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Neil Joseph Schelly wrote:
> To move a partition from one disk to another, I was using dd (and sometimes
> just cat) with bzip2 and netcat to rip an image from one disk and dump it to
> another disk in another laptop in realtime. I found that while most of the
> filesystem arrived at its desti
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 11:23 AM, Michael ODonnell
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I once lucked out and found a YouTube video showing a tech
> disassembling exactly the laptop model I was working on,
> including all the secret/hidden catches and fasteners that
> you normally only find out about *afte
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 2:06 PM, Michael Pelletier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The main drawback to this approach is that you need a Windows
> system on which to run PowerChute.
PowerChute is/was available for Linux.
I think I've also seen a third-party utility (possibly part of the
NUT or a
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 1:47 PM, Bill McGonigle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ... must cut speaker wire!
For most of the APC Smart-UPS line, pressing the "On" button briefly
will silence the "On Battery" alarm (but not the "Low Battery" alarm).
For the ones with only a single "On/Off" button, I
Bill McGonigle wrote:
>
> So, it's a one-time configuration? I haz a vmware.
>
I think it's just an EEPROM setting. APCUPSD used to be able to
reprogram the EEPROM directly. They moved the code out of there and into
the apctest module. Details here:
http://www.apcupsd.org/manual/manual.html#S
Hey,
I've searched the main exim docs to see if it implements RFC 3463 and
I can't find any such reference. I know there are some exim fans here.
Does exim not support that RFC?
--
Jeff Macdonald
Ayer, MA
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Yep, apparently the APC units have a little firmware chip in there, so it's
a persistent configuration.
I have about half a dozen of them around the house (TV, wireless router, two
computer desks, VoIP adapter & cordless phone plus the weather station
console, cable modem in the basement) and unti
On Aug 21, 2008, at 14:06, Michael Pelletier wrote:
> The main drawback
> to this approach is that you need a Windows system on which to run
> PowerChute.
So, it's a one-time configuration? I haz a vmware.
-Bill
-
Bill McGonigle, Owner Work: 603.448.4440
BFC Computing, LLC
This just got posted on our internal jabber server - thought folks here
might be amused by it.
http://algebraicthunk.net/~dburrows/blog/entry/package-management-sudoku/
--
Cole Tuininga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Code Energy
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-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill McGonigle
Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2008 1:47 PM
To: Greater NH Linux User Group
Subject: Re: Laptop external power from batteries (DC/DC)
So, to the original point of demo'ing linux in the field withou
Trying to be budget conscious I recalled that my office UPS (APC) is
1500VA and 865W, and has lead acid batteries inside. It claims 2
hours of runtime at 50W. I got it on sale for $120 or so.
So, I pulled out the Kill-A-Watt and plugged it inline with my
laptop, and got a 42W load mostly i
-Original Message-
I get a bunch of rules for EST / EDT, so I think I have US/Eastern properly
selected. I did md5sum it, and then I md5summed the files
in /usr/share/zoneinfo, and there's no match, which is interesting.
Googling the md5sum of my /etc/localtime I see other people with
paul.cour1 writes:
> My daughter has a Dell Inspiron (5100) and she dropped it. Consequently, the
> LCD is cracked in a couple places.
> I assume Dell sold a bazillion of these machines, so also, I assume parts are
> available...
>
> Where might I go in the Southern NH or Mass. areas, to
> get
Paul,
My friend Andy Demers did a great job when my four-year-old son knocked my
laptop off a precarious perch and cracked the screen. It makes some pretty
amazing colors and patterns when you poke it, doesn't it?
You can reach him via <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. I had him replace the keyboard
(which
Here's the site. I found it about 30 seconds after sending.
http://repair4laptop.org/notebook_lcd_display.html
Upon closer review they have a lot of information, but not for EVERY
laptop, but a lot of them. Most of the time the manfs use the same old
tricks with each model, so you might be ab
There's this site out there, and my google-fu isn't what it should be
this early in the morning :^), but I have used a site that listed most
models of major brands and provided step by step instructions for
replacing the LCDs. Maybe someone else knows of the site, or is a
GoogleMaster.
~k
Mi
I once lucked out and found a YouTube video showing a tech
disassembling exactly the laptop model I was working on,
including all the secret/hidden catches and fasteners that
you normally only find out about *after* you've damaged them...
