It's a little bit strange to answer own articles ...
Just freshly installed my old Fedora 10 system with Fedora 12 (32 bit),
and I was suprised to see that Firefox 3.5.5 (directly from mozilla.org)
crashes on any site with flash (Flash plugin 10.0.32.18 from adobe.com).
Both are
Hi folks!
Just freshly installed my old Fedora 10 system with Fedora 12 (32 bit),
and I was suprised to see that Firefox 3.5.5 (directly from mozilla.org)
crashes on any site with flash (Flash plugin 10.0.32.18 from adobe.com).
Both are the most recent versions. No other custom plugins
Tom Horsley tom.hors...@att.net wrote:
I don't see logwatch installed by default in f12. Is there a preferred
substitute these days, or should I just yum install logwatch to
get it back?
After installation from DVD, I also missed some kind of daily
system report (be it generated by
Arthur Pemberton pem...@gmail.com wrote:
By your comment one would think that installing mysql-server brings
some great evil with it.
For a typical installation of a desktop workstation, none of the
packages in the Servers section needs to added. Makes sense. There's
no need for so-called
Ed Greshko ed.gres...@greshko.com wrote:
Took a quick look at http://pim.kde.org/akonadi/ and on the surface
seems like a reasonable direction/idea. So, not quite sure as to why
you may consider this to be a big issue.
If every applications starts its own copy of mysql, then this is
Mark Haney mha...@ercbroadband.org wrote:
And yes akonadi does require MySWL, but KDE 4.2 does NOT require
akonadi. So my point is still very valid.
In Fedora 10, akonadi cannot be un-installed without removing KDE.
And KDE cannot be updated to version 4.2 without updating akonadi
as well.
Hi folks,
most people with automatic updates might not have noticed, but if
you look closer, the recent bunch of updates, including KDE 4.2,
installs the MySQL server on the machine (and some other database
related stuff which MySQL depends on).
It's the akonadi package that requires a