On 08/15/2010 12:47 AM, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
greetings
tpowa
signoff x86_64
--
Ionuț
On 08/15/2010 12:46 AM, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
greetings
tpowa
signoff x86_64
--
Ionuț
In order for that to be correct it needs to also have :/usr/local/bin
inside of the quote marks. The /usr/local/bin directory on Linux systems
like slackware and debian is where stuff gets put that anyone can execute
that's on the system. I put a simple shell script I wrote there then
tried
Le dimanche 15 août 2010 11:20:33, Allan McRae a écrit :
On 15/08/10 18:50, Jude DaShiell wrote:
In order for that to be correct it needs to also have :/usr/local/bin
inside of the quote marks. The /usr/local/bin directory on Linux systems
like slackware and debian is where stuff gets put
Am 2010-08-14 23:10, schrieb Xavier Chantry:
On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Kurt J. Bosch
kjb-temp-2...@alpenjodel.de wrote:
Am 2010-08-14 21:48, schrieb Laurent Carlier:
You should fill a bugreport as there is security issues
No. Last time I did this it was rejected -
Hi,
during the last days I updated my old notebook. It wasn't updated since
2007. So you can imagine that the latest switch from tar.gz to tar.xz
was a little problem.
But a manual installation of the necessary packages and some rude
untaring directly in / gave me the ability to update the whole
On 15 August 2010 13:53, PT M. pen...@gmail.com wrote:
Before entering X, I saw such error message since last git update:
/etc/bash_completion.d/git: line 123: syntax error near unexpected token
`'
/etc/bash_completion.d/git: line 123: ` done (git config -z --get-regexp
On 15/08/10 07:10, Xavier Chantry wrote:
On Sat, Aug 14, 2010 at 9:54 PM, Kurt J. Bosch
kjb-temp-2...@alpenjodel.de wrote:
Am 2010-08-14 21:48, schrieb Laurent Carlier:
You should fill a bugreport as there is security issues
No. Last time I did this it was rejected -
On 15 August 2010 19:14, Johannes Held m...@hehejo.de wrote:
Hi,
during the last days I updated my old notebook. It wasn't updated since
2007. So you can imagine that the latest switch from tar.gz to tar.xz
was a little problem.
But a manual installation of the necessary packages and some
Am Sun, 15 Aug 2010 11:21:24 +0200
schrieb Laurent Carlier lordhea...@gmail.com:
Le dimanche 15 août 2010 11:20:33, Allan McRae a écrit :
On 15/08/10 18:50, Jude DaShiell wrote:
In order for that to be correct it needs to also
have :/usr/local/bin inside of the quote marks.
The
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 5:44 AM, Heiko Baums li...@baums-on-web.de wrote:
Am Sun, 15 Aug 2010 11:21:24 +0200
schrieb Laurent Carlier lordhea...@gmail.com:
Le dimanche 15 août 2010 11:20:33, Allan McRae a écrit :
On 15/08/10 18:50, Jude DaShiell wrote:
In order for that to be correct it
However in Judd's case I would think ~/bin would be better suited for
user scripts unless he needs to use them system wide ie. as another
user. since its much easier to edit save the files and does not
require root privileges to modify
Mike
I use ~/.local/bin for user specific applications and
On Sun 15 Aug 2010 06:33 -0700, mike rosset wrote:
I use ~/.local/bin for user specific applications and scripts. ~/bin would
create visible clutter to the home folder.
--
Ape Lauri Niskanen
That might work for you however in Jude's case being a blind user I
would think he would want
Jude DaShiell jdash...@shellworld.net writes:
In order for that to be correct it needs to also have :/usr/local/bin
inside of the quote marks. The /usr/local/bin directory on Linux
systems like slackware and debian is where stuff gets put that anyone
can execute that's on the system.
I
Tobias, All,
Just dropping a note to say that kernel26-2.6.35.2-1-x86_64 works fine on my
box-from-hell that had the hardlock on boot problems with 2.6.34. Compiz works,
Virtualbox works, so it looks good.
(I'm on my test drive and my mail is on the drive I just took out, so sorry I
On 08/15/2010 06:14 AM, Johannes Held wrote:
Hi,
during the last days I updated my old notebook. It wasn't updated since
2007. So you can imagine that the latest switch from tar.gz to tar.xz
was a little problem.
