Rich Cloutier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Any idea why Mozilla 0.9.whatever that comes with Mandrake 8.1 would
> suddenly stop working?
That's funny; I had a problem with it last night (0.9.9, installed from
a tarball the day after it was released), the first time I had any
problems with mozil
On Wed, 2002-03-27 at 23:15, mike ledoux wrote:
>
> I've seen that in the past, usually it indicated that I had a mozilla
> process or processes that had 'crashed' without actually going away.
> Finding and 'kill -9'ing those processes 'fixed' the problem for me
> every time.
>
> I don't think
> > Better answer? Python.
>
> Better answer to which question ?
It's like learning to play Oboe after your already know Flute.
Learn Lisp (or Perl or Smalltalk) well and everything else is cake.
ccb
--
Charles C. Bennett, Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
sub mult
James R. Van Zandt, Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 09:10:53PM -0500:
>
> I ordered a Woody disk last night for $5.95. Only a single disk, but
> supposed to be enough to get started, and you can get the rest over
> the network. (The full woody distribution apparently will take 8
> CDs!)
>
If you have a
> If the used controller you bought from some
> guy on eBay fails, or starts acting flakey, it doesn't matter what
> RAID level you're running, or how good your disks are, you'll probably
> lose data. With controllers available so cheaply new with a warranty,
> I can't imagine that the cost savin
> So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> like one of the hottest skills in demand is Java development. I was
> wondering if anyone can recommend GOOD sources of information about
> learning Java. Free ones (like web sites) are preferable, but not
> necessarily req
Any idea why Mozilla 0.9.whatever that comes with Mandrake 8.1 would
suddenly stop working?
When I run it from a terminal (/usr/bin/mozilla) I get the following
message:
Error sending command
I've tried it from both my regular and the root login, and it does the
same thing. I've checked the int
I ordered a Woody disk last night for $5.95. Only a single disk, but
supposed to be enough to get started, and you can get the rest over
the network. (The full woody distribution apparently will take 8
CDs!)
- Jim Van Zandt
On Wednesday 27 March 2002 20:27, you wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 17:58:11 -0500
>
> Tom Rauschenbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I meant that if I was looking to learn an OO language to write OO
> > software I would choose C++. Looking to learn an OO language to get a
> > job made me choose
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Friends and fellow Linux lovers,
Please please please trim replies. The point of quoting messages is
to provide context, and you completely defeat the purpose when you
quote the entire message, not to mention waste bandwidth. It is also
a nuisanc
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 17:58:11 -0500
Tom Rauschenbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I meant that if I was looking to learn an OO language to write OO software I
> would choose C++. Looking to learn an OO language to get a job made me
> choose to learn Java.
Better answer? Python.
Bill
***
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Okay, I've installed RH7.2 (no erratas) 4 times today. Not once has
> it come up with X running, yet each time I specifically stated that
> I wanted to use GNOME and wanted it to be started at boot time.
>
> This *seems* to be a thing with th
Did anyone else notice the amusing typo at the end of the next to last
paragraph? (At least I *HOPE* they meant "prescribed"! :-)
Mansur, Warren wrote:
>-Original Message-
>From: Donna Baglio [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2002 3:46 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subj
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2002 8:42 PM
Subject: RH7.2 install
>
> Okay, I've installed RH7.2 (no erratas) 4 times today. Not once has
> it come up with X running, yet each time I specifically stated that
> I wanted
On Wednesday 27 March 2002 13:18, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> Tom Rauschenbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > On Wednesday 27 March 2002 08:18, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> > > "Derek D. Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > > So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> > > >
In a message dated: 27 Mar 2002 16:58:45 EST
"Roger H. Goun" said:
>I'll do it. But now I'm going to be late for dinner. :-)
I'm all set, 'maddog' has volunteered to get me the CD, thanks for
all the offers though, I really appreciate it!
--
Seeya,
Paul
***
I'll do it. But now I'm going to be late for dinner. :-)
-- R.
