In my KDE (now at v4.2.0) Application Launcher I've got a half-dozen
applications in the Lost Found folder. It seems that these
applications have at least one other thing in common: they're all in
the Electronics category. This list mirrors the apps I see in LF:
$ grep -l Electronics
On Wednesday 11 February 2009 17:09:55 Robert Moskowitz wrote:
I just got a Sansa 4Gb Connect MP3. This is audio and video.
I am running FC10 and Gnome on an Asus 701.
I plug the sansa in with its special USB cable and I show a USB
device but it is not accessable.
The Sansa devices can be
On Saturday 14 February 2009 15:38:39 Kevin Kofler wrote:
Steve Snyder wrote:
In my KDE (now at v4.2.0) Application Launcher I've got a
half-dozen applications in the Lost Found folder. It seems
that these applications have at least one other thing in common:
they're all
On Tuesday 09 December 2008 01:06:22 am gab_v wrote:
Dear all,
I have a Fedora 9 distr.
I've lot of problem with SELinux, so I want to know how to get rid of
it. In particular I am interested NOT in make SELinux status
Disabled but to uninstall it.
I am not sure how to do it, also because
Hello.
I'm about to wipe my x86_64 F8 installation in preparation for
installing x86_64 F10. Since I'll be doing a clean install, I'm
feeling adventurous. My plan is to go 64-bit only - no 32-bit
binaries. Mind if I ask a few questions?
1. In prior versions of Fedora there was no provision
On Friday 21 November 2008 01:52:47 pm Alan Evans wrote:
On Fri, Nov 21, 2008 at 10:45 AM, Wayne Feick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
VMware Workstation 6.5 is out now, with some nice new features like
Unity. With this release, simply running vmware once as root will
automatically rebuild all the
Shortly after it's released, I'll be doing a clean install of Fedora 10
on a solid-state disk (SSD). This disk will contain all but the /home
directory structure.
Is there an optimal (and F10-supported) filesystem for use on SSDs, or
should I just opt for the default?
Thanks.
--
On Monday 17 November 2008 10:16:47 am Alan Cox wrote:
There are many Linux flash filesystems, but Fedora does not support
any of them.
If you are using an ATA, CFA or SCSI attached solid state disk then
that aspect of file systems is really irrelevant. Raw flash devices
require management
I recently starting using IPv6 networking on my Fedora8 machine. This
is native, not 6over4 tunneled, networking. So why then am I getting
the sit and tunnel4 kernel modules loaded?
I've got NETWORKING_IPV6=yes in /etc/sysconfig/network
and IPV6INIT=yes in ifcfg-eth0. No references to