Scribbling feverishly on January 17, Ken Moffat managed to emit:
I'm confused. The partitioner thread left me scratching my head.
I have several ext2 partitions, and several questions.
Can I make these ext2's into ext3's using tune2fs?
Yes.
Can I go back and forth?
Yes.
Can I change
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 10:53,Douglas J Hunley scribed:
Keith Antoine babbled on about:
I cannot see any way to reverse the trend from ext3 to 2. The other way
is simple (tune2fs -j). Nothing I can see undoes this, not that I wanto
normally
change fstab from ext3 to ext2, unmount the
Scribbling feverishly on January 17, Net Llama managed to emit:
Is this on your Slackware box?
Yes. I built and installed GTK+ and GDK from source. They live under
/usr/local/mumble. As does Xscreensaver, I might add.
I've attempted it on a RH7.x box and i get errors like these during
On Friday 18 January 2002 05:32, Kurt Wall wrote:
| Can I change them using fstab settings?
|
| No.
well, um, yes and no. going back to ext2 requires editing /etc/fstab,
does it not? and on some systems (i'm thinking suse 7.3 here), in
addition to getting the repaired mk_inittab script from
-- 14 January 2002 Congress May Take New Look At Software Protection
from Product Liability For Security Flaws
Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.) who co-chairs the Congressional Internet Caucus
said . The producers of software should be responsible for any flaws
that the software
Way, way too much overkill. You certainly don't need 6 access points,
especially at over a grand each for Cisco.
Youre right 3 is more than enough. I was just throwing numbers out there
...
it is early in the project you know.
them all a unique ESSID if you want precise control, patch each one
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, dep managed to emit:
On Friday 18 January 2002 05:32, Kurt Wall wrote:
| Can I change them using fstab settings?
|
| No.
well, um, yes and no. going back to ext2 requires editing /etc/fstab,
does it not? and on some systems (i'm thinking suse 7.3
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 15:54:49 +0100
Roger Oberholtzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 08:31:07 -0500
Ian [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| DOUGLAS HUNLEY wrote:
|
| -- 14 January 2002 Congress May Take New Look At Software Protection
| from Product
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 15:54:49 +0100
Roger Oberholtzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the bitstream:
[snip]
I would be concerned about how they defined responsible. As a programmer
I guess I would need some form of malpractice insurance to protect
against law suits. Can damages be for more
On Friday 18 January 2002 09:16 am, Rick Sivernell wrote :
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 15:54:49 +0100
snippity
for. While some foreign developers are very good, many are not. Those that
are not use their language as a hinderence in convering in US to avoid or
frustrate those who manage or use the
-Original Message-
From: David A. Bandel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2002 8:39 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: network/ limited number of ips
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 07:37:10 -0600
Schmeits, Roger [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the
bitstream:
[snip]
the
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 10:30:30 -0500
David A. Bandel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
| On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 15:54:49 +0100
| Roger Oberholtzer [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the bitstream:
|
| [snip]
|
|
| I would be concerned about how they defined responsible. As a programmer
| I guess I would need
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
-- Forwarded Message --
Subject: [fsl-discuss] Standards: Register: Phillips moves to put 'poison' label on
protected audio CDs
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 09:13:05 -0800
From: Karsten M. Self [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: FSL Discuss
Joel Hammer wrote:
This must be the dumbest idea in a long time.
This is like holding a builder liable because someone broke into his
building by digging under the foundation or smashing a window.
DUMB.
I think what is needed here is to prevent software companies from
including clause in
The problem with holding software writers liable is this.
They cannot anticipate all the uses or all the hardware the software will be
aplied to.
Neither, can they predict all the ineractions with every other piece of
software aver written.
Therefore, software would come with incredible
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Douglas J Hunley managed to emit:
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
mother of all sue-fests indeed!
Looks like I'll be spending more money on Philips products in
the future. :-P
Kurt
--
Your lover will never wish to leave you.
Lee,
Can you expand a little on what you mean by tell it to reboot and power down
duing the bio bootup? Who or what do I tell ? The bios?
TIA
--- Susan Macchia [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What it means in SuSe 7.2 and Mandrake is that the box was shut down
before the program had finished
Indeed this is most excellent interesting. I believe this also
appeared on /. a few days ago.