But a manual installation of the necessary packages and some rude
untaring
On 08/14/10 17:46, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
Signoff x86_64 , it seems to be working fine for me
(I had the impression that it might be heating up my laptop more than
normal, but then I was doing backups last night, and I'm feeling
Ray Rashif schivmeis...@gmail.com:
1) remove any xorg.conf that you have
I did that before reboot. Xorg still didn't find any screens. The reason for
that, might be an outdated driver still loaded - thus the reboot.
2) edit mkinitcpio.conf for a 'full' image
I'd miss that one. -.-
I'll give
Am Sun, 15 Aug 2010 06:19:24 -0700
schrieb mike rosset schizoi...@gmail.com:
I agree with this /usr/local/ is a pretty common location to install
system wide software and imo /usr/local/bin /usr/local/sbin should be
included in the default path. FHS covers this and GNU conf also
defaults to
On 15 August 2010 22:14, Chris Brannon cmbranno...@gmail.com wrote:
The hand-written, system-specific scripts pose a problem, though. Does
anyone use makepkg + pacman to manage these? Is it worth the extra
effort?
I keep /usr/local for random from-the-web stuff. For my own stuff, I
have
On Sun 15 Aug 2010 07:08 -0700, mike rosset wrote:
Someone unaware of dotfiles might miss them, but others (blind or
sighted) should be able to access them without issue.
And all of this has nothing to do with the orignal issue /usr/local. I
only suggested using something in $HOME for user
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 2:09 PM, Loui Chang louipc@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun 15 Aug 2010 07:08 -0700, mike rosset wrote:
Someone unaware of dotfiles might miss them, but others (blind or
sighted) should be able to access them without issue.
And all of this has nothing to do with the
On 08/15/10 13:07, Isaac Dupree wrote:
On 08/14/10 17:46, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
Signoff x86_64 , it seems to be working fine for me
Also, I think the ath9k regressions (randomly losing the wireless
connection) that .33 and .34
I have a headache. Why isn't Fidel Castro helping me??
Hi, may be Bush could help you
On 08/15/2010 12:07 PM, Isaac Dupree wrote:
On 08/14/10 17:46, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
Signoff x86_64 , it seems to be working fine for me
(I had the impression that it might be heating up my laptop more than normal,
but then I
Guys,
Here is a quick browser tip for firefox. About a year ago I stumbled across
'NightShift - Eyecare' that did a fantastic job at basically inverting the way
firefox rendered pages darkening the display and providing immediate relief to
tired eyes:
NightShift - Eyecare (good title)
On Sun, Aug 15, 2010 at 17:03, David C. Rankin
drankina...@suddenlinkmail.com wrote:
Guys,
Here is a quick browser tip for firefox. About a year ago I stumbled
across 'NightShift - Eyecare' that did a fantastic job at basically
inverting the way firefox rendered pages darkening the
On 08/15/10 17:45, David C. Rankin wrote:
What type of video card do you have?
Intel 945 class -- it's one of the first to get KMS and the support is
excellent by now. I never ever get slow graphics (although I don't play
games much... IIRC extremetuxracer works fine...)
If you can
I also noticed that kernel 2.6.35 wake the fan in my notebook more often.
watching sensors output, the fan wakes when temp reached 52°C, then cooled
down to 45°C in 30 secs, then fan stops, and the temp soon go up to 50+ in
another 30 secs.
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 7:46 AM, Isaac Dupree
after a recent update, i found out that telepathy-butterfly is broken.
/usr/lib/telepathy/telepathy-butterfly, running manually from a
console, complains about requiring papyon = 0.5.0, while to he
package state it requires papyon = 0.4.9. but there is NO papyon
0.5.0 out there according to the
On 08/14/2010 04:47 PM, Tobias Powalowski wrote:
Latest kernel is in testing,
please signoff for both arches.
greetings
tpowa
Works fine on my x86_64 laptop...
--
David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
Rankin Law Firm, PLLC
510 Ochiltree Street
Nacogdoches, Texas 75961
Telephone: (936) 715-9333
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