your phone's browser :)
>
> Phone's browser?
If you need the SysRq trick, you probably can't use your computer's browser ;) .
-- Emanuele Rusconi
for core in /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu[0-9]*/
-- Emanuele Rusconi
es" / "Processor family"),
and there's an "optimize for size" option under "General setup", which I
suppose corresponds to -Os.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
ck
playback_ports {
0 system:playback_1
1 system:playback_2
}
capture_ports {
0 system:capture_1
1 system:capture_2
}
}
-- Emanuele Rusconi
got the last line of my koan:
pcm.!default { type plug; slave { pcm "rawjack" } }
-- Emanuele Rusconi
p us brotheren of the Gentoo! Help!"
> they cried.
>
How does the ancient seer answer to this cunning riddle?
# sudo lsof /dev/snd/*
>From the answer of the oracle we will know where our fate lies,
if the whimsical God of Knowledge will smile upon us.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
that will allow the foreigners to be heard by Jack D.,
the caster needs an artifact, a mystic scroll from the Great Library,
and that scroll is named /usr/lib/alsa-lib/libasound_module_pcm_jack.so
and can be summoned with the magic words:
# sudo USE="jack" emerge -av media-plugins/alsa-plugins
-- Emanuele Rusconi
ckaudio.org/faq/routing_alsa.html
Failing that, I don't know. Maybe qsstv does not belong to the ALSA tribe
but to the OSS one, and uses the ALSA OSS emulation, and this prevents
the ALSA jack plugin to work?
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 24 May 2015 at 23:30, Volker Armin Hemmann
wrote:
> (x)emacs.
But he said "keep the system small"! ^__^
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 25 May 2015 at 10:01, Franz Fellner wrote:
> * llpp for pdfs
I didn't know it. I seems great!
I use qpdfview. And zathura on mupdf as an alternative but it has some
issues.
+1 for feh.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
d on mupdf handy.
By the way, I was looking for a pdf that crashed poppler, to test llpp
on it, but I can't find it anymore (though llpp is mupdf-based, so it
shouldn't have been affected, anyway).
Maybe that bug has been resolved lately.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
default one.
Dbus, policykit, Xorg, WMs, DEs etc. are all in the BLFS guide
("Beyond LFS"), which
by nature is not a linear guide but more like a collection of recipes from which
to choose and pick.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
In my setup (borrowed from grml, which has an AWESOME zsh setup), ^xf
(ctrl-x f) is bound to "insert-files" and completes file names,
regardless of other completion rules
for the command I'm typing.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 14 July 2015 at 09:50, Alon Bar-Lev wrote:
> On 14 July 2015 at 10:47, Emanuele Rusconi wrote:
>> In my setup (borrowed from grml, which has an AWESOME zsh setup), ^xf
>> (ctrl-x f) is bound to "insert-files" and completes file names,
>> regardless of other comp
On 20 August 2015 at 22:37, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> Ranting on the list might make you feel better, but is not likely to fix
> your problem. Just saying.
Don't worry, in his previous thread, named with the insightful subject
"", the OP just didn't care to reply after several people chimed
in
I usually use rubyripper. Like others similar software, it uses cddb
to get the titles.
If the CD set is unknown to cddb, you can try to rename the files with
Picard, which uses the musicbrainz database and can use the file's
"fingerprint" to find a match. It's usually very ac
almost anything.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
x27;s really trivial, especially with tig.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
ronments"; I run useful applications
>
Yeah, crazy, right? I mean, a configuration file WITHIN a directory!!
Woah, it's mind-boggling, dude!!
-- Emanuele Rusconi
't know
about better sources.
I'd probably start from Wikipedia :)
[1] http://rute.2038bug.com/index.html.gz
[2] http://appuntilinux.mirror.garr.it/mirrors/appuntilinux/a2/
[3] http://a2.pluto.it/a2/
-- Emanuele Rusconi
> 2015-09-02 16:43 GMT-03:00 J. Roeleveld :
>>
>> You could start with sites like:
>>
>>
>> http://web.stanford.edu/class/msande91si/www-spr04/readings/week1/InternetWhitepaper.htm
>>
That seems an excellent introduction! Bookmarked, Some_Day™ I'll read it ;)
-- Emanuele Rusconi
This site does not exist::
> https://gentoo.org/proj/gli.git/
>
> Ideas or alternate archive sites are most appreciated.
>
> wwk,
> James
>
>
>
>
git clone git://anongit.gentoo.org/proj/gli.git
As written on the "summary" page.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
should be already able to do that NOW, it's just a matter of
installing the pieces of software that do that.
