Buenos días.
Sé perfectamente que la presente no es lista de servicios de MS, pero
se me han quemado todos los papeles.
En mi trabajo, estoy obligado a usar Windows 10, pero me las apaño,
con toda la batería de Firefox, Thunderbird, LibreOffice y el
Subsistema de Windows para Linux (WSL), que
On Wed, May 29, 2024 at 06:47:18AM -0400, Jessica Litwin wrote:
>On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 17:09 Paul M Foster
><[1]pa...@quillandmouse.com> wrote:
>
> Folks:
> At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not
> wired
> for internet
>
>From
On Tue, 28 May 2024, David Christensen wrote:
On 5/28/24 00:28, Roger Price wrote:
I wired my place Cat5. A lot of work, and I regretted it. I live in the
hills behind Nice, an area with a lot of lightning. The overhead line to
my place took a hit and thanks to the Cat5 conductivity I lost
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 17:09 Paul M Foster wrote:
> Folks:
>
> At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
> for internet
>From experience, if your house was framed with metal studs, whole house
wifi will be annoying. You'll likely need multiple access points and
David Wright wrote:
> I was under the impression that 3-phase to a private residence
> contravenes building regulations, as that would make 440V available
> for you to electrocute yourself.
No, it's perfectly possible - just look at your local DNO's website.
It's necessary when there's a large
El 2024-05-29 a las 02:57 +, Eduardo Jorge Gil Michelena escribió:
> La línea en el FSTAB que funcionó es la siguiente:
>
> UUID=30472234-8e2e-42c5-9ea4-9741dcdd4281 /media/Datos ext4 defaults,noatime
> 0 2
>
> Ya está.
(...)
La única opción que no está en el manual de mount es
On 5/28/24 17:10, John Hasler wrote:
David writes:
AIUI in the USA for residential 120/240V single-phase three-wire service
drops, electrical utilities either run all three phases along the
distribution line or they run two phases. Running one phase and a neutral
instead of two phases would
On 29/05/2024 00:51, Michael Grant wrote:
The culprits that seemed to be causing the massive dependencies were
libsasl2-2 and libsasl2-modules-db. Though not libsasl2-modules which
i also have installed.
With adjusted priorities these packages are not an issue for "apt upgrade".
More serious
La línea en el FSTAB que funcionó es la siguiente:
UUID=30472234-8e2e-42c5-9ea4-9741dcdd4281 /media/Datos ext4 defaults,noatime 0 2
Ya está.
Gracias.
Saludos.
El martes, 28 de mayo de 2024, 04:19:22 p. m. ART, Eduardo Jorge Gil
Michelena escribió:
Sigo sin dar con la línea
On 2024-05-28 at 15:02, Marco Moock wrote:
> Am 28.05.2024 um 20:38:46 Uhr schrieb Thomas Schmitt:
>> What does "[residual-config]" mean ?
>
> Packages include system-wide configuration files. If packages are
> removed, this configuration will not be deleted. You need to purge
> such packages
On 2024-05-27 18:42:48 +0300, mindaugascelies...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, May 27, 2024 5:59:55 PM EEST Nicolas George wrote:
> > Eben King (12024-05-27):
> > > Is there an easier way to uninstall a package and everything it brought in
> > > at one swell foop? Thanks.
> >
> > The packages
During the latest shutdown:
May 29 01:55:05 qaa systemd[1]: Stopping session-2.scope - Session 2 of User
vinc17...
[...]
May 29 01:55:26 qaa systemd[1]: session-2.scope: Stopping timed out. Killing.
May 29 01:55:26 qaa systemd[1]: session-2.scope: Killing process 2990 (mutt)
with signal
El mar, 28 de may de 2024, 18:13, Eduardo Jorge Gil Michelena <
egi...@yahoo.com.ar> escribió:
> Sigo sin dar con la línea adecuada...
