You have watched only that scene.
note: a spoiler of this great movie. You might miss one of the great art
works.
He fabricated a police car and police uniform then robbed a bank.
That guy is the baddest man in the world:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMZ1KCZDggY
I don't really understand why you started to talk about yakuza in this
context though, because "Thank you very macho" is just kind of a Japanese
standard greeting, it is called "oyaji gag" (old men's joke) for this kind of
a congregational context. However, as I said, I hated yakuza. Because
>Thank you very macho.
Yakuza are very welcome.
I could not count the number of times I've built or upgraded kernels on
Debian stable the past few years. There was no effort - just build and
install, or point to jxself's repo and give an apt command. But maybe
bringing a kernel in from backports is a lot of trouble for some reason, I
Upgrading the kernel for Debian unstable/testing is very easy.
Upgrading the kernel for Debian stable is very hard, basically only when
there is a newer version in the backport repository. However, if you want to
upgrade to a even newer kernel, you would probably have to do what I said.
Thank you very macho. I am currently engaged in designing a car body. I got
some sudden inspirations. I am going to sell it to Ferrari.
It seems that that finally began obeying my order (about the terminal D). It
seems wiser. Kind of Win-Win. You put me out... I eventually settled in
Inkscape after tried several painting software, so it is OK though. The first
impression is right as I thought.
That's great news! You need to show us some artwork soon!
I don't know what to think about what you've written here. Changing a kernel
on Debian is very simple.
Those are network errors. You aren't contacting the mirrors.
Six years ago, VertPingouin, on the French-speaking forum, made that WiFi
chipset work by adding "acpi=off" to the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT variable
in /etc/default/grub (you can edit that file by executing 'sudo pluma
/etc/default/grub' in a terminal), executing 'update-grub' and
The driver is in the kernel image. If free, the firmware may be in an
independent package, such as open-ath8k-htc-firmware. Executing 'lsusb' in a
terminal would indicate what is the chipset.
Follow the instructions on https://jxself.org/linux-libre/ (and notice that
the 4.4 version is supported until January 2022, which is not that far away).
I don't have any good idea on manually updating kernel on a fixed-release
distribution. Typically you have to rely on backports.
I once tried to do so on Debian stable, but when I wanted to manually install
a new kernel, I had to first manually gather all its dependencies unavailable
in
The image I downloaded is
https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current-live/amd64/bt-hybrid/debian-live-10.4.0-amd64-gnome.iso.torrent
I don't know which image you want me to try, but you could pass me the link.
Thanks
Try another Debian installation media, for example the 10.4 binary
installation DVD image, or the weekly build of Debian Installer (testing).
If your AR9287 still works under Debian 9 (old stable), then there is nothing
wrong with it. Like other ath5k/9k cards, it requires no firmware. Even
Hi, until a few days ago I had Debian 9 installed and my wifi works without
any problems, without requiring the installation of any package. My wifi
board is next:
2:00.0 Network controller: Qualcomm Atheros AR9287 Wireless Network Adapter
(PCI-Express) (rev 01)
Subsystem: Foxconn
I got a
https://www.newegg.com/comfast-cf-wu825n-usb-2-0/p/0XM-000R-00045
vid pid 0bda8178
It got tested on trisquel 8
4.4.0 178
It works.
Where is the software for the wifi card located in
trisquel?
how do you install free kernel
4.4.x on debian 10?
Thank you.
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