...
On Sun,09.Aug.09, 05:32:55, Long Wind wrote:
I use sarge
When I reboot/halt, the speaker beeps
Is there any way to config speaker not to beep?
Could it be that the sound card beeps when booting (at the BIOS
level of booting)?
(My motherboard's sound chip generates a low sound then.)
Suno Ano wrote:
Hi folks,
Chris Actually I took a peek with Seamonkey as well and apart from
Chris white rabbits that I could live without - and other prettifying
Chris that I definitely will live without :-) everything renders OK.
Suno Ano wrote:
Hi folks,
I wrote an article about etckeeper... that nifty thing that allows to
keep /etc under version control and thus rollback in case something
bad happens during an upgrade or so.
http://sunoano.name/ws/public_xhtml/scm.html#etckeeper
Could you fix your web page
Does anyone know if there any wireless network-connected video cameras
with in-camera motion-detection-triggered e-mail notification that are
configurable via Linux?
The cameras I've seen need to have the wireless network configuration
set up while connected via a cable, and come with a
Karl O. Pinc wrote:
On 06/08/2009 03:30:21 PM, Karl O. Pinc wrote:
On 06/08/2009 03:19:37 PM, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Does anyone know if there any wireless network-connected video cameras
with in-camera motion-detection-triggered e-mail notification that are
configurable via Linux
Karl O. Pinc wrote:
On 06/08/2009 03:45:08 PM, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Karl O. Pinc wrote:
On 06/08/2009 03:30:21 PM, Karl O. Pinc wrote:
On 06/08/2009 03:19:37 PM, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Does anyone know if there any wireless network-connected video
cameras
with in-camera motion
Chris Jones wrote:
On Wed, Jun 03, 2009 at 11:02:03AM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Yes, C-h in Emacs should perform some kind of backspace operation
(back-deletion or at least movement), since C-h in ASCII is the
Backspace character.
I believe that like C-S/C-Q and friends this belongs
Does anyone here know of good articles/site about network-connected
web cameras, in particular, what protocols they use (what interface
they provide) for configuation and for access?
In particular:
For configuration, do they typically use an operating-system-independent
interface such as a
Neal Hogan wrote:
2009/6/4 mr...@prokon.cz mailto:mr...@prokon.cz mr...@prokon.cz
mailto:mr...@prokon.cz
Hi,
please, how can I deactivate this mailing list..
thanks
I suspect you mean unsubscribe. That is, you no longer want to be part
of this list.
Scroll down to
Chris Jones wrote:
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 11:49:34AM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Chris Jones wrote:
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:04:44PM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Chris Jones wrote:
[..]
... homo sapiens ... opposable thumb.
...
The indirect relationship is that thumbs are both very
Daniel Burrows wrote:
...: one of my colleagues bought a keyboard with pedals a
few years ago. As I understand it, the pedals are used for shift
states and control characters -- I haven't used it myself, but it seems
like an interesting idea, and it continues the pianistic angle here. :-)
ronggui wong wrote:
Thanks for your hints, and I find shortname=mixed is more close to
what I want.
I think there's also shortname=winnt.
(I forget exactly what it does differently, but it's what I use
to preserve case.)
Daniel
--
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Chris Jones wrote:
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:04:44PM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Chris Jones wrote:
[..]
Where the above no longer works for me is when the two action keys
do not belong to the same half of the keyboard - such as Ctrl-X
Ctrl-P, because I would use my right thumb
Paul E Condon wrote:
... [gdm] needs a window manager before the user has even logged in.
What features of a window manager does it need or use?
(I don't use gdm. Does it have multiple windows that the user might
need to move around or that the user might want to see decorated?)
Daniel
--
Muzer wrote:
KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
man:/manpage[(number)]
(where the denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
Which part of KDE is that? (What is KDE's file/etc. browser?)
Daniel
--
(Plain text sometimes corrupted to HTML courtesy of
Chris Jones wrote:
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 11:47:46AM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
You can go: Control-down, x-down, f-down, Control-up, x-up, f-up; and
that can be done in one rolling motion in about 1/3 of a second.
More like one tenth of a second for an average typist..