On Wed, 2002-03-27 at 16:23, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Is there anyone who:
> A. is coming to the meeting tonight
> B. has a fast connection at home
> C. Could download the lasted Intel/Linux version of
Hi,
Is there anyone who:
A. is coming to the meeting tonight
B. has a fast connection at home
C. Could download the lasted Intel/Linux version of OpenOffice
D. Can burn it to CD?
E. Give it to me at the meeting :)
On a 56K dial-up connection, the bandwidt
I received the following job posting from a recruiter interested in
posting on the GNHLUG web page. Since all she had was word doc, I
requested a plain text document. Her contact information is below.
(this looks like a great deal if you want to play with IBM mainframes
and Linux :)
Seeya,
Okay, I've installed RH7.2 (no erratas) 4 times today. Not once has
it come up with X running, yet each time I specifically stated that
I wanted to use GNOME and wanted it to be started at boot time.
This *seems* to be a thing with them, and as Ben stated, broken and
misbehaving software se
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002, at 12:23pm, Kurth Bemis wrote:
> what version of megaraid do you have?
We have used everything from the single-channel, 16MB "Express 100" model
to the quad-channel, 128MB "Enterprise 1500" model. All have used the same
drivers and software; they just have different capabi
In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 12:37:27 GMT
"Rich C" said:
>> Anyone install RH7.2, have the X config go smoothly, have it tell you
>> that GNOME would be your desktop, choose a graphical login, and still
>> have it present you with a text login?
>>
>
>I think you may have missed a tiny lit
Tom Rauschenbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Wednesday 27 March 2002 08:18, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> > "Derek D. Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> > > like one of the hottest skills in demand is Java development.
In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 13:08:47 EST
"Tom Buskey" said:
>Just did. Finally!
'bout time :)
>Direct maps really can't be admin'd from NIS. SunOS won't umount direct
>maps w/o rebooting. It will with indirect maps. And they're slower
>then indirect maps. You have to create the m
In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 13:03:20 EST
"Tom Buskey" said:
>O'Reilly just came out with the 2nd edition of NFS and NIS. The 1st
>edition is 1991 & SunOS specific. I haven't looked at the new one as I
>don't do NIS nowadays, but I sure prayed for it to cover something
>other then Su
In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 09:28:31 PST
Ken Ambrose said:
>On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> Anyone install RH7.2, have the X config go smoothly, have it tell you
>> that GNOME would be your desktop, choose a graphical login, and still
>> have it present you with a text
Paul Lussier said:
>In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 08:57:32 EST
>Rich Payne said:
>
>>It's not RedHat specific, but O'Reilly has an NFS and NIS book. That's how
>>I got started (it also helps to have a few machines you can set it up on).
>
>I have to agree with Rich, the only decent book o
Unless things have changed a lot from 7.0 (or I am mistaken - I haven't messed
with it for a long time) the entry:
id:5:initdefault:
is what you need. Yours probably says:
id:3:initdefault:
My guess is that the installer choses runlevel (3 -- or not 5 at least)because
it might be a good i
O'Reilly just came out with the 2nd edition of NFS and NIS. The 1st
edition is 1991 & SunOS specific. I haven't looked at the new one as I
don't do NIS nowadays, but I sure prayed for it to cover something
other then SunOS in the days of Solaris 2.5.1. I'd grab it in a second
if I was doin
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2002 4:55 PM
Subject: RH7.2 install question
>
> Anyone install RH7.2, have the X config go smoothly, have it tell you
> that GNOME would be your desktop, choose a graphical login, and still
-Original Message-
From: Donna Baglio [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, March 26, 2002 3:46 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Opportunity to Offer Input on US Cybersecurity
Opportunity to Offer Input on US Cybersecurity
The President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board (P
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Anyone install RH7.2, have the X config go smoothly, have it tell you
> that GNOME would be your desktop, choose a graphical login, and still
> have it present you with a text login?
