I think the binary only ltmodem (lucent stuff) module should make his modem
running...
And the best way to get help - is by posting the output of lspci ;)
Hetz
On Thursday 21 February 2002 04:30, Amichai Rotman wrote:
Hi Gang,
A friend of mine bought a Toshiba Laptop. He wants to install
Hi,
I downloaded and installed the sendsms scripts. They work fine for pele-phone,
but only work about 30% of the time for Orange.
I get the message Sent successfully. in the log, but nothing happens on
the phone.
Is there a limit to the number of messages you can send in any one time,
e.g.
hi
I've downloaded qt-copy from the kde3 cvs
i put it in /usr/local/qt
i set the enviroment variables:
setenv QTDIR /usr/local/qt
setenv PATH $QTDIR/bin:$PATH
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $QTDIR/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
then
cd $QRDIR
/configure
i get:
Creating qmake. Please
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote about Re: Fwd: Long time:
I think the binary only ltmodem (lucent stuff) module should make his modem
running...
The lucent driver is no longer binary only - you can get the source at
(for example - I just googled) http://www.heby.de/ltmodem.
However,
I have a Mandrake 8.1 system and I installed vim-X11 6.0-6mdk. When I
invoke /usr/X11R6/bin/gvim I get a very ugly font which I don't like.
I tried to set it. However neither:
/usr/X11R6/bin/gvim -font \
'-adobe-courier-medium-r-normal-*-*-140-*-*-m-*-iso8859-1'
Nor:
/usr/X11R6/bin/gvim
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002, Nadav Har'El wrote about Re: Fwd: Long time:
The lucent driver is no longer binary only - you can get the source at
(for example - I just googled) http://www.heby.de/ltmodem.
After being put straight in the linux-kernel mailing list on the same issue,
I need to correct
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Shlomi Fish wrote:
I have a Mandrake 8.1 system and I installed vim-X11 6.0-6mdk. When I
invoke /usr/X11R6/bin/gvim I get a very ugly font which I don't like.
I tried to set it. However neither:
/usr/X11R6/bin/gvim -font \
After I removed the file /usr/share/vim/gvimrc everything worked fine, and
gvim even started with a good font at startup.
That file contained the line:
set
guifontset=-*-fixed-medium-r-normal--14-*-*-*-c-*-*-*,-*-*-medium-r-normal--14-*-*-*-c-*-*-*,-*-*-medium-r-normal--14-*-*-*-m-*-*-*,*
[ shlomi answered to himself, so I'll answer to myself as well ;-) ]
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Shlomi Fish wrote:
I have a Mandrake 8.1 system and I installed vim-X11 6.0-6mdk. When I
invoke /usr/X11R6/bin/gvim I get a very ugly font which I don't
On Thursday 21 February 2002 12:16, Erez Doron wrote:
hi
I've downloaded qt-copy from the kde3 cvs
i put it in /usr/local/qt
i set the enviroment variables:
setenv QTDIR /usr/local/qt
setenv PATH $QTDIR/bin:$PATH
setenv LD_LIBRARY_PATH $QTDIR/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
I asked:
I downloaded and installed the sendsms scripts. They work fine for pele-phone,
but only work about 30% of the time for Orange.
I get the message Sent successfully. in the log, but nothing happens on
the phone.
I found the answer. Walla will accept a message with quotes ' or a
I asked:
I downloaded and installed the sendsms scripts. They work fine for pele-phone,
but only work about 30% of the time for Orange.
I get the message Sent successfully. in the log, but nothing happens on
the phone.
I found the answer. Walla will accept a message with
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002, Dan Kenigsberg wrote about Re: Sendsms to Orange:
I must shamefully admit that I have never noticed the # (pound) problem...
It is slightly more complicated: it seems that Orange-Walla expects a hex ascii
value after the #. It does not work for many characters and when it
Hi,
I have this problem:
My machine IP is 192.168.1.2 and I'm connected to my other Linux machine
which has the real IP.
Now - I need to connect to another machine outside my network which is
10.1.1.1 (which means that machine is also under firewall)..
Now - on that machine I don't have
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote about X Forwarding question:
My question - how can I get the 10.1.1.1 X sessions to my 192.168.1.1 machine?
If you can ssh to the remote machine, the simplest would be to do ssh -X
10.1.1.1. In the shell you'll get, you'll automatically have
If you can ssh to the remote machine, the simplest would be to do ssh -X
10.1.1.1. In the shell you'll get, you'll automatically have
DISPLAY=10.1.1.1:10 (or something similar), and X clients will
automagically work! Ssh runs an X proxy on that machine to forward all
connections to :10
This should work. *Don't* set DISPLAY yourself - use the one ssh gives you.
What DISPLAY do you get on the gateway (in the middle of the ssh sequence)?
What DISPLAY do you get finally on 10.1.1.1?
What do you mean by doesn't work and doesn't give me anything?
Sorry for the trouble -
On Thu, Feb 21, 2002, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote about Re: X Forwarding question:
You can't - 10.1.1.1 is not accessible from outside, only through ssh'ing the
gateway and then to 10.1.1.1
So what? You can do two stages of ssh -X, from your machine to the gateway,
and then from the gateway to
I trying to figure out where the menu defintitions are for the main menu
on the panel. I once installed ximian gnome, and since then my main menu
has four elements: Programs, Favorites, Settings, Desktop.
The regular menu editors that come with gnome, and Mandrake (I'm using
Mandrake 8.1) do
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Shai Bentin wrote:
I trying to figure out where the menu defintitions are for the main menu
on the panel. I once installed ximian gnome, and since then my main menu
has four elements: Programs, Favorites, Settings, Desktop.
The regular menu editors that come with gnome,
Hello,
I wonder about the following scenario, which is quite common:
A large network consisting of many users and many Unix boxes. Users
aren't supposed to have root access to any box. All home directories
reside on a central fileserver. How do you configure the networked
filesystem?
The
Hi Gang,
I want to create a DB of people for whom I fixed their computer in the past:
Contact info, hardware inventory, recoed of what I did...
Is there something I can use?
Should I create a DB?
Should I create forms?
I want to get to their house and fill in a form with tas many details as
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002, Eran Tromer wrote:
Hello,
I wonder about the following scenario, which is quite common:
A large network consisting of many users and many Unix boxes. Users
aren't supposed to have root access to any box. All home directories
reside on a central fileserver. How do you
-=O0~O0=-
He took his vorpal sword in hand:
Long time the manxome foe he sought -
So rested he by the Tumtum tree.
And stood awhile in thought.
[L.Carrol Jabberwacky]
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002, Hetz Ben Hamo wrote:
This should
-=O0~O0=-
He took his vorpal sword in hand:
Long time the manxome foe he sought -
So rested he by the Tumtum tree.
And stood awhile in thought.
[L.Carrol Jabberwacky]
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002, Amichai Rotman wrote:
Hi Gang,
I
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002, Max Kovgan wrote:
-=O0~O0=-
He took his vorpal sword in hand:
Long time the manxome foe he sought -
So rested he by the Tumtum tree.
And stood awhile in thought.
[L.Carrol Jabberwacky]
On Thu, 21 Feb 2002,
On Fri, 22 Feb 2002, Amichai Rotman wrote:
Hi Gang,
I want to create a DB of people for whom I fixed their computer in the past:
Contact info, hardware inventory, recoed of what I did...
Is there something I can use?
Should I create a DB?
Should I create forms?
I want to get to
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