Re: [gentoo-user] timesheet - to keep track of employee time etc
A suggestion based on my experience. Use the OpenOffice database connectivity to connect to whatever database (I use Oracle jdbc connector, for oracle DB). You can then make a simple interface to the Database using the Writer/HTML template form features. I would imagine that if you spent perhaps, maybe 2 hrs, you will have the basic functionality your looking for. If a couple of hours seems excessive, consider how long you may have already spent trying to get other things to work. Just My 2 cents, hope this helps Glen On Tue, 2005-04-05 at 18:15 -0600, Joseph wrote: On Tue, 2005-04-05 at 19:30 -0400, Chris Bare wrote: Does anybody know of any timesheet program in portage that would allow track employee time etc? I use app-office/gnotime to keep track of my own hours. It can generate some basic reports. It depends on what your needs are, it doesn't talk to a DB with hours for all employees if you where looking for something like that. I was looking for something more secure, you log-in and the time you log-in is the time you start work. I run onto timesheet.php it looks interesting but I got stuck with installation, it simply won't run and there is on documentation besides some basic what to do in README file (I think I'm missing something). http://www.advancen.com/timesheet/index.html#Documentation **This message is intended for the addressee named and may containprivileged information or confidential information or both. If youare not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender.**
[gentoo-user] Re: emerge and etc-update oddity
Hi all, I can't locate the origin of the following message which occurs on start-up and when I emerge packages. If I could be given some direction, I would most certainly appreciate. Regenerating /etc/ld.so.cache... * Caching service dependencies... Usage: server -n rsa_nickname -p port [-3RFrf] [-w password] [-c ciphers] [-d dbdir] -3 means disable SSL v3 -r means request certificate on first handshake. -f means require certificate on first handshake. -R means request certificate on all handshakes. -F means require certificate on all handshakes. -c ciphers Letter(s) chosen from the following list A SSL2 RC4 128 WITH MD5 B SSL2 RC4 128 EXPORT40 WITH MD5 C SSL2 RC2 128 CBC WITH MD5 D SSL2 RC2 128 CBC EXPORT40 WITH MD5 E SSL2 DES 64 CBC WITH MD5 F SSL2 DES 192 EDE3 CBC WITH MD5 a SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH FORTEZZA CBC SHA b SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH RC4 128 SHA c SSL3 RSA WITH RC4 128 MD5 d SSL3 RSA WITH 3DES EDE CBC SHA e SSL3 RSA WITH DES CBC SHA f SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC4 40 MD5 g SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC2 CBC 40 MD5 h SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH NULL SHA i SSL3 RSA WITH NULL MD5 j SSL3 RSA FIPS WITH 3DES EDE CBC SHA k SSL3 RSA FIPS WITH DES CBC SHA l SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH DES CBC SHA (new) m SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC4 56 SHA (new) TIA -- Glen Trudgett [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: emerge and etc-update oddity
Hi all, I can't locate the origin of the following message which occurs on start-up and when I emerge packages. If I could be given some direction, I would most certainly appreciate. Regenerating /etc/ld.so.cache... * Caching service dependencies... Usage: server -n rsa_nickname -p port [-3RFrf] [-w password] [-c ciphers] [-d dbdir] -3 means disable SSL v3 -r means request certificate on first handshake. -f means require certificate on first handshake. -R means request certificate on all handshakes. -F means require certificate on all handshakes. -c ciphers Letter(s) chosen from the following list A SSL2 RC4 128 WITH MD5 B SSL2 RC4 128 EXPORT40 WITH MD5 C SSL2 RC2 128 CBC WITH MD5 D SSL2 RC2 128 CBC EXPORT40 WITH MD5 E SSL2 DES 64 CBC WITH MD5 F SSL2 DES 192 EDE3 CBC WITH MD5 a SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH FORTEZZA CBC SHA b SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH RC4 128 SHA c SSL3 RSA WITH RC4 128 MD5 d SSL3 RSA WITH 3DES EDE CBC SHA e SSL3 RSA WITH DES CBC SHA f SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC4 40 MD5 g SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC2 CBC 40 MD5 h SSL3 FORTEZZA DMS WITH NULL SHA i SSL3 RSA WITH NULL MD5 j SSL3 RSA FIPS WITH 3DES EDE CBC SHA k SSL3 RSA FIPS WITH DES CBC SHA l SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH DES CBC SHA (new) m SSL3 RSA EXPORT WITH RC4 56 SHA (new) TIA -- Glen Trudgett [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Digital camera recommendations?
