Hmm....

I'm at a loss for words on this one.

I tried editing the file without running sudo, and I got the message 'can not open the file for writing'. I've also tried it with sudo to allow access to the file, and it saves properly then.

Brian

On Saturday, March 27, 2004, at 08:28 AM, Gretchen Summers wrote:

Brian,

I follow these instructions as you describe, and it works the same, but
after I see the "mime.types" and hit return, that is when I get the
"File not found."

And, I did type pico mime.types without the period.  That was a typo in
the email itself.

On Mon, 22 Mar 2004 20:43:40 -0500, Brian Futrell wrote:

On Monday, March 22, 2004, at 12:33 PM, Gretchen Summers wrote:


Essentially when you open a file with pico, it copies the file to a
section of memory called a buffer.  When it asks you to save the
modified buffer, it's asking if you want to save the contents of that
buffer back to a file.

After you press 'Y' to save the contents of the buffer, it should
have a prompt that says 'File name to write:'.  On my window, it has
the file name 'mime.types'.  If that is not there, you will need to
type it in then press return afterwards.

Normally you should type in 'exit' on the command line before closing
a terminal window, but I don't think it hurts too much when using
pico.  I may be wrong though.

Also, when typing in "pico.mime.types", there should be a space
between 'pico' and 'mime', not a period.  That should get you back
into that file.

Brian

Brian,

OK. I'm a little closer. I was able to do the first
part--pico.mime.convs. When I got to the point where I typed "Y" to
save modified buffer (whatever that is!), it went fine. When I pressed
return, however, it said "file not found." So I closed the terminal
window, and opened a new one. I typed in "pico.mime.types," and it
said "file not found." I don't know what else to do. BTW, I hope I
didn't mess anything up by just closing the window. I really am a
novice with the terminal.


On Sun, 21 Mar 2004 22:20:02 -0500, Brian Futrell wrote:
This is what I did:

On Saturday, March 20, 2004, at 08:27 AM, Gretchen Summers wrote:

Brian,

I don't know what to do when you get to this step (this is where I got
hung up the first time). As I mentioned, I am not very familiar with
the terminal and how to use it.



4. Use a text editor to uncomment the following line towards the end
of the mime.convs file (by removing the # sign):
#application/octet-stream application/vnd.cups-raw 0 -
I usually use pico as the editor, as it is fairly self explanitory
(sudo pico mime.convs).

At the command line I typed in 'pico mime.convs' (without the quotes).
I moved the cursor towards the end of the file until I saw the line
mentioned in step 4.
I then removed the # sign by using the delete key (del didn't work).
It's like the 5th line from the bottom of the file.
Then I pressed Control and X to exit the pico program.
It will ask you to Save Modified buffer. Type 'Y' to proceed.
It will then ask you for a file name. Press Return to accept the
default file name.


        5.      Also uncomment the following line towards the end of the
mime.types file:
 #application/octet-stream


At the command line I typed in 'pico mime.types' (without the quotes).
I moved the cursor towards the end of the file until I saw the line
mentioned in step 5.
I then removed the # sign by using the delete key (del didn't work).
Again it's like the 5th line from the bottom of the file.
Then I pressed Control and X to exit the pico program.
It will ask you to Save Modified buffer. Type 'Y' to proceed.
It will then ask you for a file name. Press Return to accept the
default file name.


On Fri, 19 Mar 2004 12:07:40 -0500, Joe Questore wrote:
I finally managed to share the HP Deskjet 812c connected to my G3
AIO with my Windows XP computer using an article from
www.macOSXhints.com.  Here's the exact link I used:




http://www.macosxhints.com/ article.php?story=20021101062604548&query=sharing+printers+with+Windows

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Gretchen Summers [EMAIL PROTECTED]


I hope my steps help you out Gretchen. If not, let me know.


The two files mentioned above can only be saved once the sudo command
is issued. This is done in Step 3.


While I'm not as proficient with the BSD command line, I've used PCs
long before Windows was in widespread use.  The DOS command line was
the only way to do things.

Brian Futrell
---
"Dentyne": G3/266 AIO 320MB/40GB/Zip100/24x/10.2.6
"FrankenMac": 8500/180-7200 case 160MB/2x1GB/9.1-P166/48MB/DOS
 "Minty": G3/266 DT (oc 300) 256MB/2x10GB/Zip100/16x10x40/10.2.8

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Gretchen Summers [EMAIL PROTECTED]

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~* Gretchen Summers [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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