Re: [newbie] Netscape Upgrade 4.6 to 4.7 - Is it worth it?
I got the 4.7 128-bit and it worked pretty well for a couple weeks, although today it crashed so much I got frustrated and started using Windows/ IE5 so I could get what I had to do, done. - Original Message - From: David van Balen [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Saturday, November 20, 1999 4:31 PM Subject: Re: [newbie] Netscape Upgrade 4.6 to 4.7 - Is it worth it? On Sat, 20 Nov 1999, Sevatio Octavio wrote: I'm curious as to how much of an improvement Netscape 4.7 is over 4.6. For all of you that upgraded, was it worth the time? Did it fix the problems of it suddenly shutting down and all the other annoying stuff? Seve Not really. If you've got some extra time then go ahead and upgrade but don't go out of your way to do so... don't know if it fixed the 128 bit encription problem or not. DvB
Re: [newbie] Printing Envelopes NIGHTMARE
"Karen" == Karen Heiby [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Mike Fieschko wrote: [snip] I do not have an Epson 660, but I notice in Star Office's Printer Setup, that this model is not listed. What printer support did you install with Star Office? I found the printer setup and I have it selected to use my Epson with the drivers that work with every other program. I still get this envelope problem, though. Karen I wasn't given the opportunity to setup a printer, however, Karen StarOffice tells me I have a generic printer. It prints Karen documents okay (albeit VERY slowly). It's weird because Karen all my other applications have my printer listed as Karen "epson", which is what I named it. The printer drop-down Karen box in Star Office doesn't contain any other options Karen besides that Generic Printer. What printer drop-down menu? The one where you select the printer after you tell it to print something, before you click OK. (But never mind, I have my drivers in there now). What version of Star Office? I have 5.1 from Sun here, and 5.1 from Star Division, and on the desktop is an icon "Printer Setup", which is a link to $(inst)/bin/spadmin.bin I have Star Office 5.1a and Mandrake 6.1. So far I'm caught up with you. I found how to setup the printer and I have my various drivers set in there (Curiously, the driver that's supposed to print up to 1440dpi can't be changed in StarOffice's configuration to anything past 300, but that's another issue). Anyway, after putting in the drivers, Star Office still botches up envelopes by printing them at the wrong orientation and then printing numerous pages of gobbledygook until I turn the printer off and delete the queue. Too bad, Star Office would be great for my needs if it weren't for this one problem. Thanks for any input you can give me! Karen
Re: [newbie] Printing Envelopes NIGHTMARE
Do you have an Epson 660 too? I'd like to try WP8. I was just wanting the convenience of a total office suite, though. You know, everything is in once place nice and neat :-) Karen - Original Message - From: WH Bouterse [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 16, 1999 3:36 PM Subject: Re: [newbie] Printing Envelopes NIGHTMARE I too have had excellant luck with WP8 !!! William Bouterse Juneau, Alaska
[newbie] Hardware recommendations
I would like to get a new external modem and a PS/2 mouse, OR aninternal modem and a PS/2 mouse (that's how my system has to be set up). I would appreciate anyone's brand name recommendations for the least hassle getting these to work in Linux-Mandrake. Thanks! Karen __My greatest fear in life is that no-one will remember me afterI'm dead. - some dead guy
Re: [newbie] Netscape
In the Navigator, Applications setting I see something there for configuring an application to work with Java Script programs, and some other Java thingie. Do those need configured as well, to run certain web features? - Original Message - From: Seth Gibson [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, November 08, 1999 7:40 AM Subject: Re: [newbie] Netscape On Mon, 08 Nov 1999, you wrote: If I need to do it in Edit--Preferences--Navigator--Applications, can someone tell me exactly which file to direct it to? I have both JDK 1.1.7 v3 and JRE 1.1.7. v1a installed on here. Actually try looking under EditPreferencesAdvanced. . .that's where all the java settings should be. -- Seth Gibson www.mp3.com/PSM0x2710 members.tripod.com/cybernetic_thunder (Under Construction) Aggression Takes Its Toll.
