that are still running
5x86's at 133MHz; about the same speed as a Pentium 75.
Actually, 120MHz was AMD's baby and they achieved it with overclocking
Bus from 33MHz to 40MHz (VLB only?).
--
Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air)
PL Computers
Serbia, Europe
Google is the Mother, Google is the Father
to use SOFTWARE LINUX RAID = mdraid, not to attempt
to install driver for your RAID.
1. Have you set your RAID controller to AHCI mode?
2. Have you created Software RAID partitions and then created EXT4
partitions on top of the Software RAID (mdraid)?
--
Ljubomir Ljubojevic
(Love is in the Air
Always Learning wrote:
Centos 5.6 X86_64 is on two DVDs. Can not determine if -R or +R. However
when installing, disk 2 is never required.
I used it on my first and only install. Of course I chose some extra
packages, and that is why infrequently used packages are on the disk 2.
Ljubomir
david wrote:
Just a thought
If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)
disk doesn't quite fit on the DVD+, and needs a DVD-, this might put
some folks at an inconvenience.
I wonder if the difference between fitting and not fitting is small
enough, so that some
Always Learning wrote:
On Sat, 2011-07-16 at 20:06 -0400, Mark Weaver wrote:
On 7/16/2011 6:50 PM, Always Learning wrote:
If there was an automatic ban on List mail containing HTML parts, it is
likely the latest crap would not be distributed to everyone.
A possible test of the
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jul 2011, Keith Roberts wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Keith Roberts ke...@karsites.net
Subject: Re: [CentOS] firewall?
On Sat, 16 Jul 2011, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
*snip*
I wrote about physical presence *outside* of your
Always Learning wrote:
On Sat, 2011-07-16 at 13:25 +0200, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
But, sadly google can't teach someone to start making their own
choices or to think for themselves
Learning Linux/Centos on one's own, and without good text books, is a
very daunting task even for those with over
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
Hi Everyone,
I just tried to install EXT4 onto a CentOS 5 machine but it failed.
Does anyone know in which repository it is?
root@usaxen01:[~]$ cat /etc/redhat-release
CentOS release 5 (Final)
root@usaxen01:[~]$ uname -a
Linux usaxen01 2.6.18-8.1.15.el5xen #1 SMP
Eugene Poole wrote:
Has anyone seen an issue like this? I'm continuing to run CentOS 5.3
because VMware Server 2.02 works well there. And I haven't found a
tutorial or 'How To' showing how to move to kernel based virtualization
(KVM) on the later versions of CentOS.
Tutorial, or better
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Sun, 2011-07-17 at 10:37 +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
I don't think I have been on a forums or mailing list that refused to
point someone in the right direction. Give a man a fish, you have fed
him for today. Teach a man to fish, and you have fed him
Rajagopal Swaminathan wrote:
Greetings,
On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 11:47 PM, Always Learning cen...@u6.u22.net wrote:
On Sat, 2011-07-09 at 20:13 +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
yum install gstreamer*
Is yum install vlc* better that gstreamer?
Ignorant queation:
And whch repos should
Timothy Murphy wrote:
I'm running CentOS-6 on an HP MicroServer (since this morning)
and I'd like to open an non-standard port,
for use on a laptop attached to the internet through the server.
Do I have to explicitly add an iptables rule?
If so, and I want to open (say) udp port 500 ,
david wrote:
At 10:31 PM 7/16/2011, you wrote:
On 07/16/11 7:50 PM, david wrote:
If the I386 (or i686, never could figure out why the name change)
I386 was the original 386 CPU, which ran at speeds from 16 to 33Mhz
i486 includes a few additional instructions on the 486 processor, and
IIRC,
Michel Donais wrote:
I want to get a look at Cents-6
The computer is a portable Thinkpad T-42
The base OS is Windows XP Professionnal
I tried to use both Microsoft Virtual PC and Oracle Virtual Box with the
same result
I boot from the CD (wich have been burned from an ISO downloaded
Keith Roberts wrote:
I don't use NFS, can you actually reach your NFS machine from another
machine on your LAN to get some sort of file listings from it, like an
apache directory listing? This would tell you that the machine is
actually reachable.
#showmount -e host IP or FQDN
will list
Devin Reade wrote:
Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
I use it too. Reverse-DNS check is best SPAM repellent there is. Only
mail from properly set mail servers is accepted.