>
> En el FSTAB he puesto (entre varias variantes que no funcionaron) lo
> siguiente:
>
> UUID=30472234-8e2e-42c5-9ea4-9741dcdd4281 /media/egis/Datos ext4
>
David writes:
> AIUI in the USA for residential 120/240V single-phase three-wire service
> drops, electrical utilities either run all three phases along the
> distribution line or they run two phases. Running one phase and a neutral
> instead of two phases would reduce the power by the square
On 5/28/24 12:47, gene heskett wrote:
On 5/28/24 15:29, Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
On Tuesday 28 May 2024 01:49:52 pm Paul M Foster wrote:
I've never see a 3 phase in a house. Common in commercial/industrial,
though.
Residential installations (talking in the US here) typically involve
*one*
On 5/28/24 00:28, Roger Price wrote:
I wired my place Cat5. A lot of work, and I regretted it. I live in the
hills behind Nice, an area with a lot of lightning. The overhead line
to my place took a hit and thanks to the Cat5 conductivity I lost
equipment.
If your electrical utility uses
From "Monte Milanuk"
To debian-user@lists.debian.org
Date 28/05/2024 22:42:07
Subject Re: "Repeaters", etc.
On 5/28/24 11:03, rtnetz...@windstream.net wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Paul M Foster"
I've never see a 3 phase in a house.
Quite some years ago my father inquired
On 5/28/24 11:03, rtnetz...@windstream.net wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Paul M Foster"
I've never see a 3 phase in a house.
Quite some years ago my father inquired about getting
3 phase power to his house to power a rather husky lathe.
The answers were distributed between
On 5/28/24 10:11, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Brad Rogers wrote:
On Tue, 28 May 2024 11:31:29 +0100
"mick.crane" wrote:
Hello mick.crane,
Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or
did I misunderstand it.
Yes, there is. I believe you're thinking of
On 5/28/24 15:29, Roy J. Tellason, Sr. wrote:
On Tuesday 28 May 2024 01:49:52 pm Paul M Foster wrote:
I've never see a 3 phase in a house. Common in commercial/industrial,
though.
Residential installations (talking in the US here) typically involve *one* transformer tapping a single phase
On 5/28/24 14:23, rtnetz...@windstream.net wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Paul M Foster"
I've never see a 3 phase in a house.
Quite some years ago my father inquired about getting
3 phase power to his house to power a rather husky lathe.
The answers were distributed between
On Tuesday 28 May 2024 01:49:52 pm Paul M Foster wrote:
> I've never see a 3 phase in a house. Common in commercial/industrial,
> though.
Residential installations (talking in the US here) typically involve *one*
transformer tapping a single phase out of the three that are up there on the
On 5/28/24 14:03, rtnetz...@windstream.net wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Paul M Foster"
I've never see a 3 phase in a house.
Quite some years ago my father inquired about getting
3 phase power to his house to power a rather husky lathe.
The answers were distributed between
Sigo sin dar con la línea adecuada...
En el FSTAB he puesto (entre varias variantes que no funcionaron) lo siguiente:
UUID=30472234-8e2e-42c5-9ea4-9741dcdd4281 /media/egis/Datos ext4
user,automount,exec,rw,errors=remount-ro 0 1
Luego hice mount -a
Para recibir el siguiente mensaje de error:
On 5/28/24 14:04, Paul M Foster wrote:
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 03:13:26PM -, Curt wrote:
On 2024-05-28, Paul M Foster wrote:
but I'd rather not. Since the wifi signal will permeate the whole house, it
seemed more reasonable to plant a device in each room which could pick up
the wifi, and
Am 28.05.2024 um 20:38:46 Uhr schrieb Thomas Schmitt:
> today i upgraded a Debian 11 system to 12 and am now scratching my
> head over the final steps as described in
>
> https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/amd64/release-notes/ch-upgrading.en.html#purge-removed-packages
>
>
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 7:08 PM Stefan Monnier wrote:
>
> > I'd like to shop for such a device, but I don't know what it's called.
