As I recall, with redhat( 7.2 ?), out of the box, there was a big
warning in printcap to make no changes in the printcap file, since it
was generated fresh every time something started up, I think the system
or the printing daemon. I think that the configuration program ran
automatically. You
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2003/8/6/32819/51827
One submission to Michigan's AG:
The SCO Group
355 South 520 West
Suite 100
Lindon, Utah 84042 USA
Phone: 801-765-4999
Fax: 801-852-9088
http://www.sco.com/
The SCO Group has been engaging in legal threats, both electronically and in
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003 19:36:02 -0400 - Joel Hammer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
the following
Re: Cron idiosyncrasy
I use the following to kill runaways. Can be set to let a heavy app alone by
increasing the loadtot and sleep time.
!/usr/bin/perl
sleep(5);
$killcomm = 'kill -9';
# 0.00 to 100.00
Quoth Keith Morse:
man repquota is not explaining all the columns. An example.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] root]# repquota /
*** Report for user quotas on device /dev/sda2
Block grace time: 24:00; Inode grace time: 00:00
Block limitsFile limits
User
Matthew Carpenter wrote:
Some ninnies will... Mark my words Not all cautious people are
smart people, or even educated...
And some smart people like to keep such a low profile that they will do
whatever they are told by anyone in authority. I married one such. She
graduated with honors
Bill Parker has just updated http://www.linux-sxs.org/security/pointers.html to
incorporate the following:
Updated
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On 08/13/03 16:38, Joel Hammer wrote:
Be careful. Some of the more advanced printing programs like to overwrite
your manual printcap file from time to time. Redhat would do that,
as I recall.
No it didn't, unless of course you ran redhat-print-config. Of course if
you're running
On Tue, 2003-08-12 at 12:45, Michael Hipp wrote:
What is the best browser for SMB shares under Linux?
Unfortunately, I'm looking for something comparable to 'Network
Neighborhood' or 'My Network Places'.
Haven't been particularly happy with using Konq or Nautilus for such
(they're a
You could try http://www.pcflank.com/scanner1.htm
It lets you add the ports you want scanned.
I still think programs like nmap are best.
Regards,
Wil McGilvery
Manager
Lynch Digital Media Inc
416-744-7949
416-716-3964 (cell)
1-866-314-4678
416-744-0406 FAX
www.LynchDigital.com
Burns MacDonald wrote:
On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 19:04, Michael Hipp wrote:
We do quite a bit of IT Security work. Shields Up is OK for what it is,
given the parameters it has to work under - it's not bogus, but it is
lightweight.
The usefulness of a site like ShieldsUp is that it gives you the
Quoth Tom Wilson:
On Tue, 2003-08-12 at 12:45, Michael Hipp wrote:
What is the best browser for SMB shares under Linux?
Unfortunately, I'm looking for something comparable to 'Network
Neighborhood' or 'My Network Places'.
Haven't been particularly happy with using Konq or Nautilus
Tim Wunder wrote:
On Tuesday 12 August 2003 9:15 pm, someone claiming to be Kurt Wall
wrote:
Quoth Joel Hammer:
C'est moi.
Actually, the picture was badly composed. I should have piled up all
three of the lobsters that I ate.
Yes, this was excessive, but, c'est la vie.
3 lobsters are no
Joel Hammer wrote:
Thanks for the scan. These ports I expected to be open, except for 1024
(kdm). I just wonder why ShieldsUp didn't detect these ports. It looks like
I was inviting the world to log onto my X server. I have never found anyone
doing this. It is password protected.
I have to
Well, I couldn't leave well enuf alone.
I got annoyed by my new and improved man pager, since the calling shell
can't be used until the acroread session is closed.
So, here is the better mouse trap. It needs two scripts, not one.
First script is called Man
man -t $1 /tmp/junk$$
[ -a /tmp/junk$$
On 08/08/03 10:44, Matthew Carpenter wrote:
Would you like to provide said information? I know you love XFS, but could
you do an unbiased comparison for us?
Sorry, i don't have the time, or the experience with Reiser.
On Fri, 08 Aug 2003 06:58:21 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
IBM:http://lwn.net/Articles/43307/
RedHat: http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/030805/linux_cloud_1.html
SuSE:
http://www.suse.com/us/company/press/press_releases/archive03/sco_redhat.html
Novell: http://www.microsoft-watch.com/article2/0,4248,1210100,00.asp
On Thu, 7 Aug 2003
Quoth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
This was sent to me by a friend at work...
