Re: Which high end multichannel audio interfaces work?

2012-03-10 Thread Jan Stary
On Mar 09 18:17:50, Jochen Fabricius wrote:
 Hi, 
 
 I'm looking for a really high end multichannel (at least 2 in 8 out,
 breakout box) audio interface that works with OpenBSD. Obviously the
 M-Audio Delta 1010 does, because it is listed in envy(4). But this
 interface needs an external power supply, and I want to avoid it is
 possible. So I found the Echo Layla 3G
 http://www.echoaudio.com/Products/PCI/Layla3G/index.php Does anybody
 know if this card works with OpenBSD? Or any other interface of similar
 quality? 
 
 I want to build a very flexible PC based digital crossover solution,

What's a digital crossover solution?

 with room equalizing and music playback from an internal storage
 (planned for later). Yes, I know that there are much cheaper and easier
 solutions for this task,

what task?

 but where is the fun with these? 

So, you want to buy a high-end 8 channel audio interface,
because it's more fun than, say,  2-channel? (But an
external power supply would take the fun out of it?)



Re: Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions - WTF?

2012-03-10 Thread Lars
Kaya Saman wrote:
 On 03/09/2012 10:35 PM, Ingo Schwarze wrote:
 Brett wrote on Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 09:12:11AM +1100:

 I noticed and think its a great title, because it would never be
 approved by a marketing department.
 See, Nick *is* the honorary marketing department.
 Er... well... among other functions.
 (He is a bit into support as well, kind of.)
 And the title *was* approved by the CTO - smilingly, no doubt :).


 Sorry guys am confused what are you on about?

 What's OpenBSD?

 How do I install an OS?

 My computer doesn't start after I posted on this list?

 Does OpenBSD have a marketing department, I thought it was opensource
 free software not a product and end users where supposed to be
 intelligent?


 I typed in man but nothing happened


Type in woman at your unix terminal or on google images.
Problem solved.

 How do I connect OpenBSD to the internet?


Not sure, possibly you mean teh internets and not the internet.

 Is OpenBSD the inernet?



You mean teh internets?

 Installed X11 now firefox doesn't start?



Not sure what your pet animal has to do with anything, you mean your cat?
or an actual fox? Did you set your cat on fire? Or your fox?



Re: Which high end multichannel audio interfaces work?

2012-03-10 Thread Peter Hessler
On 2012 Mar 10 (Sat) at 10:07:25 +0100 (+0100), Jan Stary wrote:
:On Mar 09 18:17:50, Jochen Fabricius wrote:
: I want to build a very flexible PC based digital crossover solution,
:
:What's a digital crossover solution?
:

Ok, seriously.  If you do not know what someone is talking about, please
do not send noise to the mailing list.  I took your exact quote, put it
in google, and found relevant answers in *every* *single* *link* on the
first few pages.  Heck, even the previews had relevance.


-- 
Old age is the most unexpected of things that can happen to a man.
-- Trotsky



Re: Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions - WTF?

2012-03-10 Thread Kaya Saman

On 03/10/2012 08:27 AM, Lars wrote:

Kaya Saman wrote:

On 03/09/2012 10:35 PM, Ingo Schwarze wrote:

Brett wrote on Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 09:12:11AM +1100:


I noticed and think its a great title, because it would never be
approved by a marketing department.

See, Nick *is* the honorary marketing department.
Er... well... among other functions.
(He is a bit into support as well, kind of.)
And the title *was* approved by the CTO - smilingly, no doubt :).


Sorry guys am confused what are you on about?

What's OpenBSD?

How do I install an OS?

My computer doesn't start after I posted on this list?

Does OpenBSD have a marketing department, I thought it was opensource
free software not a product and end users where supposed to be
intelligent?


I typed in man but nothing happened


Type in woman at your unix terminal or on google images.
Problem solved.


I typed in woman and plural but each time the machine crashes and turns 
off???


Is it possible that my kernel maybe gay?

touch /usr/bin/woman

vi
#!/sbin/sh
halt -p

:-P

How do I connect OpenBSD to the internet?


Not sure, possibly you mean teh internets and not the internet.


