http://www.xen.dds.nl/f/i/screenshots/ubuntu/ubuntu_boot-leakage.html
Apart from the initial cryptsetup prompt (that could also use
polishing, but that's a different thing).
Regards, Xen.
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Why not a little bit of modesty
I don't think any of them are great (as wallpapers)?.
This is just from some idiot bystander, as I'm sure we'd all call me
;-).
Alberto Salvia Novella schreef op 19-12-2015 19:42:
In order to make the next release of Ubuntu specially eye candy, I
have cr
Alberto Salvia Novella schreef op 20-12-2015 1:40:
Xen:
I don't think any of them are great (as wallpapers)?
Have you actually tried them as wallpaper? 😮
Doesn't make a rat's difference.
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I just want to say that such a thing can make a great difference if it
is included by default.
Everything or anything that needs a customary script to be installed
kinda increases the investment required to use the feature by 8000%.
And if you have a 100 such things you want to change, it can
Not sure if this list is getting read much but:
- in a default install (now Talking Kubuntu 15.10) everything works but
a small thing has to go wrong for the system to fail entirely
- this is not a resilient thing and it should get changed if the system
is to be anything that allows people to
Colin Law schreef op 28-03-2016 18:38:
Are these not issues for upstream Nautilus developers to consider
rather than Ubuntu?
The point is really that if people "downstream" *care* their voice
becomes stronger 'upstream'.
If a number of people downstream say "hey, yes this is a great idea" i
You completely misunderstand the point of my message it seems. And then
go and say that I don't understand stuff.
And providing such standard (wikipedia) links is just very
condescending, you know.
If the halt-on-fstab-problem is Ubuntu related, then it is clear my
message should have been s
Tom H schreef op 31-03-16 10:38:
> On Tue, Mar 29, 2016 at 1:31 AM, Xen wrote:
>> Colin Law schreef op 28-03-2016 18:38:
>>> Are these not issues for upstream Nautilus developers to consider
>>> rather than Ubuntu?
>> The point is really that if people "
Bryan Quigley schreef op 06-04-16 22:35:
> Hi all,
>
> The naming scheme of just "Ubuntu 14.04.4 LTS" is no longer
> meaningful when it comes to determining what kernel/mesa/xorg you are
> on. It's also confusing to many users what 14.04.4 actually means
> and it makes determining if you are su
John Johansen schreef op 06-04-16 23:52:
> On 04/06/2016 02:32 PM, Dimitri John Ledkov wrote:
>> LTS has 5 years of support.
>>
>> There are multiple kernels available with full 5 year support:
>> - original (from .0 original release & .1 release)
>> - next-lts (from a .5 point release)
>>
>> Inter
Alan Pope schreef op 22-04-16 00:11:
> Thankfully you don't need to trust it for it to be true. We made a
> rapid and logical decision to mitigate the relentless spam we were
> getting. This isn't a perfect solution. It's now harder for people to
> do drive by edits, and we (admins) are getting nu
This is about Kubuntu but I am sure it would apply equally to a Unity
installation system.
There are some things that are incomprehensible in life. Performance of
computers is sometimes one of them.
I had a Windows 8 64 bit system with 4GB of memory of which usually 1GB
was available and
Daniel Balosh schreef op 23-04-2016 23:52:
Hi,
This is not new, still thought worth bringing this up again: the
ability to install packages using apt-get as non root is important.
apt-get is wonderful, let's use it as noon root.
The perfect solution:
1. User can have- "non root install" privile
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 24-04-2016 8:34:
It's not that simple. You can not just provide a --non-root option for
apt-get and dpkg, that simply redirect installing to $HOME/bin,
$HOME/lib etc., since a lot of packages require the root privileges to
add system wide variables, change security settin
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 31-05-2016 5:19:
GRsecurity is preventing others from employing their rights under
version 2 the GPL to redistribute
(by threatening them with a non-renewal of a contract to recive this
patch to the linux kernel.)