That oughta give you nightmares.
Kurt
--
Sooner or later you must pay for your sins. (Those who have already
paid may disregard this fortune).
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[EMAIL
Matthew Carpenter wrote:
chmod 4755 `which smbmnt`
In order to do the mounting operation, smbmnt needs to be suid root. Also, smbumount if you are using that one...
Generally suid is considered to be A Bad Thing. Is this a case where it
is a safe and advisable thing to do? Or just a last
Look carefully at this picture of the Microsoft booth at LinuxWorld
and you'll see that the Masked Penguin struck again...
http://people.debian.org/~misha/lwce03/dscn0009.jpg
Kurt
--
If it's Tuesday, this must be someone else's fortune.
___
On Tue, 12 Aug 2003, Shane Broomhall (CCI Aust) wrote:
Hi All,
I have a new Toshiba 2010 Laptop, it has a USB Foppy and It can see USB
CDRom when Windows XP is running. That is great for Windows but I want
to put Linux on it. I have had problems with getting it to boot from
the USB Floppy,
Our IEEE chapter at school is going to setup a linux cluster. Does
anyone have any experience/advice/interesting opinions about doing so?
I am wondering if there is a good distro or any other wonderfulnes that
will make the thing fun and last the semester.
-- Alma
Mandrake and Knoppix
FITTING ROFLMAO!!! pun intended I presume.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Myles Green
Sent: Wednesday, August 06, 2003 3:10 PM
To: Linux Users
Subject: Re: M$
On Wed, 2003-08-06 at 16:04, Collins Richey wrote:
Got this in a signature on
On Tue, 05 Aug 2003 17:02:44 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just got back from a full day at LinuxWorld in San Francisco. This
was my 3rd LW, and in my opinion, this was the best of the bunch. I
arrived a half hour before the floor opened at 10AM, and already the
place was
On 08/09/03 14:10, Alma J Wetzker wrote:
My personal interest is distributed applications, so a virtual
machine running a database would be good. But we don't have the disk
space to make it worthwhile. I hope to use more than one
configuration before we are done.
Well, there are alot of
Mandrake has never been an issue with people I have spoken with. I do remember a
security alert about file system access though. I am not 100% sure - maybe check out
their web site.
Regards,
Wil McGilvery
Manager
Lynch Digital Media Inc
416-744-7949
416-716-3964 (cell)
Kurt Wall wrote:
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030805/latu094_1.html
A desktop license is only $199; single CPU servers are $699.
After October 15th, prices go up, so act now! Fucking bastards.
Kurt
Of course. If you wait until October you will probably find that there is
no merit to the
On Sun, 2003-08-10 at 22:09, Ian Stephen wrote:
Right now with Evolution, Mozilla, Konqueror, Emacs, Konsole and
OpenOffice.org all open under KDE top shows CPU 96% idle. That top
output you sent had CPU 0.0% idle.
It is idle until you start loading a page. Using the Gnome System
Monitor you
Not surprising since you use Red Hat. I wouldn't use RH's KDE either :)
On Mon, 04 Aug 2003 23:22:31 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
and aterm. I think konsole can do it too, but since i don't have KDE
anywhere, i can't test it.
--
Matthew Carpenter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jerry McBride [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sun, 10 Aug 2003 11:07:43 -0400
In the September issue of WIRED, Darl McBride in the HOT SEAT says...
WIRED: Give me the summary brief.
McBride: The world is moving to a Unix operating environment, and SCO owns
the IP rights to it, When you snap off a branch
Quoth Matthew Carpenter:
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2003/8/6/32819/51827
One submission to Michigan's AG:
I've sent a similar complaint to Pennsylvania's Attorney General and
to the DOJ in Washington.
Kurt
--
While money can't buy happiness, it certainly lets you choose your own
form
On Tue, 5 Aug 2003 17:53:45 -0400
Kurt Wall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Quoth Roger Oberholtzer:
In mozilla, does any one hear the pops?
http://www.urban75.com/Mag/bubble.html
Nope.
Really strange, a lot of variation yes/no. Apparently even some folks
who have shockwave can't
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 19:36:13 -0700
Ken Moffat [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Xfce4 rc2 is pretty fabulous. They have a script that downloads,
compiles and installs is for you.
I've been using it (piror to rc2) for months - rock solid for what I
need. The only drawback is no session manager yet.
On Wed, 6 Aug 2003, Aaron Grewell wrote:
Is your /etc/modules.conf correct with the proper aliases, etc?
some mod names have changed. I just modprobe the ones I want anyway
via a script.
