On Fri, 2010-08-06 at 20:43 +0100, Peter Merchant wrote:
What does anyone recommend. I want to backup selected files/directories
from my data disk. Been meaning to do this for months.
As a simple archive of old files after they've been deleted by mistake,
the best solution I've found is
Hi,
I came along to the last meeting so it's probably about time I
introduced myself on this list. I'm a software engineer working for Red
Hat, mainly on areas to do with printing.
I will try to come along to the Bournemouth meetings -- I live locally.
I don't have a car so I'm unlikely to be
came across an old Red Hat document on Linux's
software interfaces that also explained the hardware background, written
by one Tim Waugh, so thanks for that. :-)
You're welcome. :-)
About your sector-dumping project: surely there must be a better way
than using the parallel port? ;-)
Tim
On Wed, 2010-08-25 at 10:16 +0100, Natalie Hooper wrote:
You're one step ahead of me as I have yet to make it to a meeting myself!
I'm out of order with the steps I think. I just turned out
unannounced...
Where about do you live in Bournemouth? I'm in Winton. I don't have a car
either so I'm
On Wed, 2010-10-06 at 14:38 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
It would be nice to hear from some that *are* going. :-)
I'm hoping to get there tonight too.
Tim.
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On Sat, 2010-11-27 at 08:55 +, Natalie Hooper wrote:
So my suggestion would be Tuesday 14th December at the Broadway. What does
everyone think about that?
Works for me.
Tim.
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On Wed, 2011-05-25 at 10:47 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
It may be that CUPS lets one specify the incoming charset too but I
didn't see anything obvious. Locale environment variables perhaps?
It used to be the case that you could specify it like this:
lp -o
On Tue, 2011-06-07 at 09:30 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Tim Waugh mentioned
http://www.openbusmap.org/?zoom=14lat=50.72384lon=-1.93526layers=BT
on IRC's #dorset, which may be handy for those of us that haven't
stepped on an omnibus in decades.
Actually my wife found
Information/tours for GNOME 3:
http://www.gnome3.org/
https://live.gnome.org/GnomeShell/Tour
Tim.
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How to
On Thu, 2011-06-23 at 11:39 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
In theory it's Blandford Forum's turn in July, but given poor turn-out
there recently should be just settle on Bournemouth's The Broadway for
every month? Would the Broadway regulars turn out so soon after the
last one?
Yes, I would.
On Tue, 2011-07-05 at 11:13 +0100, Matteo Montanari wrote:
Shall we go together then please?
Please let me know .. I am in Springbourne .. close to King's Park.
I'm planning to be on the yellow 3 bus that leaves Gervis Place at
19.38, and I think the closest stops to you would be the Richmond
On Tue, 2011-10-11 at 20:16 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
So how do Unix/Linux progams export their interfaces? In MS VisualStudio, I
can click on a function or method and right-click to get the interface.
The free desktop way of doing this is D-Bus. The interface
description for your D-Bus
Things I remember from our end of the table:
* PowerTOP - http://www.lesswatts.org/projects/powertop/ - for seeing
what's causing the CPU to wake up, with suggestions of what to do about
it.
* Liberation fonts were built to be metric-compatible with Microsoft
fonts, and are GNU GPL licensed
On Tue, 2012-04-03 at 00:28 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
For those that haven't been before look out for Terry.
I'll be there and I'll bring Tux along.
Tim.
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Sorry, change of plan: I won't be able to go this evening after all.
Tim.
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On Sat, 2012-04-07 at 10:56 +0100, Simon P Smith wrote:
I was a die-hard Fedora fan and then converted to Ubuntu.
Curious: what prompted you to change your allegiance?
Tim.
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On Wed, 2012-05-02 at 11:28 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Shall we slip a day or a week?
A day is preferable for me. I wouldn't be able to make it the following
Tuesday.
Tim.
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On Sat, 2012-05-05 at 12:06 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
So a week's favoured; sorry Tim. Next meeting is Tuesday 2012-06-12.
Fair enough. Hopefully I'll be able to get to the following one.
Tim.
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On Sat, 2012-08-11 at 16:35 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Does my `Unguessable123' password exist anywhere on the disk? May throw
up false positives by design to avoid the act of searching from creating
what's being searched for. LC_ALL=C grep -boa 'Un..bl...3' /dev/sda
I tend to put a
On Wed, 2013-03-20 at 19:06 +, Terry Coles wrote:
I'm not sure who you spoke to at HP, but they didn't know much about Linux.
