[newbie] Connection sharing config.

2003-01-29 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello!

I tried to configure the connection sharing on Mandrake 9.1. beta 2.
It keeps asking me for installation CD 1. I put the CD, click OK, the
tray closes, the CD spins, it seems to do something, but still stops
and asks for CD1. I tried CD2 just in case it was a typo, but nothing
helps!

Is there any way to circumvent the problem?

Thanks!

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Pro's con's for separate partitions?

2002-06-30 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello (again!)

 I always wanted to try out BeOS, but by the time I was ready to install 
 it the
 company was ready to fold :( I guess I'll wait and see how the BeOS 
 clones like
 OpenBeOS develop before trying those.

Yes, the OpenBeOS is progressing nicely. I hope it will reach the BeOS 
R5 sometime
this year.
Compared to other systems, it becomes slowly outdated (no support for 
recent hard,
for instance ATA100, ATA 133, etc... But compared to the latest Windows 
I have used,
it still holds a respectable place, althogh it wasn't upgraded for years.
Well, that's it. It's not the proper place to talk about BeOS anyway. 
But watch OpenBeOS,
it may become interesting soon.

Pascal.

 Sridhar Dhanapalan

   I once preached peaceful coexistence with Windows.
  You may laugh at my expense -- I deserve it.
   -- Jean-Louis Gassée, founder of BeOS




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Re: [newbie] Pro's con's for separate partitions?

2002-06-29 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

On 2002.06.30, at 06:16, Derek Jennings wrote:

 On Saturday 29 Jun 2002 9:56 pm, Barry Michels wrote:
 So, are there any recommendations on size for these different 
 partitions?
 I've got a 60gb drive that I want to dedicate to Linux.  The 100GB and
 120GB are going to be for miscellaneous storage.

 Recommendations?  Hmm.. Well first of all remember that almost everyone
 changes their partitions when they upgrade because they got it wrong 
 first
 time :-) Also *everyone* has their own opinion. There is no 'right way'.

 Here is what I have at present (and why)

 / 2.3GB 28% full

 /usr 6.5GB  30% full  (almost every app goes in here so it needs to 
 be
 big)

Yes, these are reasonable figures.
And if you take into account that there are 7 CDs for one distro, and 
that
you have 2 cds of source, 5 CDs if you install everything (very 
unlikely),
will represent 5 x 650 = 3250 MBytes.
Mandrake's auto-format creates a 3.4 GB root partition, at least if your
HD allows it.
So it sounds like in most of the cases, you will not install more than 
3.4 GB
in the root partition.
So with a disk like 60 GB, I would simply let Mandrake installer take
care of everything.

Pascal.




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Re: [newbie] Pro's con's for separate partitions?

2002-06-29 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

 What's the benefit to having separate /, /home, /var, etc?

 You will notice the benefit to separate /home /opt and /etc directories 
 when
 you upgrade to Mandrake 9.0.

Yes, the advantage of having /home, /opt, and /etc _DIRECTORIES_,
as you write yourself, no doubt about that. But is there any benefit
of having these on different _PARTITIONS_?

 Performing an 'upgrade' to a distro is still not
 as reliable as users would like, and many people are more comfortable 
 with a
 fresh install right down to reformatting the partitions.

But if you want to install, you don't have to reformat the partition. 
The installer
will install every file (thus replacing all the files having the same 
name), and
it will work exactly as it would on a clean partition, the only 
difference being
that the files that are not use anymore would still remain. as far as 
the installer
installs all the necessary files, I cann't see any reason that could 
make it less
reliable than a clean (i.e. with formatting) install.
As for upgrade, you may be right. It depends how the upgrade is done, 
which
files are kept and which ones are overwritten...

 If you have just one
 big '/' partition that would mean you would lose all your user data in 
 /home,

Only if you reformat.
I use Mandrake's default formatting, so in case of installing a new 
version,
I format the  partition in order to clean everything, but it's not 
mandatory.
BeOS used a single partition and it was perfectly possible to install
without formatting, and without loosing your previous settings.

 all your configuration settings in /etc and all your 'extra' 
 applications you
 mat have put in /opt.  So by having separate partitions you can 
 reformat '/'
 and '/usr' without destroying all the other data.
 Also if you were running a heavy duty server you would want to have 
 different
 partitions to optimise HD performance, but that is not usually a
 consideration in a desktop system.

 derek

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Pascal




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Re: [OT] [newbie] i am so glad i use linux

2002-06-25 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

On 2002.06.25, at 22:43, robin wrote:

 Franki wrote:

 Don't laugh.. it might be a good thing if they bring this in..

 Then you'll have Palladium users, and the rest of the world..

 Sorta like the microsoft network when it first started..
 they wanted their own internet, unfortunatly noone else did.

 besides.. they'd end up in court again so quickly...

 True - it's tempting to be overawed by the MS Empire, but we should 
 remember their revolutionary projects which went belly-up almost 
 immediately: MSN, active desktops, Windows ME   MS relies on its 
 being a de facto standard (as opposed to a real standard): people want 
 to exchange Word documents, share data with Access, share viruses with 
 Outlook and so on. Splitting that community by creating a new 
 standard would remove Microsoft's only advantage.

Not necessarily.
I guess if they build a Mac-like close environment, and also sell the 
hardware, they have
many advantages:
- They cannot be accused anymore of monopoly practices (1) because they 
build software
for their own hardware.
- Of course, they will ensure backward compatibility with formats like 
word, powerpoint, excel,
etc. And build the corresponding software tools, so it will make sense 
for business.
- As they have a huge market share, they can build very cheap hardware 
which will be hard
to compete with (therefore get it build in China, put a MS stamp on it 
and sell it, like Mac does).
- They will also build IE and Outlook products with an option secure 
mail only. This way,
they ensure backwards compatibility with existing mail, but because 
people get fed up with
spam, the move towards secure mail will be done.

You're talking of a new standard? yes, they will. With the well known 
embrace and improve
technique. At the beginning, it is not a standard, or it is the standard 
plus a little more. After 2 years,
since most of the computers are equipped, move to the nonstandard stuff 
(secure mail) and
you lock everybody else out.

One thing is sure: they have been thinking (spending thousands of 
man-month study)
  about it and you cannot judge the eventual effect just because you 
spent 5 minutes reading
an article or a mail about it.

And one of the basic rules of the art of war (Tun Tzu): never 
underestimate your enemy.
Especially if your enemy is 9 times stronger than you (in a 90% windows 
world).

(1) I mean the practices that aim to put exclusively MS products on OEM 
hard.
They can still be accused of monopolistic practices by keeping their 
data format secret.

