On Thu, Jan 02 2014, Helmut Jarausch wrote:
> On 01/01/2014 11:07:22 PM, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
>> My home desktop has had a seagate external 750GB drive ST3750640cbrk
>> for
>> a number of years and the disk is starting to fail. The system gets
>> only modest usage. It is powered on about 1/
On 01/01/2014 11:07:22 PM, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
My home desktop has had a seagate external 750GB drive ST3750640cbrk
for
a number of years and the disk is starting to fail. The system gets
only modest usage. It is powered on about 1/2 the time and the disk
often goes significant periods wi
On Wed, Jan 01 2014, Daniel Frey wrote:
> On 01/01/2014 02:07 PM, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
>> I was considering what seagate calls an "expansion hard drive". They
>> are USB 3, but I will be using only USB 2. The desktop is gentoo-only
>> and I don't need any backup software from seagate.
>>
>>
On 01/01/2014 02:07 PM, gottl...@nyu.edu wrote:
> I was considering what seagate calls an "expansion hard drive". They
> are USB 3, but I will be using only USB 2. The desktop is gentoo-only
> and I don't need any backup software from seagate.
>
> The models are STBVx000100 for x=1,2,3,4 TB.
>
My home desktop has had a seagate external 750GB drive ST3750640cbrk for
a number of years and the disk is starting to fail. The system gets
only modest usage. It is powered on about 1/2 the time and the disk
often goes significant periods without activity so it spins down.
I was considering wha
for all i know, my data disk died yesterday (WD caviar black, 2TB).
first i see the message:
SATA PORT3 Device Error
Press F1 to resume
and then during boot up this:
[2.775026] ata3: SATA link up 3.0 Gbps (SStatus 123 SControl 300)
[2.775571] ata3.00: failed to IDENTIFY (INIT_DEV_PARAMS
Am Tue, 06 Aug 2013 14:14:32 +0100
schrieb Kerin Millar :
> On 03/08/2013 15:55, Marc Joliet wrote:
> > Am Wed, 31 Jul 2013 13:12:01 +0100
> > schrieb Kerin Millar :
> >
> >> On 31/07/2013 12:31, Marc Joliet wrote:
> >>
> >> [snip]
> >>
> >>>
> >>> There's also "-cpu host", which simply passes you
On 03/08/2013 15:55, Marc Joliet wrote:
Am Wed, 31 Jul 2013 13:12:01 +0100
schrieb Kerin Millar :
On 31/07/2013 12:31, Marc Joliet wrote:
[snip]
There's also "-cpu host", which simply passes your CPU through to the guest.
That's what I use for my 32 bit WinXP VM. You can use it if you don't
Am Wed, 31 Jul 2013 13:12:01 +0100
schrieb Kerin Millar :
> On 31/07/2013 12:31, Marc Joliet wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
> >
> > There's also "-cpu host", which simply passes your CPU through to the guest.
> > That's what I use for my 32 bit WinXP VM. You can use it if you don't mind
> > not
> > being
On 01/08/2013 22:38, Walter Dnes wrote:
On Thu, Aug 01, 2013 at 08:41:56AM +0200, Michael Hampicke wrote
You can use march=native on your gentoo hosts, that's no problem, as
long as you don't use it on your guests. That's the hole idea of VMs:
being able to move the virtual machine to another m
On Thu, Aug 01, 2013 at 08:41:56AM +0200, Michael Hampicke wrote
> You can use march=native on your gentoo hosts, that's no problem, as
> long as you don't use it on your guests. That's the hole idea of VMs:
> being able to move the virtual machine to another machine, that might be
> completely di
Am 01.08.2013 03:02, schrieb Walter Dnes:
> On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 11:45:48AM +0100, Kerin Millar wrote
>
>> Please provide the content of /proc/cpuinfo on the host.