That's fine if your check is that a reverse DNS entry exists,
or that the HELO/ELHO exists in forward DNS
Always Learning wrote:
Do your Mail Transfer Agents use valid or bogus HELO/EHLO names ?
Mine uses proper name, but then again I am one of the few in my country
to offer POP3 on SSL port 465. And I am small local WISP.
And when I say *few*, I mean I do not actually *know* of any mail server
hadi motamedi wrote:
Dear All
I need to put my centos 5.6 server as firewall server in fron of a
windows-running node before connecting it to the net. Can you please
let me know what stuff do I need to put on my centos server?
Thank you
___
CentOS
Fajar Priyanto wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 6:47 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
You might be interested in shorewall[1]. It has config file and
extensive documentation. You tell it what you want and all iptables are
automatically set. It also has webmin module
hadi motamedi wrote:
On 7/16/11, SZ Quadri s...@quadri.in wrote:
You can use pretty standard tools:- iptables etc. You just need a minimum
sever install with maybe some web based GUI to manage the box from other
machines. You can have a look at webmin (www.webmin.com) which offers nice
web
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 1:18 PM, Fajar Priyanto fajar...@arinet.org wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 6:47 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
You might be interested in shorewall[1]. It has config file and
extensive documentation. You tell it what you want and all
Fajar Priyanto wrote:
Do this:
1. Make sure your Centos has two network card. One connected to
internet, one to local lan. Make sure the Centos can already browsing
internet.
Example internet: eth0 192.168.1.1
local: eth1 192.168.2.1
Just as a FYI, shorewall does support single NIC systems,
Keith Roberts wrote:
So I guess I could configure my single NIC Centos 5.6
machine connected to a 4 port ADSL router to act as the
external Gateway for other machine on the LAN side of the
router, possibly using NAPT on the Centos box?
Yes, you can do that. You can also use it as a proxy
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 2:20 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
Keith Roberts wrote:
So I guess I could configure my single NIC Centos 5.6
machine connected to a 4 port ADSL router to act as the
external Gateway for other machine on the LAN side of the
router
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
The fact is, you can use a Linux firwall with a single NIC, as long as
you use different IP subnets and strong iptables rules to filter
traffic properly between the 2 subnets.
another scenarion where this is used more and more these days is with
virtualization, where you
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 2:56 PM, Drew drew@gmail.com wrote:
not to mention danger of PC's bypassing your one-NIC firewall and
unsafely connecting to the outside.
That I think is the biggest danger with a one NIC setup.
Linux boxen may be safe(r) (then windows) from
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jul 2011, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs
Subject: Re: [CentOS] firewall?
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Sat, Jul 16, 2011 at 2:20 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs
wrote:
Keith
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Sat, 16 Jul 2011, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
*snip*
I wrote about physical presence *outside* of your network, like if you
are on a large WISP that uses bridged network (bad design) and your
Wireless client is bridged, and you have single NIC firewall in place
Markus Falb wrote:
On 16.7.2011 19:03, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
All firewalls (on Linux at least) are by default closed, and you need
knowledge to punch through the wholes for your public services.
This is complete nonsense! You are free to configure a default policy of
accept
Keith Roberts wrote:
I read some time ago something about tunneling different
protocols through firewalls? which sounded quite scary.
Depends on the tunneling protocol you use, and on what platform you are
using.
For example, I use vtund package (server-client shema) with simple
config to
Markus Falb wrote:
On 16.7.2011 19:37, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Markus Falb wrote:
On 16.7.2011 19:03, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
All firewalls (on Linux at least) are by default closed, and you need
knowledge to punch through the wholes for your public services.
This is complete
Udo Siewert wrote:
On Fri, 15 Jul 2011 06:58:55 +0200
Udo Siewert alge...@lavabit.com wrote:
On Fri, 15 Jul 2011 06:25:11 +0200
Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
All 3 DVD-s (2 x x86_64 + i386) are burned on K3B 0.12.17 on CentOS
5.6.
x86_64 is tested and works. i386 not yet
Always Learning wrote:
amd64_edac: probe of :00:18.2 failed with error -22
Logwatch shows this error on several machines - laptop and desktops -
all running C 5.6. It never appears on the data centre servers.
I have 'googled' but can not identify what error 22 is. One German
posting
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:
On Fri, 2011-07-15 at 05:57 +0200, Udo Siewert wrote:
A shot in the dark: my DVD image burned by K3B won't also boot. Using
Brasero and all was fine. Not reproducable, but worth the attempt.
