Sitat manohar-y2 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi List,
>
>
> I have a small setup of thin clients on Linux.
>
> Now according to some requirement... i need to setup a few thin
> clients and have it ready for working with a windows based
> application
>
> ie... the clients will work on the thin
Hi List,
I have a small setup of thin clients on
Linux.
Now according to some requirement... i need to
setup a few thin clients and have it ready for working with a windows based
application
ie... the clients will work on the thin clients and
access the windows based application.
Hello.
I`ve looked at various printer docs but don`t seem to be getting anywhere
:-(
I have a HP OfficeJet R40xi running on another linux system.
It is setup using CUPS (and works great) and the CUPS administration
indicates it`s location as :-
lpp://192.168.1.1:631/printers/hpojr40xi
I`m st
Keld Jørn Simonsen wrote:
>This seem quite non-unix-like to me.
they did not have many soundcards in the 70s ;-)
> Should this not be solved system-wise in the kernel?
> Using some wrapper-program seems like a hack.
it is.
I think the problem is, that there is not one solution for network-so
Philip A. Roa wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there a way, throught a filter, emulation or any other mechanism,
> wherein one can print to a legacy dotmatrix printer (like epson LX/FX
> series printers) printer files that have been intended for postscript
> output?
the usual Linux RIP called ghostscript has
Hi,
Is there a way, throught a filter, emulation or any other mechanism, wherein one can
print to a legacy dotmatrix
printer (like epson LX/FX series printers) printer files that have been intended for
postscript output?
I have a lot of these printers which i want to use for simple documents
On 11 Feb 2002, John McCreesh wrote:
>OK, understood. There is a discussion on freshmeat about using esound
>with non-esound compatible devices at:
>http://freshmeat.net/projects/esound. Some of these tricks (using esddsp
>as a wrapper etc) might help.
>
>Sorry to keep going on about esound, but
Does anyone know of any 10/100 PCI network cards (that are available to
buy now) which use 27C256 eproms?
I've got an old Dlink DFE500TX which seems to use them, but I can't find
anywhere that sells them any more. The newer DFE530TX's use eeproms
instead.
Thanks for any help.
--
Phil Davey
Com