Pascal




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[newbie] Connection sharing question

2002-06-20 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

I have some trouble sharing one ADSL connection (8Mbps)
for a local area network.

I did it at home and it works well. The modem assigns an IP
with DHCP and there is basically no other configuration except
running the connection sharing setup.

Now I am trying to do the same for a school. They have also
a 8 Mbps modem to which I am supposed to connect by DHCP,
and I have also run the connection sharing setup.

Now the differences:
At home, the IP assigned by the modem (or by the provider via the
modem) is something like 20x.xxx.xxx.xxx, which looks like a
reasonable value. The connection sharing works at home, or at least
it used to work with 8.1. I have no linux machine at home now.

At school, the IP assigned by the modem or by the provider
via the modem is 192.168.0.1. I thought this was
reserved for a private network. Can this cause the failure?
By the way, the symptoms: none of the connected machines can
connect to internet. If I connect directly (put the hub at the output of
the modem), it works well, but the server is meaningless.

I have tried to set my second board to another value so there is no
conflict, but it does not work.

Any idea?

Thanks,

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] Small question about command line

2002-04-15 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On 2002 April 16 Tuesday 02:39, you wrote:

 'su' means _superuser_, not 'substitute user', which it does.


From man pages:

NAME

su - substitute user identity

SYNOPSIS

su [-Kflm] [login [shell arguments]]

etc...

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] abiword not in 8.2?

2002-04-08 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

On Sunday 07 April 2002 19:51, you wrote:
 On Mon, 2002-04-08 at 01:12, Robin Turner wrote:
  1. A fully featured office suite compatible with the dreaded MS Office.
  OpenOffice is pretty much on track there.

 I think this is probably true for most users who work exclusively in one
 European language. But for those of us whose work requires dealing with
 multi-language texts, unfortunately, OpenOffice (along with the Linux
 platform as a whole, along with its apps) is still in the Dark Ages
 compared to the international language support MS began to offer with
 Win/Office2000. Trying to run Mandrake with either Gnome or KDE and do
 Asian language input and display an array of international fonts in any
 kind of application (except for Mozilla) is still a hopeless enterprise,
 and I never see improvements in version upgrades.

Probably we don't use the same Mandrake 8.2 ???

As for my experience, I do see improvements in every version.
Ex: 8.0: install in Japanese didn't work without setting a memory parameter
at boot time - I gave up.
8.1: installed fine, but the menus were all garbage characters, and kinput
was not installed by the japanese installer and had to be added afterwards.
- I managed to get it work well, thanks to Pablo and a few other persons.
8.2: Apparently works out of the box. The menus are well displayed.
I didn't try to write Japanese yet, but as I reported the kinput issue in 8.1,
I guess it should be fixed.
Since I am at it, there is a bug at logout. The small window asking
reboot / shutdown / ???  displays garbage.

I have been able to use Mandrake in Japanese since 8.1, and I write most
of my mail in Japanese with kmail.

By the way, I don't do any special settings to do that. Every time, I save my
data on a CDROM, and I perform a clean install, just to verify that it works
out of the box. Basically, I don't even follow the installer instructions.
I press enter everywhere except for installation language selection and
area / network setup. In 8.1. there were further settings to get menus
working, but for 8.2, Pablo  co made a great job. No extra settings.

 Chuck

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Kmail Question

2002-04-08 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

On Monday 08 April 2002 16:11, you wrote:
 Is there a way to reply-to the person this question was sent to?

In the present case, the person the question was sent to is the list,
right? By default, kmail replies to the list when pressing the reply
button.

IE, in the To: field is the newbie list address, I want to reply to
 that address

I don't get it. The reply button replies to the list, without changing
any setting.
By the way, with a single click on the address, you can get a mail
editor window set up to the address you want to write to. But the
subject is not set up and the body is empty

 when I hit the Reply: Button in Kmail.

 I hope that makes sense.

 It seems not to work, where in Netscape mail it does?

 Thx
 Femme

But there is something strange in the addresses display.
For instance, if somebody writes to me, in his message's
header, there is my address in the To field. But kmail
displays:

[Subject] (in large bold characters)
From: MyFriend [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This doesn't seem too logical.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Not why only graphical - Why no graphical?

2002-04-04 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

2002 4? 4 ??? 16:43??:
 Ha there folks,
 Well, a new machine and same result.

From your previous mails and also this one, I got the impression
that you are one of the most unlucky person from earth and
its suburbs.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Shutdown does not turn PC off

2002-04-03 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I have a similar problem. I use a dual pentium machine, and
I have never been able to shutdown. At the end of the shutdown
process, the terminal-like screen says power off and stays like
that forever, until I press the power button for more than 4
seconds.

I have alrready posted this question a few times about a year
ago, but never got a reply, so I ended up thinking I was the
only one to experience this problem.

I don't remember the board type, and I have no driver at hand
to open the case, but I have the same problem at home with
an old Abit dual processor board with 2 celerons.

Pascal


2002 4? 4 ??? 10:10??:
 +1 more...
 Soyo K7ADA, Duron 1.0

 Reboot works, but halt goes to the point where the PC should be powered off
 and then I get an abend displayed on the console.  This appears to repeat
 after about 20 seconds, but goes too fast to read and I haven't been able
 to find any logs -- appears everything has been closed.  Shutdown worked on
 8.1.

 Roger

 On Tuesday 02 April 2002 07:11 am, Onur Kucuk wrote:
  RK Hi everyone,
  RK I've seen a user having the same problem as me - when shutting down
  RK the computer, no matter if using shutdown -h now, poweroff or halt -p
  RK (yeah, haven't tried telinit 0 ;-) the computer goes through the
  usual RK shutdown process as in MDK8.1 and then at Power down. it just
  turns RK off the disks and stops. It should turn off the computer but it
  RK doesn't.
  RK I haven't changed a thing since 8.1 and even PnP OS is set to No if
  RK that matters. There doesn't seem to be a visible difference in the
  RK scripts in /etc/rc.d/ which are probably responsible for shutdown (as
  RK far as I figured).
  RK Since another user has already asked the same question, I wonder, has
  RK anyone else come across it meanwhile?
 
  RK BTW: My computer is an Athlon 750 on an ABIT KA7 mainboard, 128MB
  RK SDRAM.
 
  RK TIA
  RK Roman
 
 
+1
 
Intel i845 board + 512 MB SDRam + Nvidia Geforce2MX
 
Exactly the same
 
 
   Regards,
   Onur Kucuk
 
 
  _
  Do You Yahoo!?
  Get your free yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com



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[newbie] Appletalk printer

2002-02-26 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

Does anyone know how to convigure an appletalk
laserprinter (without VI'ing /etc/printcap and co). Is there
a GUI allowing to see all the appletalk printers around (i.e.
other than nbplkup in a terminal) and to set one as the
printer I want to use?

