Greetings -- In trying to print from a USB HP-A310 Photosmart printer
with hplip 1.6.10 recently installed.
I got these messages:
# modprobe -l | grep printer
/lib/modules/2.4.21/kernel/drivers/usb/printer.o
# tail -f /var/log/messages
Nov 23 23:55:06 Computer04 kernel: hub.c: new USB device
On Thu, 2006-11-23 at 17:31 -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
>
> The question is how does the file system know that a write has made it
> to disk. E.g. if the file system is atomic transaction oriented, how
> can the file system know that a commit has been committed if the drive
> lies?
>
Its hard
On 23.11.06 15:08, Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote:
> I have a usb drive which contains two partitions.
flash memory or real disk?
> One partition is ext3,
> the other is fat32. I used the fat32 to copy the files from windows XP and
> the speed is around 10MBps. When I moved this data from fat32 to ex
On Thu, 2006-23-11 at 22:15 -0500, cga2000 wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 11:56:50PM EST, Alan Ianson wrote:
>
> [..]
>
> > > > It's upto you if you want a 2.6 or 2.4 kernel.. :)
>
> Well not really...
>
> :-(
>
> I installed the latest 2.6.18.3 alongside the 2.4.27 that initially
> came w
Marc -
Don't be so sure. I bought mine - regular $1400 for $1000 back in August.
Check Lenovo's clearance section. They were trying - so I read - to empty
the warehouses for the new models. Also, it was delivered one day late -
and, I got them to knock $50.00 more off.
- Sebastian
On 11/23/0
Baz wrote:
Thinkpad - it's the standard by which all others are measured...
Yes, but I still can't afford to pony up the price of a new Thinkpad.
--
Marc Shapiro
No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow.
What?! Look, somebody's got to have some damn perspective around her
Bradley Alexander wrote:
> Hi Kent,
>
> I shut down, reseated the card, booted, and tried the same steps (lspci |
> grep audio; module-assistant; alsaconf) and got the same indications.
>
> Also please note two items I may not have mentioned. I also have a BT878 TV
> capture card (an old Happauge
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 10:15:01PM -0500, cga2000 wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 11:56:50PM EST, Alan Ianson wrote:
>
> [..]
>
> > > > It's upto you if you want a 2.6 or 2.4 kernel.. :)
>
> Well not really...
>
> :-(
>
> I installed the latest 2.6.18.3 alongside the 2.4.27 that initially
>
Let's say I have 16 points defined by
(0,0), (1, 0), (4,0), (6,0)
(0,1), (1, 1), (4,1), (6,1)
(0,4), (1, 4), (4,4), (6,4)
(0,6), (1, 6), (4,6), (6,6)
I would like to show the grid as
--
| | | |
--
| | | |
--
| | | |
--
That is all the points are intercon
Thinkpad - it's the standard by which all others are measured...
On 11/23/06, John L Fjellstad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Can't give you specific advice on the laptops you showed, but I would
check http://www.linux-laptop.net/ and see if those models are there and
how much problems people have
Can't give you specific advice on the laptops you showed, but I would
check http://www.linux-laptop.net/ and see if those models are there and
how much problems people have setting up their laptops.
--
John L. Fjellstad
web: http://www.fjellstad.org/ Quis custodiet ipsos custodes
--
T
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 05:26:06PM -0500, Stephen Yorke wrote:
> Most hosting facilities do allow FrontPage and/or FTP access...FrontPage
> does allow SSL connections but few people set it up which is sad. FTP
> is clear and is probably the most common way to allow access to M$
> Websites and no t
work, although a little more dated still retains that sense of musical
intelligence.
IOW, Once again, I looked to Alan for help.
it comes to the real world possibility of artificial intelligence and
harnessing .
well known for their superior intelligence and complex social systems,
are thought to
On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 11:56:50PM EST, Alan Ianson wrote:
[..]
> > > It's upto you if you want a 2.6 or 2.4 kernel.. :)
Well not really...
:-(
I installed the latest 2.6.18.3 alongside the 2.4.27 that initially
came with the sarge netinst and sure enough my PC card is no longer
recognized.
Hello. I set up Skype, with a usb audio device, for the homeless in a
shelter that I work in. This is useful, because people can contact
family and/or friends whom they may otherwise not have been able to
contact. I set this up on Debian Etch.
However, I find the volume settings are constan
Marc Shapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Toshiba Satellite ($299.99 US)
>Intel Celeron M 420
>512 MB DDR2 RAM
>80 GB HD
>CD-RW/DVD
>802.11 a/b/g
I have one of these. It uses the ipw2100 wifi card internally. I got
fed up with it so I now use a PCMCIA D-Link AirPlus AG
But all I want is to update my /var/lib/apt/lists/* so that I can
download only pkgs that *need* to be downloaded (via apt-get -qq
--print-uris install pkg) when I want to install a certain package.
