On Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 02:53:37PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
My objective:
Install WiFi driver into Debian+LXDE so that I can connect to the Internet.
To be more exact, the wifi driver is installed so the kernel can talk to
the wireless hardware. IOW, the procedure is the same whether you have
On Sun, Mar 03, 2013 at 07:06:13PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
I tried to install wicd.
[...]
I see that there are uninstalled dependencies:
wicd-daemon (= 1.7.0+ds1-5+squeeze3)
wicd-gtk (= 1.7.0+ds1-5+squeeze3)
wicd-curses (= 1.7.0+ds1-5+squeeze3)
wicd-cli (= 1.7.0+ds1-5+squeeze3)
On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 03:16:07AM +0100, Johan Grönqvist wrote:
2013-03-04 03:08, Michael skrev:
I installed and during installation it found
both the Win XP and the Linux Mint installations.
After booting, the Mint shows up but not the XP. How do
get the XP option do show up upon boot?
On Mon, Mar 04, 2013 at 11:04:03AM +0100, Sergey Spiridonov wrote:
Hi Debian
I am using dbmail package [1] at home and at work for many years
already. I just noticed that dbmail is not in Wheezy and is also
kicked out from Sid (for i386). I found bug [2] telling that
maintainer is not
On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 08:20:32PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
João, kindly stop responding to this thread. I want help, not noise.
Bloody cheek!! Did you behave this way on other distro support lists?
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being
On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 11:46:42AM -0800, Thomas D. Dean wrote:
On 03/01/13 11:35, Thomas D. Dean wrote:
The ANSI standard lists ESC[4m as the code to produce an underline
export TERM=ansi80x25
printf \033[4masdfasdfasdf
produces green text, not underline text as stated in the
On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 08:34:57AM -0500, Miles Fidelman wrote:
Fair enough, but... I have to say it
Back in my day, we not only had to walk to school, uphill, in both
directions, in the snow, but we also had to build our computers by
hand, from TTL logic gates. :-)
[Sorry, posted previous post too soon! :D]
On Fri, Mar 01, 2013 at 12:23:01PM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
Fair enough, but... I have to say it
Back in my day, we not only had to walk to school, uphill, in both
directions, in the snow, but we also had to build our computers by
hand,
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 07:07:02PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
On 2013/2/27 6:53 PM, Miles Fidelman wrote:
First off... stop this bs of sending replies personally (or sending dups to
both the list and me).
Why do you keep sending me messages that contain both email addresses? You
are
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 11:24:42PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Wednesday 27 February 2013 18:59:06 Claudius Hubig wrote:
Dear Lisi,
Lisi Reisz wrote:
There has, I know, been quite a lot about 32 bit on 64 bit systems
recently. But I am not clear where I should start with this one.
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 11:26:01PM -0700, Robert Holtzman wrote:
On Wed, Feb 27, 2013 at 03:52:24PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
On 2013/2/27 3:45 PM, Nate Bargmann wrote:
* On 2013 27 Feb 14:25 -0600, Mark Filipak wrote:
What a nonsensical statement. I've never successfully installed any
[Please keep attributions, I presume you are not answering yourself!]
On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 10:39:09AM +0100, Morel Bérenger wrote:
what? That's absurd. The only people I know who have their OS installed
at a shop are Apple users.
Sounds like an ideal country. In France, even if it is
On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 12:20:49PM +, Claudius Hubig wrote:
Dear Lisi,
Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Thursday 28 February 2013 11:00:36 Brian wrote:
You could do but try getting ia32-libs-gtk before you go down that route.
Brilliant! Thank you, Brian (et al of course). I now have a
On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 08:14:04PM +0100, Alois Mahdal wrote:
I think that even if you actually knew the answer before you
asked, it's still better for community to pretend that you
ask and answer than to keep it all to yourself.
Are you serious?
Imagine the thousands of posts like, What does
On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 07:48:10PM -0500, Mark Filipak wrote:
Thanks for the encouragement, Hugo, but I'm not real keen on freeware.
Open source is great, but free generally means not good and not
supported - and a user forum is not support.