>
> The first one is my shiney almost new desktop (Dell Inspiron 660) and
> the second one is my "hot backup" (more like emergen
On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 11:45:48AM +0100, Kerin Millar wrote
> Please provide the content of /proc/cpuinfo on the host.
The first one is my shiney almost new desktop (Dell Inspiron 660) and
the second one is my "hot backup" (more like emergency backup, 6-year-old
Dell Dimension 530). I'll be o
On 31/07/2013 12:31, Marc Joliet wrote:
[snip]
There's also "-cpu host", which simply passes your CPU through to the guest.
That's what I use for my 32 bit WinXP VM. You can use it if you don't mind not
being able to migrate your guest, but it sounds to me like you're doing this on
a desktop m
Am Wed, 31 Jul 2013 06:11:24 -0400
schrieb "Walter Dnes" :
> I'm looking at setting up 32-bit WINE to run a 32-bit Windows app.
> Since I'm on a pure 64-bit (no multi-lib) machine, that doesn't exactly
> work, which is why I'm looking at QEMU. I need to run WINE in 32 bit
> mode, on a 32-bit in
On 31/07/2013 11:11, Walter Dnes wrote:
I'm looking at setting up 32-bit WINE to run a 32-bit Windows app.
Since I'm on a pure 64-bit (no multi-lib) machine, that doesn't exactly
work, which is why I'm looking at QEMU. I need to run WINE in 32 bit
mode, on a 32-bit install in a VM. Is a 64-b
I'm looking at setting up 32-bit WINE to run a 32-bit Windows app.
Since I'm on a pure 64-bit (no multi-lib) machine, that doesn't exactly
work, which is why I'm looking at QEMU. I need to run WINE in 32 bit
mode, on a 32-bit install in a VM. Is a 64-bit virtual cpu type
recommended anyways? A
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 5:32 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 16:31:58 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
>
>> > I have a WZR-HP-G300NH with firmware DD-WRT v24SP2-EU-US (08/19/10)
>> > std - build 14998 and can't recall the last time I lost a wireless
>> > connection.
>>
>> Would you mind che
On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 16:31:58 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
> > I have a WZR-HP-G300NH with firmware DD-WRT v24SP2-EU-US (08/19/10)
> > std - build 14998 and can't recall the last time I lost a wireless
> > connection.
>
> Would you mind checking your wireless config and let me know what
> transmit
On 03/02/2012, at 5:49, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 14:34:01 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
>
>> I also have WZR-HP-G300NH and wifi suffered constant disconnects and
>> poor performance.
>
> I have a WZR-HP-G300NH with firmware DD-WRT v24SP2-EU-US (08/19/10) std -
> build 14998 and
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:49 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 14:34:01 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
>
>> I also have WZR-HP-G300NH and wifi suffered constant disconnects and
>> poor performance.
>
> I have a WZR-HP-G300NH with firmware DD-WRT v24SP2-EU-US (08/19/10) std -
> build 14998 a
On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 14:34:01 -0600, Paul Hartman wrote:
> I also have WZR-HP-G300NH and wifi suffered constant disconnects and
> poor performance.
I have a WZR-HP-G300NH with firmware DD-WRT v24SP2-EU-US (08/19/10) std -
build 14998 and can't recall the last time I lost a wireless connection.
--
On Thu, 02 Feb 2012 08:55:24 -0500, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
> This sounds good. Thanks to all responders. One question. I found the
> buffalo manual online. I don't see how I can assign fixed IP addresses
> on its 192.168.11.x network. That is I want the LAN connection to my
> laptop ajglap to
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 11:44 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 23:35:03 +1100, Gregory Shearman wrote:
>
>> I can second the Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH. I run it with Openwrt rather
>> than ddwrt and I find it runs flawlessly, though I only run it with a
>> few wireless laptops and a wired
On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 23:35:03 +1100, Gregory Shearman wrote:
> I can second the Buffalo WZR-HP-G300NH. I run it with Openwrt rather
> than ddwrt and I find it runs flawlessly, though I only run it with a
> few wireless laptops and a wired server.