I guess there's no other way except downloading Packages.txts from the
Debian mirror sites (eg: h
For those who have already finished their turkey, or reside outside the
US and don't celebrate Thanksgiving, or for whatever reason are actually
reading debian-user today...
I finally have some spare cash and so am looking to replace my aged IBM
Thinkpad 390. All the sale flyers came in today
* Michael Fothergill <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [061123 18:40]:
> I notice that Etch currently has 21 CD images in the testing release,
> But Sarge comprises 15 CDs.
> I have the 15 CDs. If I want to use jigdo to create the 21 CD images
> comprising Etch using the Sarge CDs to speed up and bootstrap the
On Fri, 2006-24-11 at 00:37 +, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> Dear Debian folks,
>
> I tried to post a question about jigdo but it didn't seem to reach the site.
> Here goes again.
>
> I notice that Etch currently has 21 CD images in the testing release,
>
> But Sarge comprises 15 CDs.
>
>
Dear Debian folks,
I tried to post a question about jigdo but it didn't seem to reach the site.
Here goes again.
I notice that Etch currently has 21 CD images in the testing release,
But Sarge comprises 15 CDs.
I have the 15 CDs. If I want to use jigdo to create the 21 CD images
comprisin
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 15:09:02 +0800
Tim Post <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Did it even make a dent? I've been thinking about trying it. Even
> catching 5% is still 50k less spam e-mails delivered on a larger
> network .. so I may get a little more use out of it even if its only got
> a 2/10 catch re
On 23/11/06, Brad Sawatzky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006, michael wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 12:03:49 -0700, Chris Purves wrote
> > I am seeing different results from /etc/cron.daily/find and running
> > updatedb from the command line:
[ . . . ]
> > What are the differences be
Hi all,
Just released a new podcast. The first episode has Richard Stallman,
Jeremy Allison and Jeff Waugh all answering questions from the community
in a panel format. It's a really interesting listen in my opinion and
covers a good range of topics!
the url is http://questionsplease.org so
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 04:37:15PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 02:25:57PM -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
> >
> > Note that IBM does say that jfs focus more on being able to restore
> > filesystem integrity than on data integrity. For higher integrity they
> > suggest
Most hosting facilities do allow FrontPage and/or FTP access...FrontPage
does allow SSL connections but few people set it up which is sad. FTP
is clear and is probably the most common way to allow access to M$
Websites and no there is no SSH default connection which I totally
disagree with.
Remot
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 02:25:57PM -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 22, 2006 at 10:52:07AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 10:38:45AM -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
> > >
> >
> > > So I use JFS for everything.
> > >
> > I looked a dmesg output, and in the midle
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> We have run Etch (i386) for 4 or 5 months and only run into a few minor
> problems. However, after an upgrade (in late October or early
> November), a commercial program for image processing called Envi we are
> evaluating under debian, stopped working in graphical mode (
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006, michael wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 12:03:49 -0700, Chris Purves wrote
> > I am seeing different results from /etc/cron.daily/find and running
> > updatedb from the command line:
[ . . . ]
> > What are the differences between these and why does the daily cron job
> > find les
On Wed, Nov 22, 2006 at 11:26:13AM -0500, Bradley Alexander wrote:
> I am hoping there is an easy way to do this. I am looking for a way to
> map drivers to hardware in a box. I have been tasked with a project at
> work in which I need to display the driver associated with a piece of
> hardware in
Hello list,
I am using gdm 2.16.1-1 (unstable)
I found this in /usr/share/gdm/defaults.conf
# GDM Configuration file.
#
# This file should not be updated by hand. Since GDM 2.13.0.4,
# configuration choices in the /etc/gdm/gdm.conf file will
# override the default values specified in this file
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 12:03:49 -0700, Chris Purves wrote
> I am seeing different results from /etc/cron.daily/find and running
> updatedb from the command line:
>
> aims-07:~# /etc/cron.daily/find
> aims-07:~# locate Access.pm
> aims-07:~# updatedb
> aims-07:~# locate Access.pm
> /home/httpd/twiki/l
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 09:57:11PM +0200, Andrei Popescu wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 02:40:24AM -0600, Mike McCarty wrote:
> > Michelle Konzack wrote:
> > >Am 2006-11-19 13:02:23, schrieb Mike McCarty:
> > >>Michelle Konzack wrote:
> > >>
> > >>>Why germany has not won?
> > >>
> > >>Because Ge
I have a usb drive which contains two partitions. One partition is ext3, the
other is fat32. I used the fat32 to copy the files from windows XP and the
speed is around 10MBps. When I moved this data from fat32 to ext3, I noticed
that the speed is around 300KBps. I am wondering why is it so slow
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 02:40:24AM -0600, Mike McCarty wrote:
> Michelle Konzack wrote:
> >Am 2006-11-19 13:02:23, schrieb Mike McCarty:
> >>Michelle Konzack wrote:
> >>
> >>>Why germany has not won?