--- Douglas J Hunley [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
-- Forwarded Message --
Subject: [fsl-discuss] Standards: Register:
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 14:01:55 -0500
Tim Wunder [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the bitstream:
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
OK. I admit it. I'm confused...
If these protected audio CDs are playable in an ordinary CD player,
how, exactly,
Sure, but that's lossy. The repeated digital-analog conversions distort the
sound. If you then convert your .wav to .mp3 you'll probably have definite
audible defects, and nobody wants that. That's why most tracks are ripped
directly from CDA format into mp3. And that's what copy protection
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 10:32:02 -0600
Schmeits, Roger [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the
bitstream:
[snip]
Why bootp?
you assign a specific IP to a specific MAC. Tradeoff between a static IP
and a completely dynamic one. You'll use dhcpd to do this, it just takes a
little more setup.
Ciao,
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
OK. I admit it. I'm confused...
If these protected audio CDs are playable in an ordinary CD player,
how, exactly, are they copy protected? Can't I just plug the output of
my CD player into the input of my soundcard
*sigh* gtk-devel wasn't installed for some odd reason. This completely
baffles me how that could be considering that i've built stuff in the
recent past that needed the gtk headers libs. At any rate,
Xscreensaver-4.00 is now happily running on 2 of my boxes. Thanks to
all for their advice
--- Tim Wunder [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
Looks like Phillips actually has a clue! Go Phillips!
OK. I admit it. I'm confused...
If these protected audio CDs are playable in an ordinary CD player,
how, exactly, are they copy protected? Can't I just plug the output
Original Message
Subject: Screem
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:11:12 -0500
From: Lee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Installed Mandrake 8.0 a while back and still investigating all the
goodies that install with it in full install. One of these is a beastie,
under internet
On Friday 18 January 2002 17:13 pm, Lee wrote:
Original Message
Subject: Screem
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:11:12 -0500
From: Lee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Installed Mandrake 8.0 a while back and still investigating all the
goodies that install with it in
Much thanks. Didn't know that, but iy sure will come in handy.
Bruce Marshall wrote:
On Friday 18 January 2002 17:13 pm, Lee wrote:
Original Message
Subject: Screem
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:11:12 -0500
From: Lee [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
DOUGLAS HUNLEY wrote:
-- 14 January 2002 Congress May Take New Look At Software Protection
from Product Liability For Security Flaws
A friend was dealing with Code Red recover at work (why, I don't know, but
he's not a Linux user so maybe he couldn't help it ;-) It
Is the the project dead?
--
The pivotal point is the second chance, judged by another set of force
and farce. In Linux We Trust -- http://linux.nf and
news://news.hkpcug.org
___
Linux-users mailing list
Archives, Digests, etc at
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:19:33 -0500
Bruce Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the bitstream:
[snip]
Not related to your main questions, but you are aware that a
Ctl-Alt-ESC in X will give you a skull-and-crossbones for a cursor?
After getting that, just click in any window and that
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 19:05:36 -0500
David A. Bandel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:19:33 -0500
Bruce Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed into the bitstream:
[snip]
Not related to your main questions, but you are aware that a
Ctl-Alt-ESC in X will give you a
--- Chang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is the the project dead?
oook?
=
Lonni J. Friedman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux Step-by-step help: http://netllama.ipfox.com
tsting
___
Linux-users mailing list
Archives, Digests, etc at http://linux.nf/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002, Sys Admin wrote:
tsting
It's not working... Some vowels are being dropped :-(
Those that sacrifice essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety
deserve neither liberty nor safety. -- Ben Franklin (1759)
Jay Nugent babbled on about:
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002, Sys Admin wrote:
tsting
It's not working... Some vowels are being dropped :-(
good one ;)
--
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
Admin: Linux StepByStep - http://linux.nf
If NT is your answer, you don't
dep babbled on about:
needs to set up fstab such that / is ext3, but additional partitions
may be set to auto. (in suse, for reasons not yet translated from
the reason this works is because the 'mount' on SuSE is too old to be able to
autodetect ext3. so settng it to auto means that 'mount'
Ken Moffat babbled on about:
I have several ext2 partitions, and several questions.