I used Brasero: failed to boot.
Ranbir
Then it is not a software but
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu wrote:
On Fri, 2011-07-15 at 05:57 +0200, Udo Siewert wrote:
A shot in the dark: my DVD image burned by K3B won't also boot. Using
Brasero and all was fine. Not reproducable, but worth the attempt.
I used Brasero: failed to boot.
Ranbir
James Pearson wrote:
James Pearson wrote:
James Pearson wrote:
Installing 64bit CentOS6 only installs x86_64 and noarch RPMS - however,
I have a number of legacy 32bit apps that require a number of 32bit RPMS
to be installed.
Does anyone know how to get the installer to install the 32bit
Timothy Murphy wrote:
I've installed CentOS-6 on my server
(in parallel to CentOS-5.6)
and now I'm trying to set up dhcpd.
I'm not sure if there has been a change in dhcpd
under CentOS-6, but I'm getting the dreaded message
Not configured to listen on any interfaces!
when I sudo service
Jake Shipton wrote:
On 07/15/2011 05:45 PM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
I've installed CentOS-6 on my server
(in parallel to CentOS-5.6)
and now I'm trying to set up dhcpd.
I'm not sure if there has been a change in dhcpd
under CentOS-6, but I'm getting the dreaded message
Not configured to
Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
and there is no mention of interfaces, just their IP's, and you can only
set DHCP service on the first IP on the interface.
What exactly do you mean when you say that you can only set DHCP service
on the first IP on the interface?
I
Camron W. Fox wrote:
Alle,
We currently have a CentOS 5.6 x86-64 server running using about 70G of
a 500GB hardware raid partition. We'd like to install 6.0 alongside this
installation in a dual boot configuration. We tried to install using the
Use Free Space installation option, but
Les Mikesell wrote:
On 7/15/2011 2:56 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Timothy Murphy wrote:
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
and there is no mention of interfaces, just their IP's, and you can only
set DHCP service on the first IP on the interface.
What exactly do you mean when you say that you
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
I'm doing an update on a machine that does have VMs running on it, and I
see a number of complaints to the effect of
WARNING:
/lib/modules/2.6.18-194.32.1.el5/weak-updates/kmod-kvm/kvm-intel.ko needs
unknown symbol kvm_vcpu_init
WARNING:
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
I'm doing an update on a machine that does have VMs running on it, and I
see a number of complaints to the effect of
WARNING:
/lib/modules/2.6.18-194.32.1.el5/weak-updates/kmod-kvm/kvm-intel.ko
needs unknown symbol
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Fri, 15 Jul 2011, yonatan pingle wrote:
*snip*
Any pros vs cons on using a bootable USB thumb drive instead of CD/DVD ?
this might be the better solution as the images just grow larger and
larger each update.
I find it much faster to install from USB.
I think
Trey Dockendorf wrote:
Now where is the best place to post bugs regarding KVM in centos 6?
Are you aware that there is CentOS mailinglist for Virtualization?
CentOS-virt.
As for bugs, there is bugs.centos.org for reporting bugs.
Ljubomir
___
CentOS
Mark Weaver wrote:
It really has been a while for me doing this stuff so I'm going to have
to eat a little crow here and ask: what is all of the following trying
to tell me?
snip
My guess of the culprit would be:
Non-zero Async Control Character Maps are not supported!
Also thing to
Akemi Yagi wrote:
I have rebuilt gnome-applets and updated my test system with it. This
seems to have fixed the crash problem. I have made the rebuilt version
available for testing:
http://centos.toracat.org/misc/CentOS-6/gnome-applets/
Bug #4964 has been updated with this info. Please
Udo Siewert wrote:
On Thu, 14 Jul 2011 23:30:32 -0400
Kanwar Ranbir Sandhu m3fr...@thesandhufamily.ca wrote:
I used K3B in Fedora 15 to burn the DVD image. I changed the speed to
1x, but K3B reported the burn speed as 2.4x - I guess it couldn't go
any lower.
A shot in the dark: my DVD
Trey Dockendorf wrote:
Tried my first CentOS 6 install on a system currently running 5.6. My
attempt was not an upgrade, but a full re-format. I have verified the
checksums of the ISO and did the pre-install disk verify and everything
checked out. However after the screen for setting up
Les Mikesell wrote:
On 7/12/11 10:50 PM, hadi motamedi wrote:
Thank you for your reply. I tried as :
#yum install octave
But it returns No octave package available
Try the EPEL repository. Most things that don't need to replace base
programs
and don't have license issues end up there.