>
> I think it's called a "wireless bridge".
>
> Any device with a wifi card and (at least) an ethernet port can do that.
> So "any" wifi router will do the trick, as
Hi,
today i upgraded a Debian 11 system to 12 and am now scratching my head
over the final steps as described in
https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/amd64/release-notes/ch-upgrading.en.html#purge-removed-packages
On Tue, 28 May 2024, Tim Woodall wrote:
I start a new user namespace as follows:
(The special bashrc is just because there are some things in my default
one that (expectedly) don't work in the lxc user namespace)
I then mount an overlayfs on top of that:
fuse-overlayfs -o
- Original Message -
From: "Paul M Foster"
> I've never see a 3 phase in a house.
Quite some years ago my father inquired about getting
3 phase power to his house to power a rather husky lathe.
The answers were distributed between "impossible"
and "prohibitively expensive".
--
Bob
On Tue, 28 May 2024 14:01:58 -0400
Paul M Foster wrote:
Hello Paul,
>Nope. On a 3 phase system with individual phases at 120V, you will never
In the UK, each phase is nominally 240V, not 120V. That's why David
mentioned 440V between phases.
--
Regards _ "Valid sig separator is
On Tue, 28 May 2024 18:11:48 +0100
debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Hello debian-u...@howorth.org.uk,
>I have a powerline adapter (Devolo units). There's no such restriction,
>as far as I know. My powerline transmitter and receiver are certainly
>on different circuits.
Fair enough. Different
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 03:13:26PM -, Curt wrote:
> On 2024-05-28, Paul M Foster wrote:
> > but I'd rather not. Since the wifi signal will permeate the whole house, it
> > seemed more reasonable to plant a device in each room which could pick up
> > the wifi, and provide wired internet to
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 12:29:37PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
[snip]
>
> I was under the impression that 3-phase to a private residence
> contravenes building regulations, as that would make 440V available
> for you to electrocute yourself.
Nope. On a 3 phase system with individual phases at
Max, your list looks very similiar to what I'm seeing.
I seem to have suceeded in removing all of the testing packages from
my backup instance, now, just need to flip the ips around and see if
the ship still floats.
The culprits that seemed to be causing the massive dependencies were
libsasl2-2
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 01:20:19PM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:11:48PM +0100, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> > Most houses in the UK are wired to a single phase, so everything is
> > connected together at the consumer unit and powerline works just fine.
> > If
I start a new user namespace as follows:
(The special bashrc is just because there are some things in my default
one that (expectedly) don't work in the lxc user namespace)
lxc-usernsexec -m b:0:689824:65536 -- /bin/bash --rcfile ~/.bashrc.lxc
Inside there I mount a squash fs image that
A quem possa interessar.
Apos boa discussao com os signatarios desta lista, realizei que poderia
escrever ao suporte do ACER para esclarecimento.
Agradeco assim a todos pela boa atencao dispensada.
Att
Luiz Carlos
On 28/05/2024 14:05, Atenágoras Silva wrote:
Então é o caso de verificar se
On Tue 28 May 2024 at 18:11:48 (+0100), debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> Brad Rogers wrote:
> > On Tue, 28 May 2024 11:31:29 +0100 "mick.crane" wrote:
> >
> > >Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or
> > >did I misunderstand it.
> >
> > Yes, there is. I
On 29/05/2024 00:00, Michael Grant wrote:
4) dpkg -i libc6_whatever.deb libwhomever.deb
5) Repeat until it works.
Apt is NOT built for downgrading.
Agree.
Ah I see, I did not realise that's what you meant by downgrading it,
thanks.
The thread is becoming excessively long. Have you
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:11:48PM +0100, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> Most houses in the UK are wired to a single phase, so everything is
> connected together at the consumer unit and powerline works just fine.
> If you have a specific problem, then there are DIN rail powerline units
>
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 01:00:24PM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> So once I've done this dpkg -i to install a package, I can do that
> without removing the old one first?
