-- Forwarded message --
From: Robert A. DelGarbino [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 5:56 PM
Subject: [azipa] seeking HELP for Debian Mail Server Setup with
Postfix + Dovecot + SASL + Squirrel Mail
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hello,
I am a Linux nube and am
Hi,
Sorry for the loss, tuna, glad you're ok!
Hope you can get something, or that one of your neighbors saw/heard
something (I know you said they didn't on IRC last night but perhaps the
situation has changed?)
~Ryan
On Thu, Oct 9, 2008 at 8:07 PM, Tuna [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 9:14 AM, Stephen P Rufle
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.lojackforlaptops.com/
Has anyone actually used this.
A poor man's lowjack for laptops is to install ddclient and use
dyndns. Any time you turn your computer on, it updates your IP which
can then be tracked.
I use:
http://adeona.cs.washington.edu/
"Adeona is the first Open Source system for tracking the location
of your lost or stolen laptop that does not rely on a proprietary,
central service. This means that you can install Adeona on your laptop
and go there's no need to rely on a single
Stephen P Rufle wrote:
Tuna if you need to borrow a laptop for some period, I have a Dell D600
I could let you borrow till you get a new one.
From my mom:
Let him know that Dad really appreciates his generosity, but Dad still
has a backup laptop. What a nice bunch of people you associate
I like what I see at Adeona. I would like to point out, that even with
this if your criminal is smart enough to wipe the drive. You may never
find it, but I think like a car lock, it is certainly better then not
having it.
I really like the pics at the bottom of the site for the Mac OS X
version
Nathan,
I just did a Fedora install of my new laptop. When I setup the disk partitions,
there was an option to encrypt a whole partition. I did so for my /home1
partition. When it booted, it asked for the passphase for my /home1 partition.
There is a GENTOO How-to page on it at
In Oregon, when a laptop was stollen from FreeGeek where I taught, it was
swiftly recovered, since the community is fairly small.
This looks like a meth hit. Nothing like that chemical to make people want to
steal - thinking they are transcending conventionalism with drug use, while
feeding
I've searched the 'net and tried Gmail forums, but can't find
any help anywhere else, so I'll try the best source, even though
this is OT.
1. Every day, I have some legitimate email that Gmail sends
to spam, so I still have to go through it every day to retrieve
those legitimate items.
2. Having
From: Joe [EMAIL PROTECTED]
That's a really good question Nathan. I've used encfs for directories
since it's so easy to install and use, but it's not for whole disk
encryption. I haven't tried WDE because I wasn't sure what the different
distros would support and if you ever have to use a
Gmail/google uses the spamav/clamav, spamd and spamassasin rating to determine
what is spam and what is not.
Part of that is based on their custom signatures, which send to spam folders
based on intelligent format. This spamav/clamav signature is updated on
their servers hourly (or
Nathan,
I just did a Fedora install of my new laptop. When I setup the disk partitions,
there was an option to encrypt a whole partition. I did so for my /home1
partition. When it booted, it asked for the passphase for my /home1 partition.
There is a GENTOO How-to page on it at
Thank you, Lisa. That is a very helpful explanation.
In this case, the example item with a single quote mark in
the subject line went into my trash folder rather than to spam.
Does the fact that this happens (with single quote marks in a
subject line) mean that every item like that goes into
I just ran a test sending a message to myself with the character-
string n't in the subject line and it was not filtered to either spam
or trash.
On 10/10/08, Josef Lowder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thank you, Lisa. That is a very helpful explanation.
In this case, the example item with a
Hmmm, in view of LK's answer, I do not understand...
it seems like, the filtering would affect all
users of (incoming) gmail - which includes me.
I user gmail, but the thread with the OT: I've been burgled subject,
was handled sorta normally for me.
I wonder if there might be more to this...
Wouldn't the MBR and stage 1 of the bootloader have to be in plain
text? I mean, the x86 BIOS is small and not very bright, so you're
stuck with having some unencrypted stuff on it. I think. If the
BIOS has additional functions, you might be able to have a totally
crypted disk. I also
Hey Nathan.
I use encfs/fuse as its built into the kernel, bcrypt and gpg. All run under
GPL unlike Truecrypt which is Open Sourced but the owner holds the copywrite.
Meaning they could pull it back, etc. Plus it is not in the Debian repos like
the other ones.
I have used Luks/LVM but for a
I use gmail and the Tuna's email didn't appear in my spam box. Just curious
are you saying not spam to the messages that are misdirected?
On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 11:30 AM, Mike Schwartz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hmmm, in view of LK's answer, I do not understand...
it seems like, the filtering
On 10/10/08, Shawn Badger [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I use gmail and the Tuna's email didn't appear in my spam box. Just curious
are you saying not spam to the messages that are misdirected?
Yes, I do check not spam to messages the show up in the spam folder
that are not spam. But they keep
What are your rules?
Can you post them for us?
I am sure that a [EMAIL PROTECTED] might be able to quickly tell you the issue?
Date: Fri, 10 Oct 2008 14:17:01 -0700
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us
Subject: Re: OT: Gmail filter errors
On 10/10/08,
On 10/10/08, Lisa Kachold [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What are your rules?
Can you post them for us?
Here's the list of subjects for which I've created filters:
http://www.upquick.com/view/gmail.filters
---
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
http://hp.com/touchsmart
(warning: flash)
Looks sexy. How long do you think it will be until somebody gets it to
run Linux?
It doesn't appear to be a multitouch screen, or else they would probably
advertise that.
---
PLUG-discuss mailing list -
Linux Security HackFest Lab
Saturday October 11, 2006 Noon until 3ish
UAT: http://www.uat.edu
Focus: Knoppix STD ISO Live CD*
Includes Backtrack Live CD*
Agenda: Starts at Noon
1) Short Presentation: OSI Layered Linux Security [OpenOffice Presentation
Available for Download if you Arrive
I just went to the Dell Future of Computing event this week and the
Lojack for Laptops folks were there(they have actually changed their
name to AbsoluteSoftware), and I hit them up with lots of questions
about how the person who stole it could get around it. Basically, if
you get one of the new
On my dell laptop the agent is built into the bios. It appears to phone
home about once a day.
There account website requires IE 6+ to access.
My laptop has never been stolen so cannot speak to how well they do or
don't recover.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL
Matt Graham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Wouldn't the MBR and stage 1 of the bootloader have to be in plain
text? I mean, the x86 BIOS is small and not very bright, so you're
stuck with having some unencrypted stuff on it. I think. If the
BIOS has additional functions, you might be
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