Yea, the entries in modules.conf are correct, as they work just fine
for 2.4.21. modprobing
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/030805/latu094_1.html
A desktop license is only $199; single CPU servers are $699.
After October 15th, prices go up, so act now! Fucking bastards.
Kurt
--
To invent, you need a good imagination and a pile of junk.
-- Thomas Edison
Interesting article and lots of critiques at
http://kerneltrap.org/node/view/715
The following extract shows the basic differences. This is German
number notation with commas and periods reversed.
reiser4 reiserfs ext3 XFS JFS
copy
On 9 Aug 2003, Roger Oberholtzer wrote:
Has anyone been getting an email from [EMAIL PROTECTED] (where
your.domain is your domain)?
It has text like this:
Hello there,
I would like to inform you about important information regarding your
email address. This email address will be
Our IEEE chapter at school is going to setup a linux cluster. Does
anyone have any experience/advice/interesting opinions about doing so?
I am wondering if there is a good distro or any other wonderfulnes that
will make the thing fun and last the semester.
-- Alma
Quoth James McDonald:
Um,
I have been trying to lighten the load on my PIII 600MHz w/ 512MB RAM.
So for starters I went back from KDM to XDM.
From kwrite to nedit
From OpenOffice 1.0.3 to OpenOffice 1.1
and From Mozilla to Thunderbird and Firebird
But the best improvement came from
On 08/08/03 15:04, Alma J Wetzker wrote:
Our IEEE chapter at school is going to setup a linux cluster. Does
anyone have any experience/advice/interesting opinions about doing so? I
am wondering if there is a good distro or any other wonderfulnes that
will make the thing fun and last the
On Tue, 2003-08-05 at 22:49, David A. Bandel wrote:
If SCO loses (likely), all the suckers that bought licenses
(along with a whole slew of others) will sue SCO (SCO will, however, be
out of business and broke long before their trial).
We live in hope
Aren't you glad you still don't work
http://www.washingtontechnology.com/news/1_1/daily_news/21384-1.html
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Can anyone name the bad penguin in this animation?
http://www.opq.se/images/BadPenguin.gif
--
++···+
· Roger Oberholtzer · E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]·
· OPQ Systems AB · WWW: http://www.opq.se/
On 08/05/03 08:44, Swapana Ghosh wrote:
Hi
I have two machines under the router at home. One
has windows setup and another one is totally a linux
box. Yesterday due to thunder my linux box X-Term has
been corrupted, while i am trying to connect my
Windows machine to the lunux box it is
What is the best browser for SMB shares under Linux?
Unfortunately, I'm looking for something comparable to 'Network
Neighborhood' or 'My Network Places'.
Haven't been particularly happy with using Konq or Nautilus for such
(they're a look but don't touch browser)?
Any recommendations
On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 23:45, Burns MacDonald wrote:
Sounds like something straight out of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
or should be.
Which I might add, I am reading yet again.
--Tom Wilson
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Thu, 7 Aug 2003 12:38:34 -0400
Matthew Carpenter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
h This is still required to use smbmount... I'm not certain
about smbfs and /etc/fstab...
Did you try the password= attribute? Since most people don't do a
blank password or a guest account, this may be a
ronnie gauthier schrieb:
On Wed, 06 Aug 2003 14:14:25 +0200 - Klaus-Peter Schrage [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote the following
Re: Re: OT: time waster, but also a question
Right now, I can't tell you if there is any sound at all on my computer
- last night I have been to a ZZTop concert in Hannover,
From some of my friends back in Utah:
http://www.xmission.com/~fozz/darlandsaddam.jpg
Kurt
--
If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large deposit
in my name at a Swiss bank.
-- Woody Allen, Without Feathers
___
On Sat, 09 Aug 2003 19:54:44 -0500
Ben Duncan [EMAIL PROTECTED] emitted these signals:
I set up a Mosix one about 2 years ago for a trade show.
Not a problem and I really liked it.
Another vote for Mosix. My office workstation is currently a Mosix
cluster. I got tired of my compiles
On Mon, Aug 11, 2003, Michael Fakaro wrote:
My old OKI printer finally died and I went looking for a new one and
found a Samsung ML1750 c/w Linux drivers in the box.
Brought it home and it was printing great in 5 minutes drivers installed
no problem.
