Recently I noticed that (thanks to Lior Kaplan, it seems) it is now trivial
to get Hebrew spellchecking (based on Hspell 1.1) in OpenOffice.
The Hebrew localized version (now available on the official OpenOffice site!)
comes with Hebrew spell-checking pre-bundled, and there's an extension [1]
for t
2010/11/2 Nadav Har'El
> Recently I noticed that (thanks to Lior Kaplan, it seems) it is now trivial
> to get Hebrew spellchecking (based on Hspell 1.1) in OpenOffice.
> The Hebrew localized version (now available on the official OpenOffice
> site!)
> comes with Hebrew spell-checking pre-bundled,
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010, Lior Kaplan wrote about "Re: Hebrew spell-checking in
OpenOffice":
> > I believe that hunspell's dictionary in fact has a way to give such
> > correction
> > rules, but I don't know how to correctly write them, or how to make
> > OpenOffice
> > use them.
> >
>
> The word lis
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010, Lior Kaplan wrote about "Re: Hebrew spell-checking in
OpenOffice":
> Known issue, and reported at
> http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=99796
Thanks for the pointer.
I'll vote for the issue (if I can be of any other help, please let me know).
> > The second iss
Actually, the lockup-for-many-seconds-bug was fixed by changing the
encoding of the dictionary to UTF-8. (See
http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=105490).
Alan
On 11/02/2010 01:09 PM, Nadav Har'El wrote:
OpenOffice loads the hunspell-format dictionary (with so-called "double
affi
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 01:25:18PM +0200, Nadav Har'El wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 02, 2010, Lior Kaplan wrote about "Re: Hebrew spell-checking in
> OpenOffice":
> > Known issue, and reported at
> > http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=99796
>
> Thanks for the pointer.
> I'll vote for the is
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010, Lior Kaplan wrote about "Re: Hebrew spell-checking in
OpenOffice":
> I've double checked this, and Debian doesn't include a tool needed for
> building the hunspell target. See
> http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=602189
I see :(
However, if we're talking about
On Tue, Nov 2, 2010 at 2:44 PM, Nadav Har'El wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 02, 2010, Lior Kaplan wrote about "Re: Hebrew spell-checking in
> OpenOffice":
> > I've double checked this, and Debian doesn't include a tool needed for
> > building the hunspell target. See
> > http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugre
Hello everyone,
I am looking to purchase ARM servers, preferably with the new
Cortex-A15 processors. This is to run general purpose server
workloads, so I would like to buy full integrated servers rather than
build them up myself from embedded boards. Any ideas who sells such
beasties in Israel?
Hi Linux-il members,
Anyone have experience with the PLX IOP 480 on recent (last two years) PC
x86?
Regards,
- yba
--
EE 77 7F 30 4A 64 2E C5 83 5F E7 49 A6 82 29 BA~. .~ Tk Open Systems
=}ooO--U--Ooo{=
- y...@tkos.co.
Hi,
Why don't you take Atom processors? more horse power (IIRC), and there are
solutions (from Intel) which can give you a big box with few dozens boards
and hard disks.
Hetz
2010/11/2 Muli Ben-Yehuda
> Hello everyone,
>
> I am looking to purchase ARM servers, preferably with the new
> Cortex-A
Hi Muli,
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 10:14:43AM +0200, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> I am looking to purchase ARM servers, preferably with the new
> Cortex-A15 processors.
The Cortex-A15 core has just been announced by ARM. Don't expect to see actual
Cortex-A15 based chips in less than a year.
> This is
On Nov 2, 2010, at 5:03 PM, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
Why don't you take Atom processors? more horse power (IIRC), and
there are solutions (from Intel) which can give you a big box with
few dozens boards and hard disks.
Didn't we have this discussion a couple of weeks ago?
Geoff.
--
Geoffre
Hi Muli,
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 05:30:12PM +0200, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 05:11:34PM +0200, Baruch Siach wrote:
> > Are you interested in processing horsepower, or storage?
>
> Mostly processing, although storage is also interesting.
Then you should go for the Coretx-A8
On Nov 2, 2010, at 8:17 PM, Baruch Siach wrote:
Then you should go for the Coretx-A8/A9 based chips. You can have a
Beagleboard (TI OMAP based) for about $150. I don't know who sells
them in
Israel though.
For that price (500 NIS) you can get a dual core ATOM (2x aprox
1.6gHz cores),
Quoting Yedidyah Bar-David, from the post of Mon, 01 Nov:
>
> I worked for several years with postfix+dovecot+postfixadmin. IIRC it
> was mostly based on this howto:
> http://bliki.rimuhosting.com/space/knowledgebase/linux/mail/postfixadmin+on+debian+sarge
> which is pretty dated, but postfixadmin
Did anyone on this list actually installed and maintained
mainstream distribution on Sheevaplug ? ( or alike )
I'm referring to a VERY light implementation of firewall/postfix/apache.
( all on the same machine will surprise me though )
If so, please share brand,model and configuration.
I'm not e
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 08:55:12PM +0200, Moish wrote:
> Did anyone on this list actually installed and maintained
> mainstream distribution on Sheevaplug ? ( or alike )
> I'm referring to a VERY light implementation of firewall/postfix/apache.
> ( all on the same machine will surprise me though )
Quoting Ira Abramov, from the post of Tue, 02 Nov:
>
> the howto), but now I have postfix refusing to connect to the database.
> I'm close to open a new thread on that since I feel like I exhausted
> everything Google could find me.
Motherfrakker! This took two important hours and here's the solu
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 05:11:34PM +0200, Baruch Siach wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 10:14:43AM +0200, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> > I am looking to purchase ARM servers, preferably with the new
> > Cortex-A15 processors.
>
> The Cortex-A15 core has just been announced by ARM. Don't expect to
> s
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 05:03:39PM +0200, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
> Hi,
> Why don't you take Atom processors?
Because I want to run experiments on the ARM architecture.
Cheers,
Muli
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Get yourself an old openmoko device. They are ARM based, well documented,
with several simple options of Linux distros for them. Very weak, of course,
but for ARM games (playing with your arm :-) ) they should be just fine.
Ez
On Tue, Nov 2, 2010 at 5:31 PM, Muli Ben-Yehuda wrote:
> On Tue, Nov
As written earlier, the cheapest way to get an ARM is to buy a Seagate
FreeAgent Dockstar at <300 NIS.
This is basically a slightly trimmed down SheevaPlug.
128MB RAM
128MB NAND Flash
3 USB ports
Fanless
debian & OpenWRT available.
Please see:
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.region.israel/
Hi all,
The company I am working on is looking into incorporating some smart card
readers into our device line (based on TI OMAP3).
We need someone to help us port the pcsc-lite stack to our device and then
help writing the higher level code to read/write data from/to the smart card.
Since the
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