I don't like forums either. Yes, this is a mailing
On Sat, Feb 23, 2013 at 02:36:13PM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Saturday 23 February 2013 13:38:16 lina wrote:
Few days ago, a guy borrowed my USB.
Why?? Surely lending one's USB is asking for trouble! Personally I would
reformat, but then I am paranoid.
Any .exe is probably a Windoze
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 08:51:17PM +0100, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Some people will say that unstable is better for security issues,
because it is harder to exploit flaws when the software changes
constantly.
Really??? They obviously don't understand the meaning of stable. (Hint,
On Fri, Feb 22, 2013 at 11:28:36PM -0600, Mark Allums wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 08:51:17PM +0100, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org
wrote:
Some people will say that unstable is better for security issues,
because it is harder to exploit flaws when the software changes
constantly.
On Thu, Feb 21, 2013 at 08:06:25AM +0700, Ken Heard wrote:
I have a Lenovo R61 laptop which I upgraded from Lenny to Squeeze at
the end of November last. Ever since that upgrade the boot routine
frequently aborts. The kernel is installed, and the boot routine
continues as far as the point
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 09:24:36AM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 03:56:58PM +1300, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 03:35:01PM +0100, Alois Mahdal wrote:
(Finally, as we know, there's only 10 kinds of people...)
Yeah, those that put people
On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 08:20:45AM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Saturday 16 February 2013 03:20:54 Jerry Stuckle wrote:
When dealing with computers, it's powers of 2. When
dealing with distances, it's powers of 10.
Not so. Manufacturers of hard drives normally (frequently?) give the size
On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 08:58:24PM +0400, Dmitriy Matrosov wrote:
Hi.
UserDit /home/Public/*/www
^^^
huh?
UserDir enabled
UserDir disabled root
[...]
VirtualHost *:80
..
UserDit /home/Public/*/www/wiki
^^^
VirtualHost/
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 03:35:01PM +0100, Alois Mahdal wrote:
(Finally, as we know, there's only 10 kinds of people...)
Yeah, those that put people into categories and those that don't :)
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being oppressed, and
On Wed, Feb 13, 2013 at 02:41:47PM +1300, Richard Hector wrote:
On 13/02/13 14:32, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 2/12/2013 4:43 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
Assumed you'll build a fence, 10m long and every 1m there should be 1
fence post, how many fence posts do you need?
11 :)
Depends how
On Tue, Feb 12, 2013 at 03:12:22PM +0800, Long Wind wrote:
I repeat: which command to start xmms2's GUI interface?
http://wiki.debian.org/FAQsFromDebianUser#I_asked_my_question_according_to_the_directions_written_at_the_.22How_should_I_post.22_question.2C_but_I_still_don.27t_get_an_answer
--
On Tue, Feb 12, 2013 at 04:59:32AM -0500, Long Wind wrote:
I am really surprised to find so many help in such a short time.
Thanks to all those who reply!
I install gxmms2 and abraca
They don't work as I expect
I am still unable to play a file, attached in this mail
Tried the url from that
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 11:56:22AM -0500, Carroll Grigsby wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2013 16:11:00 +0100
Gernot Super superger...@yahoo.com wrote:
Dear fellow debian-users,
since there are no concrete numbers how many people actually use
GNOME 3 with Gnome-Shell (in debian) i set up a poll
On Sat, Feb 09, 2013 at 04:58:48AM -0800, Weaver wrote:
I now have the original number of packages reinstalled and only 35845 new
packages to look through to find out what I am missing.
I think I'll just call it a night.
What is the output from apt-get update, and apt-get upgrade, wrap it
On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 09:15:26AM +0100, Morel Bérenger wrote:
I'm curious to look at other replies.
A good place to post would be
d-community-offto...@lists.alioth.debian.org.
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being oppressed, and loving the
On Fri, Feb 08, 2013 at 08:10:31PM +0100, Alois Mahdal wrote:
Hello GTOTD,
I'm trying to make sense of some kernel driver code and I noticed some
`pr_warning()` calls.