Thanks,

Pascal





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[newbie] OT: no windows

2002-02-18 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I was looking for a cheap laptop to install Mandrake.
Unlike home made towers, it is quite difficult to buy
parts, so I had a look at the net in order to find computers
without windows. I found an interesting home page:

http://www.bestpricecomputers.ltd.uk/products/nowindows.htm

At the beginning of the page, they give a few links related
to Microsoft's unfair practices, with sounds good at a first
glance. But in the paragraph Not to worry, I'll install Windows
myself, they say:

We do not ship PCs with blank hard disks.. When reading
a bit further, you understand that this means, we will not ship
without windows.

Basically, if you want to buy a computer, you should provide
them with your windows registration number = YOU SHOULD
OWN A WINDOWS COPY.
And I am not sure of that, but maybe it will not work if it is
an OEM registration number

The sentence: Trust the experts. We have the resources
and time to keep abreast with the latest drivers and patches.
That makes a big difference to the performance of your PC.
Your PC will be better for it. is also worth mentioning.
Basically, we are idiots.

And the cherry on top of the cake is the last paragraph:
Basically, they would really like shipping linux machines,
but there is not enough demand for such a thing.
Now fasten your seat belts:

 If you must have Linux/Unix on your PC the only way to do
 it is to receive the PC with Windows  format the drive. It's a
 minor inconvenience for a great PC at a great price...

a minor inconvenience that implies that you own a copy of
microshit.

 especially bearing in mind that most mail order companies
 insist you buy Windows with your PC; they in fact just
 bundle it in with the price of the machine :-)

Read the whole page. That's a good example of commercial
hyocrisy.

Pascal

Sorry for your time, I couldn't help spreading this. I wrote them
a mail to tell them what I think.



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Re: [newbie] Mac OS X versus Linux - factual please

2002-02-14 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

 Hi guys,
 Thanks for all your comments which, while very interesting, do not quite
 answer my maybe poorly formulated question.  So I will re-phrase it: do you
 know of any comparisons between MAC OS X and Linux which would look at
 aspects such as connectivity, multi-tasking, multi-user capability, telnet
 (how many simultaneous sessions), file system comparison (journalling),
 crash recovery, users and group administration, etc.
 Rather than a philosophical comparison with praise or blame I would simply
 seek an objective technical/factual comparison of the compare and

May I remind you that the first philosophical comparison with praise / blame 
etc... came from you? Are expressions like I don't think, I don't trust
objective / technical / factual for you?

 For a very simple reason: I don't think that proprietary software is a
 good thing.  Neither do I trust that Mac suddenly coming into Unices
 and even open source with their next OS is anything but opportunism
 born out of dire need.  As for their OS - look at Linus T's comments
 about it in his book.

 _
 Join the world’s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
 http://www.hotmail.com

 I would simply seek an objective technical/factual comparison of the
 compare and ontrast type.
 Many thanks in advance,
 Andrei

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Mac OS X versus Linux?!

2002-02-13 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

2002 2? 13 ??? 13:40??:

  Id depends on what you want. For most of the people of this list
  (including me), Mandraje provides everything for the daily use.
  As for my frustrations:
  - No consistent cut  paste;

 This can be frustrating if you use different toolkits. The
 select-and-middle-click method works in most places, though.

Most of the places doesn't mean all the places. I know that the
middle button has a higher success likelyhood, and that's why I
use it all the time. But what I am saying is that some applications
use ctrl-c / ctrl-v and some other don't. Just imagine: you're a
new user coming from MacOSX (where cutpaste is a key feature)
and you land in an OS without this feature. What do you do then?
You buy another Mac.
Note that I am not saying that Linux is bad, otherwise I would
not use it and not even bother writing here. Linux improves
constantly. Among the distribs I have used, Mandrake is the most
advanced in terms of user-friendness, and I am really looking
foreward to more consistency which will make it an unbeatable
office machine.

So to summarize what I mean by non-consistent cutpaste:
Most of the applics work with select-middle button. - some fair consistency.
Some accept ctrl-c / x / v, some don't some other use a different
key combination - the general case is no consistent cutpaste.
If you want to add more consistency, then remove the ctrll-c / x/ v
from all the applications that support it and replace that with select /
middle button or do the opposite. I am aware that this cannot be solved
by Mandrake. At least not Mandrake alone.

  - No way to reassign the shortcuts consistently to mimick Mac's
  behaviour. At least not in KDE, and the changes don't apply consistently
  everywhere.

 Have you looked for alternatives? If KDE doesn't suit your needs, then try
 something else. Have you looked at GNOME and/or WindowMaker? KDE isn't the
 whole world, you know.

I know. But I was replying to a person who wants to convince a Mac
addict to switch to Linux, Mandrake or other.
Just imagine the guy who buys the CDs or downloads them. Since
he doesn't know anything about Linux, he just chooses the default
options. As you may know, KDE is the default of Mandrake (I mean,
if you press enter to all the questions you don't know during installation,
you will end up with a KDE environment). As a new user, you don't know
the difference between KDE and Gnome, do you? And as an average
user who does not want to bother reading the docs (90% of the users,
including me), you just try an see.
So to summarize the situation, as a default config (in KDE), you are not
able to configure the keys. At least it does not work consistently,
system-wide. If you want system-wide settings, I guess you have to
provide these settings at some level earlier than the window manager,
be it gnome or kde. I don't know if this can be done by environment
variables, but something like that may work.
export LINUX_COPY_KEY=ctrl-C
export LINUX_PASTE_KEY=ctrl-V (or the same configs with alt)

etc...

and all the window managers should refer to the same settings.
I am not saying it's simple or even feasible with the current OS
status...

  - Fonts / encoding problems as soon as you don't use an english
  platform. I am still unable, for instance, to send a message that
  contains French AND Japanese in the same page. Either the accents or the
  kanjis are unsuported.

 Internationalisation suport in GNU/Linux is supposed to be very good.

Is supposed, yes, once you manage to configure it properly, which is
(I think) beyond beginner's capabilities.

 Again, have you tried different apps to see if one suited your needs? I
 hear that Pango (the GNOME2 internationalisation library, used by GNOME2
 apps) handles this sort of thing quite well. Also, make sure you're using
 Unicode fonts.