What are the advantages of Openwrt? I have one of th
On Thu, Feb 02 2012, Gregory Shearman wrote:
> In linux.gentoo.user, you wrote:
>>
>> On 02/02/2012, at 11:02, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>>>
>>> I am asking for a recommendation of a router/wap. I know the
>>> wired/wireless tradeoffs.
>>>
>>> thanks, allan
>>>
>>
>> Sorry, read it as wired or wi
In linux.gentoo.user, you wrote:
>
> On 02/02/2012, at 11:02, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>>
>> I am asking for a recommendation of a router/wap. I know the
>> wired/wireless tradeoffs.
>>
>> thanks, allan
>>
>
> Sorry, read it as wired or wireless.
>
> Check out the buffalo routers -I have a G300NH
On Thu, February 2, 2012 2:08 am, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
> I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
>
> Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 100Meg,
> I should upgrade even if the "funny" turns out to be just a config error
> on my laptop.
>
> This is a home
On 02/02/2012, at 11:02, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 01 2012, bi...@iinet.net.au wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 02/02/2012, at 9:08, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>>
>>> I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
>>>
>>> Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 10
On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 10:12 PM, Michael Mol wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 8:08 PM, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>> I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
>>
>> Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 100Meg,
>> I should upgrade even if the "funny" turns out to
On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 8:08 PM, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
> I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
>
> Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 100Meg,
> I should upgrade even if the "funny" turns out to be just a config error
> on my laptop.
>
> This is a home s
On Wed, Feb 01 2012, bi...@iinet.net.au wrote:
>
>
> On 02/02/2012, at 9:08, Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>
>> I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
>>
>> Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 100Meg,
>> I should upgrade even if the "funny" turns out to be jus
You can expect best case of 50% thru put for wifi (I.e., 50Mbs), and usually
much less. Think overhead for encryption, error recovery, and speed reduction
for distance. Add to that most wifi speeds on the box come from the marketing
department ...
Then, if you are in a crowded (rf wise) envir
I have a linksys wrt54G that is acting a little funny.
Since my new laptop supports 1Gig wired ethernet and the wrt is 100Meg,
I should upgrade even if the "funny" turns out to be just a config error
on my laptop.
This is a home system.
My requirements are modest.
1. >= 4 wired ethernet ports
At Fri, 27 Jun 2008 16:01:17 -0300 Daniel da Veiga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Gordon Schulz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
>> (http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
>> out of the box.
>>
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Gordon Schulz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
> (http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
> out of the box.
>
Another vote for Tomato, as its the best firmware I've used so far.
But, if you hav
Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
(http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
out of the box.
Greetings,
gordon.
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 7:34 PM, Allan Gottlieb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
>
Allan Gottlieb wrote:
I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
point.
I have been unable to find in the documentation how to tell its dhcp
server that mac address X should get IP addr Y. I am prepared to
accept the deserved shame if someone tells me how to do this.
Fail
I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
point.
I have been unable to find in the documentation how to tell its dhcp
server that mac address X should get IP addr Y. I am prepared to
accept the deserved shame if someone tells me how to do this.
Failing the above, I am seri
Scott W. McMikle ha scritto:
> OK, I will consider myself duly chastised. ;-)
I didn't mean to be rude :), of course if you need specific help you are
more than welcome. And if you *really* need step-by-step directions, we
can point you to the right page.
However getting directions and then try/l
OK, I will consider myself duly chastised. ;-)
On 2/22/07, b.n. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Scott W. McMikle ha scritto:
> Forgive me, but I will need step by step instructions to recompile with
> the necessary driver.
Never ask for "step-by-step" instructions.
Ask for where to find information
Scott W. McMikle ha scritto:
> Forgive me, but I will need step by step instructions to recompile with
> the necessary driver.
