This is not a Mandrake specific question, but does anyone know of any CD
Duplicators (ones that hold 100 cd's and can make 5 duplicates at a time for
instance) that can be operated from Linux?
We have seen a couple that run from WinNT but are strongly preferring a
Linux driven one if they exist.
Title: KDE2
Personally, I moved my ~/.kde folder to
~/.kdeold. Then I uninstalled KDE1 with rpm -e --nodeps `rpm -q -a | grep
kde`. Then I installed openssl, alsa, and the qt-2.1.1 and kde2 rpms at http://us.mandrakesoft.com/~molnarc.
Then I made sure /opt/kde2/bin was permanently in my pa
You could use your ide cd-rom to read audio by using the ide-scsi module to
make your ide cd-rom appear as a scsi device. You will have to recompile
the kernel with the ide-scsi capabilities. There is some pretty thorough
documentation in a cd-r howto on www.linux.com.
This had better come plai
Mandrake gurus,
I have had no problem getting truetype fonts to
work in Redhat 6.0 and 6.1 every time:
copy c:\windows\fonts to
/usr/local/fonts
in /usr/local/fonts do a
ttmkfdir > fonts.dir
chkfontpath --add
/usr/local/fonts
stop and start xfs
And voila, I had T
Mandrake gurus,
I have had no problem getting truetype fonts to work in Redhat 6.0 and 6.1
every time:
copy c:\windows\fonts to /usr/local/fonts
in /usr/local/fonts do a ttmkfdir > fonts.dir
chkfontpath --add /usr/local/fonts
stop and start xfs
And voila, I had Truetype Fonts
The HTML editor in Sun's Staroffice is the best I have seen for Linux. From
what I have seen, it doesn't use any propriety tags and produces clean HTML.
http://www.sun.com/staroffice
Fox
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