From kernel.h I know pr_warning is an `eprintf()` macro:
#define pr_warning(fmt, ...) \
eprintf(0,
On Thu, Feb 07, 2013 at 07:03:52PM -0700, Shane Johnson wrote:
On Thu, Feb 7, 2013 at 6:52 PM, Bob Proulx b...@proulx.com wrote:
Shane Johnson wrote:
Sam Martin wrote:
...174 lines snipped...
It would be super awesome if you would trim the previously quoted
material to just the
On Sun, Feb 03, 2013 at 03:05:09PM -0500, Brad Alexander wrote:
I know it is bad form to respond to one's own post, but I have swapped
the Hauppague card, and have exactly the same symptoms. I suspect it
is something with either pulse.
Suggestions?
Purge the packages, but take note of which
On Mon, Feb 04, 2013 at 09:09:42AM +0100, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Is eSound still usable? Mabye ALSA? Anything?
I do not understand... for which use alsa does not work? It works
perfectly here...
He is not saying ALSA doesn't work for him.
I understood that phrase like he
On Mon, Feb 04, 2013 at 12:22:03PM +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
On Mon, 4 Feb 2013, Chris Bannister wrote:
Just be aware that if you strike any bugs and any dmo packages are
involved, it will be closed without any further ado. The deb-multimedia
repository is toxic to a healthy wheezy
On Mon, Feb 04, 2013 at 11:18:45PM -0600, Cybe R. Wizard wrote:
On Mon, 04 Feb 2013 20:30:17 -0500
Corrupted_flame82 corrupted_flam...@yahoo.com wrote:
Some motherfuckers do not beleive that revengeance is a real word.
I would like you to prove to said fucker of mothers that indeed it is
On Sun, Feb 03, 2013 at 05:11:15PM +0100, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Le 03.02.2013 15:28, Carl Fink a écrit :
So PulseAudio continues to be buggy to the point of infuriation.
Developers,
after years of work, have signally failed to fix it.
Is eSound still usable? Mabye ALSA?
On Sun, Feb 03, 2013 at 02:49:22PM +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
On Mon, 28 Jan 2013, Rob Owens wrote:
I recommend you use the third-party deb-multimedia repository for those
packages. I have them both installed from that repo and I've never had
any problems. In fact, that repo has never
On Sun, Feb 03, 2013 at 07:04:27PM +, Tixy wrote:
There seems to be a lots of packages in both repos, deb-multimedia has
its own version of loads of the AV libraries and it uses a higher epoch
in the version number to force them to be preferred over the official
libraries.
Yeah, not nice
On Sat, Feb 02, 2013 at 09:06:55PM -0600, zxcvbob wrote:
I have a different model Chromebook with an Atom processor and a
SSD. It should run Debian just fine; I have Debian on an older
netbook, but good luck installing it! (My info is about a year old
and from memory) Chromebook BIOS is
On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 07:27:52AM -0800, james gray wrote:
would like to find any thing that has actual content and is actually
informative in light of the OS structure and system calls in GNU Debian.
When you say system calls do you mean:
System calls (functions provided by the kernel)
as in
On Fri, Feb 01, 2013 at 08:41:05AM -0800, David Guntner wrote:
to clean them up. Everything *except* dovecot-common went away. When
it got to dovecot-common, it just gave me an error message. Oh, and it
deleted /etc/dovecot/dovecot.conf for me before erroring out. Oops.
This might be a
On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 09:48:13PM +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
needed, since dependencies for stable are much to old, it easily could
happen that Debian becomes buggier (and more buggy ;) than Ubuntu.
You can bork any system if you really try.
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 02:55:05AM +0100, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Le 27.01.2013 00:53, John Hasler a écrit :
...only English is acceptable on this list. People do occasionally
post here in other languages, but they are in error in so doing.
They are not in error: there is no
On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 12:45:30PM -0500, Tom Roche wrote:
Without knowing all your details, I'd probably:
rm /var/lib/apt/lists/*
rm /var/lib/apt/lists/partial/*
then try updating again.
