On Saturday 26 February 2011 23:21:32 Jesús J. Guerrero Botella wrote:
> 2011/2/26 Mick :
> > On Saturday 26 February 2011 11:26:38 Jesús J. Guerrero Botella wrote:
> >> You could always grep for INPUT_DEVICES into /etc/portage, user -R for
> >> recursive search.
> >>
> >> Also, make sure there's
On Friday 25 February 2011 18:24:50 Dale wrote:
> Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
> > let memtest86 run - for 12h.
> > increase ram voltage - a bit. Like 0.01V.
> > get a different psu.
>
> 12 hours?
you are right. 24h is better.
Le 26/02/2011 13:11, Volker Armin Hemmann a écrit :
> On Saturday 26 February 2011 13:03:00 Roger Cahn wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> Since I have installed kernel amd64 I have nomore
>> cdrom and sr0 in /dev
>> Here is my emerge --info:
> which is useless. dmesg and kernel config would be much more helpfull.
on 2011-02-27 at 10:20 Duong "Yang" Ha Nguyen wrote:
>Hal is deprecated. Try avoiding it as much as possible.
that's what i'm doing, for sure!
On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 06:52:36AM +, Stroller wrote:
> AIUI using `find /my/folder -name foo*.txt` (i.e. unquoted) the shell will
> pass the * to find if it can't expand it itself.
Not necessarily true.
On bash if you set the 'nullglob' option, if the shell can't find the
file the word wil
On Sunday 27 February 2011 12:13:21 luis jure wrote:
> on 2011-02-27 at 10:20 Duong "Yang" Ha Nguyen wrote:
> >Hal is deprecated. Try avoiding it as much as possible.
>
> that's what i'm doing, for sure!
I have read all the discussion, and, unfortunately, I can't help you Luis.
But I am asking t
(Sorry for the late replies)
Matthew Summers writes:
> wrote:
>> On Tue, Feb 8, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Nuno J. Silva wrote:
>>> Does anyone know a tool (other than ghostscript) that is able to convert
>>> a PDF (or postscript) to grayscale?
[...]
> Use the GIMP, Luke. I have to do this all the time w
on 2011-02-27 at 13:51 Paul Colquhoun wrote:
>Hmmm. "equery b" for /etc/PolicyKit/PolicyKit.conf or
>just /etc/PolicyKit doesn't return any packages on my system.
from what i could find on the web, it seems to me
that /etc/PolicyKit/PolicyKit.conf belongs to a deprecated policykit
package, supe
Paul Hartman writes:
> On Tue, Feb 8, 2011 at 7:50 AM, Nuno J. Silva wrote:
>> Does anyone know a tool (other than ghostscript) that is able to convert
>> a PDF (or postscript) to grayscale?
>>
>> Ghostscript does this, but is unable to convert gradients and fills
>> (they're replaced by bitmaps
Alex Schuster writes:
> Grant Edwards writes:
>
>> On 2011-02-08, Nuno J. Silva wrote:
>> > Does anyone know a tool (other than ghostscript) that is able to
>> > convert a PDF (or postscript) to grayscale?
>> >
>> > Ghostscript does this, but is unable to convert gradients and fills
>> > (they'
Le 27/02/2011 11:32, Jacques Montier a écrit :
> Le 26/02/2011 13:11, Volker Armin Hemmann a écrit :
>> On Saturday 26 February 2011 13:03:00 Roger Cahn wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Since I have installed kernel amd64 I have nomore
>>> cdrom and sr0 in /dev
>>> Here is my emerge --info:
>> which is usele
Thank you Volker for your answer.
> dmesg and kernel config would be much more helpfull.
dmesg | grep cdrom and grep sr0 didn't give any answer
> Especially the scsi part of kernel config. Stuff like cdrom support.
Here is my scsi config in the kernel:
< > RAID Transport Class
-*- SCSI devic
i'm posting this to the list in case it's of some use to somebody.
trying to get automounting of usb drives working on xfce, as discussed on
a recent thread, i recompiled xfce4-session with policykit (polkit) and
consolekit. eventually this got me automounting working, but in the
process i lost
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Sun, 27 Feb 2011 03:10:01 +0100, Mike Gilbert wrote about Re:
[gentoo-user] XDG_CONFIG_DIRS and XDG_DATA_DIRS env variables with E17:
[snip]
>Not quite; the 2 values are combined.
