>I don't think that has anything to do with KDE.
>
>Maybe this forum thread is part of the answer?
>
>http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-886248-start-0.html
>
>- Mark
>
This problem has solved,but I got another one.When I use startx , it says
that modules "ati" "vesa" "fbdev" don't existand
On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 08:03:25 Lavender wrote:
> >I don't think that has anything to do with KDE.
> >
> >Maybe this forum thread is part of the answer?
> >
> >http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-886248-start-0.html
> >
> >- Mark
>
> This problem has solved,but I got another one.When I use sta
>It seems that you have not installed the correct drivers for your card and/or
>have not defined these correctly in /etc/X11/xorg.conf, if indeed you have
>created such a file (it may not be necessary to create it unless there is a
>particular configuration need for your hardware).
>
>I suggest
On Friday, November 11, 2011 08:48:42 AM Dale wrote:
> J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > On Tue, November 8, 2011 10:33 am, Dale wrote:
> >> The only report that raccoon will give is a bright flash of light.
> >> Shorting out 250,000 volts sort of puts a period on the end of the
> >> briefest report there ha
On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 08:34:55 Lavender wrote:
> >It seems that you have not installed the correct drivers for your card
> >and/or have not defined these correctly in /etc/X11/xorg.conf, if indeed
> >you have created such a file (it may not be necessary to create it unless
> >there is a particular
Hello, Victor.
On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 03:43:33PM +0400, victor romanchuk wrote:
> Jarry wrote, at 11/11/2011 09:37 PM:
> > Hi,
> > this is actually not problem but rather a matter of customs:
> > My new fresh installed system shows root-fs in "df" as
> > /dev/root, not actuall device (in my case
> One more question. What is a easy to install but WELL tested and STABLE
> binary distro? I'm thinking something that needs a update 2 or 3 times a
> year or something.
If you want a *really* well tested and *really* stable linux binary
distro, Debian stable is your friend :D
I have a debian i
On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 00:11:11 -0200, Érico Porto wrote:
> What kind of computer are you looking for? If you are not a gamer but do
> like to watch high res videos, go for a fanless video board. If you
> like to do image processing, nvidia boards are also a good idea because
> of CUDA capabilities..
On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 00:32:31 +0100, Jonas de Buhr wrote:
> > Presumably there isn't a Makefile in /usr/src/Linux?
>
> sorry, i was in a hurry, i really should have asked more specific
> questions. yes, there is no makefile in the kernel sources and that
> causes all make commands in the kernel
On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 16:03:25 +0800 (CST), Lavender wrote:
> This problem has solved,but I got another one.When I use startx ,
> it says that modules "ati" "vesa" "fbdev" don't existand no screens
> found .-_-|| Alright, how to get it done?
What is VIDEO_CARDS set to in /etc/make.conf?
--
On Sun, 13 Nov 2011 16:34:55 +0800 (CST)
Lavender wrote:
>
> >It seems that you have not installed the correct drivers for your
> >card and/or have not defined these correctly in /etc/X11/xorg.conf,
> >if indeed you have created such a file (it may not be necessary to
> >create it unless there
Hi,
I am using Xen 3.4.2 with xensources for Dom0 and DomU at the moment.
Now I tried to upgrade on a testsystem to 4.1.1 and a 3.0.6 Kernel
for Dom0. The problem is, since there is no blktap driver in the
3.0.6 Kernel I have to fall back to file:// instead of tap:aio for the
disks for the guests
Has anyone come across this error before? Emerge bails out at this point
with this error - Ive just re-run make in the build directory to
recreate the error. Ive been running various versions of asterisk on
the machine for a few years - but cant get any version of 1.8 to build
because of this erro
Lorenzo Bandieri wrote:
One more question. What is a easy to install but WELL tested and STABLE
binary distro? I'm thinking something that needs a update 2 or 3 times a
year or something.
If you want a *really* well tested and *really* stable linux binary
distro, Debian stable is your friend :
Joost Roeleveld wrote:
On Friday, November 11, 2011 08:48:42 AM Dale wrote:
Now that you mention it, maybe they will run out of test subjects. o_O
They're currently in the middle of negotiations to take over the penal system
of the rabbits ;)
Once they get that contract, they'll have a r
>>> And if I pull, none of my backed-up systems are secure because anyone
>>> who breaks into the backup server has root read privileges on every
>>> backed-up system and will thereby "gain full root privileges quickly."