Unfortunately, no fix:
me@it:~ $ sudo rm /var/lib/apt/lists/*
rm: cannot remove
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 02:57:34PM +0100, Hans Vogelsberger wrote:
Ralf Mardorf wrote:
Could this thread please move to off-topic discussions?
That is why I never read or post to the German user list: the
pedantic people over there try to put everything really interesting
into the offtopic
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 03:48:00PM +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
Now I only want to mention, that making updates for Debian, is
different to making updates for e.g. Ubuntu and that there's a
difference between personal experiences and universal validity, that
some issues overlap, e.g. the Debian
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 12:25:22PM -0500, Tom Roche wrote:
[ https://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+question/6841) suggests]
Just as an aside, I don't remember putting square brackets [ and ]
around the url. I consider it unethical/bad practice to alter the quoted
text but make it look like
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 01:36:56AM +1000, Robert Brockway wrote:
On Thu, 24 Jan 2013, Lázaro wrote:
aptitude search sieve|grep mailutils
I have old mail that needs to be re-sorted. While I could re-sort
everything periodically this is resource intensive (with a lot of
mail) and would be
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 11:28:58AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
Chris Bannister wrote:
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 06:38:03AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
At the end-user level I think Debian has a logical flaw.
You are assuming all end-users are equal.
No. I was contrasting the generic end
On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 10:54:16PM -0500, Tom Roche wrote:
did `sudo aptitude update`, and got
W: Failed to fetch
bzip2:/var/lib/apt/lists/partial/watson.nci.nih.gov_cran%5fmirror_bin_linux_debian_squeeze-cran_Packages:
Hash Sum mismatch
So I changed my sources.list
- deb
Hi,
http://www.mail-archive.com/fvwm@lists.math.uh.edu/msg16819.html
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the
oppressing. --- Malcolm X
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 09:54:17AM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
chime in with a reminder that dselect is considered discouraged these
days. It's spiritual successor (a TUI interface to apt) is now aptitude.
That depends on who you ask. For newbies, I certainly wouldn't recommend
dselect, but if
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 12:04:15PM +0200, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Ma, 22 ian 13, 15:50:19, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 09:29:46PM +, Joe wrote:
[...]
and there's still nothing Open Source that comes close to
Access.
Which is good to know.
[...]
IMNSHO
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 04:01:00PM +0530, J B wrote:
On Tue, 22 Jan 2013 12:09:59 +0200
I tried to install touchegg_1.0-0ubuntu1_amd64.deb and I get
dpkg: dependency problems prevent configuration of touchegg:
touchegg depends on libutouch-geis1 (= 2.0.1); however:
Package
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 06:38:03AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
At the end-user level I think Debian has a logical flaw.
You are assuming all end-users are equal.
It presumes that all software is always available in a repository
(be it FOSS/proprietary, trusted/untrusted, whatever
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 11:28:58AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
Chris Bannister wrote:
Right, and you authenticated it how?
Essentially in the same manner as you do any time you walk into a
Mom Pop restaurant in a strange city. You observe it and make a
judgement call.
And if you miss
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 10:10:07AM -0800, David Guntner wrote:
My regular user account runs fetchmail via cron every so often, which
goes out via secure (encrypted) IMAP connections to my various mailboxes
scattered across the Internet. :-) That, in turn, feeds the mail to
Postfix for
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 05:52:26PM -0600, John Hasler wrote:
Lisi writes:
Seriously Richard, we know your age by now. :-)
Oh I was born about ten thousand years ago...
Did you write the very first song?
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being
On Mon, Jan 21, 2013 at 09:29:46PM +, Joe wrote:
[...]
and there's still nothing Open Source that comes close to
Access.
Which is good to know.
--
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people
who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the
On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 08:48:10PM +0800, lina wrote:
It's well maintained, at least far better than other boxes I met before.
Just it might be my fault, long long time ago, I might chmod blindly at
that time.
