Re: [ubuntu-uk] reminder tool

2009-06-12 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 7:43 AM, doug livesey biot...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi -- can anyone recommend a handy little reminder tool for Ubuntu?
 Just something I can quickly  easily set reminders in that will pop up 
 annoy me until I deal with them.
 Cheers,
Doug.


I'm extremely fond of Osmo.
It's a GTK personal organiser, and it's at once extremely lightweight, quite
featureful and on the whole has organised my first year of Sixth Form better
than I could have managed any other way, I'm quite sure.

Daniel

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Installing Ubuntu using wubi on Vista Home machine.....

2009-05-20 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Wed, 20 May 2009 10:31:41 +0100, Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net wrote:

 I don't understand why you would have had know anything about
 partitioning, John - the Ubuntu installer will do that for you.

 You just tell it how much space you want to allocate to Ubuntu and it
 steals it out of the free space on the existing partition.

 I am just a subscriber to the keep it simple way of thinking, and
 adding an extra layer of complication (as Wubi does) seems to have no
 great advantage.

 Don't get me wrong!  The Wubi developers can probably feel very
 pleased with themselves that they've done it, it's an achievement, but
 quite why they bothered I don't know.  They could have been creating
 something that actually had a use, other than to install the same
 Ubuntu in a different place.

 I have tried Wubi about 4 times on this laptop and others and every
 time it's been an absolute disaster, so I guess I'm jaded.  Some
 systems clearly like it and others do not.

 Sean


I had to use a Wubi install last night as my father's computer's DVD drive is 
failing and I was too tired at the time to mess about doing anything else.
The use-case scenarios might be limited in number, but they do exist.

Daniel

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Some advice

2009-05-19 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Tue, 19 May 2009 17:34:26 +0100, Sean Miller s...@seanmiller.net wrote:

 Well that all worked okay, now got Jaunty working.

 But I've lost my wireless.

 Hmmm...

 Prior to the re-install it was fine, and I don't remember actually
 doing anything to make it not so.  Is there some default option that's
 been installed which is preventing it accessing my wireless card?

 I recall this is one of those troublesome bcmwotsit ones...

 But on wired it all seems okay.

 Sean


If it's a BCM43xx then installing the b43-fwcutter package and allowing it to 
download the required firmware should work.

Daniel
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] Scrambled screen

2009-05-17 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Sun, 17 May 2009 08:29:07 +0100, Greg Herdman gherd...@toucansurf.com 
wrote:

 Hi Everyone,
 I'm really new to the Ubuntu scene; got involved about 6 months ago.
 Everything has been working fine until a recent update session. An
 incomplete update was signalled (I 'd just installed ClamTk and PiTiVi a
 day or so earlier. At first the screen dropped into 'basic' low-res
 mode. I managed to reset it using the appropriate desktop apppication
 (forgot it's name!) but the resolution wasn't quite as previously, so I
 tried to tweak it. Result - totally scrambled screen such that the
 desktop is unusable.

 I've been making basic use of Live mode from the installation CD, which
 works well with everything looking fine. I can access the harddrive,
 save and retrieve files, read and write removable media and also print.
 The downsides of Live user mode, however, are substantial, particularly
 in terms of speed, so I need to get back to my original settings.

 DSo, my question - I've noted a recent thread that seems to imply that I
 could reinstall over my current installation which would leave all my
 files within 'home' intact. Is this so?
 I'm using Ubuntu 8.04LTS (Hardy Heron) on a desktop.

 Any ideas - much appreciated.

 Greg



I believe the Ubiquity Preserve Home spec was targeted and achieved for Hardy.

If I'm correct in this belief then you can indeed reinstall Hardy (and indeed 
you could upgrade to a more recent version of Ubuntu, although of course this 
is a matter of preference) without damaging the contents of /home, as long as 
you specified a separate partition for it in your original installation.

If you did then you can run preserve /home quite easily (assuming I can 
correctly recall the steps involved in doing so):
Run through the Ubuntu installer until you reach the partitioning stage
Choose manual partitioning
Select the partition with /home on it and choose to use it
Choose the correct filesystem, but also choose NOT to format it
Change the mountpoint to be /home
Setup your other partitions appropriately and finish the installation

Working from memory, that's the correct (and easy) procedure; it does hang on 
the existence of /home as a separate partition already, though. You could work 
around that by migrating the content to a new partition while preserving all 
the necessary file attributes and then choosing this partition during 
installation, of course.

It's probably best to wait for someone else to confirm the procedure to 
preserve /home before you try, though; whilst I've done it many times, my 
memory isn't always reliable and I'd rather that it wasn't responsible for the 
loss of any of your data.

Daniel
-- 
Humanity is where the falling angel meets the rising ape.

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] 9.04: Is the (newish) GNOME logout menu controllable by keyboard?

2009-05-04 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Sun, 03 May 2009 23:32:54 +0100, David M lists2...@trancepod.netmx.co.uk 
wrote:


 I've just upgraded both of my boxes to 9.04, and it seems (so far) to
 have gone reasonably smoothly, which is a great reassurance as a couple
 (only a few, mind you) of the previous Ubuntu upgrades have been a
 little hairy..

