On 1/6/20 8:45 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
The HDMI port drives a second monitor fine but the USB-C port will
not. I can plug an external drive into the USB-C port and it mounts
it fine, however I would like to drive an additional monitor with it.
Generally,
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
The HDMI port drives a second monitor fine but the USB-C port will
not. I can plug an external drive into the USB-C port and it mounts it
fine, however I would like to drive an additional monitor with it.
Generally, you'll see that described in technical spe
On 1/6/20 1:35 PM, linux guy wrote:
Hi people.
I'm about to purchase a new workstation computer because my current
workstation is too slow. The new computer comes with Windows 10
installed on it. I rarely use Windows, but occasionally it comes in
handy to troubleshoot something, so I'd like
On 2020-01-07 07:15, Norman Gaywood wrote:
>
> So it seems it's enough to:
> dnf module disable scala # disable the scala module
> dnf install scala
>
> And scala-2.10.6-16.fc31.noarch is installed!
> So disabling the the scala module will allow you to install scala!
>
Yes, it seems tha
Thanks for the hint Ed!
So it seems it's enough to:
dnf module disable scala # disable the scala module
dnf install scala
And scala-2.10.6-16.fc31.noarch is installed!
So disabling the the scala module will allow you to install scala!
On Mon, 6 Jan 2020 at 17:30, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 2020-01-07 04:38, S.Bob wrote:
> All;
>
>
> I have a new gig, the client runs office365 (ugh). I did the new email
> account in thunderbird, used "outlook.office365.com" as the incoming IMAP
> server and I can receive emails but not send.
>
>
> I used another account for sending (SMTP), since
On 2020-01-07 04:14, S.Bob wrote:
> The xrandr command only produces output for the laptop screen and the HDMI
> monitor, even with the USB-C monitor plugged in:
I'm not clear on your actual environment.
Are you connecting a USB-C cable directly from the Laptop's USB-C connector to
the USB-C co
On Mon, 6 Jan 2020 12:51:27 -0700
linux guy wrote:
> Rsync everything ? *Everything* ? Would that work ?
I install new releases of fedora by installing in
a virtual machine, then rsyncing that to a real partition
and editing fstab, grub.cfg, and the grub environment
file to change all the UUIDs
On Tue, 7 Jan 2020 08:24:19 +1100, Stephen Morris wrote:
> Hi,
> I have just upgraded to F31 from F30 using dnf system-upgrade
> download --releasever=31. Before I did the upgrade I updated F30 to the
> latest maintenance level.
> When I booted into Gnome on F31 there was no activities
I am going to guess that the usb bus in question does not have enough
allocated bandwidth. On usb2 that was a big problem that limited the
number of web-cams usually to 1 per actual usb bus. I would suspect
that removing the SSD may let the video device work.
use the gui tool usbview and it sho
On 1/6/20 1:43 PM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/6/20 12:14 PM, S.Bob wrote:
On 1/6/20 2:29 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
When I plug an external monitor into the USB-C port I usually see
something like this via dmesg:
Is this a USB display device or is it a thunderbolt/d
Hi,
I have just upgraded to F31 from F30 using dnf system-upgrade
download --releasever=31. Before I did the upgrade I updated F30 to the
latest maintenance level.
When I booted into Gnome on F31 there was no activities menu to be
able to launch any application, the only way I could lau
On 1/6/20 12:57 PM, linux guy wrote:
The old SSD is 250 GB. The new one is 1 TB.
I could resize the Windows partition using gparted to leave more than
enough room for the entire old drive.
That makes it a lot easier then.
Here is fstab from my current workstation.
# /etc/fstab
# Created b
The old SSD is 250 GB. The new one is 1 TB.
I could resize the Windows partition using gparted to leave more than
enough room for the entire old drive.
Here is fstab from my current workstation.
# /etc/fstab
# Created by anaconda on Fri Oct 21 06:49:22 2016
#
# Accessible filesystems, by refere
On 1/6/20 10:35 AM, linux guy wrote:
I'm about to purchase a new workstation computer because my current
workstation is too slow. The new computer comes with Windows 10
installed on it. I rarely use Windows, but occasionally it comes in
handy to troubleshoot something, so I'd like to leave it
On 1/6/20 12:14 PM, S.Bob wrote:
On 1/6/20 2:29 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
When I plug an external monitor into the USB-C port I usually see
something like this via dmesg:
Is this a USB display device or is it a thunderbolt/displayport over
USB-C device? Searchin
All;
I have a new gig, the client runs office365 (ugh). I did the new email
account in thunderbird, used "outlook.office365.com" as the incoming
IMAP server and I can receive emails but not send.
I used another account for sending (SMTP), since "outlook.office365.com"
did not work but now
I want to keep my old computer fully functional as a backup. Thus I'd like
to leave the existing drive in it.
It would be super easy to clone my existing drive with dd if it wasn't for
the Windows install. Do a minimal install, dd the Linux stuff and then
somehow fix the boot entries ?
On Mon,
I sent too much info, seems like it may get kicked (held by moderator)
See my abbreviated replies below
On 1/6/20 2:29 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
ASUS VivoBook Pro N705FD Notebook, 17.3" FHD Display, Intel Core
i7-8565U Upto 4.60GHz, 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD + 1TB HDD,
On 06.01.20 19:35, linux guy wrote:
Hi people.
I'm about to purchase a new workstation computer because my current
workstation is too slow. The new computer comes with Windows 10
installed on it. I rarely use Windows, but occasionally it comes in
handy to troubleshoot something, so I'd like
Thanks for the reply.
Rsync everything ? *Everything* ? Would that work ?
I was thinking of doing a minimal install and then obtaining the list of
packages from my old workstation and running dnf with that list. Then
copying all the user data over from /home. I'd still lose some settings
thou
On Mon, 6 Jan 2020 11:35:19 -0700
linux guy wrote:
> I don't want to start over building
> my workstation installation from a fresh install.
Probably worth taking this with a large grain of salt,
but I'd consider doing a minimal new fedora install
on the new box, then rsync old fedora over the to
Hi people.
I'm about to purchase a new workstation computer because my current
workstation is too slow. The new computer comes with Windows 10 installed
on it. I rarely use Windows, but occasionally it comes in handy to
troubleshoot something, so I'd like to leave it on the hard drive.
Question
Lol. Too funny to see this post because I was wondering too and thought of
writing the same post.
Fedora rules ! Big thanks to all the people that make Fedora what it is.
Your efforts are greatly appreciated.
___
users mailing list -- users@lists.fedor
On 1/5/20 2:19 PM, S.Bob wrote:
ASUS VivoBook Pro N705FD Notebook, 17.3" FHD Display, Intel Core
i7-8565U Upto 4.60GHz, 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD + 1TB HDD, NVIDIA GeForce GTX
1050, HDMI, Card Reader, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Windows 10 Pro
Are you using the NVidia proprietary drivers?
When I plug an extern
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