Re: [newbie] Installed 6.1 - KDE has GNOME menus
Sam Gentile is right. I had the same problem which is one reason why I had to re-install Linux a lot. It occurred with *one* user out of three (i.e. it wasn't a "global" problem). As a rule, in KDE, when you click the "K" button, everything that is under the gnome menu pops up there by default. It would never ever go back to normal once it started doing that (i.e. restarting, logging out, etc. didn't help at all). There was a little black dot on the panel that said "KDE menu" or whatever, and clicking that little black dot there is the only way you can get to your KDE applications. Go to Gnome, and click on the panel "foot" thing and look at what pops up. Well, that's the same menu that is popping up for Sam Gentile in KDE! I've seen it happen too. I had been told to use Desktop Switching Tool--which did nothing. I had also been told to try editing my start menu, which does not take care of the problem at all. Just a little FYI. I was wondering, since it isn't a global malady, maybe it could be remedied if one could delete a "." file in their /home/$USER folder that sets desktop preferences, so it would be reset when they returned to KDE??? What do you think about that? I'm no longer having this particular problem so I can't test it out, but I just now thought of it. BTW, I think the problem needs to be reported as a KDE bug to www.kde.org. I reported my problem since nobody could think of an answer for me! Turns out KDE is chock full of weird bugs. Karen - Original Message - From: Axalon Bloodstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 1999 3:08 PM Subject: RE: [newbie] Installed 6.1 - KDE has GNOME menus It is supposed to have GNOME menus under KDE. They aren't supposed to be directly under Applications. On Tue, 2 Nov 1999, Sam Gentile wrote: It is not supposed to have GNOME menus under KDE. I am running KDE. None of the menus have KDE things on them. I don't have my system here but when I pull down the first entry - Applications?? - it has things like gEDit and all the GNOME things instead of the KDE things. The rest of it is unaffected. The desktop is KDE. The task bar is KDE and has KDE things on it. It's just the menus are screwed up and look like the menus you would get if you logged into GNOME. All the kde menus? or just Applications. ls -l /usr/share/applnk/Applications # says? Sam Gentile Principal Software Engineer Viridien Team Leader toysmart.com 170 High Street Waltham, MA 02454 -Original Message- From: Axalon Bloodstone [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, November 01, 1999 4:49 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [newbie] Installed 6.1 - KDE has GNOME menus Going to have to describe better than that (better yet screenshot) as it's supposed to have gnome menus... it's kinda hard to guess what you mean. On Mon, 1 Nov 1999, Karen M. Heiby wrote: I'd just like to affirm that this is a problem that I have had, too. Maybe it's a bug? Karen Sam Gentile wrote: I just installed Mandrake Power Pack 6.1 last night on a fresh system and when I boot into KDE, it has the KDE look, the KDE taskbars and such but Gnome menus!! How did this happen and how can I fix it? Sam Gentile Principle Software Engineer/Team Leader - Viridien Team -- MandrakeSoft http://www.mandrakesoft.com/ --Axalon -- MandrakeSoft http://www.mandrakesoft.com/ --Axalon
Re: [newbie] wine
You're right, there's something in one of my Linux books about not needing Windows to use wine, although you also need something else I think to get it to work. I'd go to www.winehq.com and see if they have anything about it. Karen - Original Message - From: John Aldrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 1999 9:31 AM Subject: Re: [newbie] wine On Wed, 03 Nov 1999, you wrote: From: Ronald A. Yacketta Hello all!! is it possible to run wine on a winblows less system? I use linux and only linux, but recently I have a need to run a couple applications that are winblows. is it possible? could it be?? If I understand how WINE works, yes. I've never used it, but to the best of my understanding, you don't need Windows to use WINE. I may be totally off base, wouldn't be the first time. :-) John
[newbie] Re: Installed 6.1 - KDE has GNOME menus