Nathan wrote:
anaconda.intf.run(anaconda)
SyntaxError: not well-formed (invalid token): line 1, column 0
This error is the source of the problem. You should focus on that. But I
was unable to find anything similar to this on Google.
It says that first character of the first line has
Edo wrote:
Hi,
On Wednesday, July 13, 2011 at 1:50 PM, Nguyen Vu Hung (VNC) wrote:
Hello all,
I am running CentOS 5.6 64 bit.
When running yum -y install ncurses-devel,
I expect that only ncurses 64 bit version will be installed.
Try: yum -y install ncurses-devel.x86_64
Or,
Steve Clark wrote:
On 07/13/2011 12:46 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 2:54 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote:
On 07/12/11 11:53 AM, Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 10:29 AM, Steve Clarkscl...@netwolves.com wrote:
With an HP DL140 we open the cover
Frank Cox wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2011 09:36:08 +0200
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Gnome System Monitor used to crash on RHEL Beta. Have you ran update as
soon as you installed? It is most recommended course of action.
Several megabytes of updates automatically showed up some minutes after I
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Jerry Geis wrote:
So there is longer an xorg.conf file in centos 6. Where is that stored
now?
When I am running host C5 and guest C6 using kvm all I can get is 800x600.
They System-Preferences-Display app only has detect monitor.
There is no LCD selection anymore
Les Mikesell wrote:
On 7/13/2011 10:01 AM, Keith Roberts wrote:
Yeah, but it is really hard to find atapi style laptop drives, everything
has gone to sata.
Try the older latops, you might even pick up a bare drive on
ebay.
I haven't tried it with a cd/dvd drive, but you can get
Nicolas Thierry-Mieg wrote:
In any case, pkcon is CLI and doesn't seem to bring much over yum. What
I would like is to run a GUI such as gpk-application (the gnome
PackageKit GUI) remotely, via ssh. For some use cases, I find a GUI is
quite useful for browsing and searching available
Les Mikesell wrote:
Has anyone packaged the freenx server for 6.x yet?
aTrpms has them.
Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Frank Cox wrote:
On Tue, 12 Jul 2011 09:36:08 +0200
Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Gnome System Monitor used to crash on RHEL Beta. Have you ran update as
soon as you installed? It is most recommended course of action.
Several megabytes of updates automatically
Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Wed, Jul 13, 2011 at 3:13 PM, Craig White craig.wh...@ttiltd.com wrote:
the reason that you don't want an xorg.conf file is that multiple users can
have different display settings instead of being locked in by an overall
configuration file.
Okay. But I've always
Emmanuel Noobadmin wrote:
On 7/13/11, Mark Weaver mwea...@compinfosystems.com wrote:
For a short time I dabbled with an SSH app on my Droid X so that I could
connect to and interact with Linux servers that I've deployed, but found
it all but impossible to see the screen thus rendering the
Frank Cox wrote:
Has anyone else had this problem? I tried it as a brand new username and it
happens every time.
Add to panel - System Monitor
System Monitor shows up in the panel bar for a split second as a black box,
then
crashes with the following message:
Package:
Gary Gatling wrote:
Hello,
I started making my own gnome theme with some of these icons added back.
But sadly its not ready to share with anyone yet. But since centos 6 is
out I have a renewed incentive to hurry up and finish this theme for
myself. (I worked on this with RHEL 6 up until
david wrote:
COMMENT: One of the nice properties of Linux has been that it can be
installed and run on old hardware. I wonder if this feature is going away.
CentOS dev team will, in next few days release several general purpose
CD's Like Minimal server CD and Minimal Installation CD. LiveCD
Florin Andrei wrote:
(I'm doing tests in a VirtualBox instance, so take this with a grain of
salt.)
If you give the VM only 512 MB of RAM, the text-mode installer kicks in.
It does not prompt you to configure anything related to the network or
hostname. The system boots up without a
david wrote:
Conclusion:
I'm still trying
David
There will be Minimal Server CD in next several days so you will be able
to install core system via CD and then add GUI and the rest of the
packages via yum.