I thought of chmod, so why not just try chmod/chown back? You might
still get
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 02:00:10PM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
I also discovered that the screen shots in the Synaptic help do not
match the actual synaptic display. As Squeeze is only getting
security patches and I do not have access to wheezy [I'm on dial up]
should I file a bug report?
On Tue, Jan 15, 2013 at 10:28:48PM -0600, Paul Johnson wrote:
I'm top posting because nobody should be expected to go through all that
stuff.
And what is wrong with deleting the parts that nobody should be
expected to go through? The process is called trimming.
--
If you're not careful, the
On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 01:25:59AM -0500, Doug wrote:
On 01/16/2013 12:27 AM, vishnu vardhan wrote:
i have contacted toshiba i am stumped by their reply :
3.The RAM can be extended up to 8 GB in your laptop. Hence, you
need to contact to the service center regarding the same.
4.
On Wed, Jan 16, 2013 at 10:57:46AM +0530, vishnu vardhan wrote:
i have contacted toshiba i am stumped by their reply :
3.The RAM can be extended up to 8 GB in your laptop. Hence, you
need to contact to the service center regarding the same.
4.The Ram details :- 204-Pin DDR3
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 03:20:33AM -0500, brian wrote:
On 01/14/2013 01:13 AM, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 12:23:05AM -0500, brian wrote:
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
libgtkglext1-dev : Depends: libgtkglext1 (= 1.2.0-2) but 1.2.0-3 is
to be installed
E
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 12:22:27PM +0200, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 14 ian 13, 22:15:07, Chris Bannister wrote:
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 03:20:33AM -0500, brian wrote:
brian@brian:~$ apt-cache policy libgtkglext1
libgtkglext1:
Installed: 1.2.0-3
Candidate: 1.2.0-3
On Mon, Jan 14, 2013 at 12:23:05AM -0500, brian wrote:
The following packages have unmet dependencies:
libgtkglext1-dev : Depends: libgtkglext1 (= 1.2.0-2) but 1.2.0-3 is
to be installed
E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.
On Sun, Jan 13, 2013 at 05:05:12AM +0800, Hormatzhan Yiltiz wrote:
This page, as you pointed out, is more than a guideline. Can someone please
polish this up a little bit? That would be a wonderful and appreciative.
Huh?
Start here:
http://wiki.debian.org/FrontPage?action=newaccount
--
If
On Wed, Jan 09, 2013 at 10:58:01AM +, Darac Marjal wrote:
This is the whole point of the testing distribution, AFAIUI. You run
'stable' on your production server and 'testing' on your development
server.
Really?
Wouldn't you want your development server/environment to be setup as
close
On Wed, Jan 09, 2013 at 12:14:42PM +, Sharon Kimble wrote:
On 9 January 2013 03:07, Chris Bannister cbannis...@slingshot.co.nz wrote:
As I have no experience with mpd (yet) I don't know what may be causing
this, but ...
* Can you play local files with mpd/ncmpcpp?
No
* Can you
On Tue, Jan 08, 2013 at 12:47:52PM +, darkestkhan wrote:
Wheezy :-)
Only after release testing will start receiving new packages once again.
Next version will be called Jessie (but if you plan to use constantly
testing then just put testing in place of Wheezy in your apt preferences).
Not
On Tue, Jan 08, 2013 at 02:16:07PM +, Sharon Kimble wrote:
Jan 08 13:46 : output: Failed to open MPD ALSA [alsa]: Failed to open
ALSA device default: Connection refused
Jan 08 13:46 : player_thread: problems opening audio device while playing
On Tue, Jan 08, 2013 at 03:28:30PM +, darkestkhan wrote:
On Jan 8, 2013 3:01 PM, Chris Bannister cbannis...@slingshot.co.nz
Not a good idea. Once wheezy is the new stable, the flood gates will
open for the next testing (jessie) and it will be chaotic for a while.
And in my personal
[Please don't top post: http://catb.org/jargon/html/T/top-post.html]
[ fixed up as best I could.]