First of all I am now of the opinion that whole problem is out of the scope of Mandrake as a product, but rather, is a KDE bug that needs to be redirected to KDE. But I appreciate Mandrake's effort to help! I replied to Axalon's questions anyway just for the heck of it, in case anyone else is interested in the problem. Ok lets see posible causes, 1) kappfinder was takeing a "long time", so you shut down the Xserver to see what was going on and kappfinder did not complete At the time I didn't even know what kappfinder was for, and had never used it. Actually I still haven't :-) 2) Your computer locked up and you used reset button, filesystem got damaged, linking kde and gnome menus to same inode (so very very Now this is possible. I have been told about how uncrashable Linux is but so far I'm having to kill processes and/or reset my machine because of an unreactive keyboard way more than I had to in Windows 98--I don't mean to start a war about it though. It's not like I'm giving up on Linux... I'm optimistic that I'll be able to learn what's going on and stop this from happening all the time. unlikely, considering diff pc's) 3) Somebodys been playing with the menu editors As far as I can tell, this problem can't even be replicated by playing with menu editors. I remember trying to use the editor to get it back the way it was, but discovered that I could only move individual application links, but not whole directory links, which I would need to do to fix it. Gnome "directories" as well as applications were showing up and would have needed to be moved. I could tell they were Gnome directory links because they all had little black dots next to their names. You can delete them, I think, but try to move the KDE directory links to your custom menu, and they just snap back to the right of the screen where they were--you can't do it. 4) Poltergiests have infiltrated your computers and it's time to get the priest haha ;-) I had been told to use Desktop Switching Tool--which did nothing. I had also been told to try editing my start menu, which does not take care of the problem at all. Just a little FYI. Just exactly what were you expecting from it that it did not do? All it's intended todo is alter the ~/.xinitrc of the user.. (with option to change system default if root) I wasn't expecting anything, I thought it was dumb advice but I just didn't want to prevent someone from advising the same thing again out of misunderstanding the problem ;-) I was wondering, since it isn't a global malady, maybe it could be remedied if one could delete a "." file in their /home/$USER folder that sets desktop preferences, so it would be reset when they returned to KDE??? What do you think about that? I'm no longer having this particular problem so I can't test it out, but I just now thought of it. mv ~/.kde ~/kde.sux mv ~/.gnome ~/gnome.sux cp -r /etc/skell/.kde ~/ cp -r /etc/skell/.gnome ~/ LOL. I take it you are not a GUI kind of guy. I'll have to remember that. BTW Sam if this works for you, write so, so I know what to do next time! BTW, I think the problem needs to be reported as a KDE bug to www.kde.org. I reported my problem since nobody could think of an answer for me! Turns out KDE is chock full of weird bugs. David? Daniel? (i don't know if they are subscribed here, if you believe its a bug in kde it's self and not our implementation you'll need file bug report thru their bug system) I think it is a KDE bug but if someone from Mandrake knew of a work around, it couldn't hurt to ask. Thanks for the help! ;-) Karen PS. Niether one of you answer what i asked, ls -l /usr/share/applnk/Applications # Says what? Sam needs to answer that one. I did a clean reinstalled to get rid of the problem (being a newbie with no important data saved on the Linux partitions just yet, that's how I fix a lot of weird stuff ;-) though I wanted to express concern about it as it was frustrating and I'm afraid it might happen again. Thanks for the help. Karen ~ - Original Message - From: Axalon Bloodstone [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, November 02, 1999 3:08 PM Subject: RE: [newbie] Installed 6.1 - KDE has GNOME menus It is supposed to have GNOME menus under KDE. They aren't supposed to be directly under Applications. On Tue, 2 Nov 1999, Sam Gentile wrote: It is not supposed to have GNOME menus under KDE. I am running KDE. None of the menus have KDE things on them. I don't have my system here but when I pull down the first entry - Applications?? - it has things like gEDit and all the GNOME things instead of the KDE things. The rest of it is unaffected. The desktop is KDE. The task bar is KDE and has KDE things on it. It's just the menus are screwed up and look like the menus you would get if you logged into GNOME. All the kde menus? or just
Re: [newbie] Clean uninstall