(GRsecurity is a derivative work of the linu
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 01-06-2016 16:15:
He has frustrated the purpose of the agreement (the grant) he had with
the original licensor, and thus
the grant fails. In other words: he has violated the license.
So what do you want? For him to go out of business?
Do you want free acc
https://www.reddit.com/r/KotakuInAction/comments/4grdtb/censorship_linux_developer_steals_page_from_randi/
I also want to respond by saying that although everyone is falling over
the Grsecurity developer, especially with relation to that reddit post
you cite, and even though his responses migh
plain why someone would need to do the suing and for what
reason.
I want to add in conclusion.
That it should be. About.
The right. To make a difference.
It should be about the right to make a difference. The most important
right is the right to make a difference ;-).
Regards, and ku
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 01-06-2016 23:57:
To my knowledge, the intention of most of those who license their work
out under the GPL is essentially to recieve a different form of
payment:
Maybe that is a subverted reason now. I don't think that was so in the
past. This is a rather
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 02-06-2016 0:22:
June 1 2016 4:27 PM, "Xen" wrote:
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 01-06-2016 16:15:
He has frustrated the purpose of the agreement (the grant) he had
with
the original licensor, and thus
the grant fails. In other wor
Sam Bull schreef op 02-06-2016 13:36:
On Thu, 2016-06-02 at 12:31 +0200, Xen wrote:
> So I think the unfairness is very much there now. Spengler is now
> actually getting something for nothing, where before he was not,
> and
> the whole intention of many of the contributors to li
Sam Bull schreef op 02-06-2016 16:33:
On Thu, 2016-06-02 at 14:35 +0200, Xen wrote:
The intention of the GPL is not really relevant.
What happens is that the authors remain to have a say about how theÂ
product is used, if copyright is at play (at least the idea ofÂ
copyright).
Yes, and the
Sam Bull schreef op 03-06-2016 12:02:
On Thu, 2016-06-02 at 20:39 +0200, Xen wrote:
> This exactly has happened many times. If you take a proprietary
> piece
> of software, make changes and resell it (breaking the license
> agreement
> you received it under), then the origi
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 05-06-2016 7:01:
Soylent news has published an article/discussion on GRSecurity, RMS,
etc
If you're interested it's here:
https://soylentnews.org/article.pl?sid=16/06/02/214243
You know, at risk of sparking more controversy here:
That article only summar
Sam Bull schreef op 06-06-2016 17:02:
Sam Bull schreef op 06-06-2016 17:02:
As the patches substantially change the original code base, it is very
likely to be considered a derivative, without needing to take into
account all these other more complex factors.
Of course, thank you, thanks clea
In case it matters, personally I wish people would just drop their hate
of Microsoft and actually bind the Windows key on many keyboards to
something useful. It is just not bound. Why? It is one of the most
useful keys in existence and has been for a long time on the Windows
platform, but it do
Jan Claeys schreef op 25-06-2016 2:28:
While nowadays there are only two naming schemes that are still
commonly used (IBM PC-based & Apple), a long time ago many computer
companies had their own keyboard layouts & key names. Â On many old
keyboards these keys were named the "meta" and "super" key
Dale Amon schreef op 27-06-2016 0:50:
I believe it is called the Super key? What a stupid name to begin
with! And Alt is called the Meta key? Equally stupid.
[...]
What on earth were people thinking when they tried to get away from
calling it "windows key" and "alt key"
While nowadays
Dimitri John Ledkov schreef op 30-06-2016 20:14:
My current hunch is like this at the moment:
- 18.04 to still have an i386 port in the archive, and be upgradable
to.
- 18.04 not having desktop/server install media (however maybe even
releases before that)
- 18.04 has "ubuntu-desktop" but w
Well thank you for your words, and apologies for not getting back soon
enough.
concernedfoss...@teknik.io schreef op 07-06-2016 9:56:
My own life in the Linux world is constant opposition.
