Sounds like making bin/mask.sh executable by root ONLY might help you forget to
use sudo to run it
Sudo chmod /bin/mask.sh x=rshould do it
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
GMT+ 10:00
Sent from my Aphone. Please excuse my brevity.
On 21 November
ilot" and then select Uninstall.
>That simple.
>
>George.
>
>
>On Wednesday, 06-11-2024 at 20:25 Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>> Good evening All
>>
>>
>> I know some of you work in a corporate environment, so have possibly had
>> to deal with r
x27;t work, and they used the registry key disable of copilot.
I think my computer's just ducked...
All suggestions welcome PLEASE
Thanks
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
ge file).
Perhaps you need to change the settings to use 32bit environment
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
ke1thr...@duck.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 4/8/24 09:31, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
I've seen that some recent kernel has had trouble so I thought I'd
report some good news
Error
Update
My vboxdrv module has disappeared. I don't have time this side of a 4
week trip to try to sort it. I'll look for help w
Not sure who to send this to, I find no explicit address for a general
"debian webmaster."
https://metadata.ftp-master.debian.org/changelogs//main/g/graphicsmagick/graphicsmagick_1.4+really1.3.35-1~deb10u3_changelog
-- Keith
I've seen that some recent kernel has had trouble so I thought I'd
report some good news
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
changed my
password, and mail is now downloading. As the Toyota ad said several
years ago bugga
Sorry for misleading people. But I'll try the other suggestions
And, please remember the warning about sub-folder rules
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
kei
rning about another gotcha I found early on. They have policy
restrictions on some sub-folders of mail. They may store only a few
items. There is a setting somewhere to reverse this
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 23/7/24 23:22, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Another is to fetch the epoch time value (%s) and then use that value
in all future calls. With GNU date:
now=$(date +%s)
julian=$(date -d "@$now" +%j)
dom=$(date -d "@$now" +%d)
Good evening All - especially Gr
On 23/7/24 23:22, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 23 July 2024 9:42:27 pm AEST, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 23, 2024 at 18:02:53 +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
From the tab I had used earlier, ran source .bashrc
then
:/tmp/205.2024 $>mkcd /tmp/day$DOYR.$YEAR
So you're
On 23 July 2024 9:42:27 pm AEST, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>On Tue, Jul 23, 2024 at 18:02:53 +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>> From the tab I had used earlier, ran source .bashrc
>>
>> then
>> :/tmp/205.2024 $>mkcd /tmp/day$DOYR.$YEAR
>
>So you'r
1:47 205.2024 AEST
This is part of my command prompt, generated by
PS1='\n \u@\h \n\n $(date +"%a %d%b%Y@%H:%M:%S %j.%Y %Z") \n :\w $> '
My calculation is that today is day 205
When I run this function
mkcd ()
{
mkdir -p $1
cd $1
}
in the form :~ $>
ommand prompt, generated by
PS1='\n \u@\h \n\n $(date +"%a %d%b%Y@%H:%M:%S %j.%Y %Z") \n :\w $> '
My calculation is that today is day 205
When I run this function
mkcd ()
{
mkdir -p $1
cd $1
}
in the form :~ $> mkcd
/mnt/data/keith/Documents/$YEAR/$
mkcd ()
{
mkdir -p $1
cd $1
}
in the form :~ $> mkcd
/mnt/data/keith/Documents/$YEAR/$MTH$YEAR/$DOYR.$YEAR/
I am transferred to
/mnt/data/keith/Documents/2024/Jul2024/196.2024 $>ie $DOYR is
using the wrong day number
So I cd to my home and run the com
lter the screen and touchpad and for that matter sound settings
etc accidently. It means the Fn keys will also function what was
considered normally for decades.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
able
there
I wonder if the repeated replying to self has raised questions with the
spam filters?
Hans, do you have access to an alternate smtp server, maybe your ISP or
gmail?
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 30/6/24 06:43, mick.crane wrote:
On 2024-06-29 17:46, Lee wrote:
My gripes and difficulties are the same thing. No universal image
viewer like Ifranview,
geeqie is quick,
something equivalent to notepad++,
Geany
+5 for geany
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
What would happen if you ran:
sudo apt update && sudo apt list --upgradable
every hour or so via cron? Cron can email the output I believe
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
-day? Ah: it has been set up as a
convention.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
well you did it MUCH more eloquently
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 24/6/24 23:41, Erwan David wrote:
AM/PM would not be so strange if between 11AM and 1 PM it was 12 AM ...