Again, if you think as a new user would, you just take all the defaults.
Here is my Mandrake 8.1 experience:
- I clean installed 8.1 with Japanese option from the installer;
- Everything went pretty well until the installation finishes. A few messages
came out in English, which may bring some trouble for the non-english
speakers, but the localization ratio is very good.
- At reboot time, I had no fonts at all (this means no menus or at best
a few garbage characters)
- I had to choose fonts blindly (fortunately there were some icons). After
a few restarts of KDE, I got the menus working. Now I opened kmail.
As it was the first time I used the mail, I think the app could have taken
the font parameters I had setup for kde, but no, I had to configure fonts for
kmail as well.

Now, my config works rather well. Both the OS and me have made a step
towards each other (I got a more or less working config, and I have
adapted myself to what I cannot configure).

At one point after receiving 8,1, I sent quite a lot of reports to the
i18n group, and I hope 8.2 will have made some fixes. 

But there are still  things that don't work. 

Re: [newbie] Mac OS X versus Linux?!

2002-02-12 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

 Sorry, I forgot to ask this in my first reply but why do you feel the need
 to convert your friend to Linux if he is happy with Mac OS X?

 For a very simple reason: I don't think that proprietary software is a good
 thing.  Neither do I trust that Mac suddenly coming into Unices and even
 open source with their next OS is anything but opportunism born out of dire
 need.  As for their OS - look at Linus T's comments about it in his book.

Id depends on what you want. For most of the people of this list
(including me), Mandraje provides everything for the daily use.
As for my frustrations:
- No consistent cut  paste;
- No way to reassign the shortcuts consistently to mimick Mac's
behaviour. At least not in KDE, and the changes don't apply consistently
everywhere.
- Fonts / encoding problems as soon as you don't use an english
platform. I am still unable, for instance, to send a message that contains
French AND Japanese in the same page. Either the accents or the
kanjis are unsuported.

We (on this list) can cope with this, but as for a person coming from
MacOSX world where the 3 points above work perfectly, I guess it is
not easy and for them, Mac is still the only solution that works out of
the box, without any other config.


Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Full Linux Network

2002-02-06 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Le 02.2.6 à 13:11, Chris Ashmore ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) écrivit:

 Here is the story / question. There is a small intercity private school
 that has NO money at all. So they get these computers donated to them
 P2's with some RAM and 10 Gig HDD's, monitors all that. Minus the OS.
 They dont have enough money to by windoze lisence for all of them. What
 will it take to buld a Lunix Network, with centralize administration,
 home folders on a server. I have a local ISP donating the internet
 connection, and I am setting up email for the teachers and turning on
 squid w/ squid guard so the kids cant go to xxx.com. Most of the Network
 hardware is being donated wire, hubs that sort of stuff. I am donating a
 lot of time to this project mostly because I want this to work. I have
 heard of remote Xterm (simuliar to Citrix), and a few others. I was just
 wondering if there was a  good solution to this? Any ideas would be
 helpful.

Hello,

It depends on what you call no money at all. I am currently building
a network for the French school in Kyoto. All the machines they have also
come from donations. As for Linux, I use Mandrake, and the idea is to
register as a club member which is cheaper than buying a package, and
which is a net profit for Mandrake.

They have a few old PCs (400MHz, 10 Gig, 128 MB), and old macs (PPC 7300s).
I have bought everything to build a server (1 GHz celeron, 40 GB disk,
256 MB memory), 2 network boards. Everything under 500 $. Since they don't
have too much resources, the server will also be used as a PC. The internet
connection is a 8 Mbps ADSL which is the cheapest solution in Japan (even
cheaper than a 56K modem, about 16~17$ a month).
I will try to have the printer shared, as they have only one printer.
Appletalk, connection sharing and net browsing work fine on all the
machines.
If you want to share your experience, you can contact ma at:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] I am not sure of who will help the other most, but
that can be interesting.

By the way, if somebody of this list can contribute, we are looking for
French keyboards. If you have one you don't need, please inform me before
trashing it. Contact me at [EMAIL PROTECTED] We would of course pay the
shipping.

Pascal





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Re: [newbie] Opera in spanish?

2002-02-05 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Le 02.2.6 à 4:07, Joan Tur ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) écrivit:

 Hallo!
 
 Does any of you have opera (5, 5.05TP1 or 6TP3) running in spanish language?

Opera in Spanish is quite rare. Most of the Operas I know of are in Italian
or German.

 And Opera doesn't answer...

Opera never answers. It just puts you under hypnosis until the curtain
closes.

 Thanks!

Pascal




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[newbie] 8.2 beta bug report

2002-01-30 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

I am trying to contact the site http://qa.mmandrakesoft.com
for bug report issues, but I cannot find it. Does anybody
know the exact address? Apparently it is badly linked, or
the server might be down...


Thanks,

Pascal




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[newbie] Web sharing does not survive a reboot

2002-01-16 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello (again)!

I have built a new machine in order to use it as a small server
(about 10 machines for the time being).
I have an ADSL modem to which plug an LAN cable conneced
to the first ethernet interface (eth0). The other interface is for
the LAN (eth1).

Using the network setup tools, I have configured eth0 to
connect by DHCP to the modem, and eth1 with the address
192.168.0.1.

After that, I have configured the web sharing, and it works
without any problem. I can access the mail from other machines,
use internet browsers, ftp, etc...


The only problem is that I have to start the web sharing manually
everytime I boot. Is there a way to automate the startup so that
the server can work as a server simply by power on, and without
logging into it?

Thanks for any hint!

Pascal

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[newbie] printing from MacOS to a Linux server

2002-01-16 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello (Last one for today)

I have installed a Linux server for about 10 clients.
There is a printer connected to it with the parallel
port (an inkjet printer).

I have installed appletalk (netatalk) which runs fine.
When I run nbplkup, 3 zones are shown. Don't ask me
why, but most of the machines here show 3 zones,
so I assume it's normal.

I still cannot see the printer from the client machine.

I found many pages explaining how to do for the server
side, but close to nothing about what I should do from the
client. Am I supposed to see the printer in the chooser
on MacOS9, or with the printer tool in MacOS X?

I forgot to mention that CUPS runs.

Can anybody figure out what I have missed?

Thanks,

Pascal

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[newbie] TNT graphics card problem

2002-01-16 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello!

I sent this mail yesterday but didn't get it back from the list,
so maybe it hasn't been sent properly. Sorry if you get it twice,
and sorry also for the two following messages!

I have a problem installing Mandrake on a new machine.
I bought a TNT2 board. I could use the installer so basically
it works in a low resolution / low color definition mode.
When the X server starts, or just before it starts, the text mode
screen flashes, The period of the flashes is about a second,
it lasts for about 1 minute, and after that it says something
like: respawning too fast. Stop for 5 minutes.
At that point, I can log in text mode and perform all operations
you can perform in text mode. 5 minutes later, it retries to launch
X, flashes again, and then stops for another 5 minutes.

