Old SCO Also Donated Code to Linux

2003-08-14 Thread C M Reinehr
Wouldn't it be a hoot if it's determined that the Old SCO, i.e., 
pre-Caldera SCO, is the party that donated the questionable code to the 
Linux kernel!

Groklaw, Monday, August 11, 2003, Old SCO Also Donated Code to Linux

http://radio.weblogs.com/0120124/2003/08/11.html

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Let's Put SCO Behind Bars

2003-08-14 Thread C M Reinehr
I learned of this link to the article Let's Put SCO Behind Bars from the 
Debian user mailing list:

Let's Put SCO Behind Bars by Michael D. Crawford

http://www.goingware.com/notes/prosecute-sco.html

and, using it by reference, have just filed a complaint with the Attorney 
General of the State of Alabama (USA) alleging fraud and extortion on the 
part of The SCO Group.

cmr
 
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: printing pdf files?

2003-07-28 Thread C M Reinehr
I print PDF's from Acrobat Reader all the time with CUPS. There's two ways 
to do it. Since I also use KDE, I just substitute kprinter for the default 
print command string and AR pipes the postscript to kprinter, from which I 
have access to all of the CUPS options, printers, etc.

The other way is to install the CUPS enabled lpr command. In the case of 
Debian Linux the package is cupsys-bsd, which provides the BSD commands 
for interacting with CUPS. Chiefly, it includes 'lpr', 'lpc', 'lpq', 
'lprm' along with some libraries  documentation. With this version of lpr 
installed, your print command would be the usual 'lpr -P printer_name' 
along with any options you prefer.

Cheers!

cmr

dep wrote:

 a tad of an emergency here, because i have some forms i need to fill out 
 and file, but i can't print the silly things.
 
 i'm running cups and acrobat wants to use /usr/bin/lpr; i do not get 
 anything at all when i allow it to proceed. likewise xpdf. ghostview 
 gives me errors before even loading the file, as does the kde pdf 
 viewer.
 
 so i guess what i'm looking for is the command string necessary to get 
 acrobat to send through cups, i.e., what to say on the line where it 
 says /usr/bin/lpr.
 
 any ideas?

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: printing pdf files? -- solved

2003-07-28 Thread C M Reinehr
Great! Glad to hear it.

A question none of us thought to ask was whether you had a postscript 
capable printer! In which case you could just send the printout directly 
to the printer without resorting to ghostscript.

cmr

dep wrote:

 quoth Roger Oberholtzer:
 
 | I think you are screwed. I had a form to print in a similar way. All
 | the printing programs ultimately use ghostscript. If ghostscript
 | won't show it, the system won't print it. And, my experience is that
 | you get no error. It just goes into the ozone. But, saving to a file
 | in postscript and then checking it interactively with gv shows the
 | problem.
 
 interestingly, i found the solution. gv and ghostscript as shipped with 
 suse 8.2 (and everywhere else i can find) are, um, suck-enabled. 
 monicaware.
 
 however . . . printing from acrobat is possible. the syntax is 
 lp -d [printername] (in my case, LJIIIDSS; printername[s] can be learned 
 by typing lpstat -p at a bash prompt, which any user may do)

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: stupid knoppix/debian question

2003-07-25 Thread C M Reinehr
I had to refresh my memory by taking a quick look at the sources.list file 
from Knoppix 3.2 and it looks as if it's pretty complete. The mirrors 
included are the official Debian mirrors, but there are, probably, over 
a hundred other mirrors worldwide. Check out: http://www.debian.org/mirror/

The security mirrors are, perhaps, the most important mirrors to include 
in your sources.list. Then, the standard debian mirrors. After that, it's 
a matter of including mirrors for applications for which you have a 
specific interest, which are not included in the standard mirrors, i.e.,
Java: deb ftp://ftp.tux.org/pub/java/debian testing main non-free

Hope this helps. I'm just learning my way around apt  dpkg, myself.