Umm 12Meridian??
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
m/sec works out to 8min 20sec. There may
be a second or 2 if you use accurate distance and speed of light. But
then, the sun's circuit is slightly oval
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
nalogue clock
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 23/6/24 18:57, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Sun, 23 Jun 2024 15:35:14 +1000
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Hello Keith,
+14:00?? I've only ever heard of maxima of +/- 12:00.
AFAIAC, it was political willy waving, nothing more; To be 'first' into
the new millennium.
As if that
On 23/6/24 18:56, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Sun, 23 Jun 2024 13:01:10 +1000
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Hello Keith,
Not to mention some cultures change how words are spelt: colour, odour,
metres to quote a few.
Due, mainly, to the literacy of the people that moved, rather than any
deliberate
7;m the only one who mis-read the date format when I raised
the query originally.
Is David writing at 00:52 or is that time UTC?
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 23/6/24 00:02, Greg Wooledge wrote:
In mutt, it would be:
set date_format="!It's %a %d%b%Y at %H:%M:%S here, where clocks are UTC%z"
I believe UTC%Z will give the :
as I get from my text expander.
Tue 25Jun2024 at 18:34:20 =UTC +10:00
--
All the best
Keith Bai
On 23/6/24 14:25, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 23 Jun 2024 at 12:52:55 (+1000), Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Have you ever pondered why the 'international date line' is so convoluted?
Only on the odd occasion when an area decides to cross it, for
whatever reason. Like Samoa recently.
ome people pronounce the word for 1,000 metres as a
measure of kills - kil-ometer. It should be kilo-metre. To support my
agruement, try speedometer, gasometer, odometer.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
seman. It's 45 mins different from Sth Aust and the a further
45 mins to main stream West Aust. There might be 10,000 people live
within it. I think that somewhere is Baledonia. I'll check next time
I drive over, but that'll be sometime next year, if I'm lucky.
On 23/6/24 01:16, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Possible. I was happy to forget that I had anything to do with
Windows 🙂
Especially delving into the registry
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
maybe the coders
just haven't mis-read the dates they are inserting for us.
Cheers,
David.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 20/6/24 21:19, The Wanderer wrote:
On 2024-06-20 at 07:10, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 21:00:38 +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
https://manpages.debian.org/bookworm/manpages-dev/strftime.3.en.html
is a list of place names for MANY parts of a date layout. I have set up
y experience is that most installers do pretty well at guessing where I am
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 18/6/24 00:56, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 16/6/24 23:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 06:13:36PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
It was late afternoon on 16Jun2024 that I wrote this. Possibly
18:13:36 when I pressed send. I'd reck
d off on the other.
Else we'll wake a little late.
Remember the joke about going to bed at 8 and setting the alarm on a
wind-up clock for 9 - we wouldn't get much sleep.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
work, and decided that spelling the
month was simple basics.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
, and nothing is
actually wrong.
Absolutely correct Greg. I like your date/time line. The addition of
the offset fro UTC without some explanation confused me.
And started 2 debates.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 17/6/24 18:26, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
It was late afternoon on 16Jun2024 that I wrote this. Possibly 18:13:36
when I pressed send. I'd reckon it would likely have been 08:13:36 UTC
What's wrong with my system clock. I've not really looked at the time
on my originals be
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
Forwarded Message
Subject: test sent date details
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2024 17:56:41 +1000
From: Keith Bainbridge
To: keithr...@gmail.com
All the best
Keith
On 17/6/24 21:22, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 06:26:19PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 16/6/24 23:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 06:13:36PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
It was late afternoon on 16Jun2024 that I wrote this. Possibly 18:13:36 when
I
On 17/6/24 19:15, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Jun 17, 2024 at 06:47:41PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 17/6/24 14:20, David Wright wrote:
Just some random thoughts:
On Sun 16 Jun 2024 at 18:13:36 (+1000), Keith Bainbridge wrote:
[...]
All the aliases that lie textually after
On 16/6/24 20:02, DdB wrote:
Am 16.06.2024 um 10:13 schrieb Keith Bainbridge:> Practical Limitations
Environment Variables: Bash has a limit on the number of environment
variables it can store, which is typically around 32,000. If you define
too many aliases, you may exceed this li
e the matching ' was found. Either
you mixed " and ' or you simply forgot to close an opened '. Ideally the
error message will tell you the affected line.