I just felt it was important to mention
The interesting thing is that this whole thing actually made the local
public radio station with a story from National Public Radio (NPR). Of
course, these sorts of public radio stories are always behind the
curve but it described linux as being an operating system developed by
a collective
Hi All,
Does anyone know if sound is supported in XFCE 4 ? I can get my Flash
plugin working (and singing, etc.) on Mozilla 1.4, but I can't seem to
be able to find a place to specify and enable system event sounds. I
know it can be rather irritating sometimes, but it's better that the
On Tue, 05 Aug 2003 12:58:27 -0400
Tim Wunder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 8/5/2003 11:52 AM, someone claiming to be Collins Richey wrote:
On Tue, 5 Aug 2003 08:04:51 -0600
Collins Richey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, 3 Aug 2003 19:59:41 -0600
Collins Richey [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, 05 Aug 2003 17:02:44 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Notably absent this year was Google. Granted they're not really selling
anything that is Linux specific, but they were there last year, and were
quite popular.
This is a down time for most companies. If they aren't
Just how does this this thing spread?
I have a couple of windows boxes behind my linux firewall. I have almost all
privileged ports blocked. Will that be enuf?
Joel
On Tue, Aug 12, 2003 at 01:32:28PM -0700, Gary Wilson wrote:
If you are in an all-Linux place, you are damn lucky.
We are
A coworker just got a sexy new Mac Powerbook, and had me drooling over how
gorgeous the entire OSX UI is. But what really blew me away was the fact
that OSX can do _real_ window transparency, like this:
http://osx.hyperjeff.net/Showcase/screen_shots/03.28.CocoaNTerminal.jpg
That means that
On 08/10/03 14:15, burns wrote:
On Sun, 2003-08-10 at 11:52, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I found that installing RH9 cured the problems I experienced with RH8, which were very similar to what you describe. IMHO, RH8 was like the typical RH x.0 release and RH9 behaves more like a RHx.1 or x.2
Involves Wine, but a big win for many... including some of my harvest
fields.
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,1210083,00.asp
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-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
burns wrote:
| On Sun, 2003-08-10 at 13:03, Andrew Mathews wrote:
|
|
|I'd check to make sure up2date didn't leave any errant processes
|running. I notice this happening when I have a bunch of kio_http
|processes running, but that may be kde relevant
On Mon, 2003-08-11 at 12:35, Condon Thomas A KPWA wrote:
However, I haven't looked at the Microsoft logo often enough to know if this
is usual. Look at the major Microsoft sign above the booth. Where the 's'
meets the preceding 'o' it looks like there is a divot in the 'o', very like
the
Matthew Carpenter wrote:
Any judge in their right mind will be able to see through this.
- --
Oxymoron.
In Harmony's Way, and In A Chord,
Tom :-})
Thomas A. Condon
Barbershop Bass Singer
Registered Linux User #154358
Interfere not in the business of Dragons,
For
I bet this sells about as well as Yugos!
Prior to the war, the Yugo was a huge success. The war killed it. So, for
SCO, this is their Boznia.
--
++···+
· Roger Oberholtzer · E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]·
· OPQ Systems
On Sun, 2003-08-10 at 00:25, Matthew Carpenter wrote:
SNIP
SuSE 8.2 pro comes with all types of clustering software. I believe there is even a
scientific cluster software included, although it is not Beowolf.
Also: http://www.redhat.com/software/rhel/as/cluster/
Oracle offers a high-end
On 08/13/03 16:04, Michael Hipp wrote:
Joel Hammer wrote:
Thanks for the scan. These ports I expected to be open, except for 1024
(kdm). I just wonder why ShieldsUp didn't detect these ports. It looks
like
I was inviting the world to log onto my X server. I have never found
anyone
doing this.
Quoth Ted Ozolins:
On Slackware 8.1, I had printing (lpr/lprng) using a Canon BJC-210
working nicely. I did the upgrade to 9.0 and now I can not get it to
work no matter how or what I do. I then decided to setup printing on
another machine with a clean install of Slackware 9.0 and still no
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] Wed, 13 Aug 2003 09:31:02 -0400 (EDT)
http://www.google.com/search?q=speed+of+light+in+furlongs+per+fortnight
The story goes that at NASA a management droid was briefing some senior
engineers using a bewildering array of terms and units. The engineers
were
On 08/12/03 15:24, Joel Hammer wrote:
BTW, if you are hot and bored (Our ac is out right now here in Maryland),
and have a cable connection, you might enjoy seeing a few pictures of
Maine. We just got back from Maine after a weeks vacation there. The
weather was lousy, just overcast. I posted
No, but I can say SuSE!
