Hello, I recently got a Qstarz BT-Q818XT GPS receiver
(http://www.qstarz.com/Products/GPS%20Products/BT-Q818XT-F.htm) which
contains an MTK vII/3329 chipset
(http://www.mediatek.com/en/product/info.php?sn=50). I got the
following when I plugged it into my laptop which is running
yesterday's
On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 9:11 AM, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org wrote:
No thanks.
I talked with a few people like this, and people who want to use rdate should
be using it as rdate -n probably, and in that case, they should use ntpd -s
instead.
I find rdate_flags useful on my work
On Mon, Jul 18, 2011 at 6:31 PM, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org
wrote:
There is ntp everywhere. Use:
server myownmachine.mynetwork.xx
servers pool.ntp.org
I often plug this laptop in to unknown stuff (or mirror/span ports or
ethernet taps) and run tcpdump so I don't want to run any
What do you think of making cksum output:
(SHA256) nonexistant.txt: MISSING
instead of FAILED and the extra output to stderr saying No such file
or directory?
This would make it easier to ignore the MISSING files but still see
those that FAILED the checksum.
Daniel
On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 11:25 AM, Henning Brauer
lists-openbsdt...@bsws.de wrote:
* Philip Guenther guent...@gmail.com [2010-10-29 19:48]:
Group-per-user setups solve this by letting people safely have a umask
of 007 or 002. When they do work in a directory whose group is a
secondary group,
On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 10:12 PM, Brynet bry...@gmail.com wrote:
I believe the real problem here is that you're allowing users on your
systems that are incapable of properly setting the group/world
permissions of their home directories.
My employer lets a variety of people on their systems -
As detailed in the following link I have to disable pciide and set my
BIOS to use SATA drives in 'compatible' mode in order to use my HP2133
netbook with the cheap 4GB SSD it came with:
http://www.nabble.com/Re%3A-Interrupt-problems-with-recent-snapshot-p20160942.html
I looked into the problem