Every idea you bring to the table, gets shot down.
You get no support for anything you want to do. If it
Xen schreef op 06-07-2016 8:50:
There is nothing left to see what is going on, and to "not let your
sight be clouded by eyes of hate".
I meant: There is nothing left but to see what is going on, and to "not
let your sight be clouded by eyes of hate".
You know, observe
Tom H schreef op 09-07-2016 20:45:
On Tue, Jul 5, 2016 at 4:15 AM, Ralf Mardorf
wrote:
On Tue, 5 Jul 2016 03:39:48 -0400, Tom H wrote:
On Mon, Jul 4, 2016 at 3:58 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
It's still more user-friendly to disable secure boot, than to deal
with it, isn't it?
It's certainly si
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-07-2016 10:15:
You and I are advanced users and using secure boot at least is
uncomfortable for us, we don't know, if it could cause an issue at a
bad
timing. It might expand security, but for my computer usage I didn't
experience security issues in more than 10 year
Dale Amon schreef op 14-07-2016 16:55:
I don't particularly like Secure Boot and UEFI, and in fact for
development work I prefer having the ability to turn them off.
That said, I would almost certainly want to set it up for a
spacecraft system. There are reasons for Secure Boot if you
are securi
Brendan Perrine schreef op 15-07-2016 8:26:
Yes and secure boot is different for different usecases. I can see
secure boot being geniunely useful for an atm on end not that I think
there are implementations that use ubuntu that I know about. But if
say you boot a malicous live os on the atm then
microsoft outlook schreef op 17-07-2016 1:16:
Hello,
I was prompted to setup a "Passphrase" to encrypt the "private folder"
on my system, after upgrading. I typed a new passphrase immediately
in a terminal window that appeared. It occurred to me that I might
have typed the wrong passphrase. Ub
John Moser schreef op 19-07-2016 23:48:
What Ubuntu needs most is a simple, non-buried toggle option to show
the boot process--including displaying the bootloader, displaying the
kernel load messages, and listing which services are loading and
already-loaded during the graphical boot. Ubuntu's
Markus Lankeit schreef op 20-07-2016 0:01:
Also, the whole network device naming scheme is just a fiasco...
Before, I could have a simple template for all my systems... now every
system requires a unique template that takes me to the HW level to
figure out what it might be. And this is supposed
Markus Lankeit schreef op 20-07-2016 23:54:
Hi Xen,
Thanks for going to bat for us on this--sorry that no one wanted to
hear you. Odd that a Debian dev would balk at this... Last I loaded
the latest Debian (about a month ago), I got the good-old "ethx"
interface names. Hmm
Tot
Xen schreef op 21-07-2016 5:00:
I believe the way to turn off the system is to do:
ln -s /dev/null /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
It was ln -s /dev/null /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-setup-link.rules.
But that doesn't work, it used to work somewhere at some point.
But no longer
Martin Pitt schreef op 21-07-2016 7:09:
Xen [2016-07-21 5:22 +0200]:
It was ln -s /dev/null /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-setup-link.rules.
But that doesn't work, it used to work somewhere at some point.
It does work, other than for USB devices, which is LP: #1593379. It
got fixed in x
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 21-07-2016 11:57:
On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 03:00:47 +, Xen wrote:
I still don't like seeing this enp4s0 (under the previous motherboard
it was enp3s0, go figure) whenever I look under the hood and detest it
to the bone.
Hi,
this number already changes for my m
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 21-07-2016 15:44:
On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 15:14:28 +0200, Xen wrote:
You can't change installed PCI devices on the fly
No, I need to turn of the computer and after removing or mounting a
sound card, I need to boot the Linux install. However, I only have one
network d
C de-Avillez schreef op 21-07-2016 21:48:
On Thu, 21 Jul 2016 14:19:34 +0200
Xen wrote:
> FWIW, this is the *only* reply to this thread that I will ever do.
