[newbie] Subject No Subject
Using kmail with 2.6.3-7. I just tried to create a new folder to insert an email. The clicking on Folder generated a Sig 11 crash of kontact. When I restarted kontact the email I was interested in had become blank with No Subject Unkown Wed Dec 312 1759 1969. This is not the first time I have had this problem with kmail, at one time every email I tried to read became No Subject. It can be cured by reinstalling or restoring backup for user. Anyone have an idea as to what causes this? -- Regards; Hoyt Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com Join the Club : http://www.mandrakeclub.com
[newbie-it] (No subject)
Devo far partire il programma RabbIT2 tramite il file ./jr che si trova sotto la directory /PROGRAMMI/RabbIT2 Se lo faccio a manina, cioè cd /PROGRAMMI/RabbIT2 ./jr Starting server... Se però lo voglio far partire in automatico mettendolo in un file ??? Hoprovato a metterlo sotto .kde/Autostrart ma il problema è che non riesco mandarlo in esecuzione.. se nello script metto: /PROGRAMMI/RabbIT2/jr oppure... /PROGRAMMI/RabbIT2/sh jr non parte! Mi dice che non trova il file o la directory... come posso rosolvere? Grazie ciao ciao Davide -- \\\ [EMAIL PROTECTED]@] -o00-(..)-00o by Dave,Adde,Kudega,Kua,Zarax,Pichan... - Se esiste un problema esiste anche la sua soluzione, se invece la soluzione non c'è... allora nemmeno il problema sussiste!!! =
[newbie] On the Subject of clocks ... Need Enlightenment
yes OK Bad joke in subject line I literally need a clock in Elightenment. I'm so frigging clueless... Every other WM. has one... Even that weirdo TWM. I have tried all the WM's Mandrake 8.x has to offer by default. I don't remember if there is one in Blackbox (haven't played with it much). So far I am partial to KDE *yay windowsy interface i can handle!* Enlightenment *Yay Linuxy interface I can handle!* But... the lack of a clock in E is driving me insane! Help? Femme Dennis Myers wrote: On Monday 04 February 2002 11:32 pm, you wrote: On Mon, 4 Feb 2002, Dennis Myers wrote: What is this AWAIK or something like that. AFAIK is As Far As I Know Mike I think someone needs to set the date and time on their system.. : ) Yeah yeah...heh...brand new box, literally just put together and running for about the third time. Hey, and no windows! :-) That's ok, it made me look at mine and guess what it was an hour off and now it is 5 hours off. I'll fix it after I send this. Onward and upward. -- Dennis M. registered linux user # 180842 Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] On the Subject of clocks ... Need Enlightenment
use the command xclock -digital -brief this will open up a small clock window displaying the time in digital format. do a man xclock for more details. Since you seem keen to stick with enlightenment edit the file $HOME/.enlightenment/file.menu and add the foll line there: MY_CLOCK NULL exec xclock -digital -brief please keep the quotes when editing the file.menu file. save the file and restart enlightenment (ctrl + alt + end will also work if enlightenment is already running). Then left-click any where on your desktop and in the menu that appears choose MY_CLOCK. HTH, mario FemmeFatale wrote: yes OK Bad joke in subject line I literally need a clock in Elightenment. I'm so frigging clueless... Every other WM. has one... Even that weirdo TWM. I have tried all the WM's Mandrake 8.x has to offer by default. I don't remember if there is one in Blackbox (haven't played with it much). So far I am partial to KDE *yay windowsy interface i can handle!* Enlightenment *Yay Linuxy interface I can handle!* But... the lack of a clock in E is driving me insane! Help? Femme Dennis Myers wrote: On Monday 04 February 2002 11:32 pm, you wrote: On Mon, 4 Feb 2002, Dennis Myers wrote: What is this AWAIK or something like that. AFAIK is As Far As I Know Mike I think someone needs to set the date and time on their system.. : ) Yeah yeah...heh...brand new box, literally just put together and running for about the third time. Hey, and no windows! :-) That's ok, it made me look at mine and guess what it was an hour off and now it is 5 hours off. I'll fix it after I send this. Onward and upward. -- Dennis M. registered linux user # 180842 Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com -- Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] On the Subject of clocks ... Need Enlightenment