>>
>> IMO that depends on whether you also backup the authentication-related
>
Hi,
Pandu asked a similar question a few days ago about serving up
files, but mostly for distfiles IIRC. It got me thinking about doing
the same sort of thing, but this time to serve up MP4 video files for
my Kindle Fire as well as other computers on _only_ my home network.
Sort of an in-house M
On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 10:45:46 Lorenzo Bandieri wrote:
> > One more question. What is a easy to install but WELL tested and STABLE
> > binary distro? I'm thinking something that needs a update 2 or 3 times a
> > year or something.
>
> If you want a *really* well tested and *really* stable linux
On Nov 14, 2011 1:25 AM, "Mark Knecht" wrote:
>
> Hi,
> Pandu asked a similar question a few days ago about serving up
> files, but mostly for distfiles IIRC. It got me thinking about doing
> the same sort of thing, but this time to serve up MP4 video files for
> my Kindle Fire as well as other
On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 18:21:17 Mark Knecht wrote:
> Hi,
>Pandu asked a similar question a few days ago about serving up
> files, but mostly for distfiles IIRC. It got me thinking about doing
> the same sort of thing, but this time to serve up MP4 video files for
> my Kindle Fire as well as othe
Am 13.11.2011 19:26, schrieb Mick:
> On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 10:45:46 Lorenzo Bandieri wrote:
>>> One more question. What is a easy to install but WELL tested and STABLE
>>> binary distro? I'm thinking something that needs a update 2 or 3 times a
>>> year or something.
>>
>> If you want a *really*
On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 1:21 PM, Mark Knecht wrote:
Hi,
> Pandu asked a similar question a few days ago about serving up
> files, but mostly for distfiles IIRC. It got me thinking about doing
> the same sort of thing, but this time to serve up MP4 video files for
> my Kindle Fire as well as oth
Am 13.11.2011 19:03, schrieb Grant:
And if I pull, none of my backed-up systems are secure because anyone
who breaks into the backup server has root read privileges on every
backed-up system and will thereby "gain full root privileges quickly."
>>>
>>> IMO that depends on whether you
On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 11:16 AM, Pandu Poluan wrote:
>
> On Nov 14, 2011 1:25 AM, "Mark Knecht" wrote:
>> From browsing around a lot of pages on the web it seems that there
>> are a number of small & light servers (in terms of memory anyway) in
>> portage. Some names: fnord, thttpd, boa, monk
On Sun, Nov 13, 2011 at 11:22 AM, Mick wrote:
>
> Both thttpd and boa that I am using are extremely simple to configure - just a
> few lines in their config files and your iptables rules to allow access from
> your LAN, or from a particular IP address. Apache is also not *too*
> complicated, alt
On 11/13/11 13:03, Grant wrote:
And if I pull, none of my backed-up systems are secure because anyone
who breaks into the backup server has root read privileges on every
backed-up system and will thereby "gain full root privileges quickly."
>>>
>>> IMO that depends on whether you als
On 11/13/11 13:03, Grant wrote:
>
>Then I could have the backup server pull
> that copy from each system without giving it root access to each
> system. Can I somehow have the correct ownerships for the backup
> saved in a separate file for use during a restore?
>
If you're intent on making a t
I have an Nvidia GeForce GTX 560 Ti running nvidia-drivers 275.09.07. It
supports dual monitors via Twinview. I have a Wacom Inspire3 6 x 8 Tablet.
The tablet is working but it covers the entire display across both monitors
and I'd like to restrict it to one monitor.
This is supposed to be d
On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 19:45:38 Mark Knecht wrote:
> Wow! That certainly qualifies for the simple part! The trick seemed to
> be to cd to the video directory before running python, but once I did
> that I am able to get video.
>
> One 'problem' if you will is the video isn't streaming but rather t
On Nov 14, 2011 6:01 AM, "Mick" wrote:
>
> On Sunday 13 Nov 2011 19:45:38 Mark Knecht wrote:
>
> > Wow! That certainly qualifies for the simple part! The trick seemed to
> > be to cd to the video directory before running python, but once I did
> > that I am able to get video.
> >
> > One 'problem'
On 13 November 2011, at 19:45, Mark Knecht wrote:
> ...
> One 'problem' if you will is the video isn't streaming but rather the
> whole file is being copied and then xine is being run. That leads to
> no disk space over time.
See if you can run Samba client on this device (and Samba on the server
To convert a UNIX date to a human-readable version the command is :
556: ~> date -d @1321251520
Mon Nov 14 01:18:40 EST 2011
I would like to create a Bash alias or function to do this,
but can't get the Bash syntax right: it keeps telling me
"date: the argument `1321251520' lacks a leading
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