Seems that SCO unloaded a lot of their Linux-friendly employees there. Darn
nice of them, if you think about it :)
On Wed, 6 Aug 2003 20:53:39 -0400
Kurt Wall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes I am, Burns. I would already have quit, though, once they started
this
Evenin', list,
Does anyone here know of an AvantGo alternative for Linux?
Thanks,
Kurt
--
Do not sleep in a eucalyptus tree tonight.
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Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc -
On Wed, 6 Aug 2003, Matthew Carpenter wrote:
On Tue, 05 Aug 2003 17:02:44 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Notably absent this year was Google. Granted they're not really selling
anything that is Linux specific, but they were there last year, and were
quite popular.
This
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 23:39:26 -0400
Kurt Wall [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From some of my friends back in Utah:
http://www.xmission.com/~fozz/darlandsaddam.jpg
OK, I'll bite. Who's the non-Arab in the picture.
--
Collins Richey - Denver Area
if you fill your heart with regrets of yesterday
Well, since I am fairly certain they are selling printers for less than
it costs them to make one, I can't complain. They are just trying to
survive economically. People like me who don't do high volume printing
appreciate having a cheap printer that works with linux.
Joel
On Tue, Aug 12, 2003
On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 18:25:44 -0400
Joel Hammer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks. That port is blocked, so I won't worry about updating anytime
too soon.
Joel
On Tue, Aug 12, 2003 at 02:33:30PM -0700, Net Llama! wrote:
On 08/12/03 14:28, Joel Hammer wrote:
Just how does this this thing
I came in late to the spam discussion. Just let me add 2 things:
- if you are really interested in spam fighting there are 2 e-mail
lists I would recommend,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.claws-and-paws.com/spam-l/
and for sys admins :
[EMAIL PROTECTED] , [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Got a situation that driving me slightly batty. I cannot get a ssh key
pairs to work in a particular situation.
local host remote host
either :
rh 7.2
Just got back from a full day at LinuxWorld in San Francisco. This was my
3rd LW, and in my opinion, this was the best of the bunch. I arrived a
half hour before the floor opened at 10AM, and already the place was packed.
IBM HP had the 2 'superbooths' to the right left of the main hall
On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 13:23, Net Llama! wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003, Matthew Carpenter wrote:
The unnamed Fortune 500 company is apparently the first to sign up for
a SCO Unix intellectual property software license under a program
started just last week.
I doubt its Sun. They can smell
I sent the info on this worm to a friend whom I know to be running a mix of
Linux and Windows at home. His response may be of interest to the list:
Yep -- as near as I can tell, only my XP laptop is vulnerable.
I downloaded the patch for it without problem (I
Michael Hipp wrote:
What is the best browser for SMB shares under Linux?
Unfortunately, I'm looking for something comparable to 'Network
Neighborhood' or 'My Network Places'.
Haven't been particularly happy with using Konq or Nautilus for such
(they're a look but don't touch browser)?
Any
I have been very happy with my lexmark z53. However, does lexmark even
make this printer anymore? More importantly, is lexmark making its new
printers linux friendly, that is, supplying drivers for them?
Joel
Tue, Aug 12, 2003 at 08:19:28AM -0700, Bill Campbell wrote:
On Mon, Aug 11, 2003,
My old OKI printer finally died and I went looking for a new one and
found a Samsung ML1750 c/w Linux drivers in the box.
Brought it home and it was printing great in 5 minutes drivers installed
no problem.
I just felt it was important to mention because of Samsungs support of
Linux. I know many
On Tue, 12 Aug 2003, Chong Yu Meng wrote:
Hi All,
Does anyone know if sound is supported in XFCE 4 ? I can get my Flash
plugin working (and singing, etc.) on Mozilla 1.4, but I can't seem to
be able to find a place to specify and enable system event sounds. I
know it can be rather irritating
It must be getting bad. Charter just send a mass mailing about the worm and
specifically mention port 135.
I run an NT box at home and since day two it has not an email client nor does
RPC work, I disabled it to manual. I do get an event error at boot but NT does
not need re-booting much so it
Precisely.
On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 21:50:32 -0500
Michael Hipp [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kurt Wall wrote:
Quoth Matthew Carpenter:
IIRC, it's 135, the RPC port.