Richard
Thanks Richard
I believe David raised very similar suggestions
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
On 17/6/24 14:20, David Wright wrote:
Just some random thoughts:
On Sun 16 Jun 2024 at 18:13:36 (+1000), Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Some of my aliases stopped working after months of working as I
expected. And udating the .bash_aliases kept giving me an error
referring to an end of file before
On 16/6/24 23:50, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jun 16, 2024 at 06:13:36PM +1000, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
It was late afternoon on 16Jun2024 that I wrote this. Possibly 18:13:36
when I pressed send. I'd reckon it would likely have been 08:13:36 UTC
What's wrong with my system c
mp;, so it didn't dawn on me to try removing
them. (I worked around it by unmounting it (an alias) and trying the
back-up again.)
So a questionand mybe something related that may help somebody else.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
of highlighted text and choose
copy
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC+ 10:00
From my Aphone
On 13 June 2024 3:42:27 pm AEST, Charlie wrote:
>On Wed, 12 Jun 2024 22:56:34 -0400
>Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Jun 13, 2024
fers to bookworm.
So maybe all isn't lost
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC +10:00
On 21/2/24 10:47, Felix Miata wrote:
I didn't think so, which begs the question why OP Keith is using it. :p
--
I read somewhere about 2 years ago, that it automagically de-duped data
when it detected I was copying the same file to different directories.
It's not deliberate,
/dev/sda3 16.00MiB
Unallocated:
/dev/sda3 34.18GiB
keith@dell0 $
Wed 21Feb2024@11:44:26
:~
At least I can make sense from some of these output numbers
>> sudo btrfs qgroup show /
ERROR: can't list qgroups: quotas not enabled
keith@dell0 $
Wed 21Feb2024@11:47:13
On 20/2/24 19:38, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Tue, Feb 20, 2024 at 02:42:18AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
Keith Bainbridge composed on 2024-02-20 17:45 (UTC+1100):
I just removed 3 snapshots from my daily driver with no change in used
space reported by df
df doesn't know how to calc
=0.00B
keith@dell0 $
Tue 20Feb2024@20:57:45
:~
>> btrfs filesystem df -h /mnt/data/
Data, single: total=530.02GiB, used=329.55GiB
System, DUP: total=8.00MiB, used=112.00KiB
Metadata, DUP: total=5.00GiB, used=1.10GiB
GlobalReserve, single: total=512.00MiB, used=0.00B
keith@dell0 $
when cf
On 20/2/24 18:11, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 19/2/24 14:20, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 19/2/24 10:26, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 14:49, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 07:34, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
So the
On 19/2/24 14:20, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 19/2/24 10:26, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 14:49, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 07:34, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
So the apparently missing space is perhaps taken up
On 19/2/24 13:00, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 19/02/2024 06:26, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
So later yesterday afternoon I created a new snapshot with no obvious
change is free space.
Effect of snapshots is delayed. When you remove a file that does not
belong to any snapshot, some disk space is
On 19/2/24 10:26, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 14:49, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 07:34, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
So the apparently missing space is perhaps taken up by btrfs snapshots.
Seems to be the
-
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
. The author does say that the app
uses btrfs inbuilt snapshot process when available.
I have to look harder when I browse over something. Is it looking
obvious that I never really learnt how to read, 70 years ago in primary
school.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbri
On 18/2/24 14:49, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 18/2/24 07:34, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
So the apparently missing space is perhaps taken up by btrfs snapshots.
Seems to be the prime suspect. If that's the case, btr
ive way to inspect shadowed directories is bind mounts.
mkdir /tmp/root
mount --bind / /tmp/root
Thank you Max
This has proved a real boon
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
camera during many of those
times.
Thanks Cindy
Interesting
Though as far as I can recall the only files I have rsync'd onto / are
4or5 config files, and all in /home/keith which now on another
partition. And with a gain in free space which virtually matches its
reported space used, yest
On 18/2/24 07:34, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
So the apparently missing space is perhaps taken up by btrfs snapshots.
Seems to be the prime suspect. If that's the case, btrfs is NOT
hard-linking the snapsho
On 17/2/24 17:08, Felix Miata wrote:
Keith Bainbridge composed on 2024-02-17 15:44 (UTC+1100):
Yes the / partitions are btrfs
df was not designed for the task you gave it. You need to use
btrfs filesystem
commands:
https://btrfs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/btrfs-filesystem.html
On 17/2/24 13:55, Gremlin wrote:
On 2/16/24 21:38, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Good afternoon All
I have just rebooted this laptop to ensure it is 'fresh'
/ is reporting full.