As Andrew has already said, Linux uses CUPS, but in addition, HP provide a
Linux add-in called 'HPLIP'
(http://hplipopensource.com/hplip-web/index.html).
On Tue, 2013-06-04 at 10:57 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Anyway, if anyone has a recentish live distro CD/DVD they no
longer need, he might appreciate it.
I expect I'll be able to rustle up a Fedora live CD for this evening.
Tim.
*/
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On Wed, 2013-06-05 at 09:17 +0100, C A Wills wrote:
Personally I'd like to thank Ralph and especially Tim for giving me
information on finding my network printer which under Mint 14 Cinnamon
64 I could not locate and connect. Thanks Tim, within 10 mins of using
your suggestion
On Wed, 2013-10-02 at 11:17 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
First Tuesday in November is the 5th. Some of us might be busy burning
parliament. Shall we slip a week to the 12th?
I can't make either date so I'll abstain. :-(
Tim.
*/
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On Tue, 2013-12-03 at 16:25 +, Tim Allen wrote:
Hi All
Playing around with CUPS 1.5.3 on Debian Squeeze. 1.5 has a nice feature
to hide job details on the web interface via JobPrivateAccess and
JobPrivateValues. With the following in cupsd.conf:
# Restrict access to the server...
On Wed, 2013-12-04 at 09:38 +, Tim Allen wrote:
Thanks, that's pointed me in the right direction. But the remaining
question is, how do I get the Policy authenticated to be triggered? With
Which policy is used is set on a per-queue basis. It's the
printer-op-policy. So to get a particular
On Thu, 2013-12-05 at 21:02 +, Tim Allen wrote:
Yes, so my understanding is that any job not owned by the authenticated
user (who is not a member of lpadmin) should show as withheld,
No -- the JobPrivateValues attributes would.
But they are none, so JobPrivateAccess has no effect.
Think
On Fri, 2013-12-06 at 10:49 +, Tim Allen wrote:
It looks like JobPrivateAccess is broke (basically ignored) in 1.5,
setting JobPrivateValues none at least gets back to pre-1.5 behaviour.
I'm not sure why you think it isn't working. Can you give an example
that doesn't behave as you expect?
On Fri, 2013-12-06 at 14:10 +, Tim Allen wrote:
Here's the relevant sections of cupsd.conf:
DefaultAuthType Basic
WebInterface Yes
Location /
Order allow,deny
Allow @LOCAL
/Location
Location /jobs
AuthType Default
Require valid-user
Order allow,deny
Allow
On Mon, 2014-01-13 at 12:41 +, Peter Merchant wrote:
Hi, I have a problem. My backup USB drive is full. It has full copies of
all my data and in some cases my whole home directory from every time
that I have backed up. What I would like to do is consolidate by adding
all files that are
For the benefit of Chad and Charles, and anyone else:
* Git PS1 decoration:
Git comes with some nice command line decoration, which you can activate
by putting this definition in .bashrc and running git-prompt in new
shells:
git-prompt() {
git_prompt_dir=/usr/share/git-core/contrib/completion
Sorry, won't be able to make it this month.
Tim.
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Hello!
Does anyone have a floppy disk drive I could borrow? I finally get
around to investigating some old floppy disks of mine only to realise it
must have been years ago that I got rid of the last disk drive I had!
Thanks,
Tim.
*/
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On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 15:37 +0100, Paul Stenning wrote:
I think I have an internal 3.5 1.44MB one here (Bournemouth). I'll
need to check to be certain but if that's what you want you are welcome
to it as I have no further use for it. I should have a ribbon cable for
it too.
Thanks for
On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 15:23 +0100, TimA wrote:
Just to add to the offers, I have an internal 5.25 if that's what
you're after.
I never even thought to specify, but it's 3.5 that I need. Wow, does
the 5.25 one still work?
Tim.
*/
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On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 15:18 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
If you have non-DOS-format floppies then USB probably won't be any good.
In their wisdom, they made the USB interface only support normal DOS
formats; no 1024-byte sectors, 10 sectors per track of ADFS, for
example.
One of them is
On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 14:31 +0100, Chad Cumberland wrote:
I have a old usb one you can borrow.