Never ask for "step-by-step" instructions.
Ask for where to find information and how do things work, so you can
actually *learn* by yourself what you are doing (instead of
On Thursday 22 February 2007 04:45:02 Scott W. McMikle wrote:
> Here are the errors I receive when I attempt startx;
>
> failed to load /usr/lib/xorg/modules/extentsions/libGLcore.so
> failed to load module "GLcore" (loader failed, 7)
> failed to load module "VESA" (module does not exist, 0)
> fail
failed to load
/usr/lib/xorg/modules/extentsions/libGLcore.so
failed to load module "GLcore" (loader failed, 7)
failed to load module "VESA" (module does not exist, 0)
failed to load module "kbd" (module does not exist, 0)
failed to load module 'mouse" (module does not exist, 0)
No Drivers Availab
Forgive me, but I will need step by step instructions to recompile with the
necessary driver.
On 2/21/07, Paul Sebastian Ziegler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
I dont know about your X Server (there are some great guides out there -
don't despair, it
Here are the errors I receive when I attempt startx;
failed to load /usr/lib/xorg/modules/extentsions/libGLcore.so
failed to load module "GLcore" (loader failed, 7)
failed to load module "VESA" (module does not exist, 0)
failed to load module "kbd" (module does not exist, 0)
failed to load module
I have the HP m7357c computer with the Asus P5LP-LE motherboard, 1.5 GB
RAM. I am using the on-board audio card; Realtek ALC 882 CODEC, and the
on-board network card; Intel 82562GT, and lastly the video card; NVIDIA
GeForce 6200SE Turbo Cache
On 2/21/07, Mark Kirkwood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wednesday 21 February 2007, "Scott W. McMikle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Recommendation':
> I
> thought perhaps that I would have to give up Gentoo until such time that
> my Linux skills have improved.
Worst case, you'll g
t;[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wednesday 21 February 2007, "Scott W. McMikle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote
about '[gentoo-user] Recommendation':
> I have found myself
> quickly over my head and now I begin to wonder if I am not quite ready
> for Gentoo. Wh
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
I dont know about your X Server (there are some great guides out there -
don't despair, it never worked for me in the first run either) but I
think I have a clue to whats with you network card:
The LiveCD has a kernel with all the drivers enabled as
On Wednesday 21 February 2007, "Scott W. McMikle" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about '[gentoo-user] Recommendation':
> I have found myself
> quickly over my head and now I begin to wonder if I am not quite ready
> for Gentoo. What would you all recommend?
Ask
On Wednesday 21 February 2007 22:07:17 Scott W. McMikle wrote:
> I have used Mandriva and Kubuntu and several other distributions before I
> thought I would give Gentoo a try because I like to tweak and learn more
> about Linux. The live cd works great on my machine, but when I attempted
> to inst
I would advise you to go through and follow the handbook using the
command line in the livecd environment. The livecd can be buggy and
personally, I like to know EXACTLY what is being done to my system.
It's good to know if something is my fault or theirs.
As per your X server woes, there is a g
I have used Mandriva and Kubuntu and several other distributions before I
thought I would give Gentoo a try because I like to tweak and learn more
about Linux. The live cd works great on my machine, but when I attempted to
install Gentoo on that same machine, X does not work, nor does my network
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 21:40:38 +0300, Cooper Bug wrote:
>
>
>> Please share your instights how many partinions do I have to
>> do, what sizes. I would value all the input. Thanks a lot.
>>
>
> 1) Only you can know what you will use the machine for and what you will
>
On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 21:40:38 +0300, Cooper Bug wrote:
> Please share your instights how many partinions do I have to
> do, what sizes. I would value all the input. Thanks a lot.
1) Only you can know what you will use the machine for and what you will
need.