Yes, I noticed that later. It solves a long-standing bug that aff
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 12:38 AM, Mick wrote:
> I have unmerged x11-drivers/xf86-input-mouse and x11-drivers/xf86-input-
> keyboard and also removed mouse and keyboard from my /etc/make.conf, which now
> only contains:
>
> INPUT_DEVICES="synaptics evdev"
>
>
> However, portage seems to want to pul
On Sunday 27 February 2011 14:33:55 you wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 12:38 AM, Mick wrote:
> > I have unmerged x11-drivers/xf86-input-mouse and x11-drivers/xf86-input-
> > keyboard and also removed mouse and keyboard from my /etc/make.conf,
> > which now only contains:
> >
> > INPUT_DEVICES="
I have a new laptop that I need to set up for dual booting. As much as
I despise Microsoft, I have to use it for certain things. Such as some
obscure peripherals, like my slide photo scanner, it doesn't support
Linux and TD Ameritrade's streaming Java tools don't work the same as on
Linux. Until
On Sunday 27 February 2011 14:14:57 Roger Cahn wrote:
> Thank you Volker for your answer.
>
> > dmesg and kernel config would be much more helpfull.
>
> dmesg | grep cdrom and grep sr0 didn't give any answer
complete dmesg would be nice nonetheless.
>
> <*> SCSI CDROM support
>
> [*] Enabl
On 26/02/11 16:41, Mick wrote:
> Where are being these set?
>
> I currently have:
>
> $ echo $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
> /etc/xdg
>
> $ echo $XDG_DATA_DIRS
> /usr/local/share:/usr/share
>
> I'm asking because although Enlightenment-17 picks up the kde menu from
> there,
> it does not seem to recognise the
On 02/26/2011 01:03 PM, Roger Cahn wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Since I have installed kernel amd64 I have nomore
> cdrom and sr0 in /dev
isnt it a pioneer sata device by any chance?
t
> complete dmesg would be nice nonetheless.
But in dmesg there are 1106 lines!
Would you like I send all or only a part of them?
>> <*> SCSI CDROM support
>> [*] Enable vendor-specificextensions(forSCSICDROM)
>> <*> SCSI generic support
> try that as module and reloa
> isnt it a pioneer sata device by any chance?
No, it isn't.
Thanks for your answer
Roger
On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 5:01 PM, dhk wrote:
> I have a new laptop that I need to set up for dual booting. As much as
> I despise Microsoft, I have to use it for certain things. Such as some
> obscure peripherals, like my slide photo scanner, it doesn't support
> Linux and TD Ameritrade's streami
I have the opposite problem from luis jure. I do not mount drives
often, so I am not sure exactly when this problem started, but gentoo
is now automounting drives and I have never wanted that. I run fvwm
with a lot of xterms, so it is not the window manager doing things for
me, it is something in
On Sunday 27 February 2011 13:39:49 Stéphane Guedon wrote:
> On Sunday 27 February 2011 12:13:21 luis jure wrote:
> > on 2011-02-27 at 10:20 Duong "Yang" Ha Nguyen wrote:
> > >Hal is deprecated. Try avoiding it as much as possible.
> >
> > that's what i'm doing, for sure!
>
> I have read all the
On 2011-02-26, Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
>>
>> Before you start tweaking voltages and replacing PSUs you better test your
>> *new* memory modules thoroughly, even if that means that you will be using
>> your old machine for a day or so.
>>
>> Personally I usually remove all memory modules and then
On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 5:32 AM, Jacques Montier
wrote:
> My kernel configuration :
>
> # SCSI device support
> CONFIG_SCSI_MOD=y
> CONFIG_SCSI=y
> CONFIG_SCSI_DMA=y
> CONFIG_SCSI_TGT=y
> CONFIG_SCSI_NETLINK=y
> CONFIG_SCSI_PROC_FS=y
> # SCSI support type (disk, tape, CD-ROM)
> # CONFIG_SCSI_ENCLO
On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 9:58 AM, Mick wrote:
> I guess that 'emerge -uaDv world' takes the current state of x11-base/xorg-
> drivers (which in the past had been merged with INPUT_DEVICES containing both
> keyboard and mouse) as a higher priority than the current state of my
> INPUT_DEVICES in /etc
I actually have 4 gigs of gskill DDR 3 1600 and from experience I can tell
you that the stock voltage on those chips is set too low. The company
actually recommends that you use 1.9 volts while most motherboards will
default to 1.5 or 1.6. Double check this however, because I know they were
worki
Am 27.02.2011 17:02, schrieb Petri Rosenström:
> On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 5:01 PM, dhk wrote:
>> I have a new laptop that I need to set up for dual booting. As much as
>> I despise Microsoft, I have to use it for certain things. Such as some
>> obscure peripherals, like my slide photo scanner, it
On Sunday 27 February 2011 16:55:26 Roger Cahn wrote:
> > complete dmesg would be nice nonetheless.