Thanks for all the offers.
Chad, are you planning on coming to the meeting tomorrow? If not,
Victor, maybe you are?
A USB drive is probably best for me, or otherwise an internal drive is
fine.
On Tue, 2014-08-05 at 00:30 +0100, Victor Churchill wrote:
Got it, Tim; internal quick release from a Dell tower box. Planning
tocome to Broadway tomorrow - Do you need cables too?
No, I have cables (and a Dell tower, yay!).
Thanks,
Tim.
*/
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On Tue, 2014-12-16 at 23:15 +, Nicky Scopes wrote:
hello all, does anyone know of any Linux projects I could volunteer
for I am trying to get some experience it doesn't necessarily have to
be in this country. I looked at gnu.org but found they need for people
to attend meetings or do
On Fri, 2015-02-06 at 11:01 +, Terry Coles wrote:
I don't have the original Windows ISO at the moment, so I thought I'd try
grabbing
the Fedora 21 ISO off the latest Linux Format DVD. That seemed to work, but
then
I just got a grey screen, when I tried to launch it. I was never
On Fri, 2015-06-05 at 17:02 +0100, Natalie Hooper wrote:
Indeed, I am currently on maternity leave so I am back living full
time in Bournemouth.
Hey, congratulations Natalie!
On Wed, 2015-06-03 at 09:32 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
Is this just happenstance or do we need to consider a new venue
On Wed, 2015-07-08 at 12:00 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
We then get into a long discussion about robotics and AI. We weren't
really looking at the techniques; rather debating the implications of
where it was all going, (think 'I, Robot', Azimov's three laws and
the dangers of robots that can
On Mon, 2015-09-07 at 14:25 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
> A visit to the web page at https://github.com/samaaron/sonic-pi/
> implies that I need to sign up to access the code, so how do I do
> that from the command line?
No, you don't need to sign up.
On the right-hand side of that page, should
I won't be able to make it to this one I'm afraid.
Tim.
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I won't be able to make it this month I'm afraid.
Tim.
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I'm trying to do some video capturing using video4linux with a cheap
capture device using the usbtv driver and some composite video cables.
All is well except for sound, which is just a click every second.
My idea is that maybe using S-Video instead of composite video would
help, but I don't
...and now I've been spared wasting time on that particular experiment
by being informed that S-Video does not carry audio.
So keep your spare S-Video cables at home.
Tim.
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On Sat, 2016-12-31 at 07:54 +, Terry Coles wrote:
> He will be sadly missed by everyone who knew him.
Most definitely. I will miss the way he would enthusiastically explain
some detail that amused him, whether it was about (natural) languages,
programming languages, music, or anything.
On Wed, 2017-03-08 at 11:50 +, PeterMerchant via dorset wrote:
> A couple of things about what I was discussing:
> Family History/genealogy
> The only program designed for Linux for managing the data is one
> called gramps.
There's also a web application, www.webtrees.net. It's what became of
On 7 June 2017 at 11:49, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Python's interpreter's `>>>' prompt is an example of a REPL.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Read%E2%80%93eval%E2%80%93print_loop
> Perl's is its debugger's: perl -de1
We talked a little about Python's debugger, pdb, and
On Tue, 26 Jun 2018 at 17:25, Terry Coles wrote:
> 2. Postpone this months meeting until after the Football is finished (the
> Final is on the 15th).
>
I vote for 2, especially because I can't make the original date.
For this option, are we saying it would be Tuesday 17th July or is that not
I mentioned LastPass, yes.
Not mentioned, because I forgot to: 'Pass: The Standard Unix Password
Manager' at https://www.passwordstore.org/
Tim.
*/
On 2 May 2018 at 19:27, PeterMerchant via dorset
wrote:
> On 02/05/18 12:12, PeterMerchant via dorset wrote:
>
>> and
On 3 May 2018 at 07:37, Keith Edmunds wrote:
> For password management, you could keep it Open Source with Bitwarden.
> Runs on Window, Mac, Linux; apps for iPhone and Android; browser plugins
> for Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Edge, Safari and even the Tor Browser.