I don't use Fedora or Gnome and I print once every couple of years, so
I can't help you here, but you could use htop to try to figure out
what software is running on Fedora.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 2 October 2015 at 10:28, Nuno Magalhães wrote:
>
> [1] http://www.pcidatabase.com/
>
I didn't know that. It doesn't seem to have System76 in the database,
though.
Once you have your hands on the laptop, this site can help you to know
which drivers you need to build in the kernel:
http://kmu
On 8 October 2015 at 10:24, wrote:
>
> I wonder why portage did not mention this
It did. Somewhat cryptic, but it's there.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
If it helps, I have these two lines in my ~/.Xresources:
XTerm*faceName: Terminus
XTerm*faceSize: 13
-- Emanuele Rusconi
can access the menu items with both the F1-F9 keys
and the 1-9 keys.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
Have you seen this already?
http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=57911
The last link is still working:
http://dev.gentoo.org/~dberkholz/scripts/regenpkgdb
-- Emanuele Rusconi
When in doubt I just read the ebuild and try to understand what's going on.
A policy would be nice, though, and sometimes even reading the ebuild
leaves me guessing.
As you point out, saying "foo: enables libfoo" leaves me wandering "OK, but
what the f* would I need foo
the "anti"
camp, but I switched before I could have an opinion, and to be honest I
didn't try systemd yet), but because I wanted a working alternative on
my laptop before making the jump, and now that my Gentoo (Funtoo,
actually) is clicking fine, I just don't feel the urge to go back to
Debian.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
l that the distro you're using takes a
direction that doesn't fit you, you look for alternatives.
And that's perfectly on-topic.
What's off-topic is to figure out if the damn buttons could actually
be moved or not.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 15 December 2014 at 17:47, wrote:
>
> Is there any simple straight forward tool to just block accesses
> to certain sites?
>
Hi, I'm absolutely a noob or even less about this subject, but lately I
stumbled into a thread on the forum that might be interesting to you:
https://forums.gentoo.org
[1] https://www.wickr.com/downloads/
>
> --
> Regards,
> Mick
>
It's not open source, is it?
Why do you want an ebuild to install a binary .deb file?
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 15 March 2015 at 23:15, Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 15, 2015 at 6:03 PM, Emanuele Rusconi
> wrote:
> >
> > It's not open source, is it?
> > Why do you want an ebuild to install a binary .deb file?
>
> There aren't many of them, but there are e
Ctrl-Alt-Del can be set to do what you want.
I have this in my /etc/inittab:
ca:12345:ctrlaltdel:/sbin/shutdown -P now
This way Ctrl-Alt-Del calls power off instead of reboot.
So to shutdown I just exit from Openbox and press Ctrl-Alt-Del.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 23 March 2015 at 10:46, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday 22 March 2015 14:36:36 Jc García wrote:
> > 2015-03-22 4:30 GMT-06:00 Peter Humphrey :
> > > On Saturday 21 March 2015 16:20:17 Jc García wrote:
> > >> > Interesting. But as I said ealier, I can reboot the system when I am
> > >> > a
>
t;
> Hope this helps,
> Francisco
>
Yeah, lots of ways to do it, there's no need of systemd.
Or do people think that Linux users haven't been able to shut down or
reboot their computers for the past 30 years? :D
Oh, wait, maybe THAT's the reason for the long uptimes. :D :D
-- Emanuele Rusconi
> > Easy to remember as "Reboot Even If System Utterly Broken"
>
> I remember it as the reverse of "busier".
>
A variant I read somewhere is "Raising (Skinny) Elephants Is So Utterly Boring".
"Skinny" is an extra optional sync, it doesn't hurt and makes the
mnemonic funnier.
I use Privacy Badger, uBlock Origin and uMatrix.
I definitely recommend Privacy Badger and uBlock Origin.
uMatrix is really hardcore, and requires quite a lot of tuning and
reloading to make some sites work, so it's not for everyone.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
esolv.conf .
-- Emanuele Rusconi
On 11 July 2016 at 17:31, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On 11/07/2016 10:32, Emanuele Rusconi wrote:
> > Wouldn't it be better to just use the same servers for both wired and
> > wireless? It's what I use and it works flawlessly.
>
> It works flawlessly *for you*, but
s/moreutils.
All the power of vim (or whatever you set in $VISUAL) and no need to pray
that your incantation is correct: you edit the file list as a text, and
when you're satisfied, save and exit.
-- Emanuele Rusconi
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