Cheers!

cmr

Douglas J Hunley wrote:

 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1
 
 I just installed Knoppix to hard disk on one of the kids' pcs.. and I 
need to 
 know the 'must haves' for inclusion in the apt-sources(?) file? What 
URIs do 
 I have to have to stay up-to-date on all the latest bug fixes and the 
 latest kewl new app-of-the-day ?
 thanks
 - -- 
 Douglas J Hunley (doug at hunley.homeip.net) - Linux User #174778
 http://doug.hunley.homeip.net  http://www.linux-sxs.org
 
 Lately, the only thing keeping me from becoming a serial killer is my 
 distaste for manual labor. -- Dilbert
 -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
 Version: GnuPG v1.2.2 (GNU/Linux)
 
 iD8DBQE/IJid2MO5UukaubkRAsoEAKCD+dPM48nWcvQDur3W5EAiYuk8ZACdEOu9
 ZT3NcgRZ01Bdod6nxejqpIM=
 =rrkf
 -END PGP SIGNATURE-

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: Have I gone Nuts?

2003-07-14 Thread C M Reinehr
Ben Duncan wrote:

 LOL ..
 
 Taught a 5 day class last week at a New Horizons learning Center, on 
Linux.
 Basically threw the book they supplied out, (HEY, When vi is at the end 
and they
 cover changing default values, you know you have to do something!!).
 
 One of the things I covered, was the init procedures and how to the 
System boots
 up and shuts down.
 
 Now, I was using Mandrake 9.1 (And not wanting to start a religion war 
here - but
 suffice it to, I will never use it again!!) and one of the students 
caught my 
 fax-paus
 on run levels. Further investigations showed, that ALL the scripts for 
all things
 needed to be started are in a ALL of the runlevel rcdotd files.
 
 Now, came across several interesting articles on inittab (One of them 
was yours
 Mr. Bandel - and the picture at the bottom shows I do have a twin 
somewhere in this
 world) and all of them show the following standard :
 
 l0:0:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 0
 l1:1:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 1
 l2:2:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 2
 l3:3:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 3
 l5:5:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 5
 l6:6:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 6
 
 Anyway, I was perplexed, as I was USED to having something (From the
 olden days)  where the scripts specific for both the S and the K 
functions
 for that particular runlevel were contained in the runlevel specific 
directory,
 and were passed thru on the way UP or DOWN to a specific run level.
 The RC scripts were generally NOT repeated in any of the other runlevels.
 
 NOW have I gone nuts, was not paying attention in MY class, or simply
 am stupider than a box on this ?
 
 And for the NEXT question, are there ANY recommendations on what a
 GOOD Distro for using to teach the NEXT class with ?
 
 Thanks ...
 
 
 

If I understand your question, you're asking if the processing of run 
levels is a fall-thru process. That is, to boot to runlevel 3, you first 
execute the startup scripts in the rc1.d, rc2.d before executing the 
startup scripts in rc3.d. If so, then I believe you are mistaken. It is my 
understanding that to switch to runlevel 3, the system executes only the 
startup or kill scripts in rc3.d (or, which ever run level you are 
switching too). Also, as Net Llama just said, all of the directory entries 
are symlinks to back to the init.d directory.

Also, for what it's worth, after Caldera self-destructed, I decided to 
migrate to Debian. For an educational environment you might also what to 
take a look at Linux from Scratch.

Cheers!

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: Have I gone Nuts?

2003-07-14 Thread C M Reinehr
Ben Duncan wrote:

 Precisely, But I cut my teeth on 3B2, then the Motorola 3000 series back 
in
 the Mid 19080's, and, I think they executed the init scripts in
 order via the inittab with something like:
 
 
 l2:2356:wait:/etc/rc1
 l3:356:wait:/etc/rc2
 
 Or to something of that effect ...

I have you beat, just barely. I started out using Xenix in 1981 or 1982 on 
an Intel 8086 system. :)

I've thrown all of those manuals away, but one book that I still have 
describes ATT System V Release 2 (copyright 1986) and the init process it 
describes is virtually identical to what we're using now. And, as you 
illustrate above, it appears common to define multiple run states in an 
inittab line.

