On 2020-08-22 19:25, Teemu Likonen wrote:
* 2020-08-22 11:19:17+01, mick crane wrote:
On 2020-08-21 18:46, local10 wrote:
What would be a reasonably secure and simple way to encrypt files on
Linux and then send them to a non-technical Windows user so she would
be able decrypt and read them?
Heads-up for those using wicd from sid.
- Forwarded message from Axel Beckert -
Date: Fri, 07 Aug 2020 05:45:41 +0200
From: Axel Beckert
To: Debian Bug Tracking System
Subject: Bug#968033: RM: wicd -- ROM; Version in unstable depends on Python
2.x, Python3 version only in experimental
On Sb, 22 aug 20, 21:50:42, Joachim Fahnenmüller wrote:
> Am 22.08.20 um 21:00 schrieb Joachim Fahnenmüller:
> >
> > root@peter:~# ls -lah /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libbabl-0.1.so.0
> > lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 22 Jun 13 2019
> > /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libbabl-0.1.so.0 -> libbabl-0.1.so.0.165.1
I've been using Remind for years (maybe decades). It can handle all kinds
of repeating reminders, not just annual dates (ie birthdays and
anniversaries). Very versatile. It is a command line program, but comes
with TkRemind (a GUI front end). Best not to use the GUI for setting up
reminders, th
On 22/8/20 6:49 pm, David Christensen wrote:
SanDisk 128GB High Endurance Video microSDXC Card
This came up well in a couple of reviews I read yesterday afternoon.
The specific summaries:
After 30+ hours of research and testing, our top choice is the 64GB
Samsung Pro Endurance. It has the be
On Sat, 22 Aug 2020 15:43:56 -0500
Greg Marks wrote:
> One cross-platform encryption method would be to use OpenSSL
> (https://www.openssl.org/). The Linux user might use the following
> commands.
>
> Encryption:
> openssl aes-256-cbc -pbkdf2 -iter 100 -in plaintext.txt -out
> ciphertext.
One cross-platform encryption method would be to use OpenSSL
(https://www.openssl.org/). The Linux user might use the following
commands.
Encryption:
openssl aes-256-cbc -pbkdf2 -iter 100 -in plaintext.txt -out
ciphertext.txt
Decryption:
openssl aes-256-cbc -pbkdf2 -iter 100 -d -in c
Am 22.08.20 um 21:00 schrieb Joachim Fahnenmüller:
Am 10.08.20 um 22:47 schrieb Kent West:
On Mon, Aug 10, 2020 at 1:49 PM Joachim Fahnenmüller
wrote:
Am 10.08.20 um 17:39 schrieb Kent West:
On Mon, Aug 10, 2020 at 10:20 AM Joachim Fahnenmüller <
jfahnenmuel...@web.de>
wrote:
Hi everybod
Am 10.08.20 um 22:47 schrieb Kent West:
On Mon, Aug 10, 2020 at 1:49 PM Joachim Fahnenmüller
wrote:
Am 10.08.20 um 17:39 schrieb Kent West:
On Mon, Aug 10, 2020 at 10:20 AM Joachim Fahnenmüller <
jfahnenmuel...@web.de>
wrote:
Hi everybody,
since I upgraded to Bullseye, Gimp does not star
On 8/22/2020 6:33 PM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 21 aug 20, 21:06:05, john doe wrote:
When I can not get the command I want, I break it down to the simplest
command as possible then I build from there to the command I realy want.
Have you considered that solution(s) found might not be usabl
Teemu Likonen wrote:
> Q: What should we eat today?
> A: What's wrong with Chinese food?
>
> Q: What novel do you suggest me to read next?
> A: What's wrong with The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin?
>
>
> Is there a culture where "what's wrong with" means "I suggest"? Or is
> there a culture wh
* 2020-08-22 11:19:17+01, mick crane wrote:
> On 2020-08-21 18:46, local10 wrote:
>> What would be a reasonably secure and simple way to encrypt files on
>> Linux and then send them to a non-technical Windows user so she would
>> be able decrypt and read them?
> If these are documents what's wron
hi gene,
86! i am 78 by now and still active after 22 years on debian (and
sometimes BSD).
my respect man
steef
from groningen, holland
Op 22-08-2020 om 18:38 schreef Gene Heskett:
On Saturday 22 August 2020 09:38:59 Albretch Mueller wrote:
On 8/21/20, The Wanderer wrote:
Wow. T
Hi.
On Sat, Aug 22, 2020 at 12:49:11PM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4954451
>
> > LSISAS3008: FWVersion(16.00.08.00), ChipRevision(0x02),
> > BiosVersion(18.00.00.00)
>
> What's the error? 95% of us don't have access to the IBM
> paywall.
But some of
Patrice Duroux wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to install a Debian system on a recently purchased Dell
> PowerEdge R840.
> After trying many versions and distributions (including also Ubuntu Server
> 20.04 LTS) up to Debian Bullseye Alpha 2, the situations are always very
> similar to this:
>
> htt
Hi,
I am trying to install a Debian system on a recently purchased Dell
PowerEdge R840.
After trying many versions and distributions (including also Ubuntu Server
20.04 LTS) up to Debian Bullseye Alpha 2, the situations are always very
similar to this:
https://access.redhat.com/solutions/4954451
On Saturday 22 August 2020 09:38:59 Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 8/21/20, The Wanderer wrote:
> > Wow. That's some dense, opaque code.
