applaud the recommedati
On Sunday, August 21, 2022 01:09:09 PM Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Well, if we are going to plug services, shellworld is fantastic!
> Even under new management service remains profoundly wonderful.
> My personal site is hosted here too, with my paying $60 for both
> accounts.
Is that shellworld.net?
On Friday, August 12, 2022 05:08:00 AM lina wrote:
> I want to make a small booklet about my baby with few cartoon pictures,
> like dance octopus, a cut baby, ect.
>
> Is there any software I can use to have the picture as they draw in a
> children's book?
Hmm, I don't remember the name, but with
Oops, just noticed that in my previous email I said pre-2020 when I meant
pre-2000 -- that may have added some confusion.
On Wednesday, August 10, 2022 08:55:20 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > my LAN consisted only of DOS (or Windows) computers. One (DOS) computer
> > on the
Hmm, big (to me) oops -- pre-2020 should have been pre-2000
On Wednesday, August 10, 2022 08:23:13 AM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Background: My first encounters with NAT were back in the days (pre-2020)
> when my LAN consisted only of DOS (or Windows) computers. One (DOS)
--
rhk
If you reply:
On Wednesday, August 10, 2022 04:12:11 AM Curt wrote:
> I never realized that local addresses were fundamentally identical in all
> local networks because there weren't enough addresses in the first
> place, and that NAT was essentially designed to palliate this shortage.
Yes, aiui, NAT was design
On Tuesday, August 02, 2022 11:04:13 AM Andy Smith wrote:
> But in reality you probably aren't ever going to have to take
> any action with regard to IPv6.
...
> Most of Sky's
> customers will not know or care that at some point IPv6 got switched
> on for them.
Well, I know this is probably a si
On Monday, August 01, 2022 12:08:47 PM Lee wrote:
> Verizon FIOS finally rolled out IPv6 in my area. yay!
I guess if I read that right, Verizon still supports IPv4 and has not
announced any plans to discontinue it?
I feel like I'm getting too old to learn (too many) new things, so if my ISP
m
On Sunday, July 31, 2022 07:50:54 AM Curt wrote:
> Maybe the OP (who's disappeared anyway, as they
> often do) should look there.
Hmm, what's the criteria for determining a missing OP? Looks like his first
post was at 10:55 last night, so when you wrote this, he hadn't been heard
from or seen i
On Sunday, July 31, 2022 05:44:25 AM Curt wrote:
> It's a GUI app so why he's trying to start it at the command line is
> anybody's guess.
I'm anybody (I think) so I'll take a guess -- if you start a gui type app from
the command line, I think, at least in many cases, you see various status and
On Friday, July 29, 2022 11:05:41 AM Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> Put CD into the USB external drive.
>
> No problem.
Is the external USB drive the drive you are having trouble with? If so, it
sounds like you have a media problem -- the media you are using is not
suitable for the drive. (Or,
On Friday, July 29, 2022 07:51:59 AM Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 07/29/2022 01:46 AM, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> > Hello
> > I try to open a CD.
> > But Linux cannot find it.
> What hardware are you using?
> Is the CD drive internal or external?
> What "Linux" are you using? This list is for Debi
I am (still) rather confused about using ssh certificate authentication.
I am confused about a variety of specifics, but the biggie is this: I have the
idea that I can create one user certificate and one server (host) certificate,
and use that for any number of users and servers on a LAN.
from
On Friday, July 15, 2022 08:49:01 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 15, 2022 at 12:32:35PM -, Curt wrote:
> > The question I ask myself preliminarily, before delving further into
> > the matter, is whether certificate-based SSH authentication is
> > appropriate for a home LAN with three
Thanks for the response, and to dsr as well. I won't really ask a question
here, but I will make some comments -- not sure how / where to fit them in --
will try to intersperse below. Or maybe I'll just top post them here:
Surprise 2:
Another surprising thing to me (with the evolution of the
Intentionally top posting.
Thanks for the reply!
I'm thinking of two or three paths forward -- one is to give up on this, but
I've invested a lot of calandar days (and non-"spare" manhours so far, so I
don't want to do that.
Another is to make another pass through some of what I consider the b
On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 07:09:33 PM Jeremy Ardley wrote:
> I understand that certificate based SSH authentication has problems with
> overall security management on a network. Password only has similar
> problems.
I'm not sure it has any more problems than ssh public key authentication,
maybe
dsr, Thanks for the reply!