It appears to be a matter of convention. An SCO Unixware 7.3 system that I 
have here includes the lines:

  r0:0:wait:/sbin/rc0 off /dev/console 21 /dev/console
  r1:1:wait:/sbin/rc1 /dev/console 21 /dev/console
  r2:23:wait:/sbin/rc2 /dev/console 21 /dev/console
  r3:3:wait:/sbin/rc3  /dev/console 21 /dev/console
  r5:5:wait:/sbin/rc0 firm /dev/console 21 /dev/console
  r6:6:wait:/sbin/rc0 reboot /dev/console 21 /dev/console

whereas the Debian system I'm on now is:

  l0:0:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 0
  l1:1:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 1
  l2:2:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 2
  l3:3:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 3
  l4:4:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 4
  l5:5:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 5
  l6:6:wait:/etc/init.d/rc 6

Cheers, from one OF to another!

cmr

 C M Reinehr wrote:
 Ben Duncan wrote:
 SNIP
 If I understand your question, you're asking if the processing of run 
 levels is a fall-thru process. That is, to boot to runlevel 3, you 
first 
 execute the startup scripts in the rc1.d, rc2.d before executing the 
 startup scripts in rc3.d. If so, then I believe you are mistaken. It is 
my 
 understanding that to switch to runlevel 3, the system executes only 
the 
 startup or kill scripts in rc3.d (or, which ever run level you are 
 switching too). Also, as Net Llama just said, all of the directory 
entries 
 are symlinks to back to the init.d directory.
 
 Also, for what it's worth, after Caldera self-destructed, I decided to 
 migrate to Debian. For an educational environment you might also what 
to 
 take a look at Linux from Scratch.
 
 Cheers!
 
 cmr
 
 

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


RE: Executable?

2003-07-11 Thread C M Reinehr
Tom,

Get your brick out. Usually, the problems discussed here are far over my 
head, so I just lurk  listen. But this one, I actually can answer.

A quick check of `man mount` reveals this interesting tidbit:

user   Allow an ordinary user to mount  the  file  system.   The
   name  of  the mounting user is written to mtab so that he
   can unmount the file system again.  This  option  implies
   the  options noexec, nosuid, and nodev (unless overridden
   by  subsequent   options,   as   in   the   option   line
   user,exec,dev,suid).

Cheers!

cmr

Condon Thomas A KPWA wrote:

 
 Net Llama! wrote:
 
 I'm sitting here looking at two Sony Vaio laptops.  Both have a
 directory that contains our test software.  In this directory (on
 both machines) is a file called Testit.  An ls -l of Testit on the
 old machine returns: 
 -rwxr-xr-x1 root root 60 Jun 25  2001 Testit
 
 The new machine is only different in size (echo statements to
 indicate progress) and date (just created).  The executable script
 is the same. 
 
 On both machines I am logged on as root.  On the newer machine I can
 not execute this file.  It returns:
 
 wobbly nfcs # Testit
 bash: ./Testit: Permission denied
 
 The old (working) machine is running RedHat 6.2.  The new machine is
 running a newly installed Gentoo system.
 
 OK, I'm baffled.  I've got the permissions set right, I've got '.'
 included in my path (yes, I know that can be dangerous), the
 executable contents are identical.  What gives?  The answer is bound
 to be so simple I'll hit my forehead with a brick when I find it,
 but can someone speed that process up? 
 
 man chattr ?
 
 Well, hm, OK, that is interesting.  But how does it apply?  Entering:
 chattr -i /nfcs/Testit
 has no effect on the file's executability.
 
 Anyway, it did get me thinking about the fact that the test directory is 
in
 its own partition, so I typed mount and found it to be mounted:
 /dev/hda8 on /nfcs type ext2 (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev)
 
 What?!?  No execution?  So I checked /etc/fstab and it is listed:
 /dev/hda8   /nfcs   auto defaults,user 0 1
 
 So where does this (rw,noexec,nosuid,nodev) come from?  All of my 
partitions
 are mounted defaults and the others have only (rw).
 