>
>
Another thing you might find useful is Firefox's 'Inspect Element (Q)' mode
(right-click on the page to find that). You can highlight elements and
inspect (and modify) their dynamic CSS properties. Especially useful for
finding things like e.g. the element's width doesn't fill its parent the
way
Hi,
Some links from things I jotted down from last week:
ls -d
-
http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/ls.html says:
"If no operands are specified, ls shall write the contents of the
current directory."
and then:
"-d [...] Do not treat directories differently than other
The way polkit works is that you have a privileged executable with a
well-known D-Bus object name, a defined D-Bus interface to it, and an
unprivileged executable which asks the system D-Bus for the object
with the interface.
The interface can be as fine-grained as you like. But you definitely
On 13 March 2018 at 12:28, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Hi Tim,
>
>> http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/ls.html says:
>
> http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/ls.html is the
> current version. :-)
Yes, indeed, I should have checked
On 16 March 2018 at 14:05, Hamish MB wrote:
> I see, I think. In that case it sounds like the wrong tool for what I'm
> trying to do, though I'm sure that for example synaptic uses it. I'm thinking
> specifically of using pkexec, does that work this way too?
Yes, pkexec
resented, rather than displaying script names and things like that. Is
> that a hack/bad idea or does it sound okay? I'm sure there must be a
> nicer way of doing this...
>
> Hamish
>
>
> On 16/03/18 14:24, Tim Waugh wrote:
>> On 16 March 2018 at 14:05, Hamish MB <hamis...@
On Thu, 8 Nov 2018 at 08:51, C Wills wrote:
> I did not know you could 'slide' a partition, it worked well (thanks Tim).
>
I think I said I thought gparted couldn't do it, based on my (outdated)
knowledge of parted. But hey, I'll take it!
Tim.
*/
--
Next meeting at *new* venue: Bournemouth,
Does v.index(min(v)) do what you want?
Tim.
*/
On Wed, 23 Jan 2019 at 13:21, Terry Coles wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a series of measured voltages which are currently being written to
> a
> Python List. As apart of the processing of these numbers, I need to
> calculate
> the average value, the
I won't be able to come this time I'm afraid.
Tim.
*/
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Next meeting: BEC, Bournemouth, Tuesday, 2019-06-04 20:00
Check to whom you are replying
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On Wed, 3 Jul 2019 at 09:07, PeterMerchant via dorset <
dorset@mailman.lug.org.uk> wrote:
> There was some discussion about 'CEPH?' and similar things.
>
Yes, thinking around the problem of wanting to seamlessly use more storage
than is available locally on e.g. a laptop, backed by network
On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 at 15:16, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> That CP/M manual also has a list of control characters, page 20 of 26.
> Ctrl-L and Ctrl-Z I understand. Ctrl-C is ‘system reboot’. Seems a bit
> severe. At least the Break key was out on a corner on the BBC Micro,
> Sun's keyboards, etc.
>
On Fri, 5 Jul 2019 at 08:07, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Here's me entering Ctrl-1, Ctrl-2, ... up to Ctrl-0 and then Enter.
>
> $ stty raw; \
> > ((timeout --foreground 4.2 dd bs=1; stty cooked; echo >&3) | hd) 3>&1
> 1^@^[^\^]^^^_^?9^M
> 31 00 1b 1c 1d 1e 1f 7f 39 0d
>
Also, here is the excellent talk I mentioned about data visualization, from
this year's PyCon:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vTingdk_pVM
Tim.
*/
On Wed, 4 Sep 2019 at 11:35, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I found out at the end that the serious pool game that was still going
> on was the
On Wed, 2 Oct 2019 at 11:31, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> The first Tuesday next month is the 5th; Bonfire Night.
> Would any of the regulars prefer it moved? I've looked at
> https://www.facebook.com/pg/bournemouthelectricclub/events/ and there's
> nothing listed there that might clash, though I
Ooh, I might not be able to make the 12th either, or the 18th or 19th, or
21st. I'm awkward this month, maybe best to schedule without me.
Tim.
*/
On Wed, 2 Oct 2019 at 12:10, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Tim W. wrote:
> > Nice catch. I'll be doing Bonfire Night things that night.