> >>
> >>Because Germany surrendered. As to why Germany surrendered, you'd
> >>have to ask the peop
Hi Kent,
I shut down, reseated the card, booted, and tried the same steps (lspci | grep
audio; module-assistant; alsaconf) and got the same indications.
Also please note two items I may not have mentioned. I also have a BT878 TV
capture card (an old Happauge analog card) that is detected and wo
On Wed, Nov 22, 2006 at 10:52:07AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 10:38:45AM -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
> >
>
> > So I use JFS for everything.
> >
> I looked a dmesg output, and in the midle it says:
>
> [ 31.547456] Probing IDE interface ide0...
> [ 31.837706]
I am seeing different results from /etc/cron.daily/find and running
updatedb from the command line:
aims-07:~# /etc/cron.daily/find
aims-07:~# locate Access.pm
aims-07:~# updatedb
aims-07:~# locate Access.pm
/home/httpd/twiki/lib/TWiki/Access.pm
aims-07:~# /etc/cron.daily/find
aims-07:~# locate A
Bradley Alexander wrote:
> Having an issue with sound on my sid box. It used to work fine, but now, I
> get errors, and my sound card is not detected. I tried several approaches to
> get it to work, including the page at http://www.debianhelp.co.uk/sound.htm
>
> It is a SBLive! Platinum running o
On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 11:20:42PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 21, 2006 at 10:37:27PM -0500, Douglas Tutty wrote:
> >
> > I went from ext3 to reiserfs because ext3 didn't stand up long term to
> > power failures (then from reiserfs to jfs when it became available).
>
> Well, if
I have several SD cards that I use to store pictures & other items on for
transport. In particular the ones from my Kodak DX6440 camera. I have an " I
(dot) Connect' USB jmulti-port card reader that handles 4 different typs of
cards as well as USB sticks & micro drives. I have been successful in
On Thursday 23 November 2006 01:55, Amit Joshi wrote:
> Also, do all of you do a daily upgrade of your "Debian Testing" to stay
> uptodate and avoid bulk upgrades?
No, I don't regularly update my testing machine. I have a list of favorite
packages (like vim, konsole, firefox, texmacs etc.,) writ
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 08:16:59AM +, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 12:25:19 +0530
> Amit Joshi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hello Amit,
>
> > Also, do all of you do a daily upgrade of your "Debian Testing" to
> > stay uptodate and avoid bulk upgrades?
not usually daily. More l
On Thu, 2006-11-23 at 14:22 +0100, Edv wrote:
> I configured a computer as kiosk for an internetterminal.
> it does autologin and starts firefox automatically.
> Is there any possibility to deactivate ALT+CTRL+F1 so that nobody can
> swith to console?
> I deactivated the other ttys in the inittab,
Hallo!
I configured a computer as kiosk for an internetterminal.
it does autologin and starts firefox automatically.
Is there any possibility to deactivate ALT+CTRL+F1 so that nobody can swith
to console?
I deactivated the other ttys in the inittab, but I think that one is
necessary to start the x
I'm trying to do an install with the Netinst CD (version 3.1r4) on a
machine which only has network access via a wireless network. The WiFi
card I'm using is based on the RT61 chipset.
The netinst CD starts and boots the system fine and gets as far as
attempting to detect my network card. Of cou
Tim Post wrote:
>
> Did it even make a dent? I've been thinking about trying it. Even
> catching 5% is still 50k less spam e-mails delivered on a larger
> network .. so I may get a little more use out of it even if its only got
> a 2/10 catch record.
I have had a chance to try this out and it doe
Russell L. Harris:
>
> I have been using LaTeX for five years, but with Debian I always have
> taken the system for granted -- it always has been there, and it "Just
> Works".
>
> Is this going to change in the near future? Where can I go for a
> basic orientation and for more information on t
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 10:37:32AM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> Hello!
>
> 0. I discovered a strange phenomenon with a Debian
>Sarge installation. I am able to replicate it
>on several machines. It occurs on freshly
>installed machines as well as on "older" ones.
>
>The problem
On 22.11.06 19:34, Michelle Konzack wrote:
> Am 2006-11-19 20:25:26, schrieb Matus UHLAR - fantomas:
>
> > I do not separate / from /usr, in many cases even from /boot
>
> So 100 Mbyte will not enough in any kind
did anyone say I use 100 MB for / with /usr? I just would not split 100MB /
from 1.
> On Wednesday, 22.11.2006 at 20:44 +, Brad Rogers wrote:
>
> > A suitable mailto link is on the bottom of *every* mail on the list.
> > The OP only had to click on it.