 More importantly, how can I change it?  If I unmount it and remount 
using:
 mount /dev/hda8 /nfcs
 it is mounted (rw) and I can execute the script.
 
 
 In Harmony's Way, and In A Chord,
 
 Tom  :-})
 
 Thomas A. Condon
 Barbershop Bass Singer
 Registered Linux User #154358
 A Jester Unemployed

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


OpenOffice.org 1.0.3 Text Converter Error

2003-06-06 Thread C M Reinehr
To All Debian Users out there:

I have installed the deb package for OpenOffice.org 1.0.3 twice, from 
scratch, this week, and I still receive an error when I try to open a text 
file for editing with Writer:

Read-Error
Error loading converter.

I can save as a text file, and I can open other formats (for example, 
html), just not text.

Does anyone have an idea of how to fix this? Do you suppose this is a 
package error. I haven't tried downloading the tgz from OpenOffice.org, 
yet. (For that matter, I haven't been able to connect to 
www.openoffice.org for the last day or so.) There is nothing about this 
type of problem in the debian or OO lists. (A couple of other people 
posted similar questions, but there have been no answers.)

This is a new, up to date, install of Debian Sarge.

TIA!

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Debian X Window Problem

2003-05-31 Thread C M Reinehr
I'm in the process of installing Debian Sarge (testing) to a PC. I first 
did a minimal, net install of Woody (stable). Then, I upgraded to Sarge. 
Next, using `tasksel` I installed X windows. So far, so good. When I boot 
to run level 2, the X server/client, and xdm start and I can log into an X 
window session. BUT, I found that I no longer have any virtual terminals. 
When I ctlaltF[1-6] I get nothing. Even the LED on the front of the 
LCD screen goes out.

To experiment, I removed the S99xdm link from the /etc/rc2.d directory, so 
that xdm would not automatically start and rebooted. This time, all of the 
virtual terminals worked just fine. Then, I started xdm manually 
(`/etc/init.d/xdm start`) and lo, the virtual terminals went away again. 
(For what it's worth, all of the getty processes are still listed.)

Does anyone have any idea what's going on, here? (I'm purposely building 
up this system one step at a time to install only those applications that 
I need, rather than installing everything plus the kitchen sink.)

Thanks!

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: Debian X Window Problem

2003-05-31 Thread C M Reinehr
Joel,

Thanks for the help. I have the standard 6 character VT's, with X using 
the 7th, and all were correct, but I finallyr emembered a warning that was 
displayed during the configuration process about framebuffers. I decided 
to check my XF86Config-4 file and, sure enough, I found a line in the 
Device section setting UseFBDev to true. Just for the hell of it, I set it 
to false, and everything started working again.

Now, I guess I need to do a little research and find out what a 
framebuffer is!

cmr

PS  This PC has a Radeon 7500QW video card and I'm using the ati driver.

Joel Hammer wrote:

 How many virtual terminals did you have before you loaded up X?
 Here is what I have in inittab:
 
 # The default runlevel.
 id:2:initdefault:
 
 # Note that on most Debian systems tty7 is used by the X Window System,
 # so if you want to add more getty's go ahead but skip tty7 if you run X.
 
 1:2345:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty1
 2:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty2
 3:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty3
 4:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty4
 5:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty5
 6:23:respawn:/sbin/getty 38400 tty6
 
 Joel
 
 
 On Fri, May 30, 2003 at 04:44:19PM -0500, C M Reinehr wrote:
 I'm in the process of installing Debian Sarge (testing) to a PC. I 
first 
 did a minimal, net install of Woody (stable). Then, I upgraded to 
Sarge. 
 Next, using `tasksel` I installed X windows. So far, so good. When I 
boot 
 to run level 2, the X server/client, and xdm start and I can log into 
an X 
 window session. BUT, I found that I no longer have any virtual 
terminals. 
 When I ctlaltF[1-6] I get nothing. Even the LED on the front of the 
 LCD screen goes out.
 