Trying to locate where I ran
sudo du -hPx --max-depth=1 /
0 /mnt
181M /boot
15M /etc
0 /
On 17/2/24 13:52, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sat, Feb 17, 2024 at 01:38:56PM +1100, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
>> sudo df -h /
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda336G 35G 100M 100% /
First off: you don't need sudo for this, ever.
Second: what k
/var
9.2G /
keith@dell0 $
Sat 17Feb2024@13:33:29
:~
But:
>> sudo df -h /
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda336G 35G 100M 100% /
keith@dell0 $
Sat 17Feb2024@13:33:39
:~
Where do I start locating the conflicting information please?
--
All
Good evening All
I know some people just like a challenge. Who will use the result, though
I wonder if ventoy would achieve a similar result
There is a 32MB partition for efi; and the rest, which for me at present is:
ls /media/keith/Ventoy/
apps linuxmint-21.3-cinnamon-64bit-beta.iso
ff. I guess gnome will be similar as it was
the basis of cinnamon
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 26/1/24 13:53, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 25/01/2024 21:42, Max Nikulin wrote:
Try
lsusb --verbose --tree
I have received a pr
Dear Andersson,
Thanks for your reply.
It is because our Vendor highly recommends us to purchase a new server to
install Debian 12. Therefore, I seek your expert opinion.
Best Regards,
Keith Cheng | Officer (IT)/HQIP
Tel: 3907 6721 | Fax: 3165 1106
From: Anders Andersson
Sent: Wednesday
Dear Colleagues,
Can I install Debian 11 or 12 with "Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2699 v3 @ 2.30GHz"
CPU?
Do they both support the following application
Nginx 1.22.1
PHP 8.2.7
Mariadb 10.11.4
On the other hand, may I know the minimum requirement of Debian 11 and 12?
Best Regards,
K
matter
Glitch? Power goes off inconveniently?
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
David
I use nmtuI (from a terminal) for jobs like this. I think it is
installed by default.
I'd bet you'll be terminated when the change activates
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC + 10:00
On 5/1/24 15:30, David wrote:
Mor
+1
--
All the best
Keith BAINBRIDGE
+61 447 667 468
keithr...@gmail.com
GMT + 10
From my Apad
On 29 November 2023 9:07:38 am AEDT, john doe wrote:
>On 11/28/23 22:51, Karen Lewellen wrote:
>>
>>
>
>Lets keep the possibility of being able to send construc
s threading the same way.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithr...@gmail.com
+61 (0)447 667 468
UTC+ 10:00
From my Aphone
On 14 November 2023 8:42:57 am AEDT, jeremy ardley
wrote:
>
>On 14/11/23 02:30, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
>> On 13/11/2023 14:50, Anssi Saari
On 4/11/23 07:14, Marco M. wrote:
dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.bin conv=noerror oflag=direct
Is it worth trying:
sudo dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.iso
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
keithr...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
UTC +10:00
On 4/11/23 07:14, Marco M. wrote:
dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.bin conv=noerror oflag=direct
Is it worth trying:
dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.iso
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
keithr...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
UTC +10:00
x27;d really like a pointer to a non-technical how to set it all up, if
accurate
Thanks
All the best
Keith BAINBRIDGE
+61 (0)447 667 468
keithr...@gmail.com
UTC + 10
>From my Apad
Try ext4
All the best
Keith BAINBRIDGE
+61 (0)447 667 468
keithr...@gmail.com
UTC + 10
>From my Apad
-- Forwarded message -
From: Keith Bainbridge
Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2023, 20:32
Subject: Re: btrfs snapshots (of root file system)?
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
I
I use timeshift for this. It claims to use btrfs as an option. I've only
used rsync on extra, and that has saved my bacon a few times
All the best
Keith BAINBRIDGE
+61 (0)447 667 468
keithr...@gmail.com
UTC + 10
>From my Apad
On Sun, 1 Oct 2023, 15:10 hw, wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
On Sat, 15 Jul 2023 16:40:13 +0800
jeremy ardley wrote:
> On 15/7/23 16:23, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
> > Is this done via gnome-settings? Or is there now a better option.