On 22.11.06 22:01, Dave Ewart wrote:
> s/every/every non-PGP-MIME/
even non-HTML. even [Remi]'s unsubscription attempt cont
> On Wednesday, 22.11.2006 at 16:07 +0100, debian wrote:
> > I have debian installed on a new server together with apache (installed
> > via apt-get).
> > Now i would like to connect to it via HTTPS:// instead of HTTP://
> > How can i do that ?
On 22.11.06 15:36, Dave Ewart wrote:
> Install apache
On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 22:01:28 +
Dave Ewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Dave,
> Messages, such as yours and mine, which as PGP-MIME signed do *not*
/me hangs head in shame. I hadn't noticed that. My apologies.
In mitigation I offer the fact that, prior to posting that message, I'd
seen
On Thu, 23 Nov 2006 12:25:19 +0530
Amit Joshi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Amit,
> Also, do all of you do a daily upgrade of your "Debian Testing" to
> stay uptodate and avoid bulk upgrades?
I tend to do it when I remember. :-)
That usually means every four to five days. At worst, weekly
Hello!
0. I discovered a strange phenomenon with a Debian
Sarge installation. I am able to replicate it
on several machines. It occurs on freshly
installed machines as well as on "older" ones.
The problem is this:
I want to create more than 4000 device files
for a project. I a
Russell L. Harris schrieb am 23.11.2006 08:07:
> I just discovered a May 2006 announcement by Thomos Esser that he has
> decided not to make additional new releases of teTeX; he recommends
> that those interested in teTeX join the TeXlive project.
>
> For me, this announcement brings up the quest
On Thursday 23 November 2006 01:34, Rick Thomas wrote:
> For the last few days, I've had great difficulty downloading from
> cdimage.debian.org (mostly daily installer images for testing).
http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-installer/
But yeah...I doubt if you can find a mirror with the weekly sna
On Thu, Nov 23, 2006 at 01:07:51AM -0600, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> I just discovered a May 2006 announcement by Thomos Esser that he has
> decided not to make additional new releases of teTeX; he recommends
> that those interested in teTeX join the TeXlive project.
>
> For me, this announcement
Amit Joshi wrote:
> Maybe I will simulate this upgrade and see what versions are the packages
> gonna be upgraded to.
> Also, do all of you do a daily upgrade of your "Debian Testing" to stay
> uptodate and avoid bulk upgrades?
aptitude update
aptitude -F "%p %25V %25v" search ~U
will show thr
Hi there,
We are pondering migrating some of our workstations from windows
xp/2003 to debian 4 next year.
We have run Etch (i386) for 4 or 5 months and only run into a few minor
problems. However, after an upgrade (in late October or early
November), a commercial program for image processing calle
Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
please, stop spamming debian lits as long as thit is not related to debian.
find better mailing lists, forums about these problems.
Lysdexics of the world, untie!
Mike
--
p="p=%c%s%c;main(){printf(p,34,p,34);}";main(){printf(p,34,p,34);}
This message made from 100
Punit Ahluwalia wrote:
For some reason, K3b will not write multisession CDs or DVDs.
I regularly use K3b to write multisession CDROMs, without
a problem. I use version 0.11.14.
Mike
--
p="p=%c%s%c;main(){printf(p,34,p,34);}";main(){printf(p,34,p,34);}
This message made from 100% recycled bits.
Raquel wrote:
I have a server that I totally messed up because I did something
really stupid. It was back up and running within about 4 hours.
Since then I've been working on backing up more and better/smarter.
You might consider something like this for the future...
http://www.mikerubel.
Micha Feigin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| On Wed, 22 Nov 2006 22:27:36 +0100
| Grzegorz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
|
| > Mirto Silvio Busico napisa?(a):
| > > Hi all,
| > > I have to setup a firewall for a little network.
| > > The firewall machine will have multiple ip addresses for a physical la
Hello,
I am using firehol,
but as I may change my box soon,
I may migrate to an another firewall software
because firehol, even if I am happy with, seems to be a frozen project:
I will certainely give a tru to shorewall.
My 2 cents,
Jerome
Stephen wrote:
On Wed, Nov 22, 2006 at 08:12:10PM +0
Michelle Konzack wrote:
Am 2006-11-19 13:02:23, schrieb Mike McCarty:
Michelle Konzack wrote:
Why germany has not won?
Because Germany surrendered. As to why Germany surrendered, you'd
have to ask the people who signed the treaty. I'd guess they got
tired of being shot up.
:-)"And if
* Magnus Therning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [061123 01:52]:
> On Wed, Nov 22, 2006 at 19:24:53 -0800, Jed R. Mallen wrote:
> >Hello,
> >
> >I have a non-networked debian box at home and a high-bandwidth XP box at
> >work.
> >
> >I want to upgrade my Debian box.
> >
> >apt-zip says it can upgrade a non-n
67 matches
Mail list logo