On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 01:04 -0600, g wrote:
an interesting page on needles;
https://www.grc.com/haystack.htm
supercalifragilisticexpialidocious gave interesting numbers, but all
you need was three obscure, unrelated, words (e.g. bluepigsskiing) to
come up with some ridiculously difficult
On 02/12/2015 06:42 AM, Patrick Dupre wrote:
Hello,
I did both. Unfortunately, sometimes, like today I have to kill
the setroubleshootd process all the times without much success at the end!
Any suggestion?
===
On 02/15/2015 06:16 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 22:07 +1030, Tim wrote:
a few years ago, i would have agreed with you both.
except for, a few years ago +1 day, when i needed to find password
for a client running w98se, that had an employee leave. he actually
was
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 13:29:40 +0100
Heinz Diehl htd...@fritha.org wrote:
Hi,
I've built countless computers in the last 20 years, but none with
the nowadays modern UEFI bioses. Unfortunately, my main machine seems
to have gotten some problems after the last lightning storm, and it's
time to
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 09:18 -0500, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
I have discovered a method of creating passwords that has helped me
greatly throughout the years. I learned it from this girl who was
always
teased in school for being weird LoL! (Thank you
Sharon..wherever
you are!) So
On 15.02.2015, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
KeePassX has strong encryption, is easy to handle and has user-configurable hash
iteration to delay brute force attacks. For me, it seems to be perfectly
suited.
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On 02/15/2015 09:27 AM, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
..the simple trick is to push each letter over by one! That's it!
ROT1 (or ROTX, where X is any number) is a common part of most of the
dictionary attacks, very easy to implement and causes near zero CPU
On 15.02.2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
imagine if the word ISN'T a word that's found in the dictionary.ANY
dictionary.would that qualify it as being a bit more secure?
Here's the math behind it, so you can calculate for yourself:
The password strength (entropy) is calculated
On 02/15/2015 04:18 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 08:07:47 +0100 Ralf Corsepius rc040...@freenet.de wrote:
On 02/15/2015 06:46 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
RPM build errors:
Installed (but unpackaged) file(s) found:
/usr/bin/stapler
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 22:07 +1030, Tim wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 01:04 -0600, g wrote:
an interesting page on needles;
https://www.grc.com/haystack.htm
supercalifragilisticexpialidocious gave interesting numbers, but all
you need was three obscure, unrelated, words (e.g.
Hi,
I've built countless computers in the last 20 years, but none with the nowadays
modern UEFI bioses. Unfortunately, my main machine seems to have gotten some
problems
after the last lightning storm, and it's time to renew the whole thing.
On the SSD, there's a fully updated F21, which I'd
On 15.02.2015, Ananda Samaddar wrote:
My brand new laptop allows you to switch to legacy mode. The only way
to find out is by accessing the settings which should be same as for
old BIOSes eg it's F2 on my laptop.
Thanks a lot for your answer! The new mainbord will be an Asus H97-Pro (or
Hi,
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
Krishna Prajapati
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan pocallag...@gmail.com
wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 22:07 +1030, Tim wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 01:04 -0600, g wrote:
an interesting page on needles;
On 02/15/2015 08:47 AM, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
Hi,
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
Krishna Prajapati
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 5:46 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan
pocallag...@gmail.com mailto:pocallag...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 22:07 +1030, Tim
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 19:17 +0530, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
[Please don't top-post. See the list Guidelines]
I don't want to get into which of these is better as we all have
different ideas of what better means. Personally I use
Hello,
As I said in another message,
The issue may not be due to seltroubleshhoting but to firefox!
I can get 20 firefox processes running requiring 5% of Mem each
and filling the 8Go of mem.
How can I get the list of AVC's?
Thank.
On 15.02.2015, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
1. Power on the system, press F2 as soon as the logo screen appears
Thanks a lot, will do!
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On 02/15/2015 09:22 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 09:18 -0500, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
I have discovered a method of creating passwords that has helped me
greatly throughout the years. I learned it from this girl who was
always
teased in school for being weird LoL!
On 15.02.2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
..the simple trick is to push each letter over by one! That's it!
ROT1 (or ROTX, where X is any number) is a common part of most of the
dictionary attacks, very easy to implement and causes near zero CPU load.
So your ROT'ed password has not a single
On 15.02.2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
I agree that a human might not be able to crack it but even a PC would have
a hard time if you use phrases, foreign words, and the like.
Please search the net on dictionary attack in combination with words like
feasibility, speed and the like. You
On 15.02.2015, g wrote:
granted, with w98se, such was not a great problem, except that he
had also encrypted a lot of files.
It totally depends on how much entropy a password has, assumed the crypto used
is strong and not flawed (e.g. proper implementation of AES, serpent, twofish
and the
Hi,
1. Power on the system, press F2 as soon as the logo screen appears and
enter the bios.
2. Use the down arrow to select the *legacy bios.*
3. Save and exit bios.
Krishna Prajapati
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 6:52 PM, Heinz Diehl htd...@fritha.org wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Ananda Samaddar wrote:
On 02/15/2015 09:43 AM, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
imagine if the word ISN'T a word that's found in the dictionary.ANY
dictionary.would that qualify it as being a bit more secure?