Everybody called it the web so I decided to seek out an arachnologist, 
although she laughed at me at the next thing I knew I was in a white 
room with no windows and doors :-(





Is OpenBSD the inernet?



You mean teh internets?


Spider Webs!

Tried catching fish once but our pond was dry :-(




Installed X11 now firefox doesn't start?



Not sure what your pet animal has to do with anything, you mean your cat?
or an actual fox? Did you set your cat on fire? Or your fox?

Hmm. when I moved in the council told us that there would be city 
foxes living in the garden and cats roaming around wild too. Just didn't 
expect to see any on X11?? I still can't!




Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Lars
Barry Grumbine wrote:
 On Thu, Mar 8, 2012 at 3:18 AM, Dmitrij D. Czarkoff czark...@gmail.com
 wrote:
 Though OpenBSD installer is not the main feature of OpenBSD for me (it
 is only used to install OS anyway), I wouldn't like it to change in any
 way now, as I just can't think of a way to make it better.


 Sorry, hate to beat a dead horse...  There is one use case where I
 would like to see the installer enhanced:

 I have a laptop with OpenBSD installed.
 I want to install to a flash/USB drive, or SD card, or eSATA drive...
 I start the laptop with boot  bsd.rd
 Select (I)nstall
 Eventually get to the question:

 Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
 Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]

 At this point I usually say oh crap, hit ^c, and go read the dmesg
 or `disklabel sd1` to make sure I pick the right disk.

 It would be nice if the installer would tell me a little something
 about the available disks so I could pick the right one:

 sd0: 238418MB, 512 bytes/sector, 488281250 sectors
 sd1: 1907MB, 512 bytes/sector, 3905536 sectors
 sd2: 3751MB, 512 bytes/sector, 7683072 sectors
 Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
 Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]



Agree. Even the BIOS boot up screen tells you more information about your
hard drive when the pc boots up (sometimes even the company that made the
drive, like samsung.. when you boot up.) Things like sd0 are cryptic
and don't provide much information.



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Eric Furman
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012, at 02:39 AM, Lars wrote:
 Barry Grumbine wrote:
  On Thu, Mar 8, 2012 at 3:18 AM, Dmitrij D. Czarkoff czark...@gmail.com
  wrote:
  Though OpenBSD installer is not the main feature of OpenBSD for me (it
  is only used to install OS anyway), I wouldn't like it to change in any
  way now, as I just can't think of a way to make it better.
 
 
  Sorry, hate to beat a dead horse...  There is one use case where I
  would like to see the installer enhanced:
 
  I have a laptop with OpenBSD installed.
  I want to install to a flash/USB drive, or SD card, or eSATA drive...
  I start the laptop with boot  bsd.rd
  Select (I)nstall
  Eventually get to the question:
 
  Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
  Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]
 
  At this point I usually say oh crap, hit ^c, and go read the dmesg
  or `disklabel sd1` to make sure I pick the right disk.
 
  It would be nice if the installer would tell me a little something
  about the available disks so I could pick the right one:
 
  sd0: 238418MB, 512 bytes/sector, 488281250 sectors
  sd1: 1907MB, 512 bytes/sector, 3905536 sectors
  sd2: 3751MB, 512 bytes/sector, 7683072 sectors
  Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
  Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]
 
 
 
 Agree. Even the BIOS boot up screen tells you more information about your
 hard drive when the pc boots up (sometimes even the company that made the
 drive, like samsung.. when you boot up.) Things like sd0 are cryptic
 and don't provide much information.
 
 

I think it should tell me which one will suck my dick.
Are you soo stupid to see how retarded this whole thing is
All of these questions are driven by colossal ignorance.
If you don't know what you are talking about
PLEASE STFUP!! 



Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread 0xAAA
It is  quite interesting that  any trolling message  gets more attention  than a
real, OpenBSD  related problem (view  the threads of  the stupid guy  which cant
read installation instructions...)

My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where other
users can discuss about senseless questions.

And misc  should be about real  problems/discussions (like it was  before stupid
linus-nerds arrived on this list...)

(sorry for that non-misc related message)



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Peter N. M. Hansteen
0xAAA 0x...@online.de writes:

 My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where 
 other
 users can discuss about senseless questions.

