Re: Problems with korean translation

2001-10-16 Thread Tommi Vainikainen
On Thu, 11 Oct 2001, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Closing the account for a week may get their attention, we don't
 get it otherwise, already tried that.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but does everybody have commit rights to
CVSROOT/passwd (or do I've to try)?  Just adding asterisk before rest of
crypt()ed password should be easy way to disable account.

Closing account until someone asks it for back is very easy way to get
knowing who is using account and make sure (s)he does things right.

-- 
Tommi Vainikainen



Bug(?!) in debian.org

2001-10-16 Thread Peter Junge
Hi,

generally it's a nice feature to come up with the i18n settings of the 
OS. But after selecting a different language this should overrule the 
script for the rest of the session. In the moment I'm using a Korean 
Linux but only for testing localized versions of StarOffice. Being a 
native German i would like to browse your pages in German or English but 
every link I follow falls back to Korean. OK, you might say, start a 
console, change the locales and start the browser from there. But this 
seems to be to complicated and there maybe also people in a alien 
environment (e.g. an internet cafe in Seoul) who don't know how to 
workaround.

Best regards, Peter 

*
Peter Junge Tel: (+49 40) 23 646 639
Quality Assurance   Fax: (+49 40) 23 646 550
Star Office GmbHmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sachsenfeld 4   http://www.sun.com/staroffice/
D-20097 Hamburg
*



Re: Bug(?!) in debian.org

2001-10-16 Thread James A. Treacy
On Tue, Oct 16, 2001 at 02:53:43PM +, Peter Junge wrote:
 Hi,
 
 generally it's a nice feature to come up with the i18n settings of the 
 OS. But after selecting a different language this should overrule the 
 script for the rest of the session. In the moment I'm using a Korean 
 Linux but only for testing localized versions of StarOffice. Being a 
 native German i would like to browse your pages in German or English but 
 every link I follow falls back to Korean. OK, you might say, start a 
 console, change the locales and start the browser from there. But this 
 seems to be to complicated and there maybe also people in a alien 
 environment (e.g. an internet cafe in Seoul) who don't know how to 
 workaround.
 
Fix the default language for your browser. It should be 'en', not
'en-us' or one of the other country variants. See
http://www.debian.org/intro/cn.en.html for details.

-- 
James (Jay) Treacy
[EMAIL PROTECTED]



Re: Bug(?!) in debian.org

2001-10-16 Thread Gustavo Noronha Silva
Em Tue, 16 Oct 2001 14:53:43 GMT
Peter Junge [EMAIL PROTECTED] escreveu:

 Hi,
 
 every link I follow falls back to Korean. OK, you might say, start a 
 console, change the locales and start the browser from there. But this 
 seems to be to complicated and there maybe also people in a alien 
 environment (e.g. an internet cafe in Seoul) who don't know how to 
 workaround.
that seems to be a bug in your browser, it should not follow locales,
but a languages preference for the browser... see www.debian.org/intro/cn.html

[]s!

-- 
Gustavo Noronha Silva - kov http://www.metainfo.org/kov
**
|  .''`.  | Debian GNU/Linux: http://www.debian.org|
| : :'  : | Debian BR...: http://debian-br.cipsga.org.br   |
| `. `'`  |  Be Happy! Be FREE!  |
|   `-| Think globally, act locally!   |
**



Re: Problems with korean translation

2001-10-16 Thread Josip Rodin
On Tue, Oct 16, 2001 at 11:16:33AM +0300, Tommi Vainikainen wrote:
 Correct me if I'm wrong, but does everybody have commit rights to
 CVSROOT/passwd (or do I've to try)?

The ext users do, pserver users don't. So, not quite everybody, but close.

-- 
 2. That which causes joy or happiness.



Re: Debian WWW CVS commit by joey: webwml/polish/News Makefile weekly/Makefile we ...

2001-10-16 Thread Martin Schulze
Josip Rodin wrote:
 On Tue, Oct 09, 2001 at 05:54:48AM -0700, Debian WWW CVS wrote:
  CVSROOT:/cvs/webwml
  Module name:webwml
  Changes by: joey01/10/09 05:54:48
  
  Added files:
  polish/News: Makefile 
  polish/News/weekly: Makefile index.wml 
  
  Log message:
  This list is only a forward of [EMAIL PROTECTED].
  
  The canonical FTP site for the FHS project and mailing list is:
  
ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/docs/linux-standards/fsstnd/
  
  The FHS editor is Daniel Quinlan [EMAIL PROTECTED].  If you
  have any general questions about this project, you can mail them to
  him.
  
  The private directory is:
  
ftp://tsx-11.mit.edu/pub/linux/docs/linux-standards/private/fsstnd
  
  Please note two things.  First, the private in the directory name is
  there for a reason.  This draft is a working document, and is not
  intended for general public release yet.  Please do not post it to the
  net, mail it to people who are not on this mailing list, or conduct
  discussions about it in a public forum other than this mailing list.
  Second, discussion on this list has been going on for a very long time
  now.  Many issues have been raised, and dropped for one reason or
  another.  We suggest you sit back and watch the discussion for a bit
  before posting your ideas about how to arrange the filesystem
  hierarchy.
  
 ABSTRACT
  
  The open and distributed process in which the Linux operating system
  has developed fosters rapid growth of the operating system,
  applications, and integrated distributions.  Yet, there exists a need
  for standardization of the Linux filesystem structure.  This document
  aims to specify standard locations of files and directories in Linux
  systems.  A standardized filesystem structure allows users,
  developers, and distributors to obtain system components from various
  sources that will work together as smoothly as if they had been
  developed under a centralized development process.  It also eases
  system administration, development of second and third party packages,
  and the writing of implementation independent documentation.
 
 Errr... WTF?

Oh... somebody not on #-devel noticed that...  This happens if I
receive too many interrupts and forget the editor to save the changelog
file before committing.  Well...  I've noticed immediately and changed
it to something useful.  I know that my scheduler is quite bad but I
don't have a better one.

Regards,

Joey

-- 
It's time to close the windows.



Re: LSB lists hosted at lists.debian.org

2001-10-16 Thread Martin Schulze
Christopher Yeoh wrote:
 Hi,
 
 Just wondering if the LSB mailing lists hosted at lists.debian.org
 were intentionally removed? I realise some were probably removed
 because they are inactive, but the following were in regular use but
 no longer work:

All lsb-* lists were moved to linuxbase.org a long time ago.
Please correct me if I'm wrong and I have to reinstate non-dead
variants of them.

Regards,

Joey

-- 
It's time to close the windows.

Please always Cc to me when replying to me on the lists.



Re: Problems with korean translation

2001-10-16 Thread Martin Schulze
FYI: I've now disabled the account, let's hope this will draw
some attention...

Regards,

Joey

-- 
It's time to close the windows.