Re: ALSA

2004-02-18 Thread Randy Edwards
few people were playing with installing 2.6...  So, does anyone know if
this happened?
   Yes, ALSA is in the 2.6 kernel and works fine.

   Of course, there is a separate option for the PC's speaker, and I 
believe that's turned off by default. :-(

--
 Regards, | There can be no effective control of corporations while
 .| their political activity remains.  To put an end to it will
 Randy| be neither a short nor an easy task, but it can be done.
  | -- President Theodore (Teddy) Roosevelt
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Re: Shell redirection is rewinding?!?

2004-02-18 Thread Michael ODonnell


kclark wrote:
makewhatis is a shell script that does all sorts of hokey stuff
with shell redirection, like opening its own fds for stderr


Yeah - what HE said.  FYI, depending on your purposes,
it's possible that executing makewhatis via the
script program could help you capture the info you
need, though that approach has its own problems...
 
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[OFF-TOPIC] Microsoft security (was: multilanguage support ...)

2004-02-18 Thread Dan Jenkins
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I actually thought of that. I even went so far as to click the
 International link on that same page, and picked Korea.
 Unfortunately, the resulting page was in Korean. (At least, it used
 ideographs. For all I know, they were Vorlon ideographs.) I guess
 that makes sense, but as *I* don't read Korean, I had to stop there.
 Sorry.
To be pedantic, Korean doesn't use ideographs. It is a syllabic script
(an alphabet with grouping into syllables). It does mix Chinese Han 
ideographs
in it though (except on Hangul day, when only Korean is allowed to be 
written).
It doesn't look anything like Vorlon. (Though in a odd coincidence, one 
of the
debian developers working on Korean support uses vorlon in his email 
address.
So maybe there is a secret link there.) ;-)

--
Dan Jenkins ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Rastech Inc., Bedford, NH, USA --- 1-603-624-7272
*** Technical Support for over a Quarter Century
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Re: ABM Considered Harmful (was: piercing corporate)

2004-02-18 Thread Dan Jenkins
On Mon, 9 Feb 2004, at 5:17am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 VBScript and WSH are something else. They're basically a system
 scripting language, just like Perl or Python (and, indeed, you can
 connect both of those to WSH). The luser has to double click to
 open the attachment and run the script. That is equally possible
 under Linux.
Actually, it is possible to have VBScript execute automatically without 
user intervention.
You can code HTML in web pages or emails which does this. Similarly 
Outlook will still
execute Javascript in emails. (So will Mozilla, but it can be turned 
off.)  If you use certain
file extensions, I believe Internet Explorer would execute WSH code in 
local user security
(rather than Internet security). I believe there are patches for 
Internet Explorer and Outlook
to eliminate this behavior, but it did/does exist.

I've gleaned these from security discussions, not personal experience. 
Most of my clientelle
use Mozilla (or Netscape), which are relatively immune to the more 
egregious exploits it seems.
--
Dan Jenkins ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
Rastech Inc., Bedford, NH, USA --- 1-603-624-7272
*** Technical Support for over a Quarter Century

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apt-spy

2004-02-18 Thread Michael ODonnell

Just a tip to fellow Debian users out there: check out
apt-spy - it benchmarks connection speeds from your
site to various Debian mirrors (many of which you're
unlikely to have heard about) and can find you some
truly zippy ones.  I've just done a fairly ponderous
'apt-get dist-upgrade' at work where the throughput
for the whole session averaged over 1gB/S, which is
a tad faster than the 150kB/S I'd been seeing from
some of the better known mirrors.

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Re: Samba related question.

2004-02-18 Thread Derek Martin
On Wed, Feb 18, 2004 at 11:23:38AM -0500, Jason wrote:
 I had to look this up and I was an English major 8).

You obviously haven't been paying close attention to this list very
long...  we have many pedants here, and many pedantic discussions.
An overabundance of pedantry, really...  ;-)

-- 
Derek D. Martin
http://www.pizzashack.org/
GPG Key ID: 0xDFBEAD02
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Re: Samba related question.

2004-02-18 Thread bscott
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004, at 2:51am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 You obviously haven't been paying close attention to this list very
 long...  we have many pedants here, and many pedantic discussions. An
 overabundance of pedantry, really...  ;-)

  Hey!  I resemble that remark!  ;-)

-- 
Ben Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED]
| The opinions expressed in this message are those of the author and do  |
| not represent the views or policy of any other person or organization. |
| All information is provided without warranty of any kind.  |

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Re: pedantry (Re: apt-spy)

2004-02-18 Thread Michael ODonnell


 a tad faster than the 150kB/S I'd been seeing from
 some of the better known mirrors.

 For what it's worth (which is very little, I'm quite sure), S
 is the SI abbreviation for the siemens, which is the SI unit for
 electrical conductance.  Presumably you're talking about seconds,
 which should be abbreviated lower-case s.

Yah, I figured I'd got it wrong but didn't take
time to look it up.  Oh, well - thanks to you,
I now sit corrected, proving that you're at least
as useful as a pair of orthopedic skivvies.  ;-

  (orthopedantic?)

I should mention that I (think I) heard that some
very early versions of apt-spy would rewrite your
sources.list file without saving the previous version,
so if you're running an ancient Debian box, heads up.
(I've never seen one had that problem, though...)
 
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Re: pedantry (Re: apt-spy)

2004-02-18 Thread Bob Bell
On Thu, Feb 19, 2004 at 03:19:09AM +0900, Derek Martin wrote:
On Wed, Feb 18, 2004 at 11:22:26AM -0500, Michael ODonnell wrote:
 truly zippy ones.  I've just done a fairly ponderous
 'apt-get dist-upgrade' at work where the throughput
 for the whole session averaged over 1gB/S, which is
Woohoo!  Can I get a job there?  ;-)

 ...duuuhh, I meant to say megabyte, not gigabyte.

Aw, shucks...  What a let-down. 
Our new lab network here is gigabit ethernet (not gigabyte, not yet
anyway).  It's really fun pushing 100 MB debug kernels around in about
a second or so.  It's also fun watching the FTP complete in just
a second, and waiting several seconds for `sync` to return. :-)
--
Bob Bell
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Desktop Linux (fwd)

2004-02-18 Thread Ben Boulanger
I'm guessing this message was supposed to go to the greater new 
hampshire linux user's list at large.  Jenny, the list is 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]  There's a barrel full of people there to help out

Anyone have info on lycoris?  I'm unfamiliar with it.  
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2004 18:56:13 -0500
From: Jenny Wong [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Desktop Linux

Today, my company doesn't run Linux on any of its client hardware and I
understand the main reason is that the learning curve is too steep for
Windows users.

I've heard that Lycoris has a distro designed by former Microsoft
employees. Does anyone know if it looks or operates much like Windows XP? 
Is there a link available for an eval copy?

Thanks
JenWong

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Re: Desktop Linux (fwd)

2004-02-18 Thread Michael ODonnell


 I've heard that Lycoris has a distro designed by former Microsoft
 employees.  Does anyone know if it looks or operates much like
 Windows XP?  Is there a link available for an eval copy?

I don't know much about Lycoris but you could
check out www.lycoris.com.  One thing they don't
make immediately obvious there is that Lycoris is
based on Caldera Linux, whose parent company (SCO)
is currently enjoying plenty of negative press.
 
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