On Sat, Feb 28, 2015 at 12:02 AM, Mark van Atten wrote:
> What am I missing?
That mount(1) here needs a spec argument:
cpu% mount /srv/macmini mac Users/mva
That works.
What made me overlook this was perhaps an unconscious presupposition
that, if only one tree is specified in the server's /et
On Sat, 28 Feb 2015 13:05:51 EST s...@9front.org wrote:
> > On Sat, 28 Feb 2015 09:18:24 +0100 cinap_len...@felloff.net wrote:
> >> i ment in the context of rio resize.
> >
> > Presumably he means his carefully laid out rio windows get out
> > of kilter (or alignment) when they all get resized. Yo
> On Sat, 28 Feb 2015 09:18:24 +0100 cinap_len...@felloff.net wrote:
>> i ment in the context of rio resize.
>
> Presumably he means his carefully laid out rio windows get out
> of kilter (or alignment) when they all get resized. You need a
> layout engine to keep them looking nice and proportiona
On Tue, Feb 24, 2015, at 09:50 AM, Ramakrishnan Muthukrishnan wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 23, 2015, at 07:39 PM, erik quanstrom wrote:
> > > > I see a crash elsewhere now. Tried installation 3 times again and all
> > > > crashed at different places.
> > > >
> > > > One of them is:
> > > >
> > > > rc: n
On 28 Feb 2015 02:21, "Jeff Sickel" wrote:
>
> The older versions of drawterm just map a large view to fill
> the whole screen and then clip the view to the window size you’ve
> selected.
[etc.]
thanks for the explanation. i
hadn't quite realised this, as
i usually resize only once, to
full scree
On Sat, 28 Feb 2015 09:18:24 +0100 cinap_len...@felloff.net wrote:
> i ment in the context of rio resize.
Presumably he means his carefully laid out rio windows get out
of kilter (or alignment) when they all get resized. You need a
layout engine to keep them looking nice and proportionate.
i ment in the context of rio resize.
--
cinap
> what does "out of whack" mean?
Off the rails, perhaps. I presume that it's one of those English
expressions (like "doubtedly" or "all but...") that originally meant
(rightly) the exact opposite of what it (wrongly) does now: you whack
something into place, so it's out of whack if it's not right
what does "out of whack" mean?
--
cinap