I have tried to download the latest TNT driver. On the same
page, there is also a linux kernel that I have downloaded and
installed. The symptoms are exactly the same.

I am almost sure the problem is within the driver because:

1. The TNT board does not work on another Mandrake 8.1 machine
after replacing its card and drivers;
2. The TNT board works perfectly with BeOS in full color, 1280x1024.

Any hint to solve this problem?

Thanks,

Pascal

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[newbie] printing from MacOS to a Linux server

2002-01-14 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello (Last one for today)

I have installed a Linux server for about 10 clients.
There is a printer connected to it with the parallel
port (an inkjet printer).

I have installed appletalk (netatalk) which runs fine.
When I run nbplkup, 3 zones are shown. Don't ask me
why, but most of the machines here show 3 zones,
so I assume it's normal.

I still cannot see the printer from the client machine.

I found many pages explaining how to do for the server
side, but close to nothing about what I should do from the
client. Am I supposed to see the printer in the chooser
on MacOS9, or with the printer tool in MacOS X?

I forgot to mention that CUPS runs.

Can anybody figure out what I have missed?

Thanks,

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] Shell Script

2002-01-07 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On 2002.01.07, at 23:36, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 This brings up a question about permissions ...

 So a script (or any executable, such as a perl script written for cgi)
 cannot be run by anyone other than root, if it was created by root? I 
 mean,
 root can't give permission for a root-owned script to be world 
 executable,
 even if the administrator wanted to? While I can see how doing that 
 would
 be a very bad idea, in terms of security, I'm just asking in order to 
 learn
 more about linux file permissions.

No, you should not confuse permissions and ownership.
Ownership and permissions are independent. When
you run ls -al from the shell, you have the permission string
first and then the owner and the group.

As root, you can allow anybody to run anything. Suppose
your script is called rootownedscript, you can allow anybody to run
it by typing chmod o+x rootownedscript (o means other, x means
execute, therefore chmod o+x = make executable for other).
Well, if you read the manual (type man chmod from a terminal),
you will know everything about chmod.

But as a warning, be careful to what you allow to your users...
I wouldn't recommend to allow diskdrake or other funny tools to
be allowed to all users...

 I had written a perl cgi script, and it wouldn't run from the web page, 
 as
 it turns out because I had created it as root.

Then chmod o+x your_script.

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] Using Japanese?

2001-12-27 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Maido maido!

On Thursday 27 December 2001 15:01, you wrote:
 Is there something analagous to the Japanese Language Toolkit in MacOS
 that I can install so that I can read and write Japanese?

Yes, freeWnn.
In my case, it was awfully simple since I have installed
in Japanese (i.e. I have chosen Japanese from the installer when
booting from the CD).
Note: the installer in Japanes did not work in 8.0. In
fact, there was a workaround by setting a boot option (set memory
to 50 MB or something like that). So I will suppose you install
from 8.1.

Here are the things you should do:

1. Once installed, you reboot, and you will notice you have
absolutely no menus. The reason is that the default font does not
support Japanese, so you have to the following menu:
config - KDE-look  feel - fonts
and set a font that supports Japanese.

2. Logout and restart x server, then login again. You should
have all your menus in Japanese.

3. You should install kinput2 otherwise you cannot write
in Japanese. It is in one of the CDs, so just start the intall engine
(don't remember its name), then search kinput2, install it.

4. Something that is not documented:
The default for starting kinput is ctrl-space or shift
control space (don't remember). But to stop kinput2 client and
write in english, you should press ctrl-backspace. (this one
is not documented).
You can change the default settings (I changed ctrl-space
to shift-space in order to be consistent with the standard (at
least with what I am ised to, BeOS and Mac). But I couldn't find
any way to stop kinput2 client with the same combination.
If you can do that, please tell me.

Well, sorry, I have to leave, and I will be back at
work in mid January. If you want more info, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Thanks,

 Doug Lerner, Tokyo

Pascal, Osaka



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Re: [newbie] Using Japanese?

2001-12-27 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Friday 28 December 2001 04:57, you wrote:
 i am working for a japanese-owned company and am the only one using
 mandrake here. it is one of the reasons why i cannot make my officemates
 try linux here in the office. Japanese language support is pretty much a
 black art to me right now. i can receive email with  alias sy='export
 LC_CTYPE=ja_JP.eucJP sylpheed;sylpheed '  but aside from that i cant do
 anything in nihongo. im using an english QWERTY keyboard so it would be
 beneficial if there would be a mandrake how-to to enable me to work in
 english or japanese like in Windows (the reason why i dual-boot here in the
 office). Wine is out of the question.

 i found somebody in the sylpheed mailinglist that can write in mandarin
 while still maintaining an english linux installation. he said the
 principles were the same but he was using some chinese-centric
 applications.


 as far as using japanese while maintaining an english installation (aside
 from the TWO Mandrakes solution)... HELP!

 ciao!

Well, a very quick reply... I will try to post a howto.
I use Japanese at work, and Mandrake is the most flexible machine I
know. I can create english accounts and Japanese accounts easily
depending whether people prefer their menus in Japanese or in English.
I guess it should work with any language.

Japanese input is not standard, but it is possible with
an english keyboard. I write most of my mail in Japanese every
day. If you want some hints, write to the following address, since
I jave to leave now:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Bye!

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Windows partition won't load anymore

2001-12-25 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Wednesday 26 December 2001 13:34, you wrote:

  I *do* think a warning in the installer would be a good idea though!

 it's *in* the *documentation* that you must *read*

Well, that can be endlessly discussed. There are
two kinds of people: those who read the docs and those who
don't. My experience tells me that the second group is way
bigger than the first.
If you are a car manufacturer, you can write in the
docs that you should at least press the clutch or set the
gear to neutral before starting the engine. But the best
solution is to put a switch on the gearbox so that it is
simply impossible to start the engine with a gear.
So, you're right, people *should* read the docs, but
as many don't, there *should* be a warning.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] LAN settings

2001-12-05 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Wednesday 05 December 2001 19:33, you wrote:
 Can anyone tell me where and how put my net numbers (ip,netmask etc) ? I'm
 new to Linux so...

Congratulations! Good choice!

 you could send your example(file) too.

Example file? You mean you  want to do the setup without the
GUI? In this case, I don't know. Otherwise, there is a GUI
which allows you to setup your net parameters, and also
configure the net sharing in case you have other machines
connected to your Mandrake station. It's really painless and
should take about 5 minutes, tests included.