 To experiment, I removed the S99xdm link from the /etc/rc2.d directory, 
so 
 that xdm would not automatically start and rebooted. This time, all of 
the 
 virtual terminals worked just fine. Then, I started xdm manually 
 (`/etc/init.d/xdm start`) and lo, the virtual terminals went away 
again. 
 (For what it's worth, all of the getty processes are still listed.)
 
 Does anyone have any idea what's going on, here? (I'm purposely 
building 
 up this system one step at a time to install only those applications 
that 
 I need, rather than installing everything plus the kitchen sink.)
 
 Thanks!
 
 cmr
 -- 
 Registered Linux User #241964
 
 Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
 and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
 ___
 Linux-users mailing list
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - 
http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users


Re: Internet Content Filtering Suggestions

2003-02-13 Thread C M Reinehr
Ben Duncan wrote:

 Have a client that has about 25 WinSLug Computers. We need to
 implement some sort
 content / virus filtering, as the employees are starting to abuse the
 internet connection.
 
 We need to allow them to access certain web sites, restrict others,
 BLOCK ICQ/AIM, and
 do a time (Absolutely NO access to the internet after 6PM).
 
 Now SonicWall seems to be the leading contender here for an appliance
 solution, BUT, they
 want a subscription on all of there devices.
 
 Any Suggestion here? NutZwerk Appliance? Cheap PC with linux and some
 sort of easy to use
 admin software?
 

If I'm not mistaken, taking out a subscription to SonicWall is optional. 
I'm using a SOHO3, without a content filtering subscription, and it appears 
that I still can manually configure access restrictions by IP number 
(allowed/forbidden), keyword, time-of-day, and web features (e.g. Active-X, 
Java, etc.). What I don't have is automatic downloading of a list of 
restricted URL's and content filtering (e.g. sex, nudity, profanity, etc.).

I say, if I'm not mistaken, because I've never actually tried to set any of 
this up. But, I just took a quick look at the configuration screens, and it 
looks as if it all is functional.

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: combining images

2003-02-01 Thread C M Reinehr
Are you trying to do this as a batch process, or manually? If your answer 
is manually, then GIMP probably is the quickest  easiest way.

cmr

Joel Hammer wrote:

 I am trying to use combine to just join together two images of similar
 width but different length. I want the resulting image to be a simple
 combination of the two, top to bottom, like so:
 
---
   | Image1|
   |   |
---
 and
---
   | Image2|
   |   |
   |   |
---
 The desired result is :
 
---
   | Image1|
   |   |
   | Image2|
   |   |
   |   |
---
 
 
 Combine seems to work by overlying the second image on the first ( or
 vice versa).  If you specify an offset, you wind up with image two getting
 truncated. That is to say, the size of the canvas is the size of image1.
 
 I could solve my problem if I could figure out how to increase the canvas
 size of image one to accommodate image 2.
 
 
 Any insight appreciated,
 
 Joel

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Connection reliability

2003-01-20 Thread C M Reinehr
stayler wrote:

 Hi Guys,
 
 I have a somewhat annoying ongoing problem here that I think the list
 may be able to assist me with.  My connection to the Internet is via a
 T-1.  I have 6 B chan for IP and 2 for some voice lines right now.  My
 connection seems to drop out on a fairly regular basis, at least once
 every 2 days, sometime more often for periods of a few sec to over
 15min.  They seem to occur at random times and do not appear to be
 local in nature, ie the premises equipment, the router is a box called
 a Vina eLink.   I will have at my disposal in the near futer a Bit
 Error rate tester, I now maintain a network of 16 DS1 microwave radios,
 it pays to have a day job.  In the mean time I'd like to have my
 firewall box provide some stats that I could use as leverage with my
 account rep.
 
 The Box is a Slackware 8.0 with 2.2.20 and IP Chains on it.  I was
 thinking a regular, say every minute ping of 5 packets to a remote box,
 someone amenable to me doing this of course.  The resulting information
 being saved and collated to show outages with an accurate date/time
 stamp.
 
 Ideas suggestions?
 
