[Telux/OSDClub Meeting] Ori Idan on "Internet Standards" - 13/7/2008

2008-07-09 Thread Shlomi Fish
Hi all, this is a announcement that Ori Idan will give a presentation titled "Internet Standards - Why, Who and How" to the Tel Aviv Linux Club, on 13-July-2008 at 18:30. More information can be found here: * http://wiki.perl.org.il/index.php/Meeting_on_13_July_2008 * http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/

Linux and video multicasting

2008-07-09 Thread Arie Skliarouk
Hi, My friend needs to broadcast an event live for 15 viewers. Unicast broadcasting requires tremendous bandwidth and hence - money. Thus he asked me to check multicast option. There are "instructions" on doing multicast using VLC: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpkmdi1gKvM but during my res

Flash production on Linux

2008-07-09 Thread Michael Jaffe
I need to convert a presentation from PowerPoint to either flash or some video format.  What's the best way to do this on Linux?  Thanks. Michael Jaffe EMAIL: jmichaeljaffe (at )yahoo (dot) com = To unsubscribe, send ma

nfs problems

2008-07-09 Thread Erez D
hi i have a diskless client booting with tftp and nfsroot (debian lenny on kurobox-pro, as client, pc with hardy64 as server) the whole filesystem is mounted via (rw,no_root_squash) on the client: when i try to create a new file - no problems when i try to edit that file, i get : "Can't open fil

solved (was: how do i rescan the pci bus ?)

2008-07-09 Thread Erez D
solved: there is a driver called pciehp if i modprobe it, it will automatically rescan the bus whenever a new pci-e device is inserted or removed. in my case i had to insmod it with: modprobe pciehp pciehp_force=1 otherwise it complains that my hardware does not support hotplug which is funny a

Re: Linux and video multicasting

2008-07-09 Thread Rami Rosen
Hello, I suggest that you try the pim daemon of Xorp: http://www.xorp.org/ Xorp is a large project; it contains the PIM-SM daemon (Protocol Independent Multicast-Sparse Mode) to handle multicasting in Linux. Make sure that your kernel is built with multicast support (recent kernels in most distro

Re: OT: How about running Linux in your web browser?

2008-07-09 Thread Gadi Cohen
I don't use it, but are you aware of http://g.ho.st/ ? It's a full "WebOS" - your own virtual desktop accessible from any web browser. IIRC it's a joint Israeli-Palestinian project. Gadi Maxim Veksler wrote: > Hello list, > > This is surly interesting news, It seems that the folks at Mozil

Re: Flash production on Linux

2008-07-09 Thread Gilad Ben-Yossef
Michael Jaffe wrote: I need to convert a presentation from PowerPoint to either flash or some video format. What's the best way to do this on Linux? Thanks. Try http://www.scribd.com Gilad -- Gilad Ben-Yossef Chief Coffee Drinker Codefidence Ltd. The code is free, your time isn't.(

Re: OpenMoko freerunner warning

2008-07-09 Thread Arie Skliarouk
Finally they put clarification on the on-line shop: http://us.direct.openmoko.com/products/neo-freerunner Sold Out? 900Mhz variant stock is due on on july 15th -- Arie On Mon, Jul 7, 2008 at 20:02, michael shiloh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Wow! Thanks for the great information. Mind if I quot

RE: Openmoko - GSM coverage data from GSMA

2008-07-09 Thread Moish
http://www.gsmworld.com/roaming/gsminfo/index.shtml Moish = To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: OpenMoko freerunner warning

2008-07-09 Thread Amos Shapira
(Sorry Shachar, sent it to you in private by mistake) 2008/7/6 Shachar Shemesh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > From memory, so please verify, but as far as I remember, the Neo is > tri-band, working with 900 and 1800MHz, with some models carrying the > 1900MHz as a third band and others the 850MHz. Orange

Re: OpenMoko freerunner warning

2008-07-09 Thread Geoffrey S. Mendelson
On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 03:59:42PM +1000, Amos Shapira wrote: > GSM > >* Quad-band (850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz) > > So I wonder why OpenMoko couldn't do this. Cost? Actually the phone is really just 2 band, the 800/900 and 1800/1900 mHz bands are close enough for modern technology to be the s