Net setup:
1. Open Mandrake control center ;
2. Choose Network and internet (click the little +);
3. Clic the connection icon;
4. Click setup (right bottom)
and then the settings should be obvious


 Tego nie znajdziesz w adnym sklepie!
 [ http://oferty.onet.pl ]

Have fun.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] can't eject cdrom

2001-12-05 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Sunday 02 December 2001 13:43, you wrote:
 Hi,
   You might try kwikdisk. It's in 'start',

Start? Are you sure we use the same OS? :-)

 Regards,
 Bill W.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] can't eject cdrom

2001-12-05 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Sunday 02 December 2001 14:31, you wrote:
 All right, right-click on any vacant area of the screen if you are using
 KDE and select Create New and then CDROM Device and then look at the
 Device tab and select the item that says (/mnt/cdrom) as part of its name.
 Do it a second time and look for (/mnt/cdrom2).  You will now have your
 devices on your desktop, and if you left click them it opens them and
 mounts them same time.

 If you right-click those Icons once you have mounted something (and
 provided you are done with it and have closed any directories or terminals
 logged to it) you will see Unmount and Eject as choices.  You can Unmount
 and then push the button on the CD Drive or you can Eject and the drive
 will eject automatically.

Indeed, it works. However, in 8.0, the software installer used to do that
automatically (i.e. when more than 1 disk involved in a software install,
the installer used to open the tray in which the expected CD had to be placed.
This was better, I think. And if it could be back for 8.2, it would be a
step towards user-frindness.

 Civileme

Thanks,

Pascal



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[newbie] dying connection

2001-11-28 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I have noticed that my internet connection dies after
a (relatively long) timeout when I don't use it.
I have an ADSL router, and it is supposed to allow
24 h /24 connection time, so I guess the timeout
might be internal (I mean, depending on the OS).
I don't care too much for my home connection, but
if I want to install a server...
Is there a setting somewhere?
Can there be another reason causing my network
connection to shutdown?
By the way, yesterday I wanted to restart the network
from the internet setup GUI, but it didn't work. I
found no better solution than reboot.

Thanks for any hint!

Pascal.



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[newbie] Shutdown problem

2001-11-26 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

Not a big issue, but...

I run two dual processor machines and both are unable
to shutdown completely. It stops at the black screen
saying power down, but I have to press the power
switch. There was a kernel setting on BeOS to allow
complete shutdown. Is there a similar trick in
Mandrake?

Thanks,

Pascal



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[newbie] Another find-related question

2001-11-20 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

Today there were a couple of posts about how to
find files. I didn't know locate, and it is very
fase compared to find.

I have been wndering for a while: is there a kde
shortcut calling a utility that uses locate or find?
I mean, an equivalent of MacIntosh's apple-F,
or BeOS's Alt-F...

Thanks,

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Cable Modems, Linux and NICs

2001-11-20 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Wednesday 21 November 2001 01:23, you wrote:
 Hi gang,

Hello!

 I'd like to add a high speed internet connection via a cable modem. My
 local cable TV company (Adelphia) will lease me a cable modem, provide
 wires, etc, and hook me up via Windows (no Linux support), etc.

I am not sure how a cable modem works, but in case it has an ethernet
plug, you can certainly connect to it by DHCP. It works for my ADSL
connection, and config has been very easy (open the network config,
choose configure, click dhcp, say yes when it says you have to
restart networking, and you're on line. I can now enjoy downloading
a Mandrake ISO within 12 minutes vs impossible with a modem.

 The plando their install under Windoze and then switch to linux.

In case of DHCP, there is nothing to install (except a network if
you don't have one.

 So a couple of questions..

 Is it reasonable to expect LM to detect the cable modem (I'm assuming
 that lots of folks on this list are using cable hookups)? Any
 pitfalls/traps?

In case you connect by DHCP, it will probably not detect the modem
itself (I don't remember having seen my modem), but it will detect
the network board which is all what you need.

 I need to buy a NIC before I hook up their modem.  Will any network card
 be OK?

Except if you use a very exotic network board, I would say there
are 99% chances it will work. You didn't make your board yourself,
did you? :-)
I bought the cheapest NIC for 750 yen (about 6.5 $), and it works.

 TIA.

 Terry Smith

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] tar command ?

2001-11-18 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Monday 19 November 2001 11:30, you wrote:
 Hi!

 I like to zip all my /var/named files in one zip files.
 I need the command how to tar it.

tar cvf archive.tar /var/named

 Can someone email me the command ?



 Best regards,
 SKLIM



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[newbie] cdrecord broken in 8.1?

2001-11-12 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I have a problem on 2 machines. One at home and
one at work. I was used to burn iso files using an alias,
and it doesn not work anymore.
Here is the respons of cdrecord in a shell:

% cdrecord -scanbus
Cdrecord 1.10 (i586-mandrake-linux-gnu) Copyright (C) 1995-2001 J?g Schilling
cdrecord: No such file or directory. Cannot open SCSI driver.
cdrecord: For possible targets try 'cdrecord -scanbus'. Make sure you are 
root.

In the past (in the downloadable version of 8.1), cdrecord
was working well. Has anybody experienced the same problem? By the
way, login as root is not a solution. I have tried, just in case, but
it produces exactly the same result. Anyway, I am in the cdrom group,
so it should work.
The 2 machines are dual processor PCs but I don't think it is
related. The motherboards and processors are different. Beside that, I
didn't change anything but clean-installed the root partition on both.

Any hint?

Thanks,

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] cdrecord broken in 8.1?

2001-11-12 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Tuesday 13 November 2001 12:05, you wrote:

 Yes, I have the same problem and have been working with the guys in this
 group in trying to resolve it. I might go back to 7.2 since it was working
 OK there. I haven't been able to get internet sharing to work on 8.1 also.

For your info, it works on Mandrake 8.0. I mean,
CDRW works on 8.0. I have also other problems on 8.1 with
CDROM: sometimes, there is no way to remove the CD by pressing
the CD button.
As for internet sharing, I use it on 8.1 and it works well.
But I remember I had some trouble to get it work. Apparently,
the setup is not _exactly_ the same as on 8.0. Something is
different, but I don't know what. It might be something like
the DNS setting. I find this parameter ambiguous. Which DNS?
The name server of my ISP that resolves names from the internet,
or the DNS to resolve names on my lan? Anyway, try to modify
some of the parameters, and it might work.
As for reinstalling cdrecord, I have downloaded it
and tried to reinstall, but I got an error. This might also
be a 8.1 issue, but there are a lot of errors when installing
a package. A lot more than on 8.0.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] cdrecord broken in 8.1?

