On Mon, Apr 7, 2014 at 1:47 AM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Sunday 06 April 2014 06:54:53 Chris Bannister wrote:
> > $ man dmesg
>
> $ man dmesg > text.txt
>
> You will get a text file that you can read properly, and even change
> the font if you want to.
>
> If you want to be able to use gedit to alt
On Wed, Apr 2, 2014 at 9:47 AM, ray wrote:
> My recent and first build of Debian 7.4 has just started cycling during
> the boot. It has been doing this for an hour. It does it each time I
> start up. When it first started, it was going almost too fast to read,
> after an hour, it is much slowe
On Monday 07 April 2014 09:19:37 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> I didn't mean man dmesg, I meant dmesg. And because I am
> practically sleep-walking I sent the correction (which I sent
> *immendiately* after this one) to myself. :-( I benerally read mad
> pages in Konqueror.
Correction:
I didn't mean man d
On Monday 07 April 2014 06:16:33 Chris Bannister wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 06, 2014 at 05:47:31PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Sunday 06 April 2014 06:54:53 Chris Bannister wrote:
> > > $ man dmesg
> >
> > $ man dmesg > text.txt
>
> That produces the same result. IOW 'man dmesg' and 'man dmesg >
> te
It just wasn't my day (week? And to think taht I used tio love silver
birches!). I sent this immediatel;y after the other, and managed ot
send it to myself. :-( Sorry, Ray. :-(
On Sunday 06 April 2014 17:47:31 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Sunday 06 April 2014 06:54:53 Chris Bannister wrote:
> > $ m
On Sun, Apr 06, 2014 at 05:47:31PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Sunday 06 April 2014 06:54:53 Chris Bannister wrote:
> > $ man dmesg
>
> $ man dmesg > text.txt
That produces the same result. IOW 'man dmesg' and 'man dmesg >
text.txt' followed by 'less text.txt' is no different.
> You will get a
On Sunday 06 April 2014 06:54:53 Chris Bannister wrote:
> $ man dmesg
$ man dmesg > text.txt
You will get a text file that you can read properly, and even change
the font if you want to.
If you want to be able to use gedit to alter root owned files, there
are two ways (other than logging in as
On Sat, Apr 05, 2014 at 02:26:09PM -0700, ray wrote:
> Due to the time out issue, I am wondering if there might be a BIOS
> conflict with the Linux installation. I don't know how to get to
> those boot logs.
>
> I have read they should be in /var/log/ and dmesg.log but I don't find
> that file an
On Sat, 5 Apr 2014 14:26:09 -0700 (PDT)
ray wrote:
>
> > I suspect hardware problems. Could you try a live CD?
> >
>
> Andrei,
>
> Thank you for responding. The system works fine in Windows. In
> fact, I found even though rebooting Linux many times did not stop it,
> once I booted into Wind
> I suspect hardware problems. Could you try a live CD?
>
Andrei,
Thank you for responding. The system works fine in Windows. In fact, I found
even though rebooting Linux many times did not stop it, once I booted into
Windows and then back into Linux, it worked fine. The same thing happene
On Ma, 01 apr 14, 17:47:07, ray wrote:
> My recent and first build of Debian 7.4 has just started cycling
> during the boot. It has been doing this for an hour. It does it each
> time I start up. When it first started, it was going almost too fast
> to read, after an hour, it is much slower.
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