James wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm moving my primary workstation from one system to another.
> I use seamonkey for web browsing and reading email.
>
>
> Everything is fine, except the Mail folders can boxes do not
> show up. Recrusively everything looks to be fine, but the mail
> folders do not load up
Hello,
I'm moving my primary workstation from one system to another.
I use seamonkey for web browsing and reading email.
Everything is fine, except the Mail folders can boxes do not
show up. Recrusively everything looks to be fine, but the mail
folders do not load up when the email application i
On 11/21/06, Jorge Almeida <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 21 Nov 2006, Mick wrote:
>>> They are only stored in locked memory; they are never on disk
>>> unencrypted. Anyone that can read locked memory can access them, but this
>>> is very few users/processes on Linux -- and besides those same
On 12/02/07, Hemmann, Volker Armin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
If you can read german (or if you know someone who is able to translate it
for
you):
http://hardware.thgweb.de/2007/01/15/stresstest_netzteile_2007/index.html
Luckily, I own the same enermax they tested...
--
F everyone's I, th
> > > A good rootkit will install a "ps" that won't show the 'bot
> > > processes. The one time a machine of mine got hacked, netstat
> > > still worked, but I don't know why a hacked netstat couldn't be
> > > installed as well.
> >
> > > Looking through /proc/≤pid> is probably still reliable.
>
On 12/02/07, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Monday 12 February 2007, Matt Richards wrote:
> I wouldn't of thought it would be the RAM not from behavior like that
> but it does sound like a overheating issue, I have had computers just
> power off because they get too hot.
The thing
Thanks for all answers. It is always better to be sure to not break
something, if you update the toolchain...
Regards,
Marc
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Monday 12 February 2007, Matt Richards wrote:
> I wouldn't of thought it would be the RAM not from behavior like that
> but it does sound like a overheating issue, I have had computers just
> power off because they get too hot.
The thing with memtest is that it does (mostly) predictable tests,
On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 19:46:42 +0300, Hemmann, Volker Armin
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If you can read german (or if you know someone who is able to translate
it for
you):
http://hardware.thgweb.de/2007/01/15/stresstest_netzteile_2007/index.html
Nice link, thanks. Re reading German:
1.
On 2/12/07, Dan Farrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
I manged to solve the problem by not compiling nvidia framebuffer
support. Now even the nvidia-drivers work.
> Other than that, and a bit offtopic, too, today has been both very fun
> and incredibly educational (but a bit sore on the eyes
On Montag, 12. Februar 2007, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Sunday 11 February 2007, Jeff Rollin wrote:
> > On 11/02/07, Kent Fredric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > I would go with Hammann with
> > > "Make sure, that it is overheating and not a weak/dying PSU."
> > >
> > > Many people neglect to reali
On Mon, Feb 12, 2007 at 09:32:47AM -0600, Penguin Lover Dan Farrell squawked:
> > I can see in an xfce4 panel plugin that there is constantly a small
> > amount of incoming/outgoing traffic to/from the affected system when
> > there is no reason I know of for it. netstat doesn't show anything
> >
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I wouldn't of thought it would be the RAM not from behavior like that
but it does sound like a overheating issue, I have had computers just
power off because they get too hot.
Matty.
Jeff Rollin wrote:
> On 12/02/07, Dan Farrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> w
On Sun, 11 Feb 2007 16:50:31 +0200
"Vlad Dogaru" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> after a couple of failed attempts some time ago, I actually ended up
> with a kernel that boots. However, I am experiencing some problems
> which I think are at least in part due to my perhaps incomplete kern
On 12/02/07, Dan Farrell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I recommend you look into memtest86 to check your ram, it's provided as
a boot option on the gentoo boot cds.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Dan,
Quite correct
Funnily enough I had an Ubuntu LiveCD to hand with it on, so I used tha
I recommend you look into memtest86 to check your ram, it's provided as
a boot option on the gentoo boot cds.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Sun, 11 Feb 2007 19:58:49 -0800
Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > A good rootkit will install a "ps" that won't show the 'bot
> > > processes. The one time a machine of mine got hacked, netstat
> > > still worked, but I don't know why a hacked netstat couldn't be
> > > installed as well.
Grant,
I figured I should add this note. I'm recommending AIDE as something if you
get to the point where you feel like you've been hacked, you've done your
post-mortem, and are ready to rebuild, upon your rebuild AIDE might prove to
be handy in the future. It'd probably be useless on a system th
Grant,
Maybe going forward (if you're not doing so already), one tool I've found to
be useful in the past was AIDE. While it certainly won't prevent a break-in,
it can certainly be useful when trying to find out what changed on your
system.
Later,
Shawn
On 2/12/07, Paul Sebastian Ziegler <[EMA
On 2/12/07, Hans-Werner Hilse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 09:54:42 +0100 "Roman Naumann"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ifconfig eth0 gives me this:
>
> Link encap:
>
> UNSPEC HWaddr 44-4F-C0-00-14-31-AC-10-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00
> [...]
> I'm pretty sure the Mac-Addr is
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Monday 12 February 2007, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
While I generally agree, not *all* manufacturers provide rubbish for
us... e.g in the current context Zalman PSUs are very good quality
(robust and quiet), and if you hunt around a bit even some of the
less spectacular brand
On Monday 12 February 2007, Mark Kirkwood wrote:
> > I've given up on the consumer electronics industry being able to
> > consistently build high quality power supplies for ANYTHING that
> > plugs into the mains. The normal build quality is terrible, and the
> > ability of the designer to do the jo
Hi,
On Mon, 12 Feb 2007 09:54:42 +0100 "Roman Naumann"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ifconfig eth0 gives me this:
>
> Link encap:
>
> UNSPEC HWaddr 44-4F-C0-00-14-31-AC-10-00-00-00-00-00-00-00-00
> [...]
> I'm pretty sure the Mac-Addr is too long.. that's weird,
> Also, when using Sabayon, the f
Often this is the case especially with many so called "good deals". A lot
of the power supplies coming out of China are built for selling and not for
performance. In my own experience I have found Corsair Modular Power
Supplies to have reliable capacitors and provide steady amps. Expect to pay
m
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Sunday 11 February 2007, Jeff Rollin wrote:
On 11/02/07, Kent Fredric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I would go with Hammann with
"Make sure, that it is overheating and not a weak/dying PSU."
Many people neglect to realise how important a decent PSU is, and
how major an eff
Hi,
I have a problem with my ehternet connection and would be pleased if someone
could help me:
I emerged some things (don't ask me what exactly...) and am unable to ping
anything now.
The ip-address and co. are alright, I can just boot another operating system
on my pc (sabayon or windows) and
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