Wouldn't it be even better if we headed them off with a web forum or
even a facebook group? 

- P
-- 
Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic
delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Kaya Saman

On 03/10/2012 01:33 PM, 0xAAA wrote:

It is  quite interesting that  any trolling message  gets more attention  than a
real, OpenBSD  related problem (view  the threads of  the stupid guy  which cant
read installation instructions...)


It could be just that people need to let off steam once in a while and 
have some fun rather then being all serious.


Basically creating an OpenBSD playground and letting the animals out 
of the zoo for a while so to speak would be a good idea.




My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where other
users can discuss about senseless questions.


misc (miscellaneous) sounds perfect for this: might be better to create 
a legitimate questi...@openbsd.org list - like we do on FreeBSD, that 
way people could kinda separate things more clearly Actually as a 
FreeBSD user for round 3+ years now I'm pretty much signed up to all 
non-devel based FBSD lists as they all come in useful for legitimate 
problems and issues.




And misc  should be about real  problems/discussions (like it was  before stupid
linus-nerds arrived on this list...)


Never knew being a nerd was associated with stupidity thought they 
were spectrally at opposite ends :-P


Or is this just an OpenBSD superiority thing?? Hmm. the BSD Daemon 
insignia. didn't they do that back in 1939??? Look where they got! 
:-P :-P :-P :-P




(sorry for that non-misc related message)



P.s. just because am new to OpenBSD and posting back with my thoughts 
and opinions it doesn't mean that I'm trolling!!! :-)


To be honest from what I've seen with OpenBSD to this date: 
gateway/NAT/router/firewall/VPN concentrator (yep done all this), I 
really like it and will continue to use it for many years to come and 
hopefully contribute myself, to help the community. OS wars aside 
OpenBSD is really cool and as router and network appliance capable OS 
kicks Cisco right in their ASCII.


P.p.s. no lynching me please


Regards,


Kaya



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Marc Espie
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 02:33:50PM +0100, 0xAAA wrote:
 It is  quite interesting that  any trolling message  gets more attention  
 than a
 real, OpenBSD  related problem (view  the threads of  the stupid guy  which 
 cant
 read installation instructions...)
 
 My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where 
 other
 users can discuss about senseless questions.

Every message is a troll... for instance, smalltalk is a programming language,
and a very important one at that.

So call the list Trolling,  please.



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 3:39 AM, Lars nore...@z505.com wrote:

 Barry Grumbine wrote:
  On Thu, Mar 8, 2012 at 3:18 AM, Dmitrij D. Czarkoff czark...@gmail.com
  wrote:
  Though OpenBSD installer is not the main feature of OpenBSD for me (it
  is only used to install OS anyway), I wouldn't like it to change in any
  way now, as I just can't think of a way to make it better.
 
 
  Sorry, hate to beat a dead horse...  There is one use case where I
  would like to see the installer enhanced:
 
  I have a laptop with OpenBSD installed.
  I want to install to a flash/USB drive, or SD card, or eSATA drive...
  I start the laptop with boot  bsd.rd
  Select (I)nstall
  Eventually get to the question:
 
  Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
  Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]
 
  At this point I usually say oh crap, hit ^c, and go read the dmesg
  or `disklabel sd1` to make sure I pick the right disk.
 
  It would be nice if the installer would tell me a little something
  about the available disks so I could pick the right one:
 
  sd0: 238418MB, 512 bytes/sector, 488281250 sectors
  sd1: 1907MB, 512 bytes/sector, 3905536 sectors
  sd2: 3751MB, 512 bytes/sector, 7683072 sectors
  Available disks are: sd0 sd1 sd2
  Which one is the root disk? (or 'done') [sd0]
 
 

 Agree. Even the BIOS boot up screen tells you more information about your
 hard drive when the pc boots up (sometimes even the company that made the
 drive, like samsung.. when you boot up.) Things like sd0 are cryptic
 and don't provide much information.

With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
overwhelming pretty fast.

The idea is interesting, and especially helpful if the machine was
previously built and the drives ordered differently in a different OS or
BIOS configuration, changes in hardware RAID or drive controller
manipulation in the BIOS, or the drives were installed in a different
machine.