>
> But in dmesg there are 1106 lines!
> Would you like I send all or only a part of them?
>
> >> <*> SCSI CDROM support
> >> [*] Enable vendor-specificextensions(forSCSICDROM)
> >>
> >>
Michael Orlitzky writes:
> On 02/08/11 08:50, Nuno J. Silva wrote:
>> Does anyone know a tool (other than ghostscript) that is able to convert
>> a PDF (or postscript) to grayscale?
>
> A laserjet? =)
That makes me wonder... in a color printer, I expect it not to print any
color when it has no c
> and dmesg says what?
Because threre are many lines (1106)
you can get it at this adress:
> http://dl.free.fr/eaWeJr0WB
I hope it will work!
On Sunday 27 February 2011 15:20:25 Ian Lee wrote:
> On 26/02/11 16:41, Mick wrote:
> > Where are being these set?
> >
> > I currently have:
> >
> > $ echo $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS
> > /etc/xdg
> >
> > $ echo $XDG_DATA_DIRS
> > /usr/local/share:/usr/share
> >
> > I'm asking because although Enlightenme
On 02/27/2011 04:54 AM, luis jure wrote:
PENDING ISSUE: on thunar (and xfce, the other file manager i occasionally
use) i can eject the drive but no umount it (i mean the ability to umount
the file system but not delete the mount point under /media)
The auth/policy landscape has changed so qui
On 02/27/2011 05:55 AM, luis jure wrote:
i'm posting this to the list in case it's of some use to somebody.
trying to get automounting of usb drives working on xfce, as discussed on
a recent thread...
Heh. I just replied to that other thread before reading this :)
Sounds like you're way ahe
>> I can't get find to work. This works:
>>
>> locate *foo*.txt
>>
>> but none of these work:
>>
>> find /my/folder -name foo*.txt
>> find /my/folder -name *foo*.txt
>> find /my/folder -type f -name '*foo*.txt'
>
> $ mkdir -p /my/folder
> mkdir: cannot create directory `/my': Permission denied
>
On 02/27/2011 07:01 AM, dhk wrote:
I tried to partition my disk with fdisk the
way I wanted. It had the usual Linux partitions and a partition that I
was going to use for Window 7. I wanted to make this an LVM2 partition,
but that didn't work;
Good old fdisk is indeed old, and there are muc
On Sunday 27 February 2011 18:04:26 Florian Philipp wrote:
> Am 27.02.2011 17:02, schrieb Petri Rosenström:
> > On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 5:01 PM, dhk wrote:
> >> First, the observations. I tried to partition my disk with fdisk the
> >> way I wanted.
I would recommend you use 'parted -a optimal
On Sunday 27 February 2011 17:15:40 Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2011-02-26, Dale wrote:
> > Mick wrote:
> >> Before you start tweaking voltages and replacing PSUs you better test
> >> your *new* memory modules thoroughly, even if that means that you will
> >> be using your old machine for a day or s
On Sunday 27 February 2011 19:45:53 Roger Cahn wrote:
> > and dmesg says what?
>
> Because threre are many lines (1106)
>
> you can get it at this adress:
> > http://dl.free.fr/eaWeJr0WB
>
> I hope it will work!
497 lines. Could you please: increase the buffer and turn off usb debugging?
Hi list!
I'm currently streamlining some of my shell scripts to avoid unnecessary
process calls where bash itself is powerful enough.
At the moment, I want to replace stuff like this:
string='foo:bar:foo'
second_field=$(echo $string | cut -d : -f 2) # should read "bar"
My current solution is usi
On Sun, 27 Feb 2011 21:01:46 +0100, Florian Philipp wrote:
Hi list!
I'm currently streamlining some of my shell scripts to avoid
unnecessary
process calls where bash itself is powerful enough.
My experience (take it for whatever you think it's worth) is that
doing so often just makes things
Jason Weisberger wrote:
I actually have 4 gigs of gskill DDR 3 1600 and from experience I can
tell you that the stock voltage on those chips is set too low. The
company actually recommends that you use 1.9 volts while most
motherboards will default to 1.5 or 1.6. Double check this however,
Mick wrote:
On Sunday 27 February 2011 17:15:40 Grant Edwards wrote:
On 2011-02-26, Dale wrote:
This appears to be a corrupt file somewhere.