On Thu, 2003-09-25 at 11:10, Jason Cooper wrote: Ernie Schroder ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) scribbled: On Wednesday 24 September 2003 08:47 pm, Carl Hudkins wrote: Hi, all... Ok, an upcoming vacation and my seeming inability to completely shoot a roll of film and get it developed before it's so old that half the pictures look like they were shot from behind brown draperies have got me thinking about getting a digital camera. Since I live in a Windows-free environment, any such camera must be compatible with Linux in at least these ways: * Appears to the system as a USB mass-storage device -- that means, no special software or drivers are needed; you just plug it in and you can then get your pictures off it like a normal filesystem. + This would also be a benefit if I needed to plug it into someone else's computer in order to upload the pix to myself or something. I've tried to deal with cameras at work (Kinko's) that needed special drivers, and had to give up when even the manufacturer's web site did not have have (Win2k) drivers that would work. * No more than two hours of screwing with config files or kernel rebuilds should be required to get it working. Further, it must be compatible with my budget, which means it costs less than $300 (US). :) I know this will not get me an ultra-high-quality camera, but from what I've read the photos from such a device should be more than sufficient for my meager needs. Does such a thing exist? If anyone has one, I'd sure like to know about it! Thanks in advance, I'm using a Olympus D-550 here It meets your requirments and it's a 3 megapixle camera with 2.8 optical and 3x digital zoom Cost is about $250 (US) The camera itself looks just like a card reader to Linux so If you've gotten usb-mass storage working, you're good to go. I recommend a card reader as uploading photos to a computer is tough on the batteries. What media format does it use for storage? I'm also looking for a digital camera, and was considering the Olympus weatherproof one. Cooper. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list Hi, I just purchased the C-750 Olympus and it is a beautiful piece of machinery. 4 Mega Pixel Effective 40X Zoom 10x optical 4x digital two 128Mb Cards (one Stills, the other Motion) a 16Mb card is included and I use this for the BEST high res. pixs I can't comment on the price ( Aus $1099 camera only )but the camera is superb. It uses the new xD memory Card. I would also like to be able to move stuff into my Linux box and put gimp through it's paces. What is required to test the USB Mass storage option? Sorry if a little of topic :/ cheers, -- Glen Trudgett [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Digital camera recommendations?
On Thu, 2003-09-25 at 12:11, Ernie Schroder wrote: On Wednesday 24 September 2003 09:25 pm, Glen Trudgett wrote: On Thu, 2003-09-25 at 11:10, Jason Cooper wrote: Ernie Schroder ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) scribbled: On Wednesday 24 September 2003 08:47 pm, Carl Hudkins wrote: Hi, all... Ok, an upcoming vacation and my seeming inability to completely shoot a roll of film and get it developed before it's so old that half the pictures look like they were shot from behind brown draperies have got me thinking about getting a digital camera. Since I live in a Windows-free environment, any such camera must be compatible with Linux in at least these ways: * Appears to the system as a USB mass-storage device -- that means, no special software or drivers are needed; you just plug it in and you can then get your pictures off it like a normal filesystem. + This would also be a benefit if I needed to plug it into someone else's computer in order to upload the pix to myself or something. I've tried to deal with cameras at work (Kinko's) that needed special drivers, and had to give up when even the manufacturer's web site did not have have (Win2k) drivers that would work. * No more than two hours of screwing with config files or kernel rebuilds should be required to get it working. Further, it must be compatible with my budget, which means it costs less than $300 (US). :) I know this will not get me an ultra-high-quality camera, but from what I've read the photos from such a device should be more than sufficient for my meager needs. Does such a thing exist? If anyone has one, I'd sure like to know about it! Thanks in advance, I'm using a Olympus D-550 here It meets your requirments and it's a 3 megapixle camera with 2.8 optical and 3x digital zoom Cost is about $250 (US) The camera itself looks just like a card reader to Linux so If you've gotten usb-mass storage working, you're good to go. I recommend a card reader as uploading photos to a computer is tough on the batteries. What media format does it use for storage? I'm also looking for a digital camera, and was considering the Olympus weatherproof one. Cooper. -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list Hi, I just purchased the C-750 Olympus and it is a beautiful piece of machinery. 4 Mega Pixel Effective 40X Zoom 10x optical 4x digital two 128Mb Cards (one Stills, the other Motion) a 16Mb card is included and I use this for the BEST high res. pixs I can't comment on the price ( Aus $1099 camera only )but the camera is superb. It uses the new xD memory Card. I would also like to be able to move stuff into my Linux box and put gimp through it's paces. What is required to test the USB Mass storage option? Sorry if a little of topic :/ cheers, I don't know about cameras using xD media but assuming the camera needs no special drivers, you'll need SCSI support, SCSI-disk support and usb-mass storage. All three are built into my kernel Thanks mate! I'll give it a go :) -- Glen Trudgett [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] re: Accidently changed all /dev group ownerships doh!
Hi all, I have successfully done something as root in the wrong directory using '*'. Why don't I do as I say and not as I dosigh! Does someone have any experience in resetting the appropriate group ownerships for the /dev directory. Does devfs auto-magically do this at reboot ? Thanks! -- Glen Trudgett [EMAIL PROTECTED] ** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ** -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list