On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 07:57:47AM +0800, Robert Storey wrote:
> With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc), I
> just thought I'd throw this in here...
>
> For the longest time, I simply used a window manager. In the beginning, it
> was FVWM, but later I took a liking to
Linux but BSD also. This could be useful to vdev as well
equally.
Thoughts?
Sent from my Windows Phone
From: Robert Storey<mailto:robert.sto...@gmail.com>
Sent: 6/2/2015 6:28 PM
To: dng@lists.dyne.org<mailto:dng@lists.dyne.org>
Subject: Re: [Dng]
James Powell wrote:
> Doesn't udevil have a port on BSD? Off kilter question but
>if the answer is yes, then I can expand the idea I have.
A Google search turned up this:
http://ftp4.se.freebsd.org/pub/ubuntu/pool/universe/u/udevil/
Not sure if that is what you're looking for. Hope it helps.
ch
of.se>
Cc: dng@lists.dyne.org<mailto:dng@lists.dyne.org>
Subject: Re: [Dng] automounting in a window manager
- Original Message -
> From: "shraptor"
> On 2015-06-01 16:22, Rob Owens wrote:
> > - Original Message -
> >> From: "Robert Storey&qu
- Original Message -
> From: "shraptor"
> On 2015-06-01 16:22, Rob Owens wrote:
> > - Original Message -
> >> From: "Robert Storey"
> >>
> >> First, thanks to all who replied.
> >>
> >> To me, the ideal solution would be if this was a user-configurable
> >> option.
> >> Would be
On 2015-06-01 16:22, Rob Owens wrote:
- Original Message -
From: "Robert Storey"
First, thanks to all who replied.
To me, the ideal solution would be if this was a user-configurable
option.
Would be great if you could, for example, just stick something into
.bashrc
for any user to a
- Original Message -
> From: "Robert Storey"
>
> First, thanks to all who replied.
>
> To me, the ideal solution would be if this was a user-configurable option.
> Would be great if you could, for example, just stick something into .bashrc
> for any user to allow automounting of USB devi
On Sun, 31 May 2015 22:35:56 +0800
Robert Storey wrote:
> First, thanks to all who replied.
>
> To me, the ideal solution would be if this was a user-configurable
> option. Would be great if you could, for example, just stick
> something into .bashrc for any user to allow automounting of USB
> d
First, thanks to all who replied.
To me, the ideal solution would be if this was a user-configurable option.
Would be great if you could, for example, just stick something into .bashrc
for any user to allow automounting of USB devices, no matter which DE or
window manager was being used. But I kno
On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 07:57:47AM +0800, Robert Storey wrote:
> With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc), I
> just thought I'd throw this in here...
>
> For the longest time, I simply used a window manager. In the beginning, it
> was FVWM, but later I took a liking to
On Sun, May 31, 2015 at 07:57:47AM +0800, Robert Storey wrote:
> With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc), I
> just thought I'd throw this in here...
>
> For the longest time, I simply used a window manager. In the beginning, it
> was FVWM, but later I took a liking to
Le 31/05/2015 01:57, Robert Storey a écrit :
With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc),
I just thought I'd throw this in here...
For the longest time, I simply used a window manager. In the
beginning, it was FVWM, but later I took a liking to IceWM. As opposed
to
Hi Robert,
> It says, among other things, that udev can be configured to handle
> automounting. That's nice, but since systemd has polluted udev beyond
> repair, I'm wondering if Devuan can be set up to handle it better, perhaps
> with vdev. Or is there a better way?
>
>
Have you considered pmoun
mounted at boot
with fstab.
-Jim
Date: Sun, 31 May 2015 07:57:47 +0800
From: robert.sto...@gmail.com
To: dng@lists.dyne.org
Subject: [Dng] automounting in a window manager
With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc), I just
thought I'd throw this in here...
Fo
With all the recent discussion about DEs (Cinnamon, Gnome, Mate, etc), I
just thought I'd throw this in here...
For the longest time, I simply used a window manager. In the beginning, it
was FVWM, but later I took a liking to IceWM. As opposed to a full-blown
Desktop Environment, I liked the speed
15 matches
Mail list logo