Some times these access points have a rule configured whether you can
connect to their web interface via WLAN or LAN only?
Did you try to access the web interface from both LAN and WLAN sides?
Tomas
On Wed, 2019-02-27 at 07:45 -0800, Rich Shepard wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Feb 2019, Rich Shepard
Here is my advice:
1. go outside, away from your computer - panic
2. when you calm down do back and send output of: mount
3. If you notice that something is mounted more than once - and
without remount option - wait for other people to respond with ideas
4. If 3. is the case rub your lucky
There has been many replies - I've been diligently removing them
because they were all hopeless and/or desperate, despite finding some
truth in all them.
As you can see, I could not let this go - it is symptomatic to how the
society organizes and clusters into incoherent/clan based groups with
I am be interested :-)
On Tue, 2019-01-01 at 19:40 -0800, Russell Senior wrote:
> Excellent! Moar days to procrastinate!
>
> If people want to hear about my temperature sensor array re-
> engineering
> project, an update to the talk I did in 2013, including zeromq and
> software
> defined radio,
I was kind of curious what is Google Earth. So
I tried GEarth on bunch of Ubuntu installs both 16.04 and 18.04
I experienced no problems with GoogleEarth after doing following:
1. Download:
wget -Nc https://dl.google.com/dl/earth/client/current/google-earth-
pro-stable_current_amd64.deb
Ctrl-d is EOF - I'd be careful here.
On Thu, 2018-12-06 at 09:29 -0800, Rich Shepard wrote:
> In LibreOffice-6.1.2, Tools -> Configure -> Keyboard allows user-
> assigned
> actions to Ctrl-D for deleting everything but a single character. Is
> there a
> way to assign the same function as the
This is turning into general discussion - still I see the original
point of this email tread in a need to reuse existing VirtualBox
virtual machine image/installation.
So it makes little sense to try do anything but VirtualBox.
Often, the decision to use vBox was made decade or even longer ago.
Beware - this is intended to be funny, but factual post, I cannot help
it! This post is based on my speculation, not factual observation.
Difficulties with creating bootable disk, especially when using GUIs,
are often caused by a defective mouse operator. When USB is plugged in,
GUI tends to
:
> On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 7:10 PM Tomas K >
> wrote:
>
> > If I'd to make a bet - I'd be betting on some /lib versus /lib64
> > snafu
> > while running from live cd/dvd/usb
> >
> > If that is so perhaps binding the missing lib or fixing br
in/bash (checking binary links for the bash program on
> your
> internal drive to see if it behaves like an executable file)
> uname -m (checking the arch that you are currently running in case of
> a
> 32/64bit mixup)
>
> On Sat, Nov 24, 2018 at 7:01 PM Dick Steffens
Are you running it as root or using sudo?
just checking ...
On Sat, 2018-11-24 at 18:48 -0800, Dick Steffens wrote:
> On 11/24/18 6:40 PM, Ben Koenig wrote:
> > Skip the second argument then, just run "chroot /mnt/hd"
> > Always make sure you are root and check for spaces and whatnot.
>
>
chroot command simply sets different root directory for a command -
thus that command:
a) sees different root directory
b) cannot access anything outside that directory (aka chroot jail)
Example:
1. Imagine you just mounted:
mount /dev/sda2 /mnt/hd
2. Executing:
sudo chroot
Unless you feel the need to resolve your issues:
- You might need to distribute in appimage or inside a container for
docker.
Tomas
On Thu, 2018-11-22 at 09:18 -0800, VY wrote:
> Dear All
>
> I am facing an issue and want to get some ideas how to move forward.
>
> I have developed a Python
t cup-a-tea.
---
Storage is slow, and who likes politics or taxes.
Hope it helps, Tomas
On Mon, 2018-10-15 at 08:39 -0700, John Jason Jordan wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Oct 2018 01:27:31 -0700
> Tomas K dijo:
>
> > It seems that it would be safer to have the DAS array attached
> >
It seems that it would be safer to have the DAS array attached
permanently to your NAS and access it over the network. That is if your
NAS has eSATA port.