Like I said, I think I went down a rabbit hole, and I wish I had realized that
before I went there.
I've invested quite a few calendar days (and "spare" manhours) in trying to
figure this out, so I'm not quite ready to give up.
I do have some ideas (an idea) for an
I seem to have gone down a rabbit hole.
I want(ed?) to set up ssh on my LAN using certificate authentication, and am
having a lot of trouble finding the information I need / would like to have.
I won't go into much detail now, but I didn't realize how big a subject ssh
is, and although I'm find
On Sunday, July 10, 2022 06:48:10 PM Andy Smith wrote:
> Otherwise I'm afraid your claims about IPv6 so far have been quite
> bizarre, on the level of "IPv6 ate my homework" or "my father was
> killed by a 128-bit integer", and can't be taken seriously.
From the peanut gallery: I disabled IP
On Friday, June 24, 2022 03:02:35 AM Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> The last suggestion, and it's the simplest:
>
> rm [filename] -rf
>
> Train your brain and your fingers to move the rf to the end of the command
> so that you _have_ to check what filename you are typing as you type it.
>
> If you
The mad snipper strikes -- mwha ha haha
On Thursday, June 23, 2022 04:05:40 PM Gareth Evans wrote:
> > On 23 Jun 2022, at 01:46, gene heskett wrote:
> > On 6/22/22 19:39, Gareth Evans wrote:
> >> OK, but I mean do the non-robots.txt-compliant bots actually try to
> >> submit passwords?
> >
> >
On Wednesday, June 15, 2022 06:45:45 AM Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 15, 2022 at 4:22 AM Mick Ab
>
> wrote:
> > I have a fairly new desktop PC running Debian 11. Recently there have
> > been a few occasions when the PC has failed to
> > be woken up in the morning after being left ov
On Monday, June 13, 2022 11:35:29 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Let's get some actual numbers in here. From wikipedia:
>
> IBM PC with proprietary BIOS introduced: 1981
> Linus Torvalds begins writing Linux: 1991
Efforts started toward EFI (predecessor in some sense of UEFI) -- see below:
199
On Sunday, June 12, 2022 07:53:21 AM gene heskett wrote:
> What I do have is konsole and termit, no xterm.
For me, konsole does fine -- I can C&P from it with the mouse (and, presumably,
keystrokes).
I was going to restrain myself and not send this, but I succumbed ... sorry
for the noise.
On Sunday, June 12, 2022 03:53:49 AM Felix Miata wrote:
> Why this tangent to Gene's foibles?
I shouldn't do this, but ...
(And no criticism intended of anyone, specifically Thomas Schmitt.)
s/song/threa
On Saturday, June 11, 2022 10:25:34 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 11, 2022 at 09:54:17AM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > eval `ssh-agent`
> For the record, the command you've got here is written in a very
> antiquated way. A better (as well as more modern) way to write it
> would be:
Intentionaly top posting: I just wanted to say that the question is resolved,
and record my understanding.
Thanks to all who replied!
Repeating the command for posterity:
eval `ssh-agent`
I now see that it is a two step process, first the backticks cause ssh-agent to
be run, producing 3 line
On Saturday, June 11, 2022 07:13:38 AM gene heskett wrote:
> Welp, I did that, but the installer refuses to set the bootable flag on
> that drive, it blinks the remote screen, but when its repainted, its
> still off. I went thru the loop, even made a new gpt partition table, but
> no joy. and all I
In my (seemingly unending) quest to understand ssh, I've come across a
document that calls for running =eval 'ssh-agent'= from a command line.
I wondered why, as I thought I would get the same result from just running
=ssh-agent=, but the results are different -- see below:
$ eval `ssh-agent`
A
I want to make a comment on this thread that is at least a little bit (maybe a
lot) off point, it is more a suggestion on what might be a better way next time
(although it could be done this time with a little work, I believe). Because
I don't see a good place to put this comment in context, I'
On Thursday, June 09, 2022 02:13:31 AM mick crane wrote:
> I finally had to set up an app password for mail to work.
> During the process of discovering what to click on there was the
> statement.
> "Google will never use the content of your emails in order to select
> what ads you are shown."
> or
On Wednesday, June 08, 2022 05:58:44 PM Felmon Davis wrote:
> I don't understand the *logical* connection. logically you can have
> app-specific pw's without 2-step auth. (not sure about the other way
> around.)
Google requires 2-step authorization as a prerequisite to application specific
passwo
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