I use Enlightenment full time, and have done so for over two years now. For a lot of E users, they are provided a clock by another app. Many use the app gkrellm. Here's a screen shot of the two I have running on my desktop right now. There's an option of it displaying a clock, as well as doing other things for you. (Displaying when you have mail, users on the machine, ssh, ftp, sftp connections, and 'many many more!') http://ic.net/~timh/gkrellm_clock.png The little fish tank looking thing in the middle is something unrelated to gkrellm. But it has a clock under the host name, and date. A lot of E users use an app like that. It servers multiple functions and think it looks kewl as well! :') Of course there are more generic ways of doing it with xclock. It's completely up to your likes and dislikes. There also may be epplets that have a clock. I think if you check out /usr/bin/E-Clock.epplet. You can use that as well. Check out GKrellM's webpage. Youcan download it there, and find plugins to use with it as well. http://web.wt.net/~billw/gkrellm/gkrellm.html Hope that helps. tdh -- T. Holmes | UNIXTECHS.org | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | UIN: 17021091 | Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com | yes OK Bad joke in subject line | | I literally need a clock in Elightenment. I'm so frigging clueless... Every | other WM. has one... Even that weirdo TWM. I have tried all the WM's Mandrake | 8.x has to offer by default. I don't remember if there is one in Blackbox | (haven't played with it much). | | So far I am partial to KDE *yay windowsy interface i can handle!* | Enlightenment *Yay Linuxy interface I can handle!* | | But... the lack of a clock in E is driving me insane! | | Help? | | Femme | | Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? | Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com - Uptime --- 2:04PM up 2:24, 1 user, load averages: 0.06, 0.03, 0.00 Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] On the Subject of clocks ... Need Enlightenment
Very cool! Ty Mario! ;) one question... what's the NULL Statement do in that? I didn't try the man pages... didn't know there was a section for clocks..didn't think that (being too simple) would be in it. DUH... i'm stupid it seems ;P Femme Mario Michael da Costa wrote: use the command xclock -digital -brief this will open up a small clock window displaying the time in digital format. do a man xclock for more details. Since you seem keen to stick with enlightenment edit the file $HOME/.enlightenment/file.menu and add the foll line there: MY_CLOCK NULL exec xclock -digital -brief please keep the quotes when editing the file.menu file. save the file and restart enlightenment (ctrl + alt + end will also work if enlightenment is already running). Then left-click any where on your desktop and in the menu that appears choose MY_CLOCK. HTH, mario FemmeFatale wrote: yes OK Bad joke in subject line I literally need a clock in Elightenment. I'm so frigging clueless... Every other WM. has one... Even that weirdo TWM. I have tried all the WM's Mandrake 8.x has to offer by default. I don't remember if there is one in Blackbox (haven't played with it much). So far I am partial to KDE *yay windowsy interface i can handle!* Enlightenment *Yay Linuxy interface I can handle!* But... the lack of a clock in E is driving me insane! Help? Femme Dennis Myers wrote: On Monday 04 February 2002 11:32 pm, you wrote: On Mon, 4 Feb 2002, Dennis Myers wrote: What is this AWAIK or something like that. AFAIK is As Far As I Know Mike I think someone needs to set the date and time on their system.. : ) Yeah yeah...heh...brand new box, literally just put together and running for about the third time. Hey, and no windows! :-) That's ok, it made me look at mine and guess what it was an hour off and now it is 5 hours off. I'll fix it after I send this. Onward and upward. -- Dennis M. registered linux user # 180842 Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com -- Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
[newbie-it] (no subject)
Re: [newbie] A meaningfull Subject-line would help us all
Very good point here! I for one, only respond to messages that have a subject matter that would interest me, or my knowledge would be helpful. Or if the topic becomes rather lengthy. But at the same time, sometimes it's hard to come up with a topic that really lets the list know what you need. tdh -- T. Holmes - UNIXTECHS.org [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Real Men Use Vi! Uptime: 2:53am up 3 days, 18:40, 5 users, load average: 0.00, 0.00, 0.00 | Hi all | | As a 'taker' from this group rather than a contributer I suppose I have got | a cheek commenting here. I do so in the hope that one day I might have | learned enough to be able to contribute :-) | | I find this list very helpful in my struggle to learn Linux and even though | some of the topics are rather advanced for me at the moment I save them all | for future reference as, I am sure, many others do. | | The big problem is that, as a reference-archive, it sometimes stinks - wth | subject headers such as 'Lets go' and 'Nearly got it' | | Why not pay this superb list the respect it deserves by supressing the | comedian that lurks inside all of us and *always* use a meaningfull Subject | description. Then, even in years to come, we could fairly easily find some | obscure technical solution or whatever. All elementary really. | | If you disagree (perhaps you believe that Linux *should* be as difficult as | possible to learn and that even these helpfull messages should be cryptic) | then fair enough. I'm sorry I mentioned it. | If, on the other hand, you feel that we might all benefit from this | brilliant suggestion then why not give it a try. | Oh yes - and tell a friend :-) | | Incidently, it's normal to courteously ask someone not to use HTML so why | not ask them to use a meaningfull header line for future posts. | | Anything to make life easier. | | Dave S. | | Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? | Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com -- Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] A meaningfull Subject-line would help us all
