Use clipboard content in a script

2006-07-08 Thread Chen Levy
Hi people. In KDE I can do: #/bin/sh dcop klipper klipper getClipboardContent | festival --tts This get the current clipboard text selection and read it out loud. I know that GNOME uses D-BUS as DCOP TNG, but I was not able to grok how to use it. I read somewhere that there is a small X

Re: Use clipboard content in a script

2006-07-08 Thread Baruch Even
Chen Levy wrote: Hi people. In KDE I can do: #/bin/sh dcop klipper klipper getClipboardContent | festival --tts This get the current clipboard text selection and read it out loud. I know that GNOME uses D-BUS as DCOP TNG, but I was not able to grok how to use it. I read somewhere that

Re: good book in tcsh shell programming.

2006-07-08 Thread Shlomi Fish
On Tuesday 04 July 2006 12:57, yahav Biran wrote: Hi, Does any body know a good book with examples for learning tcsh. I would like to learn the benefits of using it by scripting such as: variables and arithmetic, looping, functions and other stuff. To complement what other people said, let

Presentations' Training Courses

2006-07-08 Thread Shlomi Fish
Hi all! If you've been to some of my presentations, you'd know that I'm usually a very bad presentor. Now I know of http://www.presentationhelper.co.uk/, which is a good resource, but I'm wondering if anyone can recommend any courses I can take that will instruct and train in how to give good

Re: Outlook Web Access - Hebrew

2006-07-08 Thread Amit Aronovitch
One thing I noticed, some time ago, was that the outlook web interface presented in IE was much better than in other browsers (completely different organization of the main portal, different navigation panels, some buttons don't appear at all, etc.). Playing with the browser-id revealed that this

Re: good book in tcsh shell programming.

2006-07-08 Thread Amos Shapira
On 09/07/06, Shlomi Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: but also the CS one to teach bash programming instead of csh programming: If you go through all this to convince them to switch - I think you'll do them a greater favour by convincing them to switch to standard Bourne Shell[1] rather than learn

Re: Recommendations for XP under Linux

2006-07-08 Thread Amit Aronovitch
One option that was not mentioned here, which might be easier under some circumstances, is using rdesktop to connect to some windows machine you have a login on. The company might have a dedicated server for such use, or you might have a co-worker running windows 2003 server that wouldn't mind