In my case, I don't generally think to check the time first thing, but then I
remember. If you are not running chrony or ntp or something similar, I'd
recommend doing so. We have as part of our update procedures a step where time
is checked. That can be done manually or automatically.
--
On Wed, 24 Jun 2020, Rich Shepard wrote:
I'd appreciate a pointer to more advanced page setup than the paper size
and margins.
I found the dia mail list at gnome.org and subscribed.
Rich
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Michael
Are you referring to services? For example, nfs behaves weirdly when time
isn't sync'd.
--
Cathy L. Smith
IT Engineer
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Operated by Battelle for the
U.S. Department of Energy
Phone: 509.375.2687
Fax: 509.375.4399
Email: cathy.sm...@pnnl.gov
That's a funny coincidence. I've been dealing with gummed up timestamps
today. Turned out to be isolated to the office365 web interface since
every other application that interacts with that inbox seems fine, even
the native Outlook client.
Nothing is broken since it's just an error in the
I'm trying to use dia to create an E-R diagram and want to change the page
measurements from centimeters to inches and to understand what the font
values (such as 0.70 represent). I've read the manual and searched the web
without finding answers.
When I first started dia I found a dialog box
No, if you click on it, it reports as empty. I look at it as a black hole.
Stuff goes in but not much comes out Actually you can download
what is called the code plug, but the program does that so I assume
it is talking to something on that device that does not show up as a
file. The funny
I was. In my case, it was the web-based email RoundCube.
On 2020-06-24 10:22, Smith, Cathy wrote:
Michael
Are you referring to services? For example, nfs behaves weirdly when
time isn't sync'd.
--
Cathy L. Smith
IT Engineer
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Operated by Battelle for
On Wed, 24 Jun 2020, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
After my "fun" last week (the wandering time) I've added checking time
consistancy to my list of thing to make sure are OK after a big upgrade.
My question is: would you suspect time being off as a suspect when other
things aren't working?
Some
On Wed, Jun 24, 2020, 09:25 Chuck Hast wrote:
> Under Win10 it comes up as E: removable disk, under device
> Manager it says it is a STM microdevices removable flash
> drive.
>
> On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 11:11 AM Chuck Hast wrote:
>
> > It is the control processor of the radio it is a
> >
After my "fun" last week (the wandering time) I've added checking time
consistancy to my list of thing to make sure are OK after a big upgrade.
My question is: would you suspect time being off as a suspect when other
things aren't working?
--
Michael Rasmussen, Portland Oregon
Be
Under Win10 it comes up as E: removable disk, under device
Manager it says it is a STM microdevices removable flash
drive.
On Wed, Jun 24, 2020 at 11:11 AM Chuck Hast wrote:
> It is the control processor of the radio it is a
> STM32F405VGT6.
> I can send you the radio service manual if that
It is the control processor of the radio it is a
STM32F405VGT6.
I can send you the radio service manual if that will help. From what
I can see it appears that it is treated like some sort of memory, and
the radio code plug (file that sets up the channels in the radio) that
is loaded into the radio
I upgrade my Arch with yay https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/yay/
You type yay
That's it! (ok, you have to approve all the AUR (Arch User Repository,
which has like everything not baked into the main release))
Love it, been running since forever. It's not that hard to install
official Arch, and
Daily driver since 2011 or sometime around then.
Rolling release, it is all handled by `pacman -Syu`
Do that as often as you feel the need. Or before opening a ticket with
Arch, that's the #1 thing to do with them.
Kernel switching? As in upgrades? As in having multiple kernels
installed and
Daily driver since 2011 or sometime around then.
Rolling release, it is all handled by `pacman -Syu`
Do that as often as you feel the need. Or before opening a ticket with
Arch, that's the #1 thing to do with them.
Kernel switching? As in upgrades? As in having multiple kernels
installed and
What do you mean by kernel switching? I just install whatever is current,
which is usually in the regular package archives a few days after the
stable kernel is released. For example, I'm on 5.7.5-arch1-1 right now. It
is possible to get into a situation where you want a kernel module, but you
I'm a long time Debian user and former small shop Sys Admin who came to
fall in love with Debian's stability and the apt package management system.
Arch seems very modern with its rolling release, ability to switch kernels
on the fly and snap, flatpak support. I understand all of these things
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