> > An URL would be good
>
>
> I set it up on my Debian 12 system first by using gnome desktop. M
er option. An
URL would be good
Thanks
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
UTC +1000
ger drive into that /home/me. Debian helps by offering to
set up a /home partition at installation. It means that my recent
files open quicker. eg :
>> ls -lah /home/keith/Documents/
total 21M
drwxrw--w- 16 keith keith 4.0K Jul 7 14:59 .
drwxrw--w- 49 keith keith 4.0K Jun 7 12:20 ..
d
Several versions back, we could download the source code
on various iso files for previous and current releases.
Where can those be found for Buster and Bookworm? Several searches
turned up nothing.
Thanks.
+1
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
Sent from my Android tablet, Please excuse my brevity..
On 28 February 2023 20:21:40 UTC, Tixy wrote:
>On Tue, 2023-02-28 at 14:52 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>> On Tue, Feb 28, 2023 at 06:32:2
ll'
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All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
Sent from my Android tablet, Please excuse my brevity..
On 23 February 2023 22:06:39 UTC, "Andrew M.A. Cater"
wrote:
>On Thu, Feb 23, 2023 at 12:49:25PM +, Simeone Dominique wrote
On February 11, 2023 10:24:47 PM UTC, "Andrew M.A. Cater"
wrote:
>On Sat, Feb 11, 2023 at 10:16:48PM +, fxkl4...@protonmail.com
>wrote:
>> i'm looking at a perixx perimice-513l usb mouse
>> i can't find or have overlooked info about it working with linux
>> is anyone familiar with this devi
t a command prompt after the first command. What happens if you run
ls
After that first command? Please copy/paste your input and output for both
sudo tlp setcharge 90 95 BAT1
And
ls
as one paste.
--
Please excuse top posting. I've tried to correct it. Settings say reply below
Sorry if this comes as a top post. I can't see the original text here
Isn't it shft-ctrl-c to copy from x-term?
>>them for the weekly builds if you look hard enough but not the ones for the
>>Alpha release. I thought maybe the alpha release would be a little more
>>stable than a weekly build
>>
>>I can confirm that the problem with FAT32 was fixed by a reboot. I don't
>>reboot every day normally,
>>
>>The laptop is an ASUS FA506ICB. I'll be filing a bug report or three later.
>>Yesterday I just needed to get it working again, but I wanted to document the
>>pulling of hair and gnashing of teeth - I suspect I may have to do this
>>again...
>>
>>
OK, try this
https://linuxmint.com/edition.php?id=297
Linux Mint Debian addition is Debian stable with some mint improvements. It
has worked better for me than Debian stable.
I converted to deb testing several months ago, and disabled the mint repo line
from sources shortly after. I update and upgrade almost daily. The only issue
I've had has been a long standing niggle (long before this lmde installation)
where I find the laptop totally unresponsive when I open the lid some mornings
- about fortnightly.
If that .iso doesn't work, try the Ubuntu based mint .iso at
https://linuxmint.com/download.php
Seriously, I suspect that simply deleting the windows partitions removed some
part of the boot process that you need. What not try a clean install that
totally wipes the drive when you find a system that works
--
Keith Bainbridge
keith.bainbridge.3...@mail.com
0447 667 468
Sent from aPad
e because
they work best.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
version
is 2.4-1v5
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
familiar with gmail basics, so I'm not sure they belong in
the real world - or is it that they are only allowed to say they know MS
stuff.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
0447 667 468
On 17/6/22 00:08, Boyan Penkov wrote:
On Thu, Jun 16, 2022 at 12:09 AM Keith Bainbridge wrote:
Cheers!
Good afternoon Boyan
What happened when you installed to 2 suggested items?
Hey Keith -- yes, thanks for the pointer; you're absolutely correct...
Somehow linux-image-headers wa
suggested items?
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
OSx showed
the same, but it's too long ago. Apple decided that my similar aged
macbook wasn't good enough any more in 2011. That machine worked well on
linux until 2016.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
On 24/5/22 23:23, Brian wrote:
Hi,
After my surrender to Jessie I've thought of moving on with Stretch.
Careful! If you go on like this you will end up installing bullseye :).
Bookworm?
SID?
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
Good Evening All
I top posted last night, in error. Sorry
I have asked the devs where the bottom posting setting has gone.
--
All the best
Keith Bainbridge
keithrbaugro...@gmail.com
Sent from my aPhone. Please excuse my brevity.
Tom
Did you remove the old drive and try the SSD using the installer?
On 27 April 2022 11:06:20 am UTC, Tom Browder wrote:
>I am trying to replace the original hard drive on an old Toshiba laptop
>with a 1 TB SSD from Crucial. (I had recently successfully done that in an
>old Dell Latitude and
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