2001-11-12 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

On Tuesday 13 November 2001 15:19, you wrote:
 Yep
 Been there got the T shirt.

 Its the new devfs system which auto populates the /dev folder.
 It requires the drivers to be aware of it, and the scsi driver used by
 cdrecord isn't.

 All you have to do is edit /etc/lilo.conf and change the line

 append= hdd=ide-scsi devfs=mount quiet

 to

 append= hdd=ide-scsi devfs=nomount quiet

 Then re-run lilo with /sbin/lilo and reboot

Yes, it works. Thanks a lot! By the way, it looks it
works without having to reboot.

The funny thing is that the scsi emulation was already
seen from the system, at least it was listed in Mandrake
control center - Hardware - CDROMS, so I couldn't
suspect a config problem.

Thanks again!

Pascal
 



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[newbie] netatalk

2001-10-30 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

Did anybody success in installing netatalk on Mandrake 8.1?
When I want to install it, the installer complains about an
incompatibility with glibc. It doesn't surprise me since there
is usually no way to get software running at once, but I
really would like to install it. Maybe it would be a smart idea
to have a native support in one of the next Mandake releases...

Thanks for any hint.

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] Internet Explorer for Mandrake 7.2?

2001-10-23 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!


 Don't forget MacOS and MacOSX. The latter could qualify as a form of Unix.

 I wonder why MS sees Linux as a threat and not these other Unices. I
 suppose since it can run on the x86?

Because Linux is dangerous for MS, and MacOS, HP-UX, Solaris, etc are not.
The reason is simply that Linux is free or at least low-cost is you consider
that you should buy a distribution. Workstations are expensive, and therefore
will never get a significant share in the consumer world. Therefore, MS can
keep a large share when competing with non-free systems, but is
threatened by Linux boxes (very low-cost OS with tons of freeware,
very reliable, almost insensitive to viruses, that can run on cheap hardware,
and with lots of very cheap hardwares supported).

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] Burn directly from ISO OR decompress first - any difference?

2001-10-17 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

On Wednesday 17 October 2001 18:14, you wrote:
 Burning from win I have a limited choice of burn-apps
 Nero/Cdrwin/Winoncd. None of these seem to handle
 burning the ISO's After spending lots of thime reading
 Nero-howtos and burning Useless ISO cds (Just one big
 useless file on the entire cd) I was wondering if it made any
 difference if I unpacked the ISO images first and then
 burned them

Unpack? You mean, you have a compressed image file,
something like xxx.iso.gz? In this case, yes, you have to
uncompress it before burning.

 P

By the way, I made two aliases in prder to burn images.
This is easier in the case you want to burn a plain CD image
like for instance Mandrake Linux CDs.
These aliases are used like this in a command tool:

1. Burning myfile.iso is done by:
burniso myfile.iso

2. Blanking a cdrw:
blankcd

You can get the best of both worlds: a nice GUI when
necessary, and a very quick utility when you want to burn a
single image. If you are interested, here is my .bashrc and some
explanations to configure your environment:

--
# .bashrc

# User specific aliases and functions

export CDRDEV=0,0,0
export CDSPEED=8
alias blankcd=cdrecord dev=$CDRDEV blank=fast
alias burniso=cdrecord -v dev=$CDRDEV speed=$CDSPEED -data $1

# Source global definitions
if [ -f /etc/bashrc ]; then
. /etc/bashrc
fi
--

You have to edit it and if necessary change 2 variables for your
machine:
1. Device: in my case, it is 0,0,0. If you run cdrecord -scanbus
in a terminal, you will get a list of the devices and their parameters.
You have to enter the 3-number sequence (separated by commas)
corresponding to your burner. Change the line export CDRDEV=0,0,0
accordingly.

2. Enter the speed (8 in my case). But this is not too important.
It works even if I set another number, preferably greaer than 8.
Change the line export CDSPEED=8 accordingly. One never
knows.

Once you're done, type source .bashrc so that your command line
tool takes the new config into account. Then you can use the two
commands burniso and blankcd.

That's about it.

Pascal



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[newbie] KDevlop questions

2001-10-02 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I am starting using kdevelop right out of the box. I didn't change
anything to its configuration. The documentation looks great, but
there are points everywhere. Ex:

QCanvasText . ( . QCanvas . * . canvas . ) .

It impedes the readability. Apparently every blank (tab or space)
is replaced with a point. I thought it might be a font problem
but changing fonts in Options-Documentation browser didn't
solve the problem.
Any hint?

Another thing I would like to change is the editor behaviour.
It is currently possible to go beyond the end of a line with the
arrow cursors, and I am not used to that. In the other editors
I am used to (Mac Metrowerks editor or BeOS), right arrow at
the end of the line means next line which sounds logical for the
file contents point of view (at least to me).
Is there a way to change that behaviour?

Thanks,

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] KDevlop questions

2001-10-02 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello again!

Sorry, I found the solution for my 2nd question: the behavior
of the editor is configured... by option-editor. My first question
is still not solved.

 I am starting using kdevelop right out of the box. I didn't change
 anything to its configuration. The documentation looks great, but
 there are points everywhere. Ex:

 QCanvasText . ( . QCanvas . * . canvas . ) .

 It impedes the readability. Apparently every blank (tab or space)
 is replaced with a point. I thought it might be a font problem
 but changing fonts in Options-Documentation browser didn't
 solve the problem.
 Any hint?

Thanks,

Pascal



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Re: [newbie] CPU question

2001-08-31 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

Anyway, the original Celeron had the multiprocesing pins messed up.  The
moire recent ones had the pins disconnected internally (more properly, never 
connected at all).  Intel was very cautious about letting the Celeron 
compete 
against its Pentium II/III/IV line and has always kept it crippled in some 
regard.  Ity is likely that you _can_ overclock some celerons, especially 
older slower ones simply by kicking the bus to 100.  A 300MHz Celeron 
becomes
a 450 when properly cooled and placed on a 100MHz bus, but above 366, the 
processors had to be individually tested, which is what Computernerd did so 
very well.

Civileme


In fact, what I would like to know (sorry, muy question was badly 
formulated),
is whether Intel modified the newer chips so that it is IMPOSSIBLE to run 
even
on a dual processor board.
The 2 400 MHz I have run fine, the kernel 2.4.8 smp loads, and the 
performance
tells me that it is really running fast. Same for BeOS, where I get the dual 
CPU
load properly displayed.
I am just worrying about the upgrade. Will I get 1 cpu at 800 MHz / 100 
FSB or 2?