 Shawn

Sounds suspeciously similar to problems I was having, but we need to learn 
a little more about your problem. When you say that your connection drops 
out, do you mean just your internet connection or do you lose phone 
service, as well. The telephone company terminates a T-1 line into a 
network termination unit. On mine, and I would imagine on all of them, 
there is a single green LED which indicates that the T-1 is up and 
functioning. Is your T-1 up  functioning, or is the entire T-1 dropping?

In my case, the phone company was doing line maintenance a half a block 
away (installing a new cable) and when ever they were in working in the 
junction box, my T-1 would begin going up  down like a yoyo. There, 
apparently, was a loose/bad connection on my line, and whenever they would 
jiggle something I'd lose connectivity. This lasted for a year, until they 
finally finished their project -- and I switched to fixed wireless internet 
access.

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee


___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Connection reliability

2003-01-20 Thread C M Reinehr
stayler wrote:

 There are several lights on the unit, one od which is a framing error
 indication.  This one goes red during the problem times, and yes the
 phone service goes as well.
 
 This problem has been going on for 6 months at least.  My location is
 fed by about a 2 miles of copper that comes from the local fiber drop.
 It could be maintenance, but it'll happen at all hours of the day and
 night and I have never seen a repair guy out here at night
 
 On Mon, 20 Jan 2003 09:06:02 -0600, C M Reinehr wrote:
 
Sounds suspeciously similar to problems I was having, but we need to learn
a little more about your problem. When you say that your connection
drops out, do you mean just your internet connection or do you lose phone
service, as well. The telephone company terminates a T-1 line into a
network termination unit. On mine, and I would imagine on all of them,
there is a single green LED which indicates that the T-1 is up and
functioning. Is your T-1 up  functioning, or is the entire T-1 dropping?

If you're ntu is indicating a framing problem, I think your only recourse 
is to complain to the telephone company. (In my case, the line would go 
entirely dead -- no frames at all. :-) Just remember that, while the phone 
company may be the evil empire, the line technicians are your friends. I 
kept calling (and complaining to the public service commission) but it was 
a local T-1 service technician who ultimately identified the problem, after 
giving me his personal cell phone number so I could call him directly, when 
my problem would reoccur.

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: New CD won't play

2003-01-11 Thread C M Reinehr
Tim Wunder wrote:

 On Saturday 11 January 2003 11:07 am, someone claiming to be David A.
 Bandel wrote:
 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1

 On Sat, 11 Jan 2003 10:53:33 -0500

 begin  Tim Wunder [EMAIL PROTECTED] spewed forth:
  Don't know if this is a linux issue or not, but here goes...
  I have a brand new audio CD that plays perfectly well on my stereo and
  in my car, but won't play on my PC. I have a Yamaha SCSI CD-RW
  (6x4x16x) and a LiteOn IDE CD-RW (24x10x40x). Neither of which like the
  CD. Other audio CD's seem to work fine, this new one doesn't. FWIW,
  it's an import from Australia (the Dead Ringer Band).
  Any ideas on what could be causing the problem and how to overcome it?

 DRM (digital rights manglement, RIAA digitally mangling your rights).
 Take it back and tell them it's defective, you can't play it in your
 computer's CD.  The only way to fight DRM is refuse to accept delibrately
 broken products.

 
 sigsnip
 I tend to agree, but wouldn't another way to fight DRM be by rendering the
 technology to digitally [mangle] your rights ineffective?
 

This might give you personal satisfaction, but would do nothing to lead 
them to change their behavior.

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: OpenOffice and Powerpoint

2003-01-04 Thread C M Reinehr
Joel Hammer wrote:

 
 HTML might be better suited for this. It would be no sweat to create the
 html with sed and a little knowledge of html (That's describes my
 knowledge of html). Given the excellent results I have been getting with
 html2ps and ps2pdf, maybe the whole thing can be made into one big pdf
 file. In full screen mode, this might make a very nice presentation.  Now,
 that would give 'em something to talk about.
 