Can I make these ext2's into ext3's using tune2fs?
using tune2fs is the only way to convert existing partitions.
simply unmount the partition, 'tune2fs -j /dev/xxx'
and then edit /etc/fstab to say ext3 instead
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Net Llama managed to emit:
--- Chang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is the the project dead?
oook?
Is the [mars_nwe] project dead?
Don't know, but the technology is moribund.
Kurt
--
Lady Luck brings added income today. Lady friend takes it away
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Sys Admin managed to emit:
tsting
wrkng
K
--
You will engage in a profitable business activity.
___
Linux-users mailing list
Archives, Digests, etc at http://linux.nf/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
how would one construct an HREF to a specific newsgroup on a specific news
server?
I know HREF=news:news.somewhere.net; will pull up the configured newsreader
and attach to news.somewhere.net, but how do I get the newsreader to
automagically load a specific newsgroup on news.somewhere.net?
How about:
Mentally Crippled Self Evangelists - sort of what windows zealots are!
Keith B.
Condon Thomas A KPWA [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have told them that MCSE stands for Must Consult with
Someone Else,
Mouse Certified System Engineer
Mandrake Consultant Suse Expert
My
Kurt Wall babbled on about:
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Sys Admin managed to emit:
tsting
wrkng
thanks! see you in the morn
--
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
Admin: Linux StepByStep - http://linux.nf
printk(HPFS: G... Kernel memory corrupted
[EMAIL PROTECTED] babbled on about:
How about:
Mentally Crippled Self Evangelists - sort of what windows zealots are!
My Capabilities Seriously Exaggerated
--
Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
Admin: Linux StepByStep - http://linux.nf
panic(Unable to find
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
how would one construct an HREF to a specific newsgroup on a specific news
server?
I know HREF=news:news.somewhere.net; will pull up the configured newsreader
and attach to news.somewhere.net, but how do I get the newsreader to
automagically load a specific
Ian wrote:
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
how would one construct an HREF to a specific newsgroup on a specific news
server?
I know HREF=news:news.somewhere.net; will pull up the configured newsreader
and attach to news.somewhere.net, but how do I get the newsreader to
automagically load
Douglas J Hunley wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] babbled on about:
And a bunch of other people babbled about it before them...
SNIP
Not bad, I kinda watched this thread with amusement, in case nobody was
keeping track here are the entries in no particular order, although
possibly chronological.
Kurt Wall wrote:
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Net Llama managed to emit:
--- Chang [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Is the the project dead?
oook?
Is the [mars_nwe] project dead?
Don't know, but the technology is moribund.
Kurt,
Please refrain using words like moribund ...
On Friday 18 January 2002 22:16 pm, Kurt Wall wrote:
Scribbling feverishly on January 18, Sys Admin managed to emit:
tsting
wrkng
K
Say wht?
--
++
+ Bruce S. Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] Bellaire, MI
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002 22:37:48 -0500
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How about:
Mentally Crippled Self Evangelists - sort of what windows zealots
are!
Keith B.
Condon Thomas A KPWA [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have told them that MCSE stands for Must Consult with
Someone Else,
On Sat, 19 Jan 2002 14:55:00 +1000
Keith Antoine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Douglas wern't you looking for something like this??
AnyBoard Forum
Rated: 3 Penguins - Category: TUCOWS Linux Internet Web Based
Applications
Version: 8.3
License: Freeware
AnyBoard is a fully featured web
Ok, that's clear, but what about root partitions. Can they be converted
from another distro? Or is that necessary? If I log in to redhat on hda6
and convert a few from there, then log in to libranet or something on say
hda9 can I convert the redhat partition? Or am I just making this too
Mayday, Called Some Experts
Mad Consultants Slurping Ethanol
Madly Causing Slashdot Effect
Mail Consumed Somewhere in Exchange
Mainframe Computers Seemed Extinct
Maintenance Contracts Seem Expensive
Maintenance Costs Significantly Extra
Making Companies Surrender Everyday
Making Computers Slow
http://mylesg.homelinux.net/
The old site will remain for a short while, probably until the end of
January.
Thanks,
--
Myles Green Calgary AB Canada
Alberta Linux Step by Step Mirror:
http://mylesg.homelinux.net/
--
USER, n.: The word computer professionals use
when they mean idiot.
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