I have an old RedHat 5.2 box (Un-Opened) at the office I'm here in
Bend, But i can check tomarrow./
On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 22:46:47 -0800, Bob Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Mr O wrote:
>
> > I almost bought RedHat in a box quite a few years back. That's
> > when I bought Caldera 2.4. Last box
Mr O wrote:
> I almost bought RedHat in a box quite a few years back. That's
> when I bought Caldera 2.4. Last boxed distro I bought was
> Mandrake 7(?) I think.
I don't need a recent edition. Just need the words "red hat" and
"gnome" on a box.
What's the story? Anne has asked for "a garden gn
I almost bought RedHat in a box quite a few years back. That's
when I bought Caldera 2.4. Last boxed distro I bought was
Mandrake 7(?) I think.
--- Bob Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This request is kind of weird. Does anyone have a RedHat
> Linux BOX
> (not the discs, the box they came in
Bob Miller wrote:
Max Lemieux wrote:
The "apt-cache search [keyword]" command, sometimes piped to "grep
[keyword]" filter is very useful for me in these situations.
Do you also know about "apt-cache search --names-only $keyword"?
I didn't, but now I do. in addition to "acs" for "apt-cac
This request is kind of weird. Does anyone have a RedHat Linux BOX
(not the discs, the box they came in) that has the word Gnome anywhere
on it? Or a manual w/ the words RedHat and Gnome on the cover?
I'd like to borrow it for a gag gift. (Shhh! Don't tell Anne.)
--
Bob Miller
Max Lemieux wrote:
> The "apt-cache search [keyword]" command, sometimes piped to "grep
> [keyword]" filter is very useful for me in these situations.
Do you also know about "apt-cache search --names-only $keyword"?
--
Bob Miller K
kbobsoft software consulting
http
Linux Rocks! wrote:
> Hey, hold them to that math as long as you have 0 miles, then it should be
> free right ?
Absolutely. If I want to move bits from our house to our house, I can
do it for free, at a very high speed.
--
Bob Miller K
kbobsoft software consulting
Allen Brown wrote:
> stty: standard input: Invalid argument
> tput: No value for $TERM and no -T specified
Remove tput and stty from ~/.bashrc and move it to ~/.bash_profile.
Then it will only be executed for login shells.
You can look at this info page for a more detailed description of
which f
Rob Hudson wrote:
In looking at the mail headers, it looks like "chezgeek.euglug.net"
has a funky time setting.
Mine is:
Wed, 19 Jan 2005 21:26:37 -0800 (PST)
chezgeek is:
20 Jan 2005 05:24:42 -
If you subtract 8 hours from chezgeek, you get our localtime, so I
guess that's right, but Thunde
In looking at the mail headers, it looks like "chezgeek.euglug.net" has
a funky time setting.
Mine is:
Wed, 19 Jan 2005 21:26:37 -0800 (PST)
chezgeek is:
20 Jan 2005 05:24:42 -
If you subtract 8 hours from chezgeek, you get our localtime, so I guess
that's right, but Thunderbird is telling m
I found this on the gentoo site, which is what I couldn't find earlier...
(Set timezone information) # ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/ /etc/localtime
I set my timezone, went to time.gov, the set the system time using
"date", and I think I'm good.
Booting to Windows might screw me all up again, thoug
Rob Hudson wrote:
I'm having a similar problem of time warp emails I think. Can anyone
verify?
Unless you wrote your message around 1pm, I'd say you have your timezone
set wrong.
--
Russ Johnson
Dimension 7/Stargate Online
http://www.dimstar.net
Top post? http://www.caliburn.nl/topposting.htm
I'm having a similar problem of time warp emails I think. Can anyone
verify? It looks like maybe I have my system clock set to localtime
instead of GMT, and kbob mentioned that Windows does that.