True, but I
Sjoerd Hardeman wrote:
Barclay, Daniel schreef:
Why does apticron ignore held packages? Wouldn't one want to know about
security updates even for packages that are in the held state?
Well, because they're in held state. That's what it is supposed to do.
Holding is supposed to prevent
Chris Bannister wrote:
...
apt-cache show gpm
Description: General Purpose Mouse interface
[..]
By default, the daemon provides a 'selection' mode, so that
cut-and-paste with the mouse works on the console just as it does
under X.
Speaking of gpm _and_ X: Can gpm be connected X's
Why does apticron ignore held packages? Wouldn't one want to know about
security updates even for packages that are in the held state?
In my case in particular I certainly do. I have been keeping all
installed packages on hold in order to cause more confirmation
prompting from non-interactive
Chris Jones wrote:
On Mon, May 18, 2009 at 04:13:16PM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Dotan Cohen wrote:
...
Are you asking about manually selecting part of the output of a
command(s) and using it to assemble another command (as opposed to
piping the whole output from one command into another
Yuriy Padlyak wrote:
Subject: Samba performance
Dancing?
:-)
Daniel
--
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Dotan Cohen wrote:
Like you said, it does require foreknowledge of the output. So there is
no way to make a one-size-fits-all solution, be it a command-line trick
or a program.
If you told us exactly what you want to achieve, we might be able to
help you better.
I just want to know in a
Michael M. Moore wrote:
...
mcu...@drifter:~$ cat /etc/apt/apt.conf
APT::Default-Release stable;
APT::Cache-Limit 33554432;
At some time in the past, APT::Default-Release worked only with the status-based
release names (stable, testing, etc.) but didn't work (and didn't report any
error
Alex Samad wrote:
On Mon, May 11, 2009 at 12:07:18PM -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
In 4a01ac7b.4010...@fgm.com, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Does Debian have any utility to address the following situation?
Not that I know of.
I have some scripts that I run both
I wrote:
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
In 4a01ac7b.4010...@fgm.com, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
I have some scripts that I run both manually and as cron jobs. The
scripts generate stdout/stderr output reporting what they're doing.
I want to see the output when I run the scripts manually
Chris Jones wrote:
On Mon, May 04, 2009 at 11:42:34AM EDT, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Have you tried mapping the Control key back to where it was when Emacs
was designed (and where it belongs--just to the left of the A key (on
QWERTY keyboards))?
Used that for a long time .. the location
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
On Wed, May 06, 2009 at 11:27:55AM -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Does Debian have any utility to address the following situation?
I have some scripts that I run both manually and as cron jobs. The scripts
generate stdout/stderr output reporting what they're doing.
I
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
In 4a01ac7b.4010...@fgm.com, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Does Debian have any utility to address the following situation?
Not that I know of.
I have some scripts that I run both manually and as cron jobs. The
scripts generate stdout/stderr output reporting what
Ben Badgley wrote:
...
One disadvantage of rural life is lacking options for high speed
connections. We make do on dial up but it can be frustrating at times.
...
If that frustration relates to waiting for Debian packages to download
after you've selected to install them: Consider
Does Debian have any utility to address the following situation?
I have some scripts that I run both manually and as cron jobs. The scripts
generate stdout/stderr output reporting what they're doing.
I want to see the output when I run the scripts manually. However, when the
scripts are run by
Harry Rickards wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
jida...@jidanni.org wrote:
Why must emacs depend on sound packages? Is emacs
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAL_9000 and will talk to us?
Isn't that an independent package, emacspeak?
Shouldn't there be a way to install an
On Sat, May 02, 2009 at 07:30:25AM EDT, Harry Rickards wrote:
Plus, even though emacs does other stuff apart from editing, what can
emacs do that a separate tool can't do?
It can integrate those separate tools.
The biggest non-editing things for which I use Emacs are its shell mode
(CLI
Chris Jones wrote:
[...]
ergonomically sound keyboard mappings, I should give it another shot.
Hvae you fingers trying to use Emacs with the Control key where IBM moved it to
on
PCs?
Have you tried mapping the Control key back to where it was when Emacs was
designed
(and where it
Harry Rickards wrote:
Have you tried configuring Outlook to send in plain text by default,
using the instructions at http://www.expita.com/nomime.html#out2002?