In my experice, failing RAM often appears as a corrupt file
somewhere.
Yep, when I had a failing memory module I would often en
Florian Philipp writes:
> I'm currently streamlining some of my shell scripts to avoid unnecessary
> process calls where bash itself is powerful enough.
>
> At the moment, I want to replace stuff like this:
> string='foo:bar:foo'
> second_field=$(echo $string | cut -d : -f 2) # should read "bar"
Am 27.02.2011 21:09, schrieb hamilton:
> On Sun, 27 Feb 2011 21:01:46 +0100, Florian Philipp wrote:
>> Hi list!
>>
>> I'm currently streamlining some of my shell scripts to avoid unnecessary
>> process calls where bash itself is powerful enough.
>
> My experience (take it for whatever you think it
Am 27.02.2011 22:06, schrieb Alex Schuster:
> Florian Philipp writes:
>
>> I'm currently streamlining some of my shell scripts to avoid unnecessary
>> process calls where bash itself is powerful enough.
>>
>> At the moment, I want to replace stuff like this:
>> string='foo:bar:foo'
>> second_field
on 2011-02-27 at 11:25 walt wrote:
>Heh. I just replied to that other thread before reading this :)
>Sounds like you're way ahead of me now, and thanks for the info.
hmmm... i wouldn't say so. your other mail actually had lots of
information that was completely new for me. "pkaction --verbose" f
Hi all,
I've recently started to set up a mythtv box for my parents. I've found
a USB DVB-T receiver which works perfectly and I've got the system up
and running on some old hardware.
Now I've been tasked with finding something small that can sit by their
TV and do it all. I've been looking
on 2011-02-27 at 08:53 fe...@crowfix.com wrote:
>I have the opposite problem from luis jure. I do not mount drives
>often, so I am not sure exactly when this problem started, but gentoo
>is now automounting drives and I have never wanted that.
perhaps you could go the opposite way than me, lik
luis jure wrote:
on 2011-02-27 at 08:53 fe...@crowfix.com wrote:
I have the opposite problem from luis jure. I do not mount drives
often, so I am not sure exactly when this problem started, but gentoo
is now automounting drives and I have never wanted that.
perhaps you could go the
On Sunday 27 February 2011 20:12:29 Dale wrote:
> I did overclock my old rig once, folding complained so I set it back and
> haven't messed with it since.
Just an aside, Dale, to satisfy my curiosity: is this the protein-folding
BOINC application? What drew you to it? None of my business, I know
On Sunday 27 February 2011 19:43:10 Mick wrote:
> [...] when I had a failing memory module I would often end up with
> corrupted files all over the place. Think about it, when the memory
> gave up some write on disk function was invariably foo-barred.
What, though, if you get hang-ups in some OS
On Sunday 27 February 2011 19:35:55 walt wrote:
> I've used this product several times with perfect results (so far):
>
> http://gparted.sourceforge.net/livecd.php
>
> Of course if you already have a working linux machine you can install
> gparted and use it that way to move, resize and create p
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday 27 February 2011 20:12:29 Dale wrote:
I did overclock my old rig once, folding complained so I set it back and
haven't messed with it since.
Just an aside, Dale, to satisfy my curiosity: is this the protein-folding
BOINC application? What drew you to i
On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 9:56 AM, Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
>
>>
>> Not related to the OP's question, but couldn't stop myself from asking:
>>
>> Why is/was webmin dropped from portage?
>>
>> I saw bug 348432 for webmin-1.530, but other than offering an ebuild it
>> didn't
>> say.
>>
>>
>
> From g
On Sun, Feb 27, 2011 at 8:43 PM, Mark Shields wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 26, 2011 at 9:56 AM, Dale wrote:
>>
>> Mick wrote:
>>>
>>> Not related to the OP's question, but couldn't stop myself from asking:
>>>
>>> Why is/was webmin dropped from portage?
>>>
>>> I saw bug 348432 for webmin-1.530, but othe
On 02/08/2011 08:50 AM, Nuno J. Silva wrote:
> Does anyone know a tool (other than ghostscript) that is able to convert
> a PDF (or postscript) to grayscale?
>
> Ghostscript does this, but is unable to convert gradients and fills
> (they're replaced by bitmaps) which results in a too big file unle
Jason Weisberger wrote:
I actually have 4 gigs of gskill DDR 3 1600 and from experience I can
tell you that the stock voltage on those chips is set too low. The
company actually recommends that you use 1.9 volts while most
motherboards will default to 1.5 or 1.6. Double check this however,
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