> I'm too busy following by secret agenda to reply to the other
> mails...
Rightly so! This is important work you do.
C de-Avillez schreef op 21-07-2016 22:19:
But here you are referring to a mail thread on systemd-devel, and
ranting about how people that know what they are talking about (and
even tried to argue with you about it) do not agree with you.
I never said they didn't know what they are talking abou
Matthew Paul Thomas schreef op 22-07-2016 12:28:
This technique could be extended to the rest of the startup. Instead of
the dots, show a determinate progress bar (that is, one that fills up).
In addition, *if* the progress bar hasn’t moved at all in the past ~5
seconds, show the most recent sta
Jason Benjamin schreef op 03-09-2016 18:52:
There is also a frontend with youtube-dl builtin called youtube-dlg
installable with a ppa:
http://www.webupd8.org/2014/03/multi-platform-youtube-dl-gui-youtube.html
(blog)
On 09/03/2016 09:31 AM, Petter Adsen wrote:
If you want/need a newer version
Thierry Andriamirado schreef op 12-09-2016 19:54:
I understand that the Ubuntu developers must choose.
What is important now is to know that doing advocacy for Linux in
developing countries must integrate this 2021 deadline.
Late to the ball, but...
I think that if you really did the calcuat
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 18-09-2016 7:19:
Perhaps the data is already there, but not in the way you wish. Maybe
it's a complete step into another direction. It might be just the first
step, of other steps, that maybe will follow one after the other.
I'm not sure what you are on, or on about...
Oliver Grawert schreef op 18-09-2016 15:09:
hi,
On So, 2016-09-18 at 14:14 +0200, Xen wrote:
Â
That won't install Ubuntu onto a 32-bit system, now will it.
it will, and snappy images will actually be staying around for 32bit
since they target embedded, where you even still see a lot new
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 18-09-2016 16:01:
with or without 32 bit support.
The whole point was that "with or without" is not good enough.
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Oliver Grawert schreef op 27-09-2016 18:35:
hi,
Am Dienstag, den 27.09.2016, 08:51 -0700 schrieb paulwhee...@cox.net:
Â
Package info: Version: 1:5.1.4-0ubuntu1Â (xenial-updates)
Unless I am mistaken, you are the package maintainers, so it does not
matter what Linux system it is installed on, i
Oliver Grawert schreef op 28-09-2016 11:38:
whatever results from this is definitely not supportable on an ubuntu
list ... mint isnt a flavour like {x,k,l,ed}ubuntu{-mate} where distro
 changes are collaboratively made in the archive and used by everyone
with the same results, there are modifica
Oliver Grawert schreef op 28-09-2016 13:29:
beyond this how do you know the bug is not caused by a (possibly)
patched libboost, a gtk patch mint applies, held back upgrades or some
weird filesystem mangling the mint installer does ... there are
millions of possibilities you can not take into acc
I said I would create a mockup, well here it is.
http://www.xen.dds.nl/test/
It annoys the living shit out of me because it won't allow me to click
buttons but it is not more than 90% done (this version).
The idea is pretty self-evident but I hate myself here ;-).
The annoying part is that i
Himanshu Shekhar schreef op 03-10-2016 16:33:
3. Flatpak vs Snaps. Both are about to turn great. However, I feel
like all major decision makers should come together to work on one
standardized desktop ecosystem, and rule out the chaos of different
distributions. Both are independent efforts to s
Xen schreef op 05-10-2016 3:32:
In short, the discrepancy between what a user can do and what root can
do, is too big.
The result of this is that most services are installed completely
system-wide and there is nothing less than that.
Now you may think containers are a solution to that but
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 9:16:
On 05 Oct 2016, at 04:05, Xen "questioned" the way things are managed
system wide and per user. I recommend to do either a minimalist Ubuntu
install, e.g. use the server image and uncheck all recommended package
groups, then start to install
JMZ schreef op 05-10-2016 7:50:
Is there really a huge learning curve for .bashrc and xinit? .bashrc
is mostly a way to make an alias list.