Read my signature more carefully.
Daniel
--
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Harry Rickards wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Have you tried mapping the Control key back to where it was when Emacs
was designed
(and where it belongs--just to the left of the A key (on QWERTY keyboards))?
If not, be sure to try
Harry Rickards wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Harry Rickards wrote:
Have you tried configuring Outlook to send in plain text by default,
using the instructions at http://www.expita.com/nomime.html#out2002?
Read my signature more carefully
Harry Rickards wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
On Sat, May 02, 2009 at 07:30:25AM EDT, Harry Rickards wrote:
Plus, even though emacs does other stuff apart from editing, what can
emacs do that a separate tool can't do?
It can integrate those
Eric Gerlach wrote:
...
The User Agent String strikes again.
I just had to change my UA string from Iceweasel to Firefox and all was
well.
Wait a minute. Why does the Debian-rebranded Firefox go beyond just changing
the software name (the name used to identify the software to humans,
How does one turn off grouping by installation state (installed, not installed,
etc.) in aptitude, so that similarly-named package show up next to each other
regardless of that installation state?
(What I'm trying to do it see where there are newer major versions of software
I have installed,
I wrote:
How does one turn off grouping by installation state ... in aptitude
Never mind.
(Yes, I've tried Google, but didn't think of the right search string.)
Later I did.
(Here's one hit:
http://linux.derkeiler.com/Mailing-Lists/Debian/2008-12/msg00576.html
)
Daniel
--
(Plain
Where are Debian Etch CD images? All the Debian CD mirrors I've seen
have only Lenny images.
(Yes, I'm in the process of upgrading to Lenny.)
Thanks,
Daniel
--
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Ken Irving wrote:
On Tue, Apr 07, 2009 at 01:34:57PM -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
John Hasler wrote:
Daniel writes:
Debian packages should have some standard place to go to to see those
latter kinds of information.
/usr/share/doc/packagename contains README.debian, the upstream README
Jeffrey Cao wrote:
On 2009-04-07, Long Wind longwind2...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks!
/etc/hosts
That doesn't address names looked up via DNS.
Daniel
--
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Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Mon,06.Apr.09, 13:21:49, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Mon,06.Apr.09, 12:52:02, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Debian packages should have some standard place to go to to see those
latter kinds of information. If it did, that place could also hold
John Hasler wrote:
Daniel writes:
Debian packages should have some standard place to go to to see those
latter kinds of information. If it did, that place could also hold an
indication of any daemons started (or installed but pending further
configuration) by installing a package.
Manoj Srivastava wrote:
On Mon, Apr 06 2009, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Debian packages should probably have some kind of post-installation
read-me file to tell you essential things about an installed package
(e.g, the commands now available; the manual/info/etc. pages now
avaible; daemons
Nuno Magalhães wrote:
is it possible to install a daemon from a Debian package without having
it automatically started afterwards?
At the risk of starting a holy war, and kind of highjaking, shouldn't
Debian *not* start just-installed daemons by default? Or at least ask
while installing if
Andrei Popescu wrote:
On Mon,06.Apr.09, 12:52:02, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Debian packages should have some standard place to go to to see those
latter kinds of information. If it did, that place could also hold
an indication of any daemons started (or installed but pending further
Carl Johnson wrote:
ow...@netptc.net writes:
... The
timeout or lockup can indicate that the packets cannot be
reassembled at the destination (your computer) and the TCP protocol
times out waiting for one or more missing packets.
That makes sense to me, but why is it only a very few web
Christofer C. Bell wrote:
On Mon, Mar 23, 2009 at 9:48 AM, Barclay, Daniel dan...@fgm.com
mailto:dan...@fgm.com wrote:
Christofer C. Bell wrote:
Mail 1: Q: What is the most annoying thing in e-mail?
Mail 2: A: Top-posting.
Mail 3: Q: Why is top-posting such a bad
Christofer C. Bell wrote:
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 11:40 AM, Ron Johnson ron.l.john...@cox.net
mailto:ron.l.john...@cox.net wrote:
On 2009-03-22 11:45, Chris Bannister wrote:
...