Well, I've never had a problem with it, but then, I usually select
Derek Martin recently said:
> I was wondering if anyone can recommend GOOD sources of information about
> learning Java. Free ones (like web sites) are preferable, but not
> necessarily required. :)
I'll leave the books and Web Sites for others to reference, but a "best kept
secret"
is the very
On Wednesday 27 March 2002 08:18, Kevin D. Clark wrote:
> "Derek D. Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> > like one of the hottest skills in demand is Java development. I was
> > wondering if anyone can recommend GOOD source
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002, at 11:21am, Kurth Bemis wrote:
> hrm.maybe I should look at another card.
> any suggestions?
We have been using the AMI MegaRAID series with good results. Nice
feature set, good prices, GPL Linux driver in the mainstream kernel, Linux
binary-only management tool from A
Anyone install RH7.2, have the X config go smoothly, have it tell you
that GNOME would be your desktop, choose a graphical login, and still
have it present you with a text login?
I know there are probably a bunch of errata packages available for
7.2, and I don't really care about that right n
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002, Kurth Bemis wrote:
> but if the card is a hardware RAID card then the kernel shouldn't care or
> see the individual drives, right? It should see one large volume.
>
> am i correct in assuming that?
In this case, no. The A
I'm reading through "Learn Java in 21 days" that I picked up at Softpro.
That was two months ago, and I'm on day 12. There's a lot of good
information in there, but does assume you know a bit about coding
and all. I've been doing all the examples on my RH 7.2 laptop
without any problems, and tho
Kurth Bemis, Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 11:21:17AM -0500:
> hrm.maybe I should look at another card.
>
> any suggestions?
>
What distro do you want to use? If you want to use Debian (which I
highly recommend), I would go for woody instead of potato. Debian
potato is too dated right now. You'
Kurth Bemis, Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 11:14:14AM -0500:
> but if the card is a hardware RAID card then the kernel shouldn't care or
> see the individual drives, right? It should see one large volume.
>
> am i correct in assuming that?
>
No, you will still need the driver support in the kernel.
Robert Casey, Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 08:49:11AM -0500:
> Hello again,
>
> I'm still working on getting NIS tuned the way we want it but I'm
> having trouble finding the info. I need. Once again I'm fairly new to Unix
> and brand new to Redhat linux. Basically, I get documentation con
Kurth Bemis, Wed, Mar 27, 2002 at 09:06:14AM -0500:
> I got the configure utility from adaptec's site...found the array and
> formatted it with all 0's. Then I figured that debian 22r4 would find it
> ok. nope it only finds the 3 drives and asks me which one would I like to
> partition and u
In a message dated: Wed, 27 Mar 2002 08:57:32 EST
Rich Payne said:
>It's not RedHat specific, but O'Reilly has an NFS and NIS book. That's how
>I got started (it also helps to have a few machines you can set it up on).
I have to agree with Rich, the only decent book out there on NFS/NIS
is the
Derek D. Martin wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> like one of the hottest skills in demand is Java development. I was
> wondering if anyone can recommend GOOD sources of information about
> learnin
It's not RedHat specific, but O'Reilly has an NFS and NIS book. That's how
I got started (it also helps to have a few machines you can set it up on).
--rdp
On Wed, 27 Mar 2002, Robert Casey wrote:
> Hello again,
>
> I'm still working on getting NIS tuned the way we want it but I'm havi
Hello again,
I'm still working on getting NIS tuned the way we want it but I'm having
trouble finding the info. I need. Once again I'm fairly new to Unix and
brand new to Redhat linux. Basically, I get documentation concerning the
configuration of NIS on line but everything seems to be
"Derek D. Martin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> So, in trolling the various sources of job listings, it looks to me
> like one of the hottest skills in demand is Java development. I was
> wondering if anyone can recommend GOOD sources of information about
> learning Java. Free ones (like web s
In a message dated: Tue, 26 Mar 2002 23:00:38 EST
"Derek D. Martin" said:
>I also wonder if someone can explain to me how one becomes an
>experienced programmer when employers all want someone who has 7+
>years of experience...
The same way we got 7+ years of sysadmin experience. Someone,
so
>I got my first NH-based sysadmin job off of nh.jobs
>(though damn if I can find it on Google...)
This URL worked for me when I went looking for nh.jobs -
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&group=nh.jobs
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