Yes, dpkg will upgrade or downgrade the existing package.
> And, once I've hammered a package into place with dpkg, in the
Sim, e' um caminho comparar as especificacoes.
Com essa luz, posso verificar o firmware do modelo de uma maquina com
Linux e sua versao e comparar com o de uma maquina Windows e ver se sao
identicas.
Valeu.
Mas se alguem da lista tiver mais experiencias proximas, pf elucidem!
Grato a todos
Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Tue, 28 May 2024 11:31:29 +0100
> "mick.crane" wrote:
>
> Hello mick.crane,
>
> >Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or
> >did I misunderstand it.
>
> Yes, there is. I believe you're thinking of powerline adaptors. They
> do require
Então é o caso de verificar se o hardware é parecido. Se for parecido com o
dos computadores que vem com GNU/Linux...
Com certeza, não é compatível com o kernel Linux-Libre...
Em ter., 28 de mai. de 2024 às 12:45, luigui escreveu:
> Ja olhei Atenagoras, o fato e' que existe uma loja pondo-o em
On Mon, 27 May 2024, Curt wrote:
On 2024-05-26, Tim Woodall wrote:
Anyone got any ideas how to disable this?
If you have ~/.alpine.passfile apparently it will keep asking, but maybe
you don't, in which case I'm stumped.
Thanks, no that file doesn't exist. I'm a bit stumped too - and
> > # apt remove -s libc6
>
> DO NOT do this.
>
> Downgrade it. DO NOT remove it and then hope to reinstall it later.
> Removing libc6 will break everything.
>
> You seem to be flailing, so let me spell this out as explicitly as
> possible. When I say "downgrade a library package", I mean:
>
Paul M Foster wrote:
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 08:15:36AM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> > You're spending the money on a house, which is $LARGESUM. Spend
> > the comparatively small amount of extra money on some form of
> > wiring before you move in, so you don't end up frustrated for
> > two
Ja olhei Atenagoras, o fato e' que existe uma loja pondo-o em promocao e
esta com o Windows instalado.
Dai a pergunta!
Valeu
On 28/05/2024 11:44, Atenágoras Silva wrote:
Dá uma olhada no site da Acer.
Tem uns computadores com GNU/Linux lá, você nem precisa comprar um com
licença do
On 5/28/24 11:13, Curt wrote:
On 2024-05-28, Paul M Foster wrote:
but I'd rather not. Since the wifi signal will permeate the whole house, it
seemed more reasonable to plant a device in each room which could pick up
the wifi, and provide wired internet to that room.
I don't see why that
On 2024-05-28, Paul M Foster wrote:
> but I'd rather not. Since the wifi signal will permeate the whole house, it
> seemed more reasonable to plant a device in each room which could pick up
> the wifi, and provide wired internet to that room.
>
I don't see why that would be more reliable than
Dá uma olhada no site da Acer.
Tem uns computadores com GNU/Linux lá, você nem precisa comprar um com
licença do Windows...
https://br-store.acer.com/notebooks/convencional/linux-gutta?initialMap=c,c=notebooks/convencional=category-1,category-2,sist--operacional
Em ter., 28 de mai. de 2024 às
El 2024-05-22 a las 14:49 -0400, Leo Marín escribió:
Me auto-corrijo.
Este mensaje SÍ estaba en la carpeta de spam.
(-5 puntos para mí y -100 para Gmail, por torpe. La IA se le está
subiendo a su cabeza silícea :-/)
> El mié, 22 may 2024 a las 13:38, laura () escribió:
> >
> > hola,
> >
> >
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 09:12:18AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> > You will most likely need to remove the testing versions of these packages
> > (apache2, git and so on) and then install the bookworm versions afterward.
>
> Those dependent packages (most if not all) are not from testing.
