At 2005-09-28 16:38:08 +1000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> To join the ICONS community please go to:
>
>http://icons.apnic.net/
Just how many times does this need to be announced?
-- ams
___
ilugd mailinglist -- ilugd@lists.linux-delhi.org
http://
Dear Members & Friends,
APNIC launched a new information portal called 'ICONS'. This site will
provide the Asia Pacific Internet community with a forum to exchange
information and links about a variety of networking topics such as routing,
network security, IXPs, and DNS.
We would appreciate it i
--- Sudev Barar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> OP was shirking and hence:
> 1. You are the community
> 2. If you benefit from Linux make sureother can too
> 3. Attending also builds mentorship - You get help
> and you help other
> 4. Choose a topic you would like o speak on and put
> it onlist when
Yeah thats a normal practice to make sure that the notebook gets clean DC
power and not some electrical noise induced by nearby "electrically noisy"
appliances
Best regards,
Vikram
On 9/28/05, Sandip Bhattacharya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:>
> > Yep. It's a ferrite bead for RF noise suppression.
>
Dear Sir,
---SNIP-
Thus, one can't unmount the CD cuz it's supposedly busy, and one can't eject the
CD cuz it's mounted. The only solution being a reboot.
---SNIP-
use "umount -l " also could use "fuser" to identify
On Wednesday, 28 Sep 2005 00:03, Abhijit Menon-Sen wrote:
> At 2005-09-27 21:33:10 +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > or better still this one - the black cable (USB one)
> > http://www.steves-digicams.com/2003_reviews/a70/a70_package.jpg
>
> Yep. It's a ferrite bead for RF noise suppression.
>
>
On 9/27/05, Raj shekhar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> in infinite wisdom [EMAIL PROTECTED] spoke thus on 09/27/05 12:44:
> > aah I thought that the secret password was "Beer"
>
> The secret password is "drinks are on me" usually followed by "@#" :-)
> --
Yes yesy you can say drinks are on me.
At 2005-09-27 21:33:10 +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> or better still this one - the black cable (USB one)
> http://www.steves-digicams.com/2003_reviews/a70/a70_package.jpg
Yep. It's a ferrite bead for RF noise suppression.
-- ams
___
ilugd mailin
On Tuesday 27 Sep 2005 9:33 pm, Guntupalli Karunakar wrote:
> or better still this one - the black cable (USB one)
> http://www.steves-digicams.com/2003_reviews/a70/a70_package.jpg
>
> Karunakar
go to sleep
--
regards
kg
http://www.livejournal.com/users/lawgon
tally ho! http://avsap.org.in
ಇಂಡ್
On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 16:29:36 +0530
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
> > On Tuesday 27 Sep 2005 1:49 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> >
> >>> My canon A70 used to work with such a cable, but not with a
> >>>straight cable (which doesnt have the blob). this ca
At 2005-09-27 13:32:16 +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> I too do the same, but one Q I have wrt to the camera cable usually
> the cables coming with the camera have a cylindrical blob at the
> camera end, how much does it affect usage? & what is it for?
That's most probably just a ferrite bead
On 9/27/05, Saurabh Nanda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > # considering your cdrom is mounted somewhere on /mnt/cdrom
> > lsof | grep cdrom
> >
> > kill -9
> But even this solution is a workaround! The CD driver should give up
> after some time and throw an error!
Cant say what's the default read
On Tuesday 27 Sep 2005 4:29 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > he has been asking about his blob for the last six months - i hope
> > someone puts him out of his agony soon :-)
>
> maybe you Kuranakar should post (make available ) a digital image of
> his blob - it might help.
an image of the dissec
> # considering your cdrom is mounted somewhere on /mnt/cdrom
> lsof | grep cdrom
>
> kill -9
I've tried killing the process (say cp) but that doesn't solve the
problem. I'll try this as well.
But even this solution is a workaround! The CD driver should give up
after some time and throw an error
On 9/27/05, Saurabh Nanda <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thus, one
> can't unmount the CD cuz it's supposedly busy, and one can't eject the
> CD cuz it's mounted. The only solution being a reboot.
# considering your cdrom is mounted somewhere on /mnt/cdrom
lsof | grep cdrom
kill -9
--
regards,
ma
Kenneth Gonsalves wrote:
> On Tuesday 27 Sep 2005 1:49 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>>> My canon A70 used to work with such a cable, but not with a
>>>straight cable (which doesnt have the blob). this cable only works
>>>for cameras showing up as USB storage.
>>
>>Again no idea - does the same c
On Tuesday 27 Sep 2005 1:49 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > My canon A70 used to work with such a cable, but not with a
> > straight cable (which doesnt have the blob). this cable only works
> > for cameras showing up as USB storage.
