Re: [Bug 464125] Re: Nvidia driver modules fail to upgrade on rt kernel doing studio ubuntu distro upgrade from 9.04 to 9.10

2009-11-05 Thread rbleeker
On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 01:39, Bryce Harrington br...@bryceharrington.org wrote: Aha, there was one update to -nvidia, which included a patch to fix broken build on -rt kernels.  I bet the upgrade you referred to was from 185.18.36-0ubuntu8 to 185.18.36-0ubuntu9, which added a patch to fix -rt

[Bug 466456] [NEW] package nvidia-185-kernel-source 185.18.36-0ubuntu9 failed to install/upgrade:

2009-10-31 Thread rbleeker
Public bug reported: Standard system upgrade from Jaunty to Karmic All i can read in the small terminal that's below the Distribution Upgrade windows is IOerror: [Errno 9] Bad file descriptor The card that's in the machine is an nVidia 6600 GTX ProblemType: Package Architecture: amd64 Date: Sat

[Bug 466456] Re: package nvidia-185-kernel-source 185.18.36-0ubuntu9 failed to install/upgrade:

2009-10-31 Thread rbleeker
** Attachment added: BootDmesg.txt http://launchpadlibrarian.net/34767525/BootDmesg.txt ** Attachment added: CurrentDmesg.txt http://launchpadlibrarian.net/34767526/CurrentDmesg.txt ** Attachment added: Dependencies.txt http://launchpadlibrarian.net/34767527/Dependencies.txt **

[Bug 909488] Re: nautilus-dropbox forbids dropbox's non-free binaries to replace themselves by properly installing dropbox system-wide

2013-03-01 Thread rbleeker
Even though this is an old discussion, I would still like to add a few things to it. I'm a systems administrator and I believe most of my kind would agree with me when I say that installing binaries in a user folder is bad practice in general. I work in an organization where Dropbox is used by a

[Bug 1306991] Re: pip stops with ImportError for request-Modul

2015-04-24 Thread rbleeker
I am aware that this might not be the right place to ask, but here it goes anyway: Can anyone explain to me why python-pip installs requirements for livestreamer in /usr/local/ ? This is against FHS and Debian policies about what /usr/local/ may be used for. I used to work in an environment where