On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 08:42:01PM +0200, William Leese wrote:
> Surely, there is someone out there using Konqueror to browse shares in their
> network?
>
> There is a tab in Kcontrol where you can fill in a login, a password and a
> workgroup to use for SAMBA shares, no mention of domain thoug
On Friday 03 August 2001 18:23, Carl Fink wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
> > I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
>
> It's a hybrid web browser/file manager. Yes, I think that's a bad
> idea, but copying Microsoft is apparently all the rage.
Personally I like it.
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 12:23:43PM -0400, Carl Fink wrote:
| On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
|
| > I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
|
| It's a hybrid web browser/file manager.
Ok, that would explain my confusion here.
| Yes, I think that's a bad idea, but copying Mi
William Leese wrote:
Again, I'm asking help. With SAMBA how do I:
Login to the domain (pdc)
I haven't figured that out yet, but it'd be great to know, so that I
could image a computer lab of 19 machines to be dual-bootable, so some
of the students could get some exposure to Linux. (I'm
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 11:04:07AM -0400, dman wrote:
> I thought Konqueror was a web browser.
It's a hybrid web browser/file manager. Yes, I think that's a bad
idea, but copying Microsoft is apparently all the rage.
--
Carl Fink [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I-Con's Sc
On Fri, Aug 03, 2001 at 10:47:30AM +0200, William Leese wrote:
| Currently I can login to the PDC and other computers logged into the domain.
| All that needs to be done now is to get konqueror display a listing of all
| these computers.
I thought Konqueror was a web browser. If it is, then I do
> -Original Message-
> From: Andrew Pritchard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 10:38
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
>
>
> > > You have to join the li
> > You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> > requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> > have those)
> >
> > %>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the
> > linux box needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast,
> > /etc/hosts or your sa
nt: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 8:15
To: 'William Leese'; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> have those)
>
> %&g
-Original Message-
From: Kurt Lieber [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: vrijdag 3 augustus 2001 8:15
To: 'William Leese'; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: RE: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires som
> You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which
> requires some level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you
> have those)
>
> %>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the
> linux box needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast,
> /etc/hosts or your samba lmhos
> Login to the domain (pdc)
You have to join the linux computer to the domain, which requires some
level of admin privilages. (We'll assume you have those)
%>smppasswd -j domainname -r NetBIOS-name-of-PDC (which the linux box
needs to be able to resolve, either by broadcast, /etc/hosts or your
On Friday 03 August 2001 00:57, Nathan E Norman wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 02, 2001 at 04:20:20PM -0500, Dimitri Maziuk wrote:
> > * Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> > > Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to
> > > buy these essential books for you before
On Thu, Aug 02, 2001 at 04:20:20PM -0500, Dimitri Maziuk wrote:
> * Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> > Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to buy
> > these essential books for you before you set off as a fabulously well-paid
> > contractor?
>
> IM
to see if there's a book the ingrates want returned.
IME, its a cruel world out there where people don't have .edu in their email
addreses ;-)
- Original Message -
From: "Dimitri Maziuk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 10:20 PM
Subject: R
* Patrick Kirk ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) spake thusly:
> Hmmm! Isn't the whole point of working for someone else to get them to buy
> these essential books for you before you set off as a fabulously well-paid
> contractor?
IME you don't get to keep the books your employer's paid for. Which kinda
defe
t;William Leese" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2001 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: Linux in the workplace: NT Domains
| On Thursday 02 August 2001 17:01, Kurt Lieber wrote:
| > If you're an NT administrator moving over to Linux, then I highly
| > recommen
On Thursday 02 August 2001 17:01, Kurt Lieber wrote:
> If you're an NT administrator moving over to Linux, then I highly
> recommend the book "Linux for Windows NT/2000 Administrators: The Secret
> Decoder Ring" by Mark Minasi. It's chock full of great examples and
> NT-->linux translations. It al
If you're an NT administrator moving over to Linux, then I highly
recommend the book "Linux for Windows NT/2000 Administrators: The Secret
Decoder Ring" by Mark Minasi. It's chock full of great examples and
NT-->linux translations. It also has a great tutorial on getting samba
up and running withi
On 10 Dec, Zack Brown wrote:
> The basic system I am planning on will be Debian/KDE, since I use Debian
> myself, and find KDE to be most similar in appearance to ms-windows (no
> insult intended to KDE).
as an extra bonus, you could show them how flexible linux + X are, and
when you've finished
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