What I fear about snappy and other modularized systems is unnecessary
complexity. I fear that simple commands such as tar -t are going to be
replaced with a
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 14:11:
On 05 Oct 2016, at 12:09, Xen wrote:
[snip] Main problems in Linux have not been solved and now big
solutions are built on top of it, and the consequence is that those
high level solutions must be as shabby as the low level underneath,
but now a 1000
Oliver Grawert schreef op 05-10-2016 14:41:
hi,
On Mi, 2016-10-05 at 04:05 +0200, Xen wrote:
Xen schreef op 05-10-2016 3:32:
>
> In short, the discrepancy between what a user can do and what root
> can
> do, is too big.
The result of this is that most services are installed comple
Oliver Grawert schreef op 05-10-2016 14:44:
i must say that in many aspects i find nmcli more powerfull than
ifconfig for scripting ...Â
it changed a lot within the last years ...Â
one big disadvantage is still that it requires a lot of dependencies ip
or ifconfig do not require ... but disk s
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 15:31:
Not to mention that there at least is one daemon that should run with
user privileges
only:http://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/xenial/man1/jackd.1.html
Jackd sounds very good but it probably won't be installable *by* a user
ever even if you did so, an
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 15:44:
On 05 Oct 2016, at 14:49, Xen wrote:
Ion Windows it is very easy to put some application on some usb stick
and run it from there, but this is hardly possible even in Linux.
You don't need to link against shared libraries. Neither a container
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 15:56:
On 05 Oct 2016, at 14:59, Himanshu Shekhar wrote:
Standardized things, at least for a distro.
Each distro has got it's policy, a distro specific standard. We could
chose the distro that fits best to our needs.
I didn't want to respond to this idea, bu
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 17:02:
o
a
On 05 Oct 2016, at 16:23, Xen wrote:
Errors? Hopefully warnings, such as the GTK GUI crap. When launching a
GUI by CLI I sometimes add 2>/dev/null ;).
KScreen. Lots of it.
Of course there are probably "session" services
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 17:05:
On 05 Oct 2016, at 16:30, Xen wrote:
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 05-10-2016 15:31:
let alone that some people don't use fstab at all on systemd
installs.
So what do they use instead?
systemd
I still use systemd with fstab.
Are you intentio
It appears that SystemD does not allow for services to just be started
when a shutdown target is reached or is in the process or being reached.
The libnss-ldap package contains a script that enumerates low-ranking
usernames (from system users) and adds them to the
nss_initgroups_ignoreusers op
Colin Watson schreef op 06-10-2016 13:36:
And yet you then go on to describe more or less how to do exactly that
using ExecStop. (Yes, this is technically "stop" rather than "start"
and requires having a pseudo-service "started" before then, but I think
that's an uninteresting matter of semanti
Colin Watson schreef op 05-10-2016 21:44:
On Wed, Oct 05, 2016 at 04:23:38PM +0200, Xen wrote:
Oliver Grawert schreef op 05-10-2016 14:41:
>along with that click packages are user packages and being used in
>ubuntu products on sale since 2015 (snaps will replace them
>eventually).
Brendan Perrine schreef op 06-10-2016 23:54:
On Wed, 05 Oct 2016 14:49:21 +0200
Xen wrote:
might not even be a problem.
I honestly wonder why you need to run programs off a usb stick. I
remember even when I was a windows users thinking why do I need that.
I have run entire installed systems
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 06-10-2016 12:42:
Just a very laste note.
On Wed, 2016-10-05 at 22:29 +0200, Xen wrote:
>> In Windows
Yes you conveniently break off my statement but (I had to look for it)
it was about something that has *nothing* to do with security as it
dealth with network
Colin Law schreef op 08-10-2016 18:29:
On 8 October 2016 at 17:21, Xen wrote:
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 06-10-2016 12:42:
Just a very laste note.