Here's the math behind it, so you can calculate for yourself:
The
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 08:07:47 +0100 Ralf Corsepius rc040...@freenet.de wrote:
On 02/15/2015 06:46 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
RPM build errors:
Installed (but unpackaged) file(s) found:
/usr/bin/stapler
/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/staplelib/__init__.py
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 17:32:05 + Patrick O'Callaghan
pocallag...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 15:30 +0100, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
KeePassX has strong encryption, is
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 15:28 +0100, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
1. Power on the system, press F2 as soon as the logo screen appears
Thanks a lot, will do!
I have an ASUS Z97Pro. Press DEL when you see the BIOS splash screen
to enter the BIOS
I made a mistake when I installed my Fedora 21 system -- I
specified a /boot partition size of 200MB rather than the
recommended 500MB -- and didn't notice my mistake until
I had too much time invested in the install to redo it to
correct the size. (I am using plain vanilla ext4 partitions
not
Your rpm.spec's %files section is incomplete.
Thanks, Ralf! What would complete it?
Adding the missing files to the spec's file section?
E.g. your spec seems to be missing
%files
...
%{_bindir}/stapler
...
and something similar to
...
%{python2_sitelib}/*
...
But
Hello,
However, your suggestions really helped me and I was able to modify the spec
file (was missing the python2-sitelib part) and can make a rpm. Here is the
spec file:
$ fpaste pdfstapler.spec
Uploading (2.4KiB)...
http://ur1.ca/jqgcf - http://paste.fedoraproject.org/185742/15606142
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 15:30 +0100, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Krishna Chandra Prajapati wrote:
Still, I believe keepass is better. your opinion please?
KeePassX has strong encryption, is easy to handle and has user-configurable
hash
iteration to delay brute force attacks. For
On 02/15/2015 08:50 AM, Heinz Diehl wrote:
[htd@keera ~]$ pwgen -sy 17 1 ?AQqh/utFcIl+p$2;
Use KeePassX and encrypt its database with this password. Then, run
Austrumi and report back how long time it took and how much
expenditure it was to pay the electricity bill. You are allowed to
On 2015-02-15 11:59, Chris Murphy wrote:
I suggest booting live media with and without the legacy option
enabled, and compare dmesg from both boots. Check things like video
and trackpad support (if this is a laptop) and also the libata
messages for what linkage is made with the drive. This is
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 15:46 -0700, jd1008 wrote:
When I connect my phone via usb, gnome (or more exactly, mate)
pops up a window which displays 2 icons named:
internal storage
sd card
however, mount command does not show them mounted.
I want to browse them via the terminal cli interface.
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU and
70% of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill Dropbox and then I
uninstalled it and now my computer is back to normal.
What the H is happening ?
--
users
Mickey writes:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU and 70%
of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill Dropbox and then I uninstalled it
and now my computer is back to normal.
What the H is
Also, some possibly related bugs:
SecureBoot enabled causes Win 8 UEFI to not start from grub
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1170245#c23
After a BIOS install of Fedora to a hard disk containing a UEFI
install of Windows 8, the Windows 8 install fails to boot
On 02/15/2015 07:10 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Mickey writes:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU
and 70% of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill Dropbox and then I
uninstalled it and now my
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 3:58 PM, Mickey binary...@comcast.net wrote:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU and 70%
of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill Dropbox and then I uninstalled it
and
On Sun, 15 Feb 2015 11:12:17 -0700 Stuart McGraw smcg4...@frii.com wrote:
I made a mistake when I installed my Fedora 21 system -- I
specified a /boot partition size of 200MB rather than the
recommended 500MB -- and didn't notice my mistake until
I had too much time invested in the install to
On 15.02.2015, Stuart McGraw wrote:
When I tried to do a yum upgrade today (which includes a
new kernel) it failed with a message that my boot partition
space was short by 6MB.
What can I do to fix or mitigate this problem?
Remove all kernels except one which you have verified to be
On 15.02.2015, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
I use Figaro's Password Manager. I don't know how good it is
(and would like to hear about that)
Unfortunately, I'm not familiar with it, so I can't answer here.
.. but it does give me a lot of options in creating the password.
This plays a minor role,
ausearch -m AVC
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Guidelines:
I'm not sure what all is in your /boot but kernel+initramfs only takes
~25MB per kernel. So I don't know how you're running out of space with
only three kernels. Anyway, from easiest and least risky, to hardest
and most risky:
a. Keep only two kernels at a time instead of three. If using yum,
Stuart McGraw writes:
I made a mistake when I installed my Fedora 21 system -- I
specified a /boot partition size of 200MB rather than the
recommended 500MB -- and didn't notice my mistake until
I had too much time invested in the install to redo it to
correct the size. (I am using plain
I suggest booting live media with and without the legacy option
enabled, and compare dmesg from both boots. Check things like video
and trackpad support (if this is a laptop) and also the libata
messages for what linkage is made with the drive. This is highly
mixed, but on all of my EFI Macs, when
Hi,
I have packaged stapler (alternative to obsoleted pdftk) as an RPM. But there
is already another package by the same name doing something else in the Fedora
repos. Is there an easy way to rename my stapler to pdfstapler or something
like that. I don't feel that it is my place to ask the
When I connect my phone via usb, gnome (or more exactly, mate)
pops up a window which displays 2 icons named:
internal storage
sd card
however, mount command does not show them mounted.