I thought I remember during the Gentoo install, there is a place to set
timezone info. "tzselect
When I use scp into my computers I get
[EMAIL PROTECTED]'s password:
stty: standard input: Invalid argument
tput: No value for $TERM and no -T specified
tput: No value for $TERM and no -T specified
stty: standard input: Invalid argument
tput: No value for $TERM and no -T specified
tput: No value fo
Linux Rocks! wrote:
On Tuesday 18 January 2005 12:41 pm, Alan wrote:
SNIP...
: I've looked at Skype, but since most of our calls are incoming, I don't
: think it will fit the bill for what we need.
Hmm... mostly incomming. have you looked into 800 numbers? or something
simular?
Jamie
Well, my LD
Hey, awesome, I finally have the right answer! :) Glad to help.
The "apt-cache search [keyword]" command, sometimes piped to "grep
[keyword]" filter is very useful for me in these situations.
-Max
Allen Brown wrote:
Max Lemieux wrote:
Here's what I found searching apt for rsh, minus noise (I'm
ru
Max Lemieux wrote:
Here's what I found searching apt for rsh, minus noise (I'm
running SimplyMepis which is pinned to Debian
testing/unstable, your results may vary):
[EMAIL PROTECTED] apt-cache search rsh|grep rsh|sort
cook-rsh - Remote execution scripts for cook
fsh - Fast remote command executi
That's not the same. AutoLF causes minicom to linefeed the
display everytime it receives a CR. This device doesn't
send CR-LF. It just sends CR. So every line is displayed
over the top of the next until I type C-A a.
--
Allen Brown
work: Agilent Technologies non-work: http://www.peak.org
Whoops,
I sent too soon. What I was trying to get to is that linewrap can be
specified on the command line or in the MINICOM environment variable.
export MINICOM="-c on -w"
for color enabled and linewrap on. This doesn't have an option for
local echo though so I'm stumped there.
Local echo in minicom is "Ctrl-A E"
I'm not sure what you mean by auto linefeed. do you want the text to
wrap to the next lne when you reach the end of the current one? that is
"Ctrl-A W".
-Mike
On Wed, 2005-01-19 at 08:30, Allen Brown wrote:
> I have an application (CMUcam) that
On Tuesday 18 January 2005 01:55 pm, Russ Johnson wrote:
: Linux Rocks! wrote:
: >I have cricket, it cost less than i was giving qwest/uswest, or the other
: >local providers... but cell phones are annoying... I put up with the
: >inconvenience of cell phone, rather than pay qwest.
:
: And your cri
On Tuesday 18 January 2005 12:41 pm, Alan wrote:
SNIP...
: I've looked at Skype, but since most of our calls are incoming, I don't
: think it will fit the bill for what we need.
Hmm... mostly incomming. have you looked into 800 numbers? or something
simular?
Jamie
:
:
: That's the run-down so f
On Tuesday 18 January 2005 04:18 pm, Bob Miller wrote:
: Ben Barrett wrote:
: > EWEB has almost-dark [but not quite dark] fiber running along 11th Ave
: > (and some of Oak downtown)... startup costs are exorbitant, but if
: > anyone is looking at homes with the best future-potential for bandwidth,
I have an application (CMUcam) that pretty much requires me
to set auto LF and local echo when talking to it. Minicom
allows me to set serial port settings (baud rate, etc) in
the /etc/minicom/minirc.dfl file.
But I don't see any way to set auto LF and local echo.
Am I condemmed to manually set th
On Tue, Jan 18, 2005 at 08:06:18PM -0800, larry price wrote:
> 1. This could be truly useful
>
> 2. It's the windows registry database
>
> I think it's going to be a hard sell, for a lot of people because of 2.
> On the other hand a desktop system like Ubuntu or Mandrake would
> probably benefit
On Tue, Jan 18, 2005 at 10:26:48PM -0800, Alan wrote:
> >AT&T wanted me to pay $.04/kb for data access from my phone. That's
> >ridiculous given that I'm already paying $52 for my plan, after taxes and
> >fees. Hit that sweet spot of $60 for both and you will have the most
> >popular thing out th
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