That way it would be permanently attached like internal drives and that
should avoid these type of synchronization errors - Especially when
The answer is - Do not start rsync until your NAS is mounted and
working.
Simple if statement in your backup script should take care of it.
You can do it number of ways - here is one - checking that there is any
content in the directory before starting rsync (in bash):
#!/bin/bash
settings to set disk sleep timer. It is a great way
to prolong disk life and reduce heat and noise. By default it is off.
Tomas
On Sat, 2018-09-29 at 16:16 -0700, John Jason Jordan wrote:
> On Sat, 29 Sep 2018 14:28:43 -0700
> Tomas K dijo:
>
> > It appears that you eith
It appears that you either did not have the directory mounted or it was
in power saving mode (disks spun down, etc.)
I would recommend that you to either manually make sure that the source
and destinations are both available or setup some wait loop in your
script to allow and trigger mounting.
On Sun, 2018-06-17 at 20:39 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 06/17/2018 05:50 PM, Tyrell Jentink wrote:
> > Oh... I guess I only answered one question...
>
>
>
> >
> > To the second question: When you want to do something that no one
> > else has ever done,
FTFY: or nobody seems to be
Did you check if you could install some of the missing man/manuals you
care about? Not all man pages are selected for default install.
on my opensuse 42.3:
installed:
sudo zypper search man | awk '$1 !~ /^i/ && $2 ~ /(^|-)(man|manual)$/
{print} $1 ~ /^i/ && $3 ~ /(^|-)(man|manual)$/ {print}' |
be good UI element - not in
the way of anything, not distracting me from writing this.
If I remember, I will ask you some day to point finger at it and show
me.
:-) Tomas
On Sat, 2018-05-19 at 12:04 -0700, Galen Seitz wrote:
> On 05/09/2018 02:18 AM, Tomas K wrote:
> > Thanks all for
I'd be rather careful with modifying users on existing system - unless
you know exactly what you are doing. It can have pretty nasty side
effects appearing/re-appearing and entertaining you for long time to
come, at the 'best' possible times.
Local users and file ownership in Linux is established
should, you can do it this way:
sudo chown -R $USER /media/dick/a857c2f6-6e1a-4afe-9d6e-
8109105a740/someDirOrFile
Then, you can try if your access to the disk is any better.
Hope it helps,Tomas
On Wed, 2018-05-16 at 09:00 -0700, Dick Steffens wrote:
> On 05/16/2018 01:48 AM, Tomas K wrote:
> &
Great to hear that the file copy problem is out of the way.If you keep
that rsync command in your toolbox, it works incrementally. The next
time you run it, it will only copy new files on the other way. If you
change the source and destination, it will copy new files to the other
machine.
To see
Thanks all for trying, I really appreciate it.
I am now confused, on the top of just not knowing.
I guess, I was naive to seek simple functional description after seeing
all those mountains of buzzwords on compiz.org.
It gets even worse with more unknown stuff such as Aero and Mac OS -
GPU and
I am trying to rid of some old junk - and found unopened, unused,
shrink wrapped WinXP SP1 installation disk with the installation guide,
etc. books Anybody needs/wants it?
This proposition is/sounds pretty bad, particularly on this email list
- but there seems to be some old stuff collectors
For what it is wort it 42.2 will not boot your new HW, you either
install 42.3 or do not waste your time. I know, I have tried that on
the same CPU and chipset before.
I am not trying to start any flame wars, I just do not know much about
this deep into Ubuntu - 42.3 has backported your CPU and
I think that you are against the physics here, not against any
particular piece of a software.
Normal RGB pixel is 3*8b=24b
1920*1080*24b*30fps=1,492,992,000
Yes, that is 1.5Gb/s just in raw pixels no image frame or network
overhead. Gamers typically prefer 60fps to feel fast shooters and need
to
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