>
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 08:15:36AM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Paul M Foster wrote:
> > We're moving across the state, and from what I've seen, providers there
> > will do something similar-- provide a router and/or modem which has wired
> > and wireless capabilities. However, because the house
Hi Marc,
On 20/05/24 at 14:35, Marc SCHAEFER wrote:
3. grub BOOT FAILS IF ANY LV HAS dm-integrity, EVEN IF NOT LINKED TO /
if I reboot now, grub2 complains about rimage issues, clear the screen
and then I am at the grub2 prompt.
Booting is only possible with Debian rescue, disabling the
On Mon, 27 May 2024 at 17:39, Sébastien Villemot wrote:
> I recently bought a ThinkPad X13 Gen5 (benefiting from the discount
> generously offered by Lenovo to Debian Developers).
>
> The laptop runs Debian Bookworm, and I got almost all the hardware to
> work by using more recent kernel and
> So, which part are you confused about? Did you think there was some
> easy way to FIX a frankendebian? Are you confused because you keep
> thinking "there must be some single apt command that will do all the
> work for me"?
>
> There's not. You get to do all the work by hand.
I am trying to
On Tue, 28 May 2024, Michael Grant wrote:
> On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 12:59:34PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
>> So what did it say after that?
>
> Sorry, here's the entire output of one of the tries:
>
> [bottom /etc/mail #1168] apt install libdb5.3/bookworm db5.3-util/bookworm
> db-util/bookworm
>
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 02:02:47PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
>
> ISTR that "apt-get install =" will unconditionally
> install of , if necessary pulling in dependencies.
>
> But I've never tried it :-)
That pulls in dependencies but does not install packages that
Paul M Foster wrote:
> We're moving across the state, and from what I've seen, providers there
> will do something similar-- provide a router and/or modem which has wired
> and wireless capabilities. However, because the house is not prewired for
> internet, we must solve the problem of getting
Andy Smith writes:
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 11:31:29AM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
>> Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or did I
>> misunderstand it.
>
> It works extremely poorly, if at all. If wifi works you would prefer
> wifi.
>
Do you mean homeplugs? I
Bom dia a todos!
Venho requerer ao conhecimento desta comunidade.
Possuo um Acer Aspire 5315- com processador celeron ~500 MHz e 2,5
Gb memoria.
Para conseguir trabalhar com o Linux tive que fazer uma atualizacao de
Firmware pois o de fabrica nao governava bem a ventuinha e aquecia e
On Tue, 28 May 2024 11:31:29 +0100
"mick.crane" wrote:
Hello mick.crane,
>Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or
>did I misunderstand it.
Yes, there is. I believe you're thinking of powerline adaptors. They
do require everything be on the same circuit, however.
On Tue, 28 May 2024 11:35:25 +
Andy Smith wrote:
Hello Andy,
>people. I don't know that it would add enough value to cover the
>cost of doing it, though.
Almost certainly not; Social housing where I live is non-existent
because, according to the builders, the land costs more than they
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 07:09:16AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:59:50AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:10:11AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> > > The following packages will be REMOVED:
> > > [...] libdb5.3t64 [...]
> >
> > You've *clearly*
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 04:43:38AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> When you say your provider wants to provide you a "wireless router",
> are you implying that you do not have any physically wired
> high-speed internet to this property. As in, the old copper either isn't
> good enough for decent
Hi,
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 11:31:29AM +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> Is there not some system that runs ethernet over the mains wiring or did I
> misunderstand it.
It works extremely poorly, if at all. If wifi works you would prefer
wifi.
Thanks,
Andy
--
https://bitfolk.com/ -- No-nonsense VPS
Hello,
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 09:57:18AM +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Mon, 27 May 2024 18:19:10 -0500
> David Wright wrote:
> >We didn't meet any lack of understanding. Rather, the problem is which
> >rooms do you connect, and precisely where do you place the wallplates.
>
> That's what I
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:59:50AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:10:11AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> > The following packages will be REMOVED:
> > [...] libdb5.3t64 [...]
>
> You've *clearly* still got testing packages installed.