 

Hi,

I'm afraid I know absolutely nothing about PP, but here's something that 
might interest you.  Check out a slide presentation on the Knoppix website 
(www.knoppix.org - select the USA/British flag for the English pages) 
entitled Slides for the Knoppix Presentation at the Chemnitzer Linux-Tagen 
2002.  They actually are PP/Impress type presentations, but done in PDF.

I came across them on the Knoppix iso I downloaded a couple of weeks ago. I 
didn't even know you could do this in PDF, but it looks great. If you can 
find out how they built them, this might be the way to go.

Cheers!

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Partition Schizophrenia Booting DOS with GRUB

2002-12-20 Thread C M Reinehr
Leon A. Goldstein wrote:

 C. M. Reinher wrote:
 
 This sounds more like a M$ DOS/Windows problem, than a Linux problem, but
 a couple of questions come to mind:

 1) What tool did you use to set up the partitions?  If you used anything
 other than a M$ DOS or Windows utility (eg. fdisk), that might be the
 cause of your problem.

 2) Have you tried restoring the master boot record with fdisk  booting
 DOS
 natively, rather than through GRUB?  What happens then?


 
 The HD was partitioned with FDISK as provided with Novell DOS 7 (aka
 DR-DOS).
 The drive boots normally when connected as master, using its own
 bootloader.
 GRUB is not in the MBR of this drive; it is  a slave to another drive,
 wherein GRUB is installed.
 
 I tried converting the three logical partitions to primary, using
 Partition Magic 6.  This only resulted with the same number of
 superfluous partitions as before, but the sequencing was changed.  I
 restored the partitions back to logical.
 
 Since the drive performs normally booting from its own DOS bootloader,
 and only goes haywire when booted from GRUB, I'd consider this a
 GRUB/Linux issue.
 
 --
 Leon A. Goldstein
 Powered by Caldera Linux 2.4
 System 5WV271

Yes  no.  Before you blame your problems on Linux or Grub you should know 
that there are no universal standards governing the way partitions are 
defined and managed.  Different operating systems have different ways of 
doing it. I can't remember where I read it, but a valuable bit of advice is 
to use _only_ the partition tools provided with your operating system. 
Using a partitioning tool from DR-DOS, to creat partitions, managed by a 
third party product to be used for a M$ operating system  booted by a 
Linux boot loader ...  See where this is going?  Before going any further I 
stongly recommend some midnight reading from the Linux Documentation 
Project: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX/os.html#OSPARTITIONS

Two How-To's in particular you should read:
Filesystems-HOWTO: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Filesystems-HOWTO.html
Partition: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/mini/Partition/index.html
Multiboot-with-GRUB: http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/mini/Multiboot-with-GRUB.html

Cheers!

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Partition Schizophrenia Booting DOS with GRUB

2002-12-18 Thread C M Reinehr
Leon A. Goldstein wrote:

 (I posted this enquiry on the Caldera mail list but got no response.  My
 apologies if any list member has seen this already.)
 
 I want to slave a DOS/Win3.1 HD to one of my Linux boxes.
 I can boot the DOS HD using GRUB:
 (menu.lst)
 TitleDR-DOS
 map (hd1)(hd0)
 rootnoverify (hd1,0)
 makeactive
 chainloader +1
 boot
 
 This works, although the recipe is not exactly as prescribed by the GRUB
 documentaion I read.  I'm supposed to have a second map entry: (map
 (hd0)(hd1)) but that simply does not work.  The above menu.lst works
 with WS.3.1 and Libranet 2.7.
 
 With DOS so booted, the problem is that my partitions are skewed.  I
 have a 1.6 GB HD partitioned with one primary and three logical
 partitions.
 When I run PCTools (remember that great utility?) the partitions are
 listed as C,D,E,F,G,H,I,J
 Examination reveals that C is duplicated in D, the real D is E and
 duplicated in H, and so on.
 I can run all apps in the C partition, but Windows is knocked out
 because it is in another partition and the mapping screws up the paths.
 
 Any suggestions?  If I can solve this, I want to donate my original DOS
 box (with a new HD) to a local no-kill animal shelter.
 
