on Tue, Sep 09, 2003 at 01:07:15AM +0200, joachim klamann ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Im using debian 3.0 on a laptop with 64 mb ram and 4 gb harddisk.
> Processor is Intel Celeron 366. Every time I boot >>find<< is running,
> consuming most of the power and blocking every other process. How
>
Jerry Quinn wrote:
Steve Lamb writes:
> On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 01:07:15 +0200
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (joachim klamann) wrote:
> > Im using debian 3.0 on a laptop with 64 mb ram and 4 gb harddisk.
> > Processor is Intel Celeron 366. Every time I boot >>find<< is running,
Most likely because you have a
Steve Lamb writes:
> On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 01:07:15 +0200
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (joachim klamann) wrote:
> > Im using debian 3.0 on a laptop with 64 mb ram and 4 gb harddisk.
> > Processor is Intel Celeron 366. Every time I boot >>find<< is running,
> > consuming most of the power and blocking e
On Tue, 09 Sep 2003 01:07:15 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (joachim klamann) wrote:
> Im using debian 3.0 on a laptop with 64 mb ram and 4 gb harddisk.
> Processor is Intel Celeron 366. Every time I boot >>find<< is running,
> consuming most of the power and blocking every other process. How
> nesseca
Im using debian 3.0 on a laptop with 64 mb ram and 4 gb harddisk.
Processor is Intel Celeron 366. Every time I boot >>find<< is running,
consuming most of the power and blocking every other process. How
nessecary is find? Do I need it? And if I need it, how can I change
priority from +10 to let
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