I want to browse them via the terminal cli interface.
How do I force mate or gnome to mount them the
Look under /run/user/your uid/gvfs. You'll find a directory
something like mtp:host=%5Busb%3A002%2C005%5D$ which is the mount
point for your phone
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On 15.02.2015, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Your only practical option is to remove the oldest kernel, which should
allow you to update, and change the installonly_limit setting in
/etc/yum.conf
Yep! And maybe he can live with two kernels installed. On my system, they take
less than 200 MB. Could
On 02/15/2015 03:55 PM, Steven Usdansky wrote:
Look under /run/user/your uid/gvfs. You'll find a directory
something like mtp:host=%5Busb%3A002%2C005%5D$ which is the mount
point for your phone
I do not see any mtp files or dirs there.
$ pwd
/run/user/1008
$ ls -1R
.:
dconf/
gvfs/
On 02/15/2015 04:53 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sun, 2015-02-15 at 15:46 -0700, jd1008 wrote:
When I connect my phone via usb, gnome (or more exactly, mate)
pops up a window which displays 2 icons named:
internal storage
sd card
however, mount command does not show them mounted.
I want
On 02/15/2015 04:58 PM, Mickey wrote:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU
and 70% of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill Dropbox and then I
uninstalled it and now my computer is back to
On 02/15/2015 05:31 PM, Mickey wrote:
On 02/15/2015 07:10 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Mickey writes:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU
and 70% of memory, after awhile I was able to Kill
On 16/02/15 12:52, jd1008 wrote:
On 02/15/2015 05:31 PM, Mickey wrote:
On 02/15/2015 07:10 PM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Mickey writes:
My computer was locking up and I couldn't open or close anything.
I did a ps aux and found that dropbox was consuming 117% of the CPU
and 70% of memory,
Allegedly, on or about 15 February 2015, g sent:
a few years ago +1 day, when i needed to find password for a client
running w98se, that had an employee leave. he actually was fired and
when asked for his password, he supplied wrong password.
granted, with w98se, such was not a great
On 02/15/2015 02:31 PM, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 15.02.2015, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Your only practical option is to remove the oldest kernel, which should
allow you to update, and change the installonly_limit setting in
/etc/yum.conf
Yep! And maybe he can live with two kernels installed. On my
Allegedly, on or about 15 February 2015, Heinz Diehl sent:
Please search the net on dictionary attack in combination with words
like feasibility, speed and the like. You will be blown away by
reading what can be done.
Of course that kind of implies that you have something that will let you
On 02/15/2015 09:29 PM, Tim wrote:
Allegedly, on or about 15 February 2015, Heinz Diehl sent:
Please search the net on dictionary attack in combination with words
like feasibility, speed and the like. You will be blown away by
reading what can be done.
Of course that kind of implies that you
Hi,
Thanks for this!
In case you do not to intend to submit this package to Fedora, the only
way to avoid this clash, is to resort to renaming your package (e.g. to
call it pdfstapler).
How and where in the .spec file should I do this? What happens to the binary,
etc inside the package?
On Sun, Feb 15, 2015 at 9:44 PM, Stuart McGraw smcg4...@frii.com wrote:
Also, I hadn't realized the boot partition could be anywhere,
I somehow thought it had to be the first partition.
GRUB2 can find and load /boot/vmlinuz+initramfs pretty much anywhere:
primary or extended partitions, on an
On 02/16/2015 06:41 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for this!
In case you do not to intend to submit this package to Fedora, the only
way to avoid this clash, is to resort to renaming your package (e.g. to
call it pdfstapler).
How and where in the .spec file should I do this?
On 02/15/2015 10:09 PM, Tim wrote:
It's a hell of a long time since I did probabilities in high school
maths, but if you just use letters instead of numbers, each position
could be any of 26 characters (instead of 10 options), and each
position is not related to any other character (one
On 02/15/2015 10:16 PM, Tim wrote:
Well if you use a crappy encryption technique, it doesn't matter how
good your password is, if you have a technique to be able to reverse
engineer it (which is entirely different from just throwing passwords
at some remote service which only gives you a
On 16.02.2015, Tim wrote:
Please search the net on dictionary attack in combination with words
like feasibility, speed and the like. You will be blown away by
reading what can be done.
Of course that kind of implies that you have something that will let you
continuously try different
Allegedly, on or about 15 February 2015, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. sent:
I have discovered a method of creating passwords that has helped me
greatly throughout the years. I learned it from this girl who was
always teased in school for being weird LoL! (Thank you
Sharon..wherever you are!) So
On 02/15/2015 06:03 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
Also, the binary is called stapler. However, there is already a stapler binary
(as part of a totally different package for URL applications). Is there a way
to name this automagically? (The package and the binary that I am packaging are
called
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