>
>
Hi,
Some links about topics we discussed last night:
* d-feet for snooping on D-Bus messages, either for debugging your own
stuff or working out how mysterious pop-up messages work
https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/DFeet
* static analysis tools for python
Flake8:
On Mon, 6 Apr 2020 at 11:25, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> This should be as simple as
>
> wget -q
> https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet-electron/releases/download/v1.1.1/jitsi-meet-x86_64.AppImage
> chmod +x jitsi-meet-x86_64.AppImage
> ./jitsi-meet-x86_64.AppImage
>
> and then entering
On Thu, 9 Apr 2020 at 10:45, wrote:
> https://www.milkandmore.co.uk
>
They were closed to new customers, and even to existing customers who had
not placed an order this year, when I looked a week or so ago.
Tim.
*/
--
Next meeting: Online, Jitsi, Tuesday, 2020-05-05 20:00
Check to whom
On Sat, 28 Mar 2020 at 10:25, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
> > Unfortunately, that machine seems to be stuck waiting for the
> > server(s) to let it download anything. I presume they are prioritising
> > higher-specification machines.
>
> Maybe. One snippet of #dorset says
>
> > folding@home ran
On Mon, 30 Mar 2020 at 14:51, Patrick Wigmore wrote:
> I thought I'd told it to abort the current tasks before shutting it
> down, but I've since found they sitll show as "In progress" on my
> Rosetta account.
I'm sitting on some work units for Rosetta@home as well, mostly because I'm
waiting
The stats.foldingathome.org search doesn't find me, no.
But the web UI gives me this link, which (eventually!) works:
https://stats.foldingathome.org/donor/Tim_Waugh
There are also 3rd party stats e.g.:
https://folding.extremeoverclocking.com/user_summary.php?s==929041
Tim.
*/
On Thu, 2 Apr
On Wed, 25 Mar 2020 at 08:48, Terry Coles wrote:
> However, only one of these machines could possibly be run 24/7 and
> unfortunately that's the ancient laptop.
I only run mine for about 15-16 hours a day.
> What happens to the calculations with these tools if the host is
> shut-down for
On Wed, 25 Mar 2020 at 10:53, Terry Coles wrote:
> dependency issues
>
(Oh yeah, this is another advantage of containers, in that the dependencies
all come with it...)
> I then decided that life was too short and installed boinc from the
> package
> manager. This is now running and the
On Wed, 25 Mar 2020 at 09:56, Terry Coles wrote:
> For simplicity I think I'll do it bare, especially since I'd have to work
> out
> how to containerise the software on two Windows machines as well as this
> desktop.
>
Yes, I imagine that's how the majority of people install it.
Set it to
On Wed, 25 Mar 2020 at 09:56, Terry Coles wrote:
> > It's all fine, they're built to be pretty resilient to that sort of
> thing.
> > I do see the completion ETA fluctuate wildly after switch-on, but really
> I
> > should stop staring at the stats and get on with work anyway :-)
>
> Thanks.
>
On Wed, 25 Mar 2020 at 10:07, PeterMerchant
wrote:
> I would like to help, but my computer is not very powerful
> -Computer-
> Processor: Intel(R) Pentium(R) CPU G3420 @ 3.20GHz
>
I don't think that's necessarily a huge drawback. The overall computing
power comes from numbers of
There are several things at play I think:
- ibercivis has not implemented checkpointing yet, which means if you
switch the computer off all running tasks lose their progress(!)
- the percentage-completion report seems to be a guess: I see it go up in
10% increments, and sometimes tasks complete
Ibercivis may not have checkpointing, but what if I run it in a VM (using
kvm), and suspend *that* when I switch the machine off?
Tim.
*/
On Tue, 5 May 2020 at 10:47, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Tuesday, 5 May 2020 10:43:53 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> > I'll have to abort on one machine
On Wed, 29 Apr 2020 at 10:21, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Wednesday, 29 April 2020 09:50:22 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> > Just happened across a new project today:
> >
> https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto=en=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.csi
> > c.es
>
On Tue, 5 May 2020 at 17:11, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Tuesday, 5 May 2020 16:56:40 BST Tim Waugh wrote:
> > On Tue, 5 May 2020 at 16:53, Terry Coles
> wrote:
> > > It still needs the mains to be on.
> >
> > For *hibernate*, i.e. suspend-to-disk?
>
> No. Fo
On Tue, 5 May 2020 at 14:43, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Tuesday, 5 May 2020 14:28:35 BST Tim Waugh wrote:
> > Or alternatively, can suspend (or hibernate) be pressed into service?