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such
Chris Jones wrote:
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 01:51:31PM EDT, Florian Kulzer wrote:
[..]
I need to see the relevant context quoted (properly trimmed as the
discussion progresses, of course), especially if a thread has run for
a while.
Most business mail runs something like this:
-
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Dirk wrote:
If you have a problem with trolling... well... let me welcome you to the
internet.
Well, then please go to the internet. We are not the internet, we are
debian-user, a mailing list that just happens to be mirrored to the
internet.
You're mixing up
ghe wrote:
... I have a script pinging my ISP (details below) and I don't understand
the results. Some output:
2391 Thu Feb 26 01:14:39 2009 -- 5 packets, time 45ms == max rtt:
351.654 ms
2392 Thu Feb 26 01:14:45 2009 -- 5 packets, time 46ms == max rtt:
344.855 ms
...
What I
Sjors Gielen wrote:
...
So I wanted two IP's in the machine; I have Hamachi running two times
and I have two interfaces now, ham0 and ham1. There are also two routes:
Destination Gateway GenmaskFlags Metric Ref Use Iface
5.0.0.0 *255.0.0.0 U 0 0 0
ghe wrote:
...
Here's a line from the same program (changed to show a
little more data) on the same host, but with appletalk, squid, and mysql
killed -- seems to be more in line with what the router sees so far:
94 Thu Feb 26 11:57:00 2009 -- 5 packets, time 45ms == rtt
min/avg/max:
Jack Schneider wrote:
On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 17:14:54 -0500
Barclay, Daniel dan...@fgm.com wrote:
Jack Schneider wrote:
... I have run without incident for over a year.
But if you haven't had any disk-failure incidents, do you know whether
your setup will reliably work if either disk fails
Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
...
I had a box with ...
I tested booting by unplugging (power and data) each drive in turn,
booting with grub was never a problem.
Thanks.
Daniel
--
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John Lindsay wrote:
Thierry Chatelet wrote:
John
Hi John,
Dont use reply to and change the subject of the thread, this does not
start a new thread, but goes into the one you are therefore
highjacking. To start a new thread, you have to create a new message.
Thierry
My
Some articles about GRUB and md-based RAID1 (mirroring) seem to imply that GRUB
can read files (including the kernel and the initrd file) from /boot on the
filesystem on a mirrored partition.
Since GRUB hasn't loaded the kernel file yet, GRUB can't be using the kernel
and its md driver, and
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Since GRUB hasn't loaded the kernel file yet, GRUB can't be using the kernel
and its md driver, and therefore can't be reading the partition _as_a_RAID_
_volume_ (/dev/mdX), right?
So is GRUB just reading the partition directly to get
Jack Schneider wrote:
On Tue, 24 Feb 2009 15:21:23 -0500
Barclay, Daniel dan...@fgm.com wrote:
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
... is GRUB taking advantage of the fact that the RAID metadata is
written at the end of a partition ...
...
If so, how reliable
Jeff Soules wrote:
...
The most intrusive attacks, where an attacker has complete control of
the user's machine (and can therefor modify EncFS, or FUSE, or the
kernel itself) are not guarded against. Do not assume that encrypted
files will protect your sensitive data if you enter your
Where does GRUB install its stage 1.5 loader if you install GRUB into the
boot record of a partition (e.g., setup (hd0,0)) rather than the master boot
record of the disk?
Thanks,
Daniel
--
(Plain text sometimes corrupted to HTML courtesy of Microsoft Exchange.) [F]
kj wrote:
... I can imagine there's some benefit to designing a battery
that delivers the cameras exact energy requirements rather than trying
to make the most of the fixed output of AAs. Given how small compact
digital cameras have become, AA batteries really just add unnecessary bulk.
Mike McClain wrote:
AA batteries are cheap, readily available and I can get NiCad and NiMH.
Custom rechargable battery packs are like printer ink cartridges.
I wonder whether any camera use AAA batteries. That would let the camera be
smaller and you'd still be able to install
In exim4, what value should AUTH_CLIENT_ALLOW_NOTLS_PASSWORDS be set to to
enable
authentication associated feature?