 
 --
 Leon A. Goldstein
 
 Powered by Libranet 1.9.1 Debian Linux
 System 5151

This sounds more like a M$ DOS/Windows problem, than a Linux problem, but a 
couple of questions come to mind:

1) What tool did you use to set up the partitions?  If you used anything 
other than a M$ DOS or Windows utility (eg. fdisk), that might be the cause 
of your problem.

2) Have you tried restoring the master boot record with fdisk  booting DOS 
natively, rather than through GRUB?  What happens then?

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: How to mount a filesystem with ownership rights

2002-12-17 Thread C M Reinehr
Collins wrote:

 I've created a separate partition for my daughter's mp3 collection,
 and this is mounted via fstab to /home/cecilia/mp3.
 
 The only problem is, she can't created new directories.  Each time I
 have to su, mkdir, and chown.
 
 How can I automated the mount and get the correct permissions?
 

What type of file system are you mounting?  What are the permissions  
ownership of the mount point?  What are the permissions  ownership of the 
root directory that you are mounting?  What is the relevant line in your 
fstab?

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Where's the LHD?

2002-12-17 Thread C M Reinehr
Jerry McBride wrote:

 
 Did I miss something? The Linux Hardware Database isn't there this
 afternoon...
 
 Was it moved somewhere when I wasn't looking?
 

For a number of weeks, the search engine didn't work. Then suddenly last 
week, the search engine began working again, but I noticed that there had 
been no new entries to the database in over a year.  I guess ZDNet can't 
afford the resources to support it any longer  decided just to pull the 
plug.

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: DirectWay/Linux?

2002-12-13 Thread C M Reinehr
Tony Alfrey wrote:

 I'm getting sales literature from my isp trying to sell me a DirectWay
 satellite link (the Hughes box).  The sales support people tell me I
 gotta use Windoze (ugh, ugh, ugh) and I seem to remember seeing
 something about an upcoming unix port.
 Is anybody out there using this DirectWay setup, and better yet, are you
 using linux??
 Thanks

Here's a couple of links which may help. My quick review seems to indicate 
that you shouldn't get your hopes up.  I'm not using a satellite service 
myself, but I was interested in it as a possible alternative. Please post 
if you find anything promissing.

DirecPC Linux Driver Project: http://www.linuxvoodoo.com/drivers/direcpc/

Satellite Data and Alternative Operating Systems: 
http://www.jasonn.com/sat-data/

DirecWay 2-Way High Speed Internet via Satellite:
http://www.macteks.com/sat/

cmr
-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users



Re: Red Hat 7.3

2002-11-29 Thread C M Reinehr
zohar wrote:

 I want to install Red Hat 7.3 on my HDD which has Suse Linux 7.1
 RH 7.3 is given in CDs of the book Red Hat Linux 7.3 Bible by Christopher
 Negus.
 
 For Partitioning it gives me option of
 (1)Remove all Linux Partitions on this system
 (2)Remove all partitions on this system
 (3)Keep all partitions and use existing free space.
 
 Now before when I installed Suse, I put 7 GB for linux from 20 GB of my
 HDD, so how should I proceed.

That depends on what you want to do. Would you like to keep Suse and 
dual-boot both Suse  RedHat, or do you want to replace Suse with RedHat? 
Do you have any future need for the remaining free space?

 Also I installed Suse but it did not allow me to increase the swap space
 from 150Mb or so while I need 512MB as I have 256MB memory. Please tell me
 solution for this also.

For the answer to this  many more interesting questions, please refer to 
the Linux Partition How-To.

 Also I have winmodem(HCF 56K PCI), so which driver should I download for
 using it in linux partition.

For the answer to this  many more interesting questions, please refer to 
the Linmodem How-To.

 Please reply ASAP.
 
 Zohar

-- 
Registered Linux User #241964

Do not meddle in the affairs of Wizards, for they are subtle
and quick to anger. -- Samwise Gamgee
___
Linux-users mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe/Suspend/Etc - http://www.linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users