___
gnhlug-d
I have a laptop LCD floating around my junk bin that... I have no idea
anymore what sort of laptop it came from, but if it's the right sort it's
yours. I've had dells before, so it could be correct.
--DTVZ
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 11:04 AM, H. Kurth Bemis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> If you are h
On 8/21/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Good Morning.
> My daughter has a Dell Inspiron (5100) and she dropped it. Consequently, the
> LCD is cracked in a couple places.
> I assume Dell sold a bazillion of these machines, so also, I assume parts are
> available...
> Where might
If you are handy with a screwdriver and plastic butterknife and observe
static safety, you can replace it yourself in a few minutes. You can
easily find the a replacement LCD replacement on eBay or another
vendor. My experiences have been that the replacement will cost
anywhere from $120 to a
eBay is where I go when I have laptop problems. I just buy another laptop
that ideally is broken enough to be cheap, but has the parts I need in good
shape. eBay has lots of results right now if you search for Dell Inspiron
5100.
-N
On Thursday 21 August 2008 10:45, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
On Thu, 2008-08-21 at 09:45 -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Good Morning.
>
> My daughter has a Dell Inspiron (5100) and she dropped it. Consequently, the
> LCD is cracked in a couple places.
> I assume Dell sold a bazillion of these machines, so also, I assume parts are
> available...
>
> Wh
Good Morning.
My daughter has a Dell Inspiron (5100) and she dropped it. Consequently, the
LCD is cracked in a couple places.
I assume Dell sold a bazillion of these machines, so also, I assume parts are
available...
Where might I go in the Southern NH or Mass. areas, to
get this Laptop repaire
That would be 3 Li cells in series. My Dell Inspiron 5150 has a battery
labeled 14.8v, 6450mAh with a charger specified as 19.5v 6.7A. It's a
pain in the butt and next time I'm looking at a new laptop I will check
the battery voltage before buying. I think that 11.1v is a more common
battery for l
On Thu, Aug 21, 2008 at 9:52 AM, michael miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The internal battery nominal voltage is 14.4 (4 x 3.6v cells in series).
FYI and FWIW, two Dell laptops I just checked indicate 11.1 volts on
the battery label.
-- Ben
___
gn
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 8:13 PM, Bill McGonigle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> dd if=/dev/sda of=/mnt/myusbdisk/my_hosed_xp_disk.dd bs=8M
> conv=noerror,sync
There's also a couple of tools that improve on this concept.
dd_rescue approaches the "bad block" problem more sophisticatedly,
varying bl
19.5v is only used for charging. The internal battery nominal voltage
is 14.4 (4 x 3.6v cells in series). Li, NiCd and NiMH batteries tend to
maintain a nearly constant voltage until they are almost fully
discharged at which point voltage drops rapidly. Lead acid battery
voltage tends to drop co
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 8:03 PM, Bill McGonigle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm curious if the voltage drops as the battery discharges or remains fairly
> level.
I know that voltage does drop as a battery discharges, and that the
pattern of the voltage drop depends on the type of battery. I've
On Thu, 2008-08-21 at 08:16 -0400, Neil Joseph Schelly wrote:
> On Wednesday 20 August 2008 20:13, Bill McGonigle wrote:
> > So, one thing I like to do is to create a disk image of the damaged
> > disk before trying anything else. That way you can go back if
> > 'recovery' attempts do more damage
> dd methods really don't work that well, at least not wth a suspect
> drive.
dd generally works with healthy drives but I've not had great
luck with it when even one sector is bad, so I've been using
dd_rescue (Debian pkg is named ddrescue, RPM equiv unknown)
which has features intended for suc
On Wednesday 20 August 2008 20:13, Bill McGonigle wrote:
> So, one thing I like to do is to create a disk image of the damaged
> disk before trying anything else. That way you can go back if
> 'recovery' attempts do more damage than good. This is largely a
> question of what your data is worth an
On Wed, Aug 20, 2008 at 10:56 PM, Peg Harris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks to all of you! You are my heros this evening!
Klaus Knopper and Linus Torvalds desrve some share of our collegtive
thanks for giving us the tools.
In addition to the excellent and intuitive Knoppix, there are other
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