Maybe those creating Minimal Server CD could create simple script with
yum
John R Pierce wrote:
On 07/11/11 6:10 PM, Christopher Chan wrote:
Wait, wait. So using SSDs as FAST writing disks is a load of hogwash? You
still need stuff like umem nvram cards? What's the deal with things like
Fusion IO then?
the high end enterprise SSDs have supercaps to give them time
R P Herrold wrote:
You can look at this as well as anyone else ... and IF SL had
done something of this sort, you can use a direct email to the
inquiring party to let them know your results
Or those running test versions of SL could look and give us info. I did
not say anyone should steel
Rudi Ahlers wrote:
On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 11:36 AM, Andy Holt centos-l...@orgdotuk.org.uk
wrote:
Someone posted that you can use VNC to install CentOS 6.
and this has WHAT to do with low ram installs?
It means you get to do a graphical install, which you otherwise can't if you
don't have
John R Pierce wrote:
the logical thing for that would be a yum groupinstall... just need to
have a group defined for this. In fact, there might already be such a
group.
But there might be several groups and few separate packages, and without
at least wiki howto with given yum
Eric Viseur wrote:
Well, just like you could use any RHEL5 repo with CentOS 5, any RHEL6
should be compatible with CentOS 6. If you're looking for names, this
can be useful : http://wiki.centos.org/AdditionalResources/Repositories
Beside those there should be these also:
virtualmin
pidgin
Drew wrote:
CentOS 6 was not really intended for slower systems, none of the newer
distros are. CentOS 6 kernel for example does not support 586 CPU's.
I'd like to know where you read that because I'm looking at putting
CentOS 6 onto a couple of lower end boxes, specifically a
John R. Dennison wrote:
On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 03:01:09PM +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
virtualmin
Perhaps we can avoid advocating repos that stomp all over base and
replace core components?
I just added several that are on my list. Virtualmin repo is where
Webmin rpms are located. I
Tom H wrote:
On Tue, Jul 12, 2011 at 9:31 AM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs wrote:
Fedora 12-15 for example need more space on boot partition (500MB is I
am not mistaken) and CentOS5/Fedora6 only needed 100MB.
F12-F15 need a larger /boot for the preupgrade tool (to upgrade
from one
Scott Robbins wrote:
Actually, in yet another bow to the desktop user, sysv will probably be
dropped in favor of systemd. Made by the same person who did
pulseaudio, it supposedly does some good--in my own case (on Fedora), it
hasn't gotten in my way, which is about all I ask of the Fedora
John Doe wrote:
From: hadi motamedi motamed...@gmail.com
#make
But it prompts as No targets specified and no makefile found.
#make install
But it prompts as No rule to make target 'install'.
If make says there is no Makefile, make install will not work either...
Did you check the
Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
Here's hoping CentOS 6.1 comes out before RHEL 6.2
As far as I gathered from recent post by members of dev team, at least
majority of 6.1 is compiled and ready for initial QA process. Of course,
this is not official info, just my calculation. But it should definitely
Always Learning wrote:
On Mon, 2011-07-11 at 14:59 +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
hadi motamedi wrote:
Thank you for your reply. But I got its *.tar.gz package and tried
from it. Do you mean '#yum install octave' is all sufficient to
install it? Please confirm.
Have you tried
Always Learning wrote:
Active repos =
01-CentOS-Base.repo
11-kbsingh-CentOS-Misc.repo
21-rpmforge21.repo
22-elrepo.repo
[root@kancelarija2 ~]# yum repolist
Loaded plugins: aliases, fastestmirror, priorities
Loading mirror speeds from cached hostfile
repo id
Robert Heller wrote:
At Mon, 11 Jul 2011 16:24:01 +0300 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
wrote:
Hi,
By mistake, I moved the directory /etc to the /home. How can i restore the
sytem back (or, at least that directory back)?
Boot with a rescue disk, mount your (broken) system under
Brunner, Brian T. wrote:
Ljubomir The Wise wrote:
Short version (I am hungry):
Experience (19 years of Windows phone support and 5 years of Linux
administration and usage as a desktop surrounded by Windows
users) says that in order to convert (reluctant) Windows user you have
to fully
david wrote:
Folks
The machine I'm trying to load does not have a DVD reader, but only a
CD reader.
Are the multiple CD images of CENTOS 6 available somewhere? Earlier
versions had them.
Thanks
David
As far as I know, this was not planed, at least not yet. For now, all
you can
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
Are you using a local repository? Perhaps the source from which you
downloaded/rsynced it was in an unstable state.
Yep. My manager d/l it; I found after I posted that he hadn't done a
makerepo. Did that, no joy. Then the other admin here tells me I needed to
do it
Keith Roberts wrote:
I'd go for Smart Package Manager if it's available on Centos
6?
yum info smart*
Smart is little different and uses different conf files then yum if I am
not mistaken.
