On Thu, 25 Aug 2016 15:07:47 -0600
Greg Woods wrote:
> In case anyone else finds this thread later: I had to go back to the F23
> version of lirc on my F24 systems, because I was getting key bounces
> (pressing one key and having it act like multiple key presses).
Nah, that's a feature! The
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 2:47 PM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Aug 2016 16:20:12 -0400
> Tom Horsley wrote:
> I seem to have lirc running OK
> and recognizing commands from my remote now.
In case anyone else finds this thread later: I had to go back to the F23
version
I need a much bigger font for yumex-dnf than the F24 default;
where can I change it?
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On Thu, 25 Aug 2016 16:20:12 -0400
Tom Horsley wrote:
> The /usr/lib/systemd/system/lircd.service file says
> it depends on the lircd-setup.service, which doesn't
> seem to have a service file anywhere.
DOH! Nevermind. lircd-setup is a program, not a service,
and it does exist. I seem to have
I see lirc rpms on fedora, but I wonder about the systemd
integration. The /usr/share/doc/lirc-core/README.fedora
file doesn't quite seem to document the actual installation.
The /usr/lib/systemd/system/lircd.service file says
it depends on the lircd-setup.service, which doesn't
seem to have a
On 08/24/2016 08:36 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
> Remember that the globs ("*") are interpreted by the shell, not ls.
In fact, interesting things can happen if you have a file called "-l".
(and this is why we have option "--")
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Roberto Ragusamail at robertoragusa.it
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On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 10:55:39AM -0400, Tim Evans wrote:
> On 08/25/2016 09:43 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 01:39:00AM -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> > > On 08/24/2016 10:21 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> > > > Root runs a nightly cronjob of "/usr/bin/calendar -a"
> > > > to look at
On Thu, 25 Aug 2016 02:51:56 -
"William Mattison" wrote:
> (I'm replying to the entire discussion as of Wednesday evening US
> Mountain time.)
[snip]
> * Stan - In your last message on this topic, you implied you are
> abandoning Adblock Plus and said you are
As I've been contemplating this over the last few days it occurred to me
tools to deal with this effectively are readily at our disposal. The
bullet-proof way to deal with this is related to what I wrote a few days
ago. As I mentioned, I do my web browsing inside virtualbox and
virtualbox has
On 08/25/2016 09:43 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 01:39:00AM -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
On 08/24/2016 10:21 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
Root runs a nightly cronjob of "/usr/bin/calendar -a"
to look at each users calendar file and send notices
of upcoming events. The new version loops
On 08/24/2016 03:20 PM, Heinz Diehl wrote:
On 24.08.2016, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
This shows both xarchiver and engrampa with xarchiver first, and the status
is 'user set'. I cannot see a way to reverse their order or make engrampa
the default archive manager.
Hmm, maybe you just have to
i would like to do just that, and what i'm seeing out there with
google are a lot of really old pages. anyone currently doing this
successfully on (fully-updated) fedora 23? pointer to web page?
thanks.
rday
--
Robert
On Thu, Aug 25, 2016 at 01:39:00AM -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 08/24/2016 10:21 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> > Root runs a nightly cronjob of "/usr/bin/calendar -a"
> > to look at each users calendar file and send notices
> > of upcoming events. The new version loops endlessly
> > through all the
On 25 August 2016 at 03:14, Tim wrote:
[...]
>
> At which point, you may as well have not bothered with using NoScript,
> in the first place. Sure, this half measure has stopped some of the
> nonsense (the other things that would also have loaded), but you're
>
Allegedly, on or about 25 August 2016, William Mattison sent:
> I'm now wondering if evercookies can really be fully blocked. I do
> want to block what I reasonably can. But as was pointed out, a lot of
> wanted web functionality needs cookies. So now I'm mainly focused on
> getting them
Tim:
>> a. Not that it's the DNS protocol, but a DNS server, that was
>> implicated. DNS servers can keep access logs, too.
Joe Zeff:
> And, to be equally blunt, you were asserting that DNS servers could be
> used to set evercookies on your machine and I was refuting that claim.
Not I... The
On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 10:08 PM, Tim wrote:
>
> You really do have to be one of the tinfoil hat brigade, never logging
> in, using things like TOR, stealing other people's WiFi, changing IPs,
> etc., all of the time to be able to avoid that kind of big brother
>
On 08/24/2016 10:21 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
Root runs a nightly cronjob of "/usr/bin/calendar -a"
to look at each users calendar file and send notices
of upcoming events. The new version loops endlessly
through all the users.
If I run calendar as myself without the -a option
it doesn't loop.
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