>
> my only intention was to get something done as quickly as possible. I
> didn't even know that people cared about proper writing of bash
> script. Is there s
On Vi, 21 aug 20, 21:06:05, john doe wrote:
>
> When I can not get the command I want, I break it down to the simplest
> command as possible then I build from there to the command I realy want.
Have you considered that solution(s) found might not be usable in the
bigger context, basically wastin
Jaikumar Sharma wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 22, 2020 at 5:10 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> > You still want bridging, not bonding.
> Preferred is bonding, if it works :)
> Have to test it with two wired connections connected to Cisco managed switch.
This really sounds like you're trying to test out a scenar
> hrmm... I just went back to the original post; I missed this bit the
> first time around:
> > In this setup i'm using a D-Link 8 port switch to connect eth0 using
> > ethernet cable and eth1 is connected on wireless adapter of my laptop.
>
> eth0 and eth1 are probably on two different networks (s
On Sat, Aug 22, 2020 at 5:10 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> You still want bridging, not bonding.
Preferred is bonding, if it works :)
> WiFi doesn't have a cable, so it can't tell you when the
> connection goes away, and it can't decide by itself to bring up
> a connection. You need a management program
On 8/22/20, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Lee wrote:
>>
>> Or you can just configure the wired ethernet connection to have a
>> lower (better) routing metric than the wireless connection. That way
>> the machine always uses the wired connection if it's up and uses the
>> wireless connection when the wired
On 2020-08-22 at 09:38, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 8/21/20, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> Wow. That's some dense, opaque code.
>
> my only intention was to get something done as quickly as possible.
> I didn't even know that people cared about proper writing of bash
> script. Is there such a thin
On 8/21/20, The Wanderer wrote:
> Wow. That's some dense, opaque code.
my only intention was to get something done as quickly as possible. I
didn't even know that people cared about proper writing of bash
script. Is there such a thing? Do people take it seriously?
lbrtchx
Lee wrote:
>
> Or you can just configure the wired ethernet connection to have a
> lower (better) routing metric than the wireless connection. That way
> the machine always uses the wired connection if it's up and uses the
> wireless connection when the wired connection is down.
>
> There's pro
On 8/22/20, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Jaikumar Sharma wrote:
>> On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 9:30 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
>> > You don't want a bond, you want a bridge.
>> >
>> > Bonding takes two interfaces that talk to the same switch on the
>> > other side, and makes them into one bond nic. You need support
Jaikumar Sharma wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 9:30 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> > You don't want a bond, you want a bridge.
> >
> > Bonding takes two interfaces that talk to the same switch on the
> > other side, and makes them into one bond nic. You need support
> > on the switch, too, which is unl
On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 9:30 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> You don't want a bond, you want a bridge.
>
> Bonding takes two interfaces that talk to the same switch on the
> other side, and makes them into one bond nic. You need support
> on the switch, too, which is unlikely in a D-Link 8-port unless
> it
Teemu Likonen writes:
* 2020-08-22 00:17:19+02, Linux-Fan wrote:
> The copy I receive from the list does not verify correctly here,
> either.
The content between MIME separator lines are signed. The separators
itself are not part of the signature and also the last empty line is not
part of the
On 2020-08-21 18:46, local10 wrote:
Hi,
What would be a reasonably secure and simple way to encrypt files on
Linux and then send them to a non-technical Windows user so she would
be able decrypt and read them?
Any ideas? Thanks
If these are documents what's wrong with open office protected w
Hi,
occasionally I experience a hang in booting during the network setup.
The boot screen shows a timeout of 5min 7sec going to 6min 37sec after
the former expired. Then the system starts normally and the networks
work, including openvpn and barracudavpn (when in use).
I didn't file a report with
On 2020-08-21 21:02, Patrick Bartek wrote:
Hi! All:
For my Homebuilt NAS [specs below], I've decided on a very small 32GB
SanDisk flash drive for the system drive to keep the 6 available SATA
II connectors free for storage drives. But I'm concerned about writes
wearing out the flash drive too s
Darac Marjal wrote:
> Signal (signal.org)
>
> Signal is an instant messaging application. It uses a well respected
> end-to-end encryption protocol (meaning that the messages are encrypted
> by the client and sent over the internet before being decrypted by the
> recipient's client).
OP asking f
Jaikumar Sharma wrote:
> Thank you for pointers, this is a test switch at home but of course
> we have bigger Cisco switches at office which have management interface.
> It look like LACP needs to be checked/enabled on ports which needs to
> be used in network bonding.
Note that LACP is not "acti
On Fri, Aug 21, 2020 at 09:28:02PM -0400, Matthew Graybosch wrote:
> On Fri, 21 Aug 2020 20:10:50 -0400
> rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
[...]
> You're right. Please consider my last email proof that exposure to
> Windows causes brain damage and that its use in the corporate workplace
> should be cons
* 2020-08-22 00:17:19+02, Linux-Fan wrote:
> The copy I receive from the list does not verify correctly here,
> either.
The content between MIME separator lines are signed. The separators
itself are not part of the signature and also the last empty line is not
part of the signature.
--=_pte5
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