On Wed, 2016-10-05 at 22:29 +0200, Xen wrote:
>> In Windows
Yes you conveniently break off my statement but (I had to look for
it)
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 9:28:
On 8 October 2016 at 23:58, Xen wrote:
Colin Law schreef op 08-10-2016 18:29:
On 8 October 2016 at 17:21, Xen wrote:
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 06-10-2016 12:42:
Just a very laste note.
On Wed, 2016-10-05 at 22:29 +0200, Xen wrote:
>> In W
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 14:38:
On 9 October 2016 at 12:56, Xen wrote:
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 9:28:
...
I was not commenting on any particular topic, merely pointing out
that
that Ralf (I think) said there are some things that Linux "does not
allow" and you ans
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 09-10-2016 15:05:
I didn't read all your trolling,
If you are going to call other people trolls for having different
opinions, do you then still expect your own opinions to be respected by
those people, or by other people in general?
however, what I already read is
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 16:48:
On 9 October 2016 at 15:43, Xen wrote:
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 14:38:
On 9 October 2016 at 12:56, Xen wrote:
Colin Law schreef op 09-10-2016 9:28:
...
I was not commenting on any particular topic, merely pointing out
that
that Ralf (I
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 19:07:
On 09/10/16 17:32, Xen wrote:
The same is true with mounting samba shares, it is not possible
with any degree of ease, today. Of course, I want to work on it,
but I can't do everything alone, or at the same time.
I'll just leave this
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 19:39:
OK, I'll bite..
On 09/10/16 18:26, Xen wrote:
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 19:07: These are not
consistently mounted, is what I was talking about. You will have to
go to that mount point (browse to that network share) every tim
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 09-10-2016 20:12:
Hi,
this time I read your complete mail, I just didn't watch the video.
A very last reply from me.
If you notice, that low level software requires improvement, you could
assume that this isn't something Ubuntu developers could change. A
feature request
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 21:17:
On 09/10/16 19:53, Xen wrote:
I am pretty sure that any application that does not support GVFS
will not see those mounts so easily. You will have to symlink them
and that defeats the purpose of the system in a certain sense.
There is no default
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 21:37:
On 09/10/16 20:17, Daniel Llewellyn wrote:
On 09/10/16 19:53, Xen wrote: As a feature request that you could
try to get implemented by the gnome guys you could suggest to their
issue-tracker that gvfs support KIO-slaves. Also would be worth
Daniel Llewellyn schreef op 09-10-2016 21:43:
On 09/10/16 20:35, Xen wrote:
Personally I think SystemD is lower level and in that sense more
dependable and more broad...ly available. It might not do the same
things but... at least it is something both parties could use.
Well, I would love a
amon schreef op 10-10-2016 15:53:
Since the topic seems to be mounting of devices from user space...
1) You can use sshfs to mount pretty much any directory,
anywhere to which you have password access on any mount
point for which you have privs. I used to use it a lot.
Works great.
I
JMZ schreef op 10-10-2016 11:58:
The vast majority of consumer boxes run Windows because of
Microsoft's bundling deal with the manufacturers. It's nothing really
to do with Windows performance or ease of use (both of which are
poor). It's just that Mr./Ms. Everyday User doesn't really know muc
Tom H schreef op 11-10-2016 16:52:
On Mon, Oct 10, 2016 at 1:01 PM, Xen wrote:
That's not really true. The vast majority of people would go screaming
for a Windows or Mac PC if they had Linux preinstalled.
The level of system maintenance I would have to give to my family for
a Linux b
Tom H schreef op 11-10-2016 22:36:
What I mean by maintain is make sure that updates are installed, just
like on Windows and macOS.
Aye. To me it is a detriment. I used to turn Windows Update off
completely for years while I was running XP and 7.