2) Your needs will change so even yo
On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 23:07:15 +0100, Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
> /usr/portage needs several gb
$ df /usr/portage/
FilesystemTypeSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/usr/PortageFS
ext2576M 249M 327M 44% /usr/portage
The Portage tree needs around 250MB, distfiles are be
I've found 128MB to be fine for /boot. If he wants to play around with
non-Gentoo kernels, then it will be nice to have the extra space to store the
kernel source tarballs (~40MB ea). In addition, its usually a good idea to
have space for backups, and probably bitmaps for the boot loader and O
On Wednesday 22 November 2006 22:28, Eric Bohn wrote:
> Absolute minimum:
>
> 1. Windows: Type=NTFS Size=10GB + however much more space you want for
> Windows. 2. Linux Swap: Type=swap Size=ram size
> 3. Gentoo: Type=ext3 Size=10GB + however much space you want for Linux.
>
> Recommended:
>
> 1.
Absolute minimum:
1. Windows: Type=NTFS Size=10GB + however much more space you want for Windows.
2. Linux Swap: Type=swap Size=ram size
3. Gentoo: Type=ext3 Size=10GB + however much space you want for Linux.
Recommended:
1. Windows: Type=NTFS Size=10GB
2. Linux Swap: Type=swap Size=ram siz
On Wednesday 22 November 2006 19:40, Cooper Bug wrote:
> Hello gentooers,
>
> I have a new 60 GB drive which I want to put gentoo on.
> This will be a dual boot system. For now, I can only
> think to give 10GB to windows, all other space for gentoo.
> Please share your instights how many partinions
Thanks for the reply. What I thought about is how many
of them do I have to have. I know people are using
partitions for mails or temporary. Also, I assume that
I need extended partition because the drive is limited to
4?
Boris.
On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 14:11:23 -0500
Jon M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
Cooper Bug wrote:
Hello gentooers,
I have a new 60 GB drive which I want to put gentoo on.
This will be a dual boot system. For now, I can only
think to give 10GB to windows, all other space for gentoo.
Please share your instights how many partinions do I have to
do, what sizes. I would value al
Hello gentooers,
I have a new 60 GB drive which I want to put gentoo on.
This will be a dual boot system. For now, I can only
think to give 10GB to windows, all other space for gentoo.
Please share your instights how many partinions do I have to
do, what sizes. I would value all the input. Thanks
We currently have an HP 7130 that is wearing out and needs
replacement. I would appreciate recommendations for a replacement.
1. Good gentoo/linux/cups support (the HP 7130 does fine)
2. Printer, copier, fax, scanner
3. Color
4. Duplex
5. "Network Printer" I would like to plug it into o
On Sep 22, 2005, at 10:32 PM, Nick Rout wrote:
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 00:21:56 -0300
Norberto Bensa wrote:
Try to stay away from Lexmark printers.
--
Ironic.
IBM spin off Lexmark in 1991
IBM subsequently become big Linux supporters.
Lexmark don't give a toss about linux.
Such is life,
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 15:16:39 +1200, Nick Rout wrote:
> > HP Deskjet 5550 works just fine
>
> I'll just weigh in here for Hewlett Packard, (although I am told that
> if you want highest quality digital photo prints go for epson).
I used to think that, having used the six colour Epsons. But I had
I agree: I have a Dell720 - a re-badged lexmark thrown in when I bought
a laptop. A real pain to set up, had to get a propriety driver but is
now working and windoze ipp prints to it using the adobe postscript
drivers. One (and only one!) doze machine will only print greyscale
tho! Unfortunately
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 00:21:56 -0300
Norberto Bensa wrote:
>Try to stay away from Lexmark printers.
>
> --
Ironic.
IBM spin off Lexmark in 1991
IBM subsequently become big Linux supporters.
Lexmark don't give a toss about linux.
Such is life, thank goodness for HP.
Oh and I also notice that
Mauro Faccenda wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> Linux?
HP or Epson. Try to stay away from Lexmark printers.