Unless I am mis-informed, when you remove a partition, all the information in the partition is irrevocably lost - forever! To my knowlege, Linux does not put any kind of information in the CMOS, or re-do the BIOS. If you remove the Linux partition, then do the DOS fdisk /mbr, that should remove any trace of Linux. Then reinstall to your hearts content. On the other hand, if the problems are persistent, then you may have either a hardware problem, or some incompatibility. KFM, unless I am sorely misinformed is the KDE file manager (perhaps a typo?). Since it is a KDE app, are you using it in KDE, or GNOME? Yes, it is one file manager in KDE (it seems to be the default one whenever I click on a shortcut to a directory, which is why this problem annoys me so much. I am using it in KDE and have these problems. Incidentally, it also behaves this way when accessed from Gnome. If you can give more concise information, perhaps someone on this list can assist you. Please include hardware information too. I have a QDI motherboard, SB16 sound card, Wisecom modem (that isn't recognized yet) on COM2, Serial Port Mouse on COM1, an unrecognized printer on LP0, 96MB SDRAM, an Intel 430TX Pentium 233MHz chipset, a KDE monitor, a second hard drive on DOS_hdb2 that's 2.6 GB, an Acer ATAPI IDE CD-ROM drive, S3 Virge video card... If I can give you more info, just let me know. I didn't have problems the very, very first time I installed Linux a few weeks ago (Mandrake is my first). None of my problems that I have now existed then. Thank you. Karen Sorry I could not be more helpfull, Ernie On Mon, 01 Nov 1999,Karen M. Heiby wrote: | I would like to know how to cleanly uninstall Linux. I'm having peculiar | problems that I think can only be fixed with a clean install. | | Here's what I've tried *several times over* but still does not work: | | 1.) Deleting the Linux partition from Windows | a.) (In Windows 98) filling up my hard drive with junk--totally, then | deleting the junk (just to make sure anything of Linux that might still | be there is overwritten) | b.) scandisk (Windows 98) and defrag (Windows 98) | | or | | c.) formatting the entire hard drive (with DOS "fdisk") and reinstalling | Windows 98, repartitioning it for Linux (Partition Magic) and then | reinstalling Linux | | 2.) Going into Linux as root, going to /, and typing the rm -fr /* command, | which | a.) gets stuck even if I wait a couple hours, I don't see anything | happening. | | 3.) Going into runlevel 3 as root, going to /, and deleting each directory | individually with "rm -fr nameofdirectory" | a.) (However: I can't delete /proc | b.) and I can't delete /lib) | | then, | | c.) I boot to DOS with a disk and using "fdisk \mbr" to delete LILO | d.) I reinstall Linux | | All three methods fail to get rid of my problems. For ex., KDE freezes when I | use KFM to browse the /mnt directory. No other file managers (Gnome, KDE file | manager, or any terminal) freeze, and it is not a permissions problem. It's | just KFM/KDE! When I click the /dev directory in KFM and look at its | permissions properties, the text (User, Group, Other) is grayed out but the | checkboxes are nonfunctional but the proper permissions are assigned. Same goes | for everything else in /dev. I can use chmod or any other file manager to | modify permissions and have done so. | | GAIM (AOL Instant Messenger clone) is retaining my contact list, when that | should never happen if it were a clean install. This is not a problem, per se, | but just an indicator that I still have old information from previous | installations haunting which are likely the cause of my persistent | problems. | | Gnome's "Settings" on the panel is kaput. I can click Gnome Control Center and | get it running, but if I click anything else on the Panel under | Settings, (Multimedia, Peripherals, etc. ) nothing happens. That's just a | minor annoyance since I can use these from Gnome Control Center anyway, but | annoying nonetheless. | | During installation, I am never asked certain questions that I vaguely remember | being asked the very first time I installed Linux, such as how much RAM do I | have, etc. It seems to install as if it knows or thinks it's installing on top | of another installation of itself. | | What gets me is that after I tried Route #1(above), by filling up my hard drive, | I should have written over anything hard drive clusters that had Linux in them | at one time, right? Even the boot record was re-made with a new LILO. How come | old Linux glitches are still haunting me? Why is my GAIM contact list still | intact when it shouldn't be? | | I really want to cleanly install Linux to solve some of my problems and give me | peace of mind and solid footing for