It exploits a vulnerability on TCP port 135, used by DCOM RPC
services. You should also block TCP ports 138, 445, 593,
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] Fri, 08 Aug 2003 21:03:34 -0700
On 08/08/03 20:38, Alma J Wetzker wrote:
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fri, 08 Aug 2003 15:26:25 -0700
On 08/08/03 15:04, Alma J Wetzker wrote:
Our IEEE chapter at school is going to setup a linux cluster. Does
anyone have any
Sorry. I didn't know that one worked for cups.
Thank you!
Harry
On Wed August 13 2003 10:26 am, Net Llama! wrote:
lprm ?
On Wed, 13 Aug 2003, Harry Giles wrote:
I messed up, and need to delete a rather large file in queue for a
printer. What is the command for doing this when using
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 23:39:48 -0600
Collins Richey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sun, 10 Aug 2003 19:36:13 -0700
Ken Moffat [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Xfce4 rc2 is pretty fabulous. They have a script that downloads,
compiles and installs is for you.
I've been using it (piror to rc2)
On Wed, 2003-08-13 at 19:04, Michael Hipp wrote:
It's not bogus. Mr. Gibson is well respected and his site is widely
used. Dunno why it didn't work properly on your system. I might guess
that it misidentified your IP address, or perhaps the fact that the
Internet has been only half working
I've used AvantGo on linux. I use Jpilot and used the syncmal plugin. But
there is an alternative. It is called Plucker - www.plkr.org
Kurt Wall wrote:
Evenin', list,
Does anyone here know of an AvantGo alternative for Linux?
Thanks,
Kurt
=
_
Kurt Wall wrote:
Quoth Matthew Carpenter:
IIRC, it's 135, the RPC port.
It exploits a vulnerability on TCP port 135, used by DCOM RPC
services. You should also block TCP ports 138, 445, 593,
and UDP port 69 (TFTP).
You should block *every* port that doesn't absolutely, positively have
to
On 08/10/03 20:36, Kurt Wall wrote:
Look carefully at this picture of the Microsoft booth at LinuxWorld
and you'll see that the Masked Penguin struck again...
http://people.debian.org/~misha/lwce03/dscn0009.jpg
Penguin Computing's booth was directly opposite M$'s.
--
If you are in an all-Linux place, you are damn lucky.
We are being bombarded with the Backdoor and Blaster
worms and anyone who hasn't gotten their Microsoft
updates in the last two weeks is being blown away.
It's an epidemic.
My Libranet box is just fine. But its my job to make
sure that all
IIRC, it's 135, the RPC port.
On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 14:33:30 -0700
Net Llama! [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
port 137, the RPC port. Of course keeping up with M$ security updates will
help too.
--
Matthew Carpenter
[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.eisgr.com/
Enterprise
Hi
Thanks for your reply...
First of all, does it make a difference?
In general, it has no difference. But demand is from
client...:-)
So client does not want that his maill will be in the
mail box as client-name@www.domain.com - he wants
*To address* in his mail box will be always shown as
On 08/13/03 17:28, Joel Hammer wrote:
As I recall, with redhat( 7.2 ?), out of the box, there was a big
warning in printcap to make no changes in the printcap file, since it
was generated fresh every time something started up, I think the system
or the printing daemon. I think that the
Joel Hammer wrote:
Be careful. Some of the more advanced printing programs like to overwrite
your manual printcap file from time to time. Redhat would do that,
as I recall.
Joel
Thanks, I'll be keeping an eye on that (I've made copies of my printcap
file as well as made notes on what I had to
In case some of you haven't found it yet:
http://www.innergeek.us/geek.html
In Harmony's Way, and In A Chord,
Tom :-})
Thomas A. Condon
Barbershop Bass Singer
Registered Linux User #154358 60.74951% - Extreme Geek
Interfere not in the business of Dragons,
For you are crunchy when flamed
opps.
hammershome.com
Joel
ceOn Tue, Aug 12, 2003 at 03:29:51PM -0700, Net Llama! wrote:
On 08/12/03 15:24, Joel Hammer wrote:
BTW, if you are hot and bored (Our ac is out right now here in Maryland),
and have a cable connection, you might enjoy seeing a few pictures of
Maine. We just
On Tuesday 12 August 2003 4:29 pm, someone claiming to be Joel Hammer wrote:
Here we go again.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A49575-2003Aug12?language=printer
If IS people hired by businesses and govt got fired for these
screwups, they might not use MS. I strongly doubt that any
When you consider recent Supreme Court decisions, you realize that the law
and the US constitution mean only what 5 justices think they mean, at the
moment.
Maybe Sandra Day will say, because of a compelling state interest, the
GPL won't mean what it says it means for 25 more years, to give the
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