On Tue, Jan 08, 2013 at 06:02:39PM +, Sharon Kimble wrote:
On 8 January 2013 15:06, Chris Bannister cbannis...@slingshot.co.nzwrote:
On Tue, Jan 08, 2013 at 02:16:07PM +, Sharon Kimble
On Mon, Jan 07, 2013 at 10:16:05AM +0530, vishnu vardhan wrote:
This indicates that the RAM capacity of your laptop is already utilized.
What lets you think it can use 8 gb of RAM?
hi Jörg-Volker,
the toshiba website link clearly states 8 gb ram :
On Sun, Dec 30, 2012 at 06:51:38AM +0200, Dionyssis Goulimis wrote:
Hi,
I downloaded the last edition of Debian yesterday but I can't remember
my Admin password, what is the best way to stop using an Admin password?
You mean the root password. It might be quicker to reinstall, and don't
On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 02:11:14PM +, AG wrote:
I may be stepping all over some or other netiquette, for which I apologise.
I don't see how; your message to this list wasn't cross-posted
I thought that the Debian user community might want to be aware of
the response from one of the Amarok
On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 05:02:49PM -0800, Ron wrote:
Setting linux kernel boot parameter pci=conf1 allows my Intel RAID
Controller-RMS25PB080 (LSI 2208/Fusion based) to be detected, and the FW to
transition to Ready state. Without this setting the Card FW responds only
with 0xF000 Fault
On Thu, Dec 27, 2012 at 01:15:53PM +0530, piruthiviraj natarajan wrote:
Is there any way to clean the apt cache for the packages that I am not
currently using?
I tried using this config
root@localhost:~# cat /etc/apt/apt.conf
APT::Clean-Installed 0;
// auto-remove breaks on meta packages
On Thu, Dec 27, 2012 at 09:36:00AM -0500, Rob Owens wrote:
Note that I use oggenc here, because I'm not familiar with the command
to convert to mp3, although I imagine ffmpeg would do it. If you find
avconv in Debian, ffmpeg is deprecated.
root@tal:~# apt-cache show ffmpeg
[...]
This
On Mon, Dec 24, 2012 at 09:04:13AM -0500, Agbefia wrote:
To whom it may concern:
I have a Dell laptop Studio that runs on Win7 operating system.i tried to
install Debian but something went wrong and my laptop cannot boot and it
seems all my data on the hard drive were erased and I cannot
On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 10:10:00AM +, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Sunday 23 December 2012 10:01:46 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Du, 23 dec 12, 00:51:51, Thore wrote:
Hello,
on my Alienware m15x Notebook I installed debian wheezy (in the
32bit version with kde).
Now I have a few questions:
On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 12:57:09PM +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Sun, 2012-12-23 at 23:08 +1300, Chris Bannister wrote:
dpkg --purge linux-image-blah-blah-blah works just fine. I think
it
even refuses if it is the one you booted from, but sorry, I'm not
willing to test that myself
On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 02:09:24PM +0200, Regid Ichira wrote:
Isn't lintian meant to be used at build time? Isn't it a sort of
post build depends?
In that case, why lintian overrides are shipped in (binary) debs?
Please file a bug against the package concerned.
--
If you're not careful,
On Sun, Dec 23, 2012 at 02:33:54PM +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
On Mon, 2012-12-24 at 02:13 +1300, Chris Bannister wrote:
Ummm, no. dpkg triggers still operate as per normal.
There is no need to edit anything!
So a default only add
Foo Kernel_version
On Sat, Dec 22, 2012 at 02:28:49PM +0900, Tae Wong wrote:
Post errors for names, including spelling errors and more, and the
team will fix these errors. Here we go.
Debian running develpment group is a misspelling of Debian running
development group.
Well spotted, but posts regarding the
Issues regarding copyright, or legal issues in general should be sent to
debian-le...@lists.debian.org CC'd
On Fri, Dec 21, 2012 at 10:09:32PM -0800, Vaibhav Niku wrote:
Hello all
pdf2ps, which is a frontend to gs, inserts a copyright notice in all PS files
it produces. I am using `GPL
On Sat, Dec 22, 2012 at 07:36:18PM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote:
Hello,
When I launch some applications from within gnome 3 mainly rhythmbox and
gmpc the following occurs:
* The fan goes to pull speed.