>
> Again no idea - does the same cable do the battey charging
Guntupalli Karunakar wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 13:08:43 +0530
> "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> I know you must be speaking from experience ;).
Yes a friend blew up his Ninon d70 because he connected his camera to a
faulty USB port and boom Rs 15 kn went up in smoke.
> Because the VFS would be unhappy if mounted media suddenly disappeared
> from under it (and was potentially replaced with something different).
> That applies to all mounts, not just CDs.
But doesn't the VFS already handle such situations with USB pen drives
and to some extent with network file
At 2005-09-27 15:11:19 +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Firstly, could anyone please tell me what's the philosophy behind
> 'locking' the CD-ROM tray when a CD has been mounted.
So that you can't eject a mounted CD.
> Why can't I eject a mounted CD?
Because the VFS would be unhappy if mounted
At 2005-09-27 03:17:48 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Thank the NSA, not NASA !! These two are very different organisations.
Thank them both, but NASA merits a whole lot more thanks. NSA's SELinux
is a dwarfed by NASA's contributions one way or another.
-- ams
__
>>
>> I don't remember offhand if Cray has contributed anything, but did
>> you
>> know that the NSA (the US National Security Agency) was
>> responsible for
>> the development of SELinux? Not only did they contribute it back,
>> most
>> distributions ship with it these days.-
>>
>
> Thanks -
Hi,
Firstly, could anyone please tell me what's the philosophy behind
'locking' the CD-ROM tray when a CD has been mounted. Why can't I
eject a mounted CD? Additionally, is there some way with which I may
eject mounted CDs?
Secondly, when the kernel encouters an I/O error while accessing a
scratc
Hi Guys,
We have requirement of 2-3 person who has at least 2-3+ years of good
experience in:
1. Development in C++/Java/PHP/Perl
2. Exposure to Database(Mysql/PostgreSQL)
3. Exposure to Web Servers
3. Linux Administration experience
4. Should be good team player
5. Telephony Exp. will be plus(i
On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 13:08:43 +0530
"[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Abhijit Menon-Sen wrote:
> >
> >
> > Most of the newer ones will let you do that (as others have
> > observed), but even the ones that don't can often be used with
> > gphoto (or digikam or whatever). And for cam
Hi Vikram,
--- vikram ranade <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I wanted to get hold of a 2~5 Megapixel one for work
> and I need this to work
> By working well i mean that i should be able to
> mount it as a regular USB
I tried Olympus C-500 Zoom. It's a 5 MP camera with 3X
optical zoom. It is recogn
Abhijit Menon-Sen wrote:
>
>
> Most of the newer ones will let you do that (as others have observed),
> but even the ones that don't can often be used with gphoto (or digikam
> or whatever). And for cameras that use a removable SD/CF/whatever card,
> you can always just get a cheap USB card reade
Abhijit Menon-Sen wrote:
>
> Most of the newer ones will let you do that (as others have observed),
> but even the ones that don't can often be used with gphoto (or digikam
> or whatever). And for cameras that use a removable SD/CF/whatever card,
> you can always just get a cheap USB card reader.
in infinite wisdom [EMAIL PROTECTED] spoke thus on 09/27/05 12:44:
> aah I thought that the secret password was "Beer"
The secret password is "drinks are on me" usually followed by "@#" :-)
--
Raj ShekharY!IM : lunatech3007
blog : http://rajshekhar.net/blog home : h
At 2005-09-26 11:13:07 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> Was curious if there are any digital camera's that work out of the box
> with linux.
http://www.gphoto.org/proj/libgphoto2/support.php
> By working well i mean that i should be able to mount it as a regular
> USB drive thru a USB connecto
Sudev Barar wrote:
>
> Our youngest speaker was all of 14!!
> No one is a giant and as to attending a meet all you do is show up and
> that is just about it. No one is going to ask you for some secret
> password or anthing like that!!
aah I thought that the secret password was "Beer"
ram
> --
>
vikram ranade wrote:
> Was curious if there are any digital camera's that work out of the box with
> linux.
> I wanted to get hold of a 2~5 Megapixel one for work and I need this to work
> well with
> Linux.
> By working well i mean that i should be able to mount it as a regular USB
> drive thru a
Abhijit Menon-Sen wrote:
> At 2005-09-26 15:46:09 +0530, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>>ams wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Now I'm confused.
>
>
> I'm still confused. I'm afraid I'm finding your argument a bit difficult
> to follow, and I'm not even quite sure whether you're being sarcastic or
> not. Nevertheles
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