YES. As I originally said, I
Le 28/05/2024, Harald Dunkel a écrit:
> Full thread is on debian-boot mailing list.
I've read it now, thanks for the info, Harald!
Regards
--
Florent
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 06:10:11AM -0400, Michael Grant wrote:
> The following packages will be REMOVED:
> [...] libdb5.3t64 [...]
You've *clearly* still got testing packages installed.
On 2024-05-28 09:57, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Mon, 27 May 2024 18:19:10 -0500
David Wright wrote:
Hello David,
We didn't meet any lack of understanding. Rather, the problem is which
rooms do you connect, and precisely where do you place the wallplates.
That's what I meant, really. Christ,
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 12:59:34PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> So what did it say after that?
Sorry, here's the entire output of one of the tries:
[bottom /etc/mail #1168] apt install libdb5.3/bookworm db5.3-util/bookworm
db-util/bookworm
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency
On Mon, 27 May 2024 18:19:10 -0500
David Wright wrote:
Hello David,
>We didn't meet any lack of understanding. Rather, the problem is which
>rooms do you connect, and precisely where do you place the wallplates.
That's what I meant, really. Christ, they can't even place power
outlets
hola!
On Tue, 28 May 2024 at 10:23, Camaleón wrote:
> El 2024-05-27 a las 22:54 +0200, Javier Barroso escribió:
>
> Holas a los dos :-)
>
> > Buenas
> >
> > El lun., 27 may. 2024 22:48, Gonzalo Rivero
> > escribió:
> >
> > > holas
> > > El 27/5/24 a las 13:01, Camaleón escribió:
> > >
> > >
El 2024-05-28 a las 05:18 +, Eduardo Jorge Gil Michelena escribió:
>
> Disculpen la pregunta que es de una cuestión bastante básica.
>
> Por una cuestión urgente he tenido que reinstalar...
> Todo bien... se realizó sin problemas... la cuestión fue dejar las cosas
> (aspecto, programas) de
When you say your provider wants to provide you a "wireless router",
are you implying that you do not have any physically wired
high-speed internet to this property. As in, the old copper either isn't
good enough for decent internet and no fibre yet, no cable modem either?
I read your original
On Mon, 27 May 2024, Paul M Foster wrote:
... and has an RJ45 jack in it in each room. So each room would
have one of these, and the devices in it would be hooked to that device via
cat 5e.
I wired my place Cat5. A lot of work, and I regretted it. I live in the hills
behind Nice, an area
Full thread is on debian-boot mailing list.
El 2024-05-27 a las 22:54 +0200, Javier Barroso escribió:
Holas a los dos :-)
> Buenas
>
> El lun., 27 may. 2024 22:48, Gonzalo Rivero
> escribió:
>
> > holas
> > El 27/5/24 a las 13:01, Camaleón escribió:
> >
> > Hola,
> >
> > De purro churro¹ (consultando el archivo de la lista) me entero
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 2:18 AM Paul M Foster wrote:
>
> On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 12:43:14PM +1000, George at Clug wrote:
> [...]
> > If you had the money, I would get a cable installer to do a proper job of
> > running cables. I used to be an Electrician, hence I am familiar with
> > running
On 5/27/24 19:05, Paul M Foster wrote:
I did some more research, and it looks like I must have misstated the
problem.
Let's assume I can't get in the attic and wire the place. Let's
assume that I've got a wireless router/modem in, say, the garage.
Let's say I have three rooms with devices I
On 5/27/24 17:09, Paul M Foster wrote:
Folks:
At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?). The local
internet provider will likely provide a wireless router, as they all do. My
idea is to put a device which
Am 27.05.2024 um 17:09:02 Uhr schrieb Paul M Foster:
> At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not
> wired for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?). The
> local internet provider will likely provide a wireless router, as
> they all do. My idea is to put a
Hola.
Disculpen la pregunta que es de una cuestión bastante básica.
Por una cuestión urgente he tenido que reinstalar...