My exim4 (on Sarge) is set up in smarthost mode, and I'm trying to set up
authentication to my smarthost, my
ISP's SMTP server.
I found some documentation saying to set
I wrote:
In exim4, what value should AUTH_CLIENT_ALLOW_NOTLS_PASSWORDS be set to
to enable
authentication associated feature?
...
I tried simply setting to true like this:
AUTH_CLIENT_ALLOW_NOTLS_PASSWORDS = true
but that yields the error:
# /etc/init.d/exim4 restart
Alex Samad wrote:
On Sun, Feb 08, 2009 at 08:51:12PM +0100, Abdelkader Belahcene wrote:
Hi,
What are the advantages by using
drives are now identified by UUID
over than /dev/xxx;
you don't have to worry about ordering. I prefer to LABEL. that way it
doesn't matter what order the disks
Chris Jones wrote:
On Thu, Feb 05, 2009 at 01:09:13PM EST, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Dave Thayer wrote:
...
One nice bonus about having a powered hub is that it can be used to
recharge gadgets such as cellphones and mp3 players without having to
leave your computer on.
Wouldn't that work
Dave Thayer wrote:
...
One nice bonus about having a powered hub is that it can be used to
recharge gadgets such as cellphones and mp3 players without having to
leave your computer on.
Wouldn't that work for unpowered hubs too? An unpowered hub can still
supply 100mA to each port.
Ignacio Mondino wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 02/05/2009 08:44 AM, consultores1 wrote:
[snip]
Are you refering to Unitedstatesdians? because i am from El Salvador and
(Probably) yes, except we don't have that equivalent of estadounidenses in
English. Yes, maybe we should (and I've even said
Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
I don't know, why the US's founding fathers did not pick a more
appropriate name.
How was it not appropriate if they were the only states in America that were
united? Were any others united into a federation or country back then?
Daniel
--
(Plain text sometimes
Guillaume wrote:
Hi,
I use personalized ipfilters and I want to log dropped packet to a
dedicated file in /var/log by using syslog.
...
#for iptables
#in a user define chain called for each packet i want to filter
iptables -A LOG_AND_DROP -m limit --limit 10/minute -j LOG --log-level
info
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
On Friday 2009 January 09 21:09:30 Chris Jones wrote:
...
3. With only one USB port .. I'll need a hub.. will that work?
For flash drives, yes. For external magnetic drives, only if it is powered.
Of course, if your USB external disk has a separate power input
David Jardine wrote:
On Tue, Jan 06, 2009 at 12:28:44PM -0800, Ken Teague wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Well, maybe I'll prove to be understanding neither of you, but the
point seems to be that you can't 'force' the maturity of a package.
I wasn't talking about trying to force
Aneurin Price wrote:
On Tue, Feb 3, 2009 at 6:24 PM, Barclay, Daniel dan...@fgm.com wrote:
David Jardine wrote:
On Tue, Jan 06, 2009 at 12:28:44PM -0800, Ken Teague wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
Well, maybe I'll prove to be understanding neither of you, but the
point seems
Ken Teague wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Ken Teague wrote:
...
If Debian set a shorter target release interval, each individual package
maintainer would implement (and test and debug) a smaller set of features
and changes (for that package) for each (more frequent) release. I don't
think
Daniel Cliff wrote:
On Fri, Jan 2, 2009 at 1:27 AM, Ron Johnson ron.l.john...@cox.net wrote:
...I've always been reluctant to mv the
pictures from the camera to a local folder, because I thought that
might mess things up with the camera. I know I may sound naive, but
perhaps there are
Ken Teague wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Why do so many defenses of Debian's release cycle length seem to ignore or
skirt the issue of _how_ _much_ is planned to be in each release? (Saying
when it's right still depends on what it is--which set of features/
changes are involved.)
How
Raquel wrote:
On Tue, 30 Dec 2008 15:38:41 -0800
Ken Teague ktea...@pobox.com wrote:
Is Debian's stable release cycle relative long because Debian
releases typically involve big changes that set the minimum time
between releases, or is it because Debian not really attempt to
design and
ghe wrote:
...
lee wrote:
Well, that means there is no way of telling which disk is which other
than uuid maybe. But who says which uuid is to be which partition?