For me the incessant updates are only a dist
Tom H schreef op 11-10-2016 22:36:
Absolutely. I'd switch on the update thingy for them to click OK for
their systems to be updated.
Here is a quick baffling picture on the topic of automatic updates.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CugYubMXEAALJ20.jpg:large
This guy spent 11 hours getting his W
amon schreef op 12-10-2016 4:37:
The problem is that in my desktop I end up with a race. The
desktop detects the new device and ignores cryptab and fstab
and asks if I want to mount or whatever. I have to give it a NO
and then go to a root shell and execute a manual cryptdisk_start
and mount (or
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 11-10-2016 21:16:
"These are all practically unused options."
And they are. I have never come across a single file that had the
immutable bit set or I would have found out.
If the graphical tools don't support it it won't be much use unless
automated system installs
Again, I don't need help on using my system, but thank you for your
cooperation in not pestering me with it endlessly ok?
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 12-10-2016 20:09:
FWIW if a developer has got a user question or does notice a bug, even
a
developer is well-advised to use the appropriate forum.
Ralf, maybe you should stop telling other people what they should do.
Just saying. That no one needs your advice on what to do, no one is
asking for it. You don't determine what people are free to do and what
not, and you are no moderator here.
You are producing a whole lot of noise giving se
Oliver Grawert schreef op 14-10-2016 12:06:
hi,
Am Donnerstag, den 13.10.2016, 18:31 +0200 schrieb Ralf Mardorf:
On Thu, 13 Oct 2016 17:42:29 +0200, Xen wrote:
>
> Can you please come out of your psychosis now?
On Thu, 13 Oct 2016 17:49:24 +0200, Xen wrote:.
>Â
>
> Please quit
amon schreef op 14-10-2016 18:11:
I am not going to continue with this other than to correct
some really strange assumptions.
First, I was probably using Unix when the person who claims
I must be amongst those who do not basics was still in nappies.
Second, none of those suggestions will find y
Ralf Mardorf schreef op 15-10-2016 17:22:
"Cryptic Shell Commands
There are various cryptic shell incantations floating around help sites
and search engines that promise to remove older kernels. Copy-and-paste
mysterious incantations into your system at your own risk."
should read
"Shell comm
Sam Van den Eynde schreef op 10-11-2016 13:54:
Hi,
I'm aware of the manual possibilities to install it myself, but is
anybody aware of an expected timeframe for the Yakkety 4.8 kernel to
become available in the Xenial repositories?
The main reason is to get a new version of zfs, since it includ
John Lenton schreef op 21-11-2016 16:11:
On 21 November 2016 at 13:55, Xen wrote:
Not to mention that 4.4 doesn't support 900 nVidia GPUs which have
been out
for like 2 years.
As a happy user of a GTX 970 on xenial's 4.4, I'm puzzled by your
assertion.
Then I suggest y
Jarno Suni schreef op 29-11-2016 20:11:
On Tuesday, November 29, 2016 6:44 PM, Jarno Suni
wrote:
"debline" form that add-apt-repository supports, and URL form that
add-apt-repository supports, too, but that is undocumented, are not
currently
supported by ppa-purge.
If removing Ubuntu co
Jarno Suni schreef op 30-11-2016 9:57:
On Wednesday, November 30, 2016 1:30 AM, Xen
wrote:
> Jarno Suni schreef op 29-11-2016 20:11:
If removing Ubuntu components such as 'multiverse' or
'backports' is
supposed to be supported, some user interface changes are
i
Jarno Suni schreef op 01-12-2016 6:51:
On Wednesday, November 30, 2016 1:30 AM, Xen
wrote:
> Jarno Suni schreef op 29-11-2016 20:11:
On Tuesday, November 29, 2016 6:44 PM, Jarno Suni
wrote:
"debline" form that add-apt-repository supports, and URL form
that
add-a
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