--
Norberto Bensa
4544-9692
Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 10:17:54 -0400
John J. Foster wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 22, 2005 at 09:34:13AM -0300, Mauro Faccenda wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> > Linux?
> >
>
> HP Deskjet 5550 works just fine
I'll just weigh in here f
On Thu, Sep 22, 2005 at 09:34:13AM -0300, Mauro Faccenda wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> Linux?
>
HP Deskjet 5550 works just fine
--
It is not unusual for those at the wrong end of the club to have a
clearer picture of reality th
John Jolet wrote:
On Thursday 22 September 2005 07:51, Dave Nebinger wrote:
I'd add here, though, that almost no lexmark inkjets are supported.
I would not agree with it. Try install gimp-print with +ppd use flag
there are some of them supported. The only problem with my Lexmark Z53
which I
On Thursday 22 September 2005 07:51, Dave Nebinger wrote:
> > Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> > Linux?
>
> You can pretty much go with any printer. Cups supports a wide range of
> printers. If you're worried about a particular product, the cups site can
On Thursday 22 September 2005 07:34, Mauro Faccenda wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> Linux?
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Mauro
I have an hp 3740 that works great.
--
John Jolet
Your On-Demand IT Department
512-762-0729
www.jolet.net
[EMA
Mauro Faccenda wrote:
Hi all,
Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
Linux?
Thanks in advance,
Mauro
I recommend http://linuxprinting.org site for looking at. There are many
printers described with support for them. As you got many drivers such
as hpjs c
> Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
> Linux?
>
You can pretty much go with any printer. Cups supports a wide range of
printers. If you're worried about a particular product, the cups site can
help you...
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Hi all,
Does anyone can recommend a well-supported inkjet printer for using with
Linux?
Thanks in advance,
Mauro
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I use BlackBox products on various OSs - they work fine. I have a
ServSwitch Multi now on Gentoo. I've used Belkin for FC3 and Windows XP
and don't like them as they sometimes loose the mouse and you have to
power them and the systems back on and off - but they are cheap. Over the
years I've
Years ago, I had a heck of a time finding a KVM switch that wouldn't
cause my mouse to go crazy. It's time to get a new KVM switch, one that
can support USB mice (but sadly still a PS/2 keyboard).
Does anyone have any recommendations, for or against, KVM switches that
play well with gentoo?
Thanks,
Travis,
Check out SugarCRM. We just purchased it for our office. There is a
free/professional version. We moved from SalesForce to SugarCRM and it is
working very well for us.
Sean
On Tuesday 26 April 2005 01:15 pm, Travis Osterman wrote:
> Does anyone hav
> Maybe one of the groupware packages like egroupware or phpgroupware?
>
> * www-apps/egroupware
> * www-apps/moregroupware [ Masked ]
> * www-apps/phpgroupware [ Masked ]
Thanks for the recommendations. Phpgroupware looks very close to what
I was hoping for. The only thing it didn't have th
On Tue, 26 Apr 2005, Travis Osterman wrote:
> > Try Plaxo. Don't know about Linux compatibility but it should work with
> > Wine...
> >
> > www.plaxo.com
>
> I was really hoping for more of a web application and I would rather
> host it myself if possible.
Maybe one of the groupware packages lik
> Try Plaxo. Don't know about Linux compatibility but it should work with
> Wine...
>
> www.plaxo.com
I was really hoping for more of a web application and I would rather
host it myself if possible.
-- Travis
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Try Plaxo. Don't know about Linux compatibility but it should work with Wine...
www.plaxo.com
On 4/26/05, Travis Osterman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Does anyone have a good recommendation for a contact informationmanagement system for a relatively small group of people (~200)? I
would prefer w
Does anyone have a good recommendation for a contact information
management system for a relatively small group of people (~200)? I
would prefer web-based and it should allow users to update their own
information easily while allowing everyone easy access to searching
and viewing the directory.
T
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