* The desktop is locked up for about a minute
* After about a minute the fan slows back
On Thu, Dec 20, 2012 at 07:51:12PM -0600, John Hasler wrote:
Brad writes:
I'm running 17 from experimental.
I just upgraded to 17: still works. I did have to allow scripts from
Google to get the CAPTCHA to appear.
But not google analytics I presume, hopefully.
--
If you're not careful,
On Fri, Dec 21, 2012 at 05:05:34PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
On 12/21/12, Frank McCormick debianl...@videotron.ca wrote:
On Fri, 21 Dec 2012 00:19:58 -0500
Frank McCormick debianl...@videotron.ca wrote:
On Fri, 21 Dec 2012 15:41:14 +1100
Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
On Fri, Dec 21, 2012 at 12:34:18PM -0200, Markos wrote:
Em Sex, 2012-12-21 às 16:43 +1300, Chris Bannister escreveu:
Is there ANY new files under /dev/ after plugging it in?
IOW, why does it have to be /dev/ttyUSB ?
I found at http://blog.gmane.org/gmane.linux.irda.general/month
[Please don't top post, read:
http://catb.org/jargon/html/T/top-post.html]
On Thu, Dec 20, 2012 at 12:37:38PM -0200, Markos wrote:
Dear Chris,
This space appeared only in the copy of the email, it does not exist in
the original file.
ALWAYS copy'n'paste error messages and configuration
On Wed, Dec 19, 2012 at 09:59:43AM -0200, Markos wrote:
Hello,
I'm trying to use an interface USB to IrDA Debian Lenny.
I installed the packages usbutils and irda-utils and edited the file
/etc/default/irda-utils
ENABLE = true
AUTOMATIC = true
DISCOVERY = true
DEVICE = / dev/ttyUSB0
On Sat, Dec 15, 2012 at 09:49:13PM -0600, nv wrote:
On Sat, 15 Dec 2012 19:31:52 +1300
Chris Bannister cbannis...@slingshot.co.nz wrote:
tl;dr: Is it recommended that I use apt-pinning to upgrade some
packages to
Weird, considering yours was the long post and not Andrei's
Eek! I
On Sun, Dec 16, 2012 at 11:53:41AM +0100, Johan Grönqvist wrote:
There has been some hope for a release in February, but the number
of release critical bugs is decreasing a bit slowly at the moment,
it seems to me.
My prediction of March is still on the money. :)
--
If you're not careful,
On Wed, Dec 12, 2012 at 03:12:25PM -0600, nv wrote:
On Wed, 12 Dec 2012 21:49:53 +0200
Andrei POPESCU andreimpope...@gmail.com wrote:
Hope this helps,
Andrei
tl;dr: Is it recommended that I use apt-pinning to upgrade some packages to
Weird, considering yours was the long post and not
On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 07:50:29AM -0600, Richard Owlett wrote:
I see a bug report as treating an individual symptom rather than
solving the underlying problem.
So just leave it for someone else to suffer through as well?
You could treat the underlying problem. as a different bug, and offer
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 12:12:05AM -0700, Bob Proulx wrote:
Chris Bannister wrote:
Asking on list, as others may be interested also.
Martin Steigerwald wrote:
martin@merkaba:~#1
martin@merkaba:~#130
^^^
I am wondering what is the significance of the #1
[Sorry for 2nd reply, sent 1st one before I noticed ...]
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 12:12:05AM -0700, Bob Proulx wrote:
Chris Bannister wrote:
Asking on list, as others may be interested also.
Martin Steigerwald wrote:
martin@merkaba:~#1
martin@merkaba:~#130
On Mon, Dec 10, 2012 at 06:39:49AM -0800, David Guntner wrote:
Lisi Reisz grabbed a keyboard and wrote:
On Monday 10 December 2012 09:55:28 Chris Bannister wrote:
Is it double sheeted with a carbon paper arrangement so the second sheet
is a carbon copy of the original?
I've not come
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