Thanks,

Pascal




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[newbie] CPU question

2001-08-30 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

I am running Mandrake on a Abit motherboard (Abit BP6)
with dual celeron. It looks like the smp kernel works fine.
The celerons I use are quite old (400 MHz) and their FSB clock
rate is 66 MHz. I was thinking I would upgrade to more recent
CPUs (about 800 MHz each, 100 MHz FSB). But I was told that
the 100 MHz celeron may not run an SMP machine. In fact,
it may work on a single processor only., so there is (according
to that person) no point in upgrading.
Does anyone have data about this issue?
Does anybody use a BP6 with 100 MHz celerons?

Thanks,

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] religion in linux

2001-08-26 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

16:9 And I tell you, make friends for yourselves by how you use worldly
wealth, so that when it runs out you will be welcomed into the eternal
homes. 16:10 "The one who is faithful in a very little is also faithful
in much, and the one who is dishonest in a very little is also dishonest
in much. 16:11 If then you haven't been trustworthy in handling worldly
wealth, who will entrust you with the true riches? 16:12 And if you
haven't been trustworthy with someone else's property, who will give you
your own

Localization comment:
For American readers, 16:9 ... 16:12 should be read
4:9 PM ... 4:12 PM.

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] 8.1 release schedule

2001-08-23 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

Wanna spoil all the excitement?

We have a release schedule in mind, but it always unravels, so we just
let it be thrilling and don't make liars out of ourselves.

Having a schedule in mind is good if you are alone. As soon as you have
customers, you need to pull your schedules out of your mind. And as soon as
you are on the stock market, you have to keep the schedule public and
stick to it.

It will be ready when it is ready.

What about releasing it the 3rd Thursday of November? You launch it
the same day as Beaujolais Nouveau, and as a marketing campaign, you
offer 1 (or more) bottle(s) of Beaujolais Nouveau to all the customers who
order it on that day. For American customers, I think Beauolais Nouveau
is called Coca Cola over there, so 1 can will be fine.

Civileme

Well, beside that, 8.1. is great. I have just started using it. I hope it 
will
improve at the same rate for years.

Pascal




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Re: [newbie] What's Raklet?

2001-08-21 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

From Robert  Collins French/English dictionary,

raclette:

a. scraper (tool)
b. Swiss cheese dish.

Anyone sees a connection with 8.1?

Raklet has apparently as much relation with 8.1 as
Traktopel with 8.0 or Rhapsody with MacOS. I prefer
Rhapsody (as a name, I mean), and it would be great
to name Mandrake versions with more attractive names,
I think. Maybe Traktopel as a bulldozer-like tool was
meant to open the way to a large public, and raklet
(raclet) as a smaller tool is meant to attract the less
exposed people that Traktopel failed to gather...

Pascal


Paul




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Re: [newbie] Setting up a new mail server

2001-08-20 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello!

I noticed Mandrake had a distribution called corporate server.  I am 
setting up a new mail server for my small company.  What should I use to 
get started.  A copy of Mandrake 8.0 set up as a server or the corporate 
server 1.0.1?  I tried out corporate server and it seemed extremly old.

I have never tried the corporate server. However, the reason might
be that for a server (i.e. a box lying in the corner), you don't need
a nice graphical interface. You set it up and it should run forever,
at least until the cleaning agent unplugs it to plug the vacuum cleaner.
I don't know what you call a small company, but if it's for a
few users, I would use Mandrake 8.0. It is very easy to install and
you can configure it basically without even popping a terminal.
If you're an experienced sys admin, that's another story, you will
feel frustrated if you don't use a terminal an vi a few config files.

Thanks,
Kevin

Have fun!

Pascal




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[newbie] Staroffice 5.2

2001-08-07 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello!

I tried using StarOffice 5.2, and it sounds like it is
rather buggy. At least the display is not good. The piece
of text around the cursor is partly hidden, backspace leaves
some black pixels (i.e. it does not eras prefectly) etc.

Is there a way to get it work fine?

Thanks,

Pascal


Re: [newbie] text file viewer/previewer

2001-08-06 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello,

Does anybody know of a good text file browser?  One that I can use to
quickly look through my files and read the textfiles as I browse through
them.

If it is plain text, there are many that can do the job, for instance
emacs, vi, with powerful features. And if you prefer a more GUI like
editor, kedit? I'm not sure I get the question...

Pascal

-Paul R


Re: [newbie] text file viewer/previewer

2001-08-06 Per discussione Pascal Goguey

Hello,

Thanks, but I mean something more like a GUI file browser, like nautilus
or explorer (or PowerDesk for windows) that allows me to browse easily
through a large number of text files in a folder and preview (read) them
in a side window while that file is highlighted.  Similar to GQview, but
for text files, not pictures.

But it exists by default, or at least very close to what you are 
describing.
I use KDE as my desktop environment. The Konqueror browser does that
(i.e. you get all the tree structure at the left - by default at least - and 
you can
browse the directories. Now if your text files are in a given directory,
select that dir in the left section, so that it opens and that you see your
text files. A single click to any file opens the file (be it text, a tar 
erchive,
a zip file (as long as you have zip installed), etc...)
I am not sure, but probably it exists in GNOME as well.
As for the text file only, I don't remember, but I guess you have 
scrollbars
and search features, otherwise I would have noticed.

By the way, I have never been able to configure the font to browse
text files, and that's why I use the good old emacs. Does anybody know how to
configure Konqueror so that it displays with a larger font?
Konqueror's settings or preferences menus do ot have any influence
on the text browsing font. Probably because Konqueror borrows an external
editor. I have tried to set the font of the editors around, but no way...

Pascal





[newbie] Telnet

2001-08-02 Per discussione Pascal Goguey
Hello!

Newbie again...
I have problems installing a cvs server on a Linux
Mandrake platform.
On one cvs troubleshooting page, it was said that I
should try first to telnet to myID@hostname 2401. It does
not work. Then, I simply tried to telnet to that machine,
and it does not work either. Then, on that machine,
telnet localhost does not work... (connection refused in
all cases).

I opened the setup tool (Mandrake control center),
and tried to figure out what's wrong. As there is a telnet
item, I wanted to start it. I got a "telnet : unrecognized
service" error message. As there is also a CVS button
(which is the purpose of my efforts, I pushed that button
as well, and got the same message.

I opened the installer and searched for telnet in
the "installable" area. There is nothing anymore, since I
have installed already. Same for CVS, everything is installed.

Beside that, this machine works fine as an IP router.
As I have 1 IP address for a few machines, I use this box
to do the job.

I would greatly appreciate some hints to help me to
solve these problems.

Thanks,

Pascal