I do something similar to what you are talking about. I roll my own help files, by saving those posts that I think will be of any help in the future. In the open source spirit, I read them or at least skim over them enough to get an idea of what to title them. I then save them as a file (with my new title and the ext _info). What you are suggesting, is probably not going to happen and even if it did, I would continue to make my own titles, so that they will have *my* idea of what they should be titled, rather than someone elses. After all, *I* will be the one that has to find it when I need it. ShalomOut Chal Elder PCUSA Registered Linux user #217118 Idea.listBT wrote: Hi all As a 'taker' from this group rather than a contributer I suppose I have got a cheek commenting here. I do so in the hope that one day I might have learned enough to be able to contribute :-) I find this list very helpful in my struggle to learn Linux and even though some of the topics are rather advanced for me at the moment I save them all for future reference as, I am sure, many others do. The big problem is that, as a reference-archive, it sometimes stinks - wth subject headers such as 'Lets go' and 'Nearly got it' Why not pay this superb list the respect it deserves by supressing the comedian that lurks inside all of us and *always* use a meaningfull Subject description. Then, even in years to come, we could fairly easily find some obscure technical solution or whatever. All elementary really. If you disagree (perhaps you believe that Linux *should* be as difficult as possible to learn and that even these helpfull messages should be cryptic) then fair enough. I'm sorry I mentioned it. If, on the other hand, you feel that we might all benefit from this brilliant suggestion then why not give it a try. Oh yes - and tell a friend :-) Incidently, it's normal to courteously ask someone not to use HTML so why not ask them to use a meaningfull header line for future posts. Anything to make life easier. Dave S. Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com message.footer Content-Type: text/plain Content-Encoding: 8bit Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] A meaningfull Subject-line would help us all
so why don't you save Civilme's posts as html files, and post them on a free website like geocities?. On Tuesday 11 September 2001 14:12, you had thoughts to the concept of: I do something similar to what you are talking about. I roll my own help files, by saving those posts that I think will be of any help in the future. In the open source spirit, I read them or at least skim over them enough to get an idea of what to title them. I then save them as a file (with my new title and the ext _info). What you are suggesting, is probably not going to happen and even if it did, I would continue to make my own titles, so that they will have *my* idea of what they should be titled, rather than someone elses. After all, *I* will be the one that has to find it when I need it. ShalomOut Chal Elder PCUSA Registered Linux user #217118 Idea.listBT wrote: Hi all As a 'taker' from this group rather than a contributer I suppose I have got a cheek commenting here. I do so in the hope that one day I might have learned enough to be able to contribute :-) I find this list very helpful in my struggle to learn Linux and even though some of the topics are rather advanced for me at the moment I save them all for future reference as, I am sure, many others do. The big problem is that, as a reference-archive, it sometimes stinks - wth subject headers such as 'Lets go' and 'Nearly got it' Why not pay this superb list the respect it deserves by supressing the comedian that lurks inside all of us and *always* use a meaningfull Subject description. Then, even in years to come, we could fairly easily find some obscure technical solution or whatever. All elementary really. If you disagree (perhaps you believe that Linux *should* be as difficult as possible to learn and that even these helpfull messages should be cryptic) then fair enough. I'm sorry I mentioned it. If, on the other hand, you feel that we might all benefit from this brilliant suggestion then why not give it a try. Oh yes - and tell a friend :-) Incidently, it's normal to courteously ask someone not to use HTML so why not ask them to use a meaningfull header line for future posts. Anything to make life easier. Dave S. Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com message.footer Content-Type: text/plain Content-Encoding: 8bit Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name=message.footer Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] A meaningfull Subject-line would help us all