> > Instead of shutting down at night, suspend/hibernate the machine
> overnight
> > so it c
On Tue, 5 May 2020 at 11:05, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Tuesday, 5 May 2020 11:02:01 BST Tim Waugh wrote:
> > Ibercivis may not have checkpointing, but what if I run it in a VM (using
> > kvm), and suspend *that* when I switch the machine off?
>
> The Client mig
On Thu, 14 May 2020 at 07:22, Terry Coles wrote:
> However, there is a new posting on the Ibercivis Message Board that says
> they
> now have a new version of the app on the server which is supposed to fix
> the
> checkpointing problem (but not the computation issue).
>
Ah, yes:
On Fri, 15 May 2020 at 10:29, Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty
wrote:
> I'm going to have one last go at getting GPU computing to work for
> Folding soon, but if I can't make it work, does anyone think it's worth
> doing CPU folding, or are the contributions so small as to be pointless?
The CPU folding is
I gave up on using hibernate ('systemctl hibernate') only because the FAH
GPU task doesn't survive it.
I noticed that ibercivis released a whole load of new tasks. Still no
checkpointing, and some of them take much longer now, 8-9 hours for me.
That's a lot to lose to lack of checkpointing, so
I saw some Ibercivis tasks start today.
Thanks for the tip about this project!
Tim.
*/
On Sat, 2 May 2020 at 16:13, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Saturday, 2 May 2020 16:07:17 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> > Unfortunately no. I guess they're having the same problem Rosetta has
> > been
Just spotted this: update on which existing drugs have come out on top
so far, and an end date for the project (end of July).
It's power maintenance. They're hoping to be back online today I think.
https://boinc.ibercivis.es/
Tim.
*/
On Thu, 18 Jun 2020 at 06:10, Terry Coles wrote:
>
> I've been unable to upload any Tasks for a day or two and the Ibercivis
> website appears to be down.
>
> Has anyone else seen this?
On Mon, 14 Dec 2020 at 09:50, Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty
wrote:
> I was wondering, now that there are multiple vaccines in development/in
> use, whether we still think it's worth doing distributed computing for
> COVID research.
>
I plan to continue for the moment at least. Even though the aim is
Hi,
I have a laptop with a spare 2.5" drive bay I'd like to install a new disk
into (and run Linux on).
The laptop uses Intel Rapid Storage Technology, which seems to be some sort
of RAID controller. I can switch it to regular AHCI in the BIOS, but if I
do that I lose the ability to dual boot
Here's the latest about this:
https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/new-year-new-red-hat-enterprise-linux-programs-easier-ways-access-rhel
Tim.
*/
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This looks like a fairly good (short) summary:
https://www.kline.sh/
Tim.
*/
On Wed, 19 May 2021 at 15:38, Neil Stone wrote:
> Essentially a forced takeover from someone that was appointed a director,
> despite all of the assurances that were put in place prior to that
> happening...
On Tue, 6 Apr 2021 at 14:50, Terry Coles wrote:
> All,
>
> The next Online Meeting is tonight at 8 pm using Jitsi.
>
> Simply click on the following link and you will be taken to the Meeting
> using your default browser:
>
> https://meet.jit.si/dorset-lug
>
> Chrome or Chromium are probably
On Wed, 9 Feb 2022 at 17:57, Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty
wrote:
> I finally got around to that, only to find that it was already enabled,
> and apparently not doing anything. As I don't leave my systems on 24/7,
> is it safe to assume that the timer isn't firing when the system is
> booted up later,
On Thu, 10 Feb 2022 at 11:05, Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty
wrote:
> The second command says it was "Passed" three days ago, but I don't know
> if that means it ran. There are no other timers in the output from that
> command.
>
We only asked for the fstrim timer. 'systemctl list-timers' will show you
I have broadband issues today so unfortunately I won't be able to join this
time.
Tim.
*/
On Tue, 5 Apr 2022 at 13:53, Terry Coles wrote:
> All,
>
> The next Online Meeting is tonight at 8 pm using Jitsi.
>
> Simply click on the following link and you will be taken to the Meeting
> using your
On Wed, 8 Jun 2022 at 11:51, Hugh Frater wrote:
> It was my ramblings about the state of housing stock in the private rental
> sector, specifically in relation to the quality and inspection of
> electrical installations that prompted the link to bimdl.com
>
> It's my understanding that it is a
I won't be able to make it this evening I'm afraid.
Tim.
*/
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