On 03/13/2017 10:00 AM, Erik Christiansen wrote:
>> This has been a long time standard email client on many systems and is
>> still in use today.
> On this list, even.
And many other places.
>> It is *still* in development (last release ~16 days ago).
> "*still*", huh? Venerable it may be, but t
On 12.03.17 23:17, Bertho Stultiens wrote:
> Mutt is a command-line email reader; see
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutt_(email_client)
>
> This has been a long time standard email client on many systems and is
> still in use today.
On this list, even.
> It is *still* in development (last rele
On 13/3/17 1:45 pm, Gregg Eshelman wrote:
> Then why hasn't its issue with noatime been fixed?
>
>
>
>From: Bertho Stultiens
> To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
> Sent: Sunday, March 12, 2017 4:22 PM
> Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Thoughts on extend
Then why hasn't its issue with noatime been fixed?
From: Bertho Stultiens
To: Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)
Sent: Sunday, March 12, 2017 4:22 PM
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] Thoughts on extending the life of the microsd's.
Mutt is a command-line email reader;
noatime
http://en.tldp.org/LDP/solrhe/Securing-Optimizing-Linux-RH-Edition-v1.3/chap6sec73.html
. Mutt
http://www.tecmint.com/send-mail-from-command-line-using-mutt-command/
Dave
On 3/12/2017 6:04 PM, Peter Blodow wrote:
> Please, could someone explain to a poor physicist what noatime an
On 03/12/2017 11:04 PM, Peter Blodow wrote:
> Please, could someone explain to a poor physicist what noatime and Mutt are?
Noatime refers to a flag that can be set on the filesystem. By default,
the access timestamp is recorded and saved in a unix filesystem (the
last time you access a file, any f
Please, could someone explain to a poor physicist what noatime and Mutt are?
Peter
Am 12.03.2017 16:34, schrieb dragon:
> For about three years now, I know of no other applications that has
> issues with noatime other than Mutt. Everyone always says 'but it breaks
> programs like Mutt' but in real
On Sunday 12 March 2017 11:34:27 dragon wrote:
> For about three years now, I know of no other applications that has
> issues with noatime other than Mutt. Everyone always says 'but it
> breaks programs like Mutt' but in reality these days, my experience
> has been that it only breaks Mutt. There
For about three years now, I know of no other applications that has
issues with noatime other than Mutt. Everyone always says 'but it breaks
programs like Mutt' but in reality these days, my experience has been
that it only breaks Mutt. There used to be more applications that it
caused issues with
On Sunday 12 March 2017 08:39:03 Erik Christiansen wrote:
> On 11.03.17 16:42, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Saturday 11 March 2017 12:02:36 dragon wrote:
> > > I doubt that you will ever hit the end of life on a quality SD
> > > card, especially a large size one. The writes that you are doing,
> > >
On 11.03.17 16:42, Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Saturday 11 March 2017 12:02:36 dragon wrote:
>
> > I doubt that you will ever hit the end of life on a quality SD card,
> > especially a large size one. The writes that you are doing, and thus
> > the number of blocks, are TINY compared to what the card
On Saturday 11 March 2017 12:02:36 dragon wrote:
> I doubt that you will ever hit the end of life on a quality SD card,
> especially a large size one. The writes that you are doing, and thus
> the number of blocks, are TINY compared to what the cards were
> designed for... photos and videos. You c
I doubt that you will ever hit the end of life on a quality SD card,
especially a large size one. The writes that you are doing, and thus the
number of blocks, are TINY compared to what the cards were designed
for... photos and videos. You can also run a flash file system instead
of ext4 if you lik
Greetings all;
When I setup LCNC on the pi, one of the things I did was to make an
R-Pi_nc_files directory on the rotating media of this machine, copied
all the .ngc files I have generated to run on TLM to it, and cleaned out
the nc_files directory on the pi, leaving only 2 files, which will
r
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