Ljubomir
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.org
Keith Roberts wrote:
On Mon, 11 Jul 2011, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
From: Ljubomir Ljubojevic off...@plnet.rs
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Restore the moved directory
Robert Heller wrote:
At Mon, 11 Jul 2011 16:24:01 +0300 CentOS mailing list centos
Beartooth wrote:
On Mon, 11 Jul 2011 17:31:36 +0100, James Hogarth wrote:
[]
Ah fair enough - just wanted to give a heads up (and point to the yum
reinstall option) in case anyone decided to do similar.
Yo! I want to do exactly that -- shift a machine running SL
(whose
Karanbir Singh wrote:
If you would like one, please send me an email on kbsingh at the
centos.org domain, and let me know your address and what size you would
want, I would be happy to ship it out to any part of the world as long
as you are willing to cover postage costs ( as an example :
Ron Blizzard wrote:
On Sat, Jul 9, 2011 at 4:19 PM, Always Learning cen...@u6.u22.net wrote:
The truth is my mp3 playing ability was installed about a year ago when
I was first introduced to Centos and I experienced a very rapid and
steep learning curve (which I successfully overcame as
John R. Dennison wrote:
Symantec is garbage and has been for many years. Don't care for
Kaspersky from past use, but that was indeed KAV as I've not used
anything else from them. Perhaps I should evaluate their KIS offering.
I've had absolutely no trouble whatsoever with Avast other than
Ned Slider wrote:
That's just a by-product of the fact that it's never been a goal of
upstream to make RHEL a self-hosting distribution. It's not a deliberate
act designed to thwart rebuilders, be it Oracle or CentOS or anyone
else. And even if it were, then it obviously failed given
Giles Coochey wrote:
On 10/07/2011 00:10, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Guys. I have this problem for a long time.
In large number of times when I type letter y, like in you my typing
cursor jumps 2-3 rows up or 1-2 words to the left.
I am unable to understand why. Could it be something
Christopher Chan wrote:
On Sunday, July 10, 2011 03:46 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Also worth mentioning is that there is Kaspersky for Linux Workstations
and Servers, and even for the Mac:
http://www.kaspersky.com/applications_list
Aw, nobody put in a word for NOD32 from Eset?
Well, I
John R. Dennison wrote:
On Sun, Jul 10, 2011 at 10:23:57AM +0200, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
Diatribe about Serbia removed.
Is this really the appropriate list for this type of political
pontification?
I was one mail away from being shunned as just another crackpot
conspiracy theorist
Always Learning wrote:
Having been very emotional distraught circa 1992-1994 when I repeatedly
argued passionately with my work colleagues that western (i.e. British)
aircraft attacking Serbian tanks and artillery would stop the massacre
of thousands of civilians from all parts of Yugoslavia,
Christopher Chan wrote:
But seriously, one thing you have to understand is that threads always
drift. People have different takes on what it is that is in the way of
the mass adoption of the Linux desktop. Everybody has their pet app that
would singlehandedly put Linux on the desktop. Like
Christopher Chan wrote:
On Sunday, July 10, 2011 10:41 PM, Ljubomir Ljubojevic wrote:
The actual point I wanted to make is not what western world has done
to my country, that has been, is now (Libya for instance) and will be,
and I am not moping about that. But looking from the other side
Always Learning wrote:
The war, hopefully the last in Europe, is over. We can not live in the
past. Now is time for reconciliation and peace. Soon Serbia will be the
30th? member of the European Union. Remember the words to the EU anthem
about brothers (Ode to Joy from Ludwig van Beethoven's
Always Learning wrote:
3. Therefore, contrary to your assertion
Redhat does not need to and has never tried to undermine any
would be enemy/competitor. Think about it.
Red Hat must always consider how to undermine any would be
enemy/competitor because, ultimately, Red Hat's own survival
Trey Dockendorf wrote:
Great news about CentOS 6.0 being available, and I figured I'd ask the
most obvious question, what can I expect when upgrading from CentOS 5.6
to 6.0? I have not had to go from one major version of CentOS to
another so this is new territory for me. Is the processes
Mike Cutie and Maia wrote:
I am ok with that I have it on a test box that I want to try it on first.yy
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf
Of Emmanuel Noobadmin
Sent: Sunday, July 10, 2011 3:38 PM
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