Idea.listBT wrote: Hi Charles I couldn't resist chipping in. You said: My needs are very specific. I delete a lot of the posts on this list without even reading them, *because I can tell from the title*, whether or not it is something I will need or understand. Good one.I don't know how you can pull my leg when my foot is in my mouth. Yeah, but because some of them aren't (titled well), as you pointed out, I may be throwing out some good ones in the mix. What I meant (before inserting the foot into my mouth) was that I usually read a few lines before even looking at the title. ShalomOut Chal Elder PCUSA Registered Linux user #217118 So you agree that meaningfull 'titles' are helpfull then ! :-) Just thought that I would pull your leg. :-) Dave S. Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com message.footer Content-Type: text/plain Content-Encoding: 8bit Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Re: [newbie] A meaningfull Subject-line would help us all
etharp wrote: so why don't you save Civilme's posts as html files, and post them on a free website like geocities?. Is this reply to me or to the previous poster? If it's to me, I would venture to say that my lack of experience would not allow me to even make any kind of an archive that anyone else could follow. I think this is something that everyone needs to do for themselves. If not you just have a bunch of info to wade through, that may or may not be relevant to you. I am technically illiterate about anything to do with networking for instance, so I would not even know what to post or even if I guessed at that, I would not know how to title them properly, so that anyone else would understand it. My needs are very specific. I delete a lot of the posts on this list without even reading them, because I can tell from the title, whether or not it is something I will need or understand. That is why I recommend making your *own* archive. That way you have more work in creating it, but less when you need it. It's not that hard to save a file and title it something that *you* will understand. It would be hard for me to title something so that someone else would understand. I usually have just about enough time to save a few of these posts that I think will help me, but I haven't had time recently to keep up a website. I used to have one, but it's been over a year since I had time to do that. ShalomOut Chal Elder PCUSA Registered Linux user #217118 On Tuesday 11 September 2001 14:12, you had thoughts to the concept of: I do something similar to what you are talking about. I roll my own help files, by saving those posts that I think will be of any help in the future. In the open source spirit, I read them or at least skim over them enough to get an idea of what to title them. I then save them as a file (with my new title and the ext _info). What you are suggesting, is probably not going to happen and even if it did, I would continue to make my own titles, so that they will have *my* idea of what they should be titled, rather than someone elses. After all, *I* will be the one that has to find it when I need it. ShalomOut Chal Elder PCUSA Registered Linux user #217118 Idea.listBT wrote: Hi all As a 'taker' from this group rather than a contributer I suppose I have got a cheek commenting here. I do so in the hope that one day I might have learned enough to be able to contribute :-) I find this list very helpful in my struggle to learn Linux and even though some of the topics are rather advanced for me at the moment I save them all for future reference as, I am sure, many others do. The big problem is that, as a reference-archive, it sometimes stinks - wth subject headers such as 'Lets go' and 'Nearly got it' Why not pay this superb list the respect it deserves by supressing the comedian that lurks inside all of us and *always* use a meaningfull Subject description. Then, even in years to come, we could fairly easily find some obscure technical solution or whatever. All elementary really. If you disagree (perhaps you believe that Linux *should* be as difficult as possible to learn and that even these helpfull messages should be cryptic) then fair enough. I'm sorry I mentioned it. If, on the other hand, you feel that we might all benefit from this brilliant suggestion then why not give it a try. Oh yes - and tell a friend :-) Incidently, it's normal to courteously ask someone not to use HTML so why not ask them to use a meaningfull header line for future posts. Anything to make life easier. Dave S. Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com message.footer Content-Type: text/plain Content-Encoding: 8bit Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name=message.footer Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Content-Description: Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com message.footer Content-Type: text/plain Content-Encoding: 8bit Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
[newbie-it] (no subject)
..DOmanda: dove posso andare a controllare che si è connesso al mio sistema, attraverso, ftp o telnet..ecc. dovrebbero esserci dei file log, ma non riesco a trovare quelli che cerco. mi sono connesso al mio computer attraverso telnet, ma non ho trovato cenni su quesa connessione (avvenut) e su cosa ho fatto all'ìinterno. grazie di esistere.