Todo bien... se realizó sin problemas... la cuestión fue dejar las cosas
(aspecto, programas) de manera similar a la añeja instalación... eso dió
trabajo que lleba tiempo
El lunes, 27 de mayo de 2024, 01:02:11 p. m. ART, Camaleón
escribió:
Hola,
De purro churro¹ (consultando el archivo de la lista) me entero de que
hay varios mensajes que no me han llegado, concretamente estos:
tarjetas graficas laura
Re: tarjetas graficas Leo Marín
Ayuda Borre ssh de
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 12:11:32PM +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
> On 28/05/2024 10:05 am, Paul M Foster wrote:
> > It appears there are two solutions. One is wifi extenders, and one is a
> > mesh network. In both cases, the device sits in the room and communicates
> > via wifi to the
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 02:02:47PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> >> > # apt install -t=bookworm db-util db5.3-util libc-bin libc-dev-bin
> >>
> >> I can never remember exactly what `-t` really does, but I suspect you'll
> >> need things like
> >>
> >> apt install libc-bin/bookworm
> >
> >
On 28/05/2024 10:05 am, Paul M Foster wrote:
It appears there are two solutions. One is wifi extenders, and one is a
mesh network. In both cases, the device sits in the room and communicates
via wifi to the modem/router. The devices in the room connect to the device
via ethernet cable.
How
On 28/05/2024 06:08, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I think it's called a "wireless bridge".
Any device with a wifi card and (at least) an ethernet port can do that.
Features like MAC VLAN may be unavailable with *any* device. Some
vendors offer it, but compatibility may be an issue in the case of
On Tue, May 28, 2024 at 12:43:14PM +1000, George at Clug wrote:
>
>
> On Tuesday, 28-05-2024 at 12:05 Paul M Foster wrote:
> > On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 05:09:02PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
> >
> > > Folks:
> > >
> > > At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
On 28/05/2024 01:02, Stefan Monnier wrote:
But that's not the whole story of what `-t` does since the above does
not explain why his attempt to use `-t` to downgrade some packages
resulted in `apt` saying " is already the newest version".
My guess is that -t increases priority of the specified
On Tuesday, 28-05-2024 at 12:05 Paul M Foster wrote:
> On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 05:09:02PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
>
> > Folks:
> >
> > At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
> > for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?). The local
> >
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 05:09:02PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
> Folks:
>
> At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
> for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?). The local
> internet provider will likely provide a wireless router, as they all do.
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 8:13 PM Paul M Foster wrote:
>
> At some point this year, I'm moving into a new house, and it is not wired
> for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?).
Your contract did not specify the house to be wired. You should have
called it out, if you wanted it.
>
On Mon, May 27, 2024 at 17:47 Stefan Monnier
wrote:
> > Has anyone had experience using a KVM setup (at least one HDMI and two
> USB
> > ports) and using cat 5/6/7 between user and the computer? I don’t need
> to
> > handle multiple computers or high-def video movies, just programming and
> >
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On Monday, May 27th, 2024 at 5:08 PM, Stefan Monnier
wrote:
> > I'd like to shop for such a device, but I don't know what it's called.
>
>
> I think it's called a "wireless bridge".
Yeah. A Raspberry Pi'll do that. Mine worked great. It
On Mon 27 May 2024 at 21:46:24 (+0200), Detlef Vollmann wrote:
> On 5/27/24 20:02, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > > > > # apt install -t=bookworm db-util db5.3-util libc-bin libc-dev-bin
> > > >
> > > > I can never remember exactly what `-t` really does, but I suspect you'll
> > > > need things like
>
On Mon 27 May 2024 at 22:23:01 (+0100), Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Mon, 27 May 2024 17:09:02 -0400 > Paul M Foster wrote:
>
> >for internet (WHY aren't new houses wired with Cat5/6/7?). The local
>
> Cost
>
> Lack of understanding (in the building trade)
We didn't meet any lack of understanding.
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