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Sevan / Venture37

On 10/03/2012 16:50, Marc Espie wrote:

So call the list Trolling,  please.


 change misc@ to demands@
:)

Sevan



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Johan Beisser
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 9:15 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia nka...@gmail.com wrote:

 With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
 overwhelming pretty fast.

 The idea is interesting, and especially helpful if the machine was
 previously built and the drives ordered differently in a different OS or
 BIOS configuration, changes in hardware RAID or drive controller
 manipulation in the BIOS, or the drives were installed in a different
 machine.

I don't see why it's hard to shell out.

!
# dmesg | grep [hs]d[0-9]
# exit



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:29 PM, Johan Beisser j...@caustic.org wrote:

 On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 9:15 AM, Nico Kadel-Garcia nka...@gmail.com
 wrote:

  With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
  overwhelming pretty fast.
 
  The idea is interesting, and especially helpful if the machine was
  previously built and the drives ordered differently in a different OS or
  BIOS configuration, changes in hardware RAID or drive controller
  manipulation in the BIOS, or the drives were installed in a different
  machine.

 I don't see why it's hard to shell out.

 !
 # dmesg | grep [hs]d[0-9]
 # exit

If you're skilled enough to have the working interfaces and know, from
experience, how to dig it up manually, you can. That would certainly not be
lost. I was thinking it could be useful for some of the odd setups I've
encountered. When I swap hard drives to another host, it's not always
clear that I've preserved hard drive ordering. If you've never swapped IDE
controller ports accidentally when replacing a motherboard, then you've not
done a lot of hardware rebuilding.



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Marc Espie
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:15:08PM -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
 overwhelming pretty fast.

What's the relevant info, then ? drive names ? drive sizes ? existing
mbr or disklabels ?

At the most, remembering you can shell out with ! and using the appropriate
command to get that (hey, if you don't know any shell, you shouldn't be
using OpenBSD anyway) is currently the best solution.

I don't see how anything else is going to help the general case.

I have the feeling you guys are all thinking in terms of the setup you're
accustomed to running OpenBSD onto, and failing to see the generality of
the problem...



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Brandon Weaver
Because answering a question requires knowledge, experience, and patience. Now
I believe there's a difference between a question and a KLB demanding answers
and rainbows.

What I find amusing is that a majority of the people with an OpenBSD
superiority complex don't know heads or tails of its  actual power. There are
exceptions on both sides, but let's draw a line of distinction between fanboy
and guru.

On Mar 10, 2012, at 7:33 AM, 0xAAA 0x...@online.de wrote:

 It is  quite interesting that  any trolling message  gets more attention
than a
 real, OpenBSD  related problem (view  the threads of  the stupid guy  which
cant
 read installation instructions...)

 My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where
other
 users can discuss about senseless questions.

 And misc  should be about real  problems/discussions (like it was  before
stupid
 linus-nerds arrived on this list...)

 (sorry for that non-misc related message)



Re: My OpenBSD 5.0 installation experience (long rant)

2012-03-10 Thread Eric Furman
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012, at 06:55 PM, Marc Espie wrote:
 On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:15:08PM -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
  With multiple drives, especially for bulky softraid setups, it might get
  overwhelming pretty fast.
 
 What's the relevant info, then ? drive names ? drive sizes ? existing
 mbr or disklabels ?
 
 At the most, remembering you can shell out with ! and using the
 appropriate
 command to get that (hey, if you don't know any shell, you shouldn't be
 using OpenBSD anyway) is currently the best solution.
 
 I don't see how anything else is going to help the general case.
 
 I have the feeling you guys are all thinking in terms of the setup you're
 accustomed to running OpenBSD onto, and failing to see the generality of
 the problem...

Yes, a much more useful post than my last.
I was extremely rude. I didn't mean to aim it at you directly, Lars.
I apologize.



Re: Suggestion

2012-03-10 Thread Nico Kadel-Garcia
[ Accidentally replied privately. ]
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 12:50 PM, Renzo Fabriek rfabr...@nerdshack.comwrote:

 On Saturday 10 March 2012 18:26:29 you wrote:
  On Fri, Mar 9, 2012 at 11:28 AM, Renzo Fabriek rfabr...@nerdshack.com
 wrote:
 
   On Friday 09 March 2012 13:10:13 Nomen Nescio wrote:
 Who in their right mind would EVER want to run this crap?
   