The UUID is written on the disk when the partition is created.
That's not right, is it? Isn't the UUID always of part of the
s. keeling wrote:
Koh Choon Lin uselessm...@gmail.com:
Anyone has an idea what is the release cycle for Debian? I
understand six months is the standard for Ubuntu.
Why? What's wrong with Etch and Lenny? They're both well usable now,
yes? Are you looking for Lenny features in a stable
michael wrote:
I've been struggling to get this to work but I think 'sed' should be
able to do it if I could just get some help with the correct
incantation...
given a file with many strings, include many of the form
a href=some url or otherwww/a
I wish each to be transformed to
a
What is the command or command option in dpkg/apt-get/etc. to verify the
current checksums of installed files again the checksums in the corresponding
package (.deb) file?
(I have been having trouble with file corruption when copying files. It seems
be on the write side rather than the read
I wrote:
(I have been having trouble with file corruption when copying files. It
seems
be on the write side rather than the read side, but now a file I've only
been
reading (/usr/bin/tail) seems be corrupt.)
Never mind. It seems to be a memory failure.
(Before rebooting, running tail
Ron Johnson wrote:
The question still is why the file names are different:
CH3CN+2.5%Fer.doc
CH3CN+2.5%25Fer.doc
Because they're not both file names.
The first was the file name.
The second was the _encoding_ in the filename in a URI (the smb:... URI).
See RFC 3986.
Daniel
--
(Plain
Testing. Please ignore.
--
(Plain text sometimes corrupted to HTML courtesy of Microsoft Exchange.)
Testing (2). Please ignore.
--
(Plain text sometimes corrupted to HTML courtesy of Microsoft Exchange.)
Allan Wind wrote:
cd does not seem to do its thing when stdout is redirected to a pipe,
however it does work with a (temporary) file:
Actually, cd does do its thing--it's just that its thing applies to the
subprocess
shell in the pipe instead of the shell it would normally apply to (when not
Raj Kiran Grandhi wrote:
I once purchased a pack of cookies and found the date of packing to be a
couple of weeks in the future!
Huh? Why do you think that that was the date of packing? Food packages
normally have _expiration_ dates (not packing or manufacturing dates), which
naturally
Chris Davies wrote:
Barclay, Daniel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why don't you just copy the text and paste it into a message?
Follows. Notice that even the text/plain part is base64 encoded.
Thanks. (And thanks to others who sent me copies.)
Now if I can figure out how to get the mail server
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 07/09/08 10:33, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
[snip]
Now if I can figure out how to get the mail server configuration fixed ..
Replacing Lookout with Postfix would do the trick.
Did you mean Exchange? (I thought Lookout referred to Outlook, which I'm
not using.)
Might
Andrew Sackville-West wrote:
On Wed, Jul 09, 2008 at 11:33:39AM -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
...
P.S. How do I change my debian-user subscription to have the mailing list
server send me a copy of my own posts? The MajorDomo/SmartList help response
message doesn't says anything about
Eugene V. Lyubimkin wrote:
...
P.S. How do I change my debian-user subscription to have the mailing list
server send me a copy of my own posts? The MajorDomo/SmartList help response
message doesn't says anything about changing that setting.
(Not getting such copies is part of why I didn't
I wrote, slightly too quickly:
Eugene V. Lyubimkin wrote:
...
P.S. How do I change my debian-user subscription to have the mailing
list
server send me a copy of my own posts? The MajorDomo/SmartList help
response
message doesn't says anything about changing that setting.
(Not getting
Does this message come across:
- with an HTML part?
- base64-encoded?
Thanks.
Daniel
[Test 1 of 3: w/ chars; UTF-8]
Does this message come across:
- with an HTML part?
- base64-encoded?
Thanks.
Daniel
[Test 2 of 3: w/ chars; ISO-8859-1 (?)]
Does this message come across:
- with an HTML part?
- base64-encoded?
Thanks.
Daniel
[Test 3 of 3: w/o chars]
Paul Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2008-07-02 at 10:03 -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Paul Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2008-07-02 at 16:19 +1000, CaT wrote:
I believe that would be the point the original poster was getting
at. If
aptitude is really doing that then it is in the wrong.
I understood
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