 However, 9.04 has removed the Logout/Shutdown options from the System
 menu in GNOME, meaning that I have no alternative now but to use the
 newish logout menu (that was introduced in 8.10, I think).

 I'd got into the habit of:

  alt-F1 [1], and then cursoring over to System - Shutdown

 ..in order to shutdown my computer, but as this menu item is no longer
 present, is it possible to activate the new logout menu from the
 keyboard? I presume it must be somehow, as it would probably be Very Bad
 from an accessibility perspective otherwise..

 (Come to that, why does keyboarding through the menus only apply to the
 menus themselves and not to any program icons that you may also have  
 added
 to the panel?)


 Thanks for any advice,


 David.


 [1] an obscure enough keyboard combo by itself, which I'd only found out
 about because I'd read it somewhere.. It would probably be nice if the
 Applications menu hover tooltip mentioned the existence of this keyboard
 shortcut, as I'm sure few people would guess it otherwise.


On my box running Karmic here, you can press Ctrl-Alt-Del to popup a shutdown
menu, although it doesn't offer an option to logout or switch users.
I'm pretty sure the shortcut was in Jaunty and Intrepid as well.

Daniel
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Re: [ubuntu-uk] 9.04: Is the (newish) GNOME logout menu controllable by keyboard?

2009-05-04 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Mon, 04 May 2009 13:08:13 +0100, Harry Rickards hricka...@l33tmyst.com 
wrote:

 -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
 Hash: SHA1

 Daniel Rhodes-Mumby wrote:
 ...
 On my box running Karmic here, you can press Ctrl-Alt-Del to popup a  
 shutdown
 menu, although it doesn't offer an option to logout or switch users.
 I'm pretty sure the shortcut was in Jaunty and Intrepid as well.

 Daniel

 Where did you get that from? I'd love to test it, but the Release
 Schedule say's it's not even at Alpha 1 yet. Did you just change jaunty
 to karmic in sources.list? Thanks

 - --
 Many thanks
 Harry Rickards (a.k.a l33tmyst)

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That was pretty much it, yes, and as an aside this is one area where it
really helps to make proper use of sources.list.d/ as well - it's far
easier to simply sed the sources.list and not have to worry about
changing PPAs back to the right version.

I've got some minor dependency breakage, as always happens in a develop-
ment release, and there aren't any noticeable changes yet. It's nice to
be at the bleeding edge of things though - and with AS module exams in
only a couple of weeks, and half a year's worth of politics and physics
notes on this laptop, 'bleeding' could well be appropriate should some-
thing break!

Daniel

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Re: [ubuntu-uk] DFEY - Logo Competition - Cash Prizes

2009-05-04 Thread Daniel Rhodes-Mumby
On Mon, 04 May 2009 19:38:20 +0100, Tim Dobson li...@tdobson.net wrote:

 DFEY is having a Logo Competition.

 Top Prize: £40
 First Runner Up: £10


 Brief for Entries
 =

 * Should be easily recognisable, visually pleasing and easily reproduced
 in different mediums.
 * Should echo themes of Digital Freedom, Technology, Young People and
 Education.
 * All entries must be licenced under Creative Commons Zero Licence
 http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0
 * Should be submitted in SVG format, though high resolution bitmap might
 be acceptable.
 * Ideally, should be created solely using free software but entries
 created using non-free software will be accepted.
 * Ideally, shouldn't use that many different primary colours.
 * Have been emailed entry to l...@dfey.org with the SVG or other image
 file attached by 23:59, 31st May 2009


 Eligibility of Entrants
 ===

 * Anyone can enter, regardless of age, geographic location etc.
 * There is no limit to the number of entries per entrant


 How to Enter
 

 1. Take a moment to read http://nw.dfey.org/wiki/Logo_Competition
 2. Send an email to l...@dfey.org with the SVG or other image file
 attached by 23:59, 31st May 2009.
 3. Include a statement that you have read and understand you are are
 licencing this piece of work to us under the Creative Commons Zero
 Licence v1 (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0)
 4. Please include your name and (if desired) a link to your blog/website
 etc.
 5. Your entry will be processed and uploaded on to the Entries page.
 http://nw.dfey.org/wiki/Logo_Competition/Entries

 ---

 Winners will be decided upon through a Schulze Method voting system.
 More information at http://nw.dfey.org/wiki/Logo_Competition

 ---

 About DFEY
 ==

 DFEY (Digital Freedom in Education and Youth) is a group formed in
 response from a growing need to encourage and promote young people's
 involvement with the free software and technical communities by creating
 a social space to make it more comfortable for young people to get
 involved with LUGs and other technical groups.

 Find out more and get involved at www.dfey.org


Thanks for this.
I'm just forwarding it on to a local youth council I'm involved in - it's
not typical of our activities, but maybe I'll be able to change that.
The issue of digital freedom, both in terms of surveillance and source
availability, is also something we might be able to bring up in the UKYP.
One of our members is an MYP so it's a possibility.

Daniel

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