On Fri, 6 Apr 2018 10:00:31 - (UTC)
Dan Purgert wrote:
> Celejar wrote:
> > On Tue, 3 Apr 2018 11:30:24 - (UTC)
> > Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> [...]
> >>
> >> Yep, you've got the terms right.
> >>
> >> Does the buffalo also provide wifi access to other clients close to it?
> >> or is it
On Sun, 8 Apr 2018 00:32:05 - (UTC)
Dan Purgert wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
> > On Sat 07 Apr 2018 at 20:17:56 (-), Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> David Wright wrote:
> >> > On Fri 06 Apr 2018 at 16:26:47 (-), Dan Purgert wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >> It's a nuance in the semantics of what it mea
I've never been using udisks/udisks2 before because I didn't really need it, but
now I thought I could see what the tool is capable of and give it a chance.
When it comes to mounting devices, I have two simple rules:
1) only root can do it.
2) in some cases only defined users can mount some specif
On Sun 08 Apr 2018 at 18:50:50 +0200, Mikhail Morfikov wrote:
[...]
> I've seen that people use something similar to the following rule:
> -
> /etc/polkit-1/localauthority/50-local.d/20-udisks2.pkla
> -
> [Allow morfik
songbird wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
>> On Sat 07 Apr 2018 at 14:38:53 (-0400), songbird wrote:
>>> i have an USB keyboard, which once in a while goes
>>> useless. it is a fairly new device and should not be
>>> defective, but i'm not sure how to tell if this is a
>>> problem from the device or
On Sun, 8 Apr 2018 13:48:03 -0400 songbird said:
> # systemctl mask saned.service saned.socket saned@.socket
> previous masking of sane items made no difference to that issue and
> i still think they may be related issues.
Man page for saned(8) talks only about saned.socket and saned@.service
bu
On Sun 08 Apr 2018 at 13:48:03 -0400, songbird wrote:
> songbird wrote:
> > David Wright wrote:
> >> On Sat 07 Apr 2018 at 14:38:53 (-0400), songbird wrote:
> >>> i have an USB keyboard, which once in a while goes
> >>> useless. it is a fairly new device and should not be
> >>> defective, but i
On 2018-04-08 20:00, Brian wrote:
> On Sun 08 Apr 2018 at 18:50:50 +0200, Mikhail Morfikov wrote:
>
> [...]
>> I've seen that people use something similar to the following rule:
>> -
>> /etc/polkit-1/localauthority/50-local.d/20-udisks2.pkla
>> -
Abdullah Ramazanoglu wrote:
> On Sun, 8 Apr 2018 13:48:03 -0400 songbird said:
>
>> # systemctl mask saned.service saned.socket saned@.socket
>
>> previous masking of sane items made no difference to that issue and
>> i still think they may be related issues.
>
> Man page for saned(8) talks only ab
Brian wrote:
...
> You could resolve the idea that sane is involved with
>
> apt purge libsane
that takes out:
colord
hplip
libsane
printer-driver-postscript-hp
which 3 out of the 4 i do use.
i've removed every *sane* package i can without taking
out things i actually use. t
Hi, Felix.
On 11/03/18 01:09, Felix Miata wrote:
>> I think that before adding the file with the configuration that I
>> mentioned (/usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/20-intel.conf), I was using the
>> default driver. At least I don't have a /etc/X11/xorg.conf file.
>>
>> In essence the configuration I s
Greetings folks;
Updodate Wheezy, realtime kernel because machine is running linuxcnc.
Editor is geany and file is left open in the editor, and reloaded into
linuxcnc as changes are made to the file, and saved but not closed.
And eventually the updates made to the file are not actually saved, g
> And eventually the updates made to the file are not actually saved,
Can you be more precise than "eventually"?
More importantly: what makes you think they're not actually saved?
Stefan
On Sunday 08 April 2018 22:17:33 Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > And eventually the updates made to the file are not actually saved,
>
> Can you be more precise than "eventually"?
Probably 100+ edits and saves over 4 or 5 hours.
> More importantly: what makes you think they're not actually saved?
>
>
I've been having a minor but mildly annoying problem. From time to time,
the entire MATE desktop will flash, and all open windows remain open;
however, the order in which their tabs appear in the bottom panel is
randomly rearranged. So, if I have 13 terminal windows open, I can no
longer quickly
>> > And eventually the updates made to the file are not actually saved,
>> Can you be more precise than "eventually"?
> Probably 100+ edits and saves over 4 or 5 hours.
>> More importantly: what makes you think they're not actually saved?
> Going to another shell and cat'ing the file shows the old
For work reasons, I keep some data on bitlocker-encrypted drives (FAT, FAT32,
NTFS). Whenever I connect the drive to my debian computer, I have to manually
mount it using dislocker from the shell. Would like the user interface did it
for me, the same way it happens on Windows.
How can I properl
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