You answered your own question. My guess? People who are too cheap
 to buy
Windows and too stupid to figure out how to find a free copy of XP or
   Win 7
on the net and do the activation or find a password. That's a pretty
   small
user space.
  
   Free copy's of Windows? Do  they exist?



  Violating copyright laws because software should be free or I found it
  on the Internet!!! is dangerous if you actually have a job or your mommy
  and daddy aren't willing to pay your legal costs if you get caught. Like
  stealing money from winos, you might not get caught but it teaches
  dangerous habits that shouldn't be taught in your social life or
  professional life. OpenBSD and the other open sourced operating systems
  have been very good about this: Nomen should not be suggesting dangerous
  habits on a public mailing list.
 
  Also, since so many of do need to work with Windows based software for
  work, it's potentially useful. Samba started tis way, and is now a
 mainstay
  of filesharing systems.  And when Microsoft drops XP support, a workable
  open source toolkit could be very helpful to access legacy data from
 legacy
  applications. I've had this sort of thing happen with Windows, Mac, UNIX,
  and Linux software from obsolete operating systems. It's also handy for
 old
  games: I've got a really old Resident Evil game I can only play in
  emulation, because the hardware it ran on is broken. (I keep it in the
  basement so I can say I have a right to the emulator ROM images.)
 

 Did you CC the list? otherwise I'm the only one who recieved it. :)

 My question was retorical.

I'm afraid that some folks do think that pirated copies are free. Ethics
can be very difficult: is it ethical to steal from a thief? For someone
who's living in the I can steal it for free, why bother with a freeware
one world, explaining ethical or moral behavior can be awkward.


 But to respond a bit. It is always funny that the risc is being argued as
 reason not to do it while the main reason should be cause it is unethical.
 But... i also do make the same mistake. But that doesn't make it less true.

Oh, not always! Perhaps I've spent too much time around people whose
ethical values are horrible, trying to convince them by other means to do
the right thing.


 I fully agree with your message.

 gr
 Renzo



Wireless N availability and Atheros availability

2012-03-10 Thread leonardz
1) I can now run wireless N on phones and tablets, and my laptop when  in
Windows, but not when in OpenBSD.
 I understand that there is a lot of work to make this available in
openbsd, but is there a rough time line? I am running 5.1current , i386. The
card built in is the  Intel WiFi Link 5100 minpci card.
Is this likely to be available in 5.2, 5.3 ???

2) The Intel card is okay, but I am told the Atheros chipset is better
supported under OpenBSD. The chipset that looks most interesting is:

AR9001-3NX2 (AR9160+AR9106)2GHz/5GHz3x3:2PCI

Is this available in minpci for a laptop? If so which manufacturers make them?
I cannot seem to find a source for them

Thanks.


Len Zaifman



Re: Request for a new list: trolling

2012-03-10 Thread Brandon Weaver
Known lazy bastard.

On Mar 10, 2012, at 7:33 AM, 0xAAA 0x...@online.de wrote:

 It is  quite interesting that  any trolling message  gets more attention
than a
 real, OpenBSD  related problem (view  the threads of  the stupid guy  which
cant
 read installation instructions...)

 My suggestion: We  create a new list, eg. trolling  or smalltalk where
other
 users can discuss about senseless questions.

 And misc  should be about real  problems/discussions (like it was  before
stupid
 linus-nerds arrived on this list...)

 (sorry for that non-misc related message)



Re: Suggestion

2012-03-10 Thread Nomen Nescio
You wrote:

 On Friday 09 March 2012 13:10:13 Nomen Nescio wrote:
   Who in their right mind would EVER want to run this crap?
  
  You answered your own question. My guess? People who are too cheap to buy
  Windows and too stupid to figure out how to find a free copy of XP or Win 7
  on the net and do the activation or find a password. That's a pretty small
  user space.
 
 Free copy's of Windows? Do  they exist?

The point is if you want Windows you have two ways of getting it. You can
buy a copy or rip one off. Got it now? Either one runs better than FreactOS