Hi
> Ok, this is an excerpt:
>
> #Buchhaltung
> [ws040]
> SCREEN_01 = shell
> X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL = "Microsoft"
> X_MOUSE_DEVICE = "/dev/ttyS1"
> X_MOUSE_RESOLUTION = 50
> PRINTER_0_DEVICE = /dev/lp0
> PRINTER_0_TYPE = P
>
>
> #S
We have about a year using LTSP and some Netvistas with an xSeries (IBM's Intel based server) and IXS (integrated server card inside an iSeries) and we are ready to jump to the next wagon, using an LPAR on an 820 iSeries. A good performance rule of thumb with Intel based servers is that
On 11/10/05, Roy Souther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Off the top of my head this would be a simple bash script that would call the app. Could look like this.
This is my quick idea. I have not tested it. Could use some work.
= START BASH SCRIPT =
#!/bin/bash
OUR_PID=$$
# Get the
Hi Catherine,
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005, Catherine Stéfan wrote:
I have an LTSP installed on a MEPIS (2.8 Ghz and 1Go of RAM) and one of my
three thin clients (P133, 31Mo RAM) seems to disconnect after a while,
roughly every 10 minutes, whatever I do.
We've seen that problem before as well. We use
Hi,
does someone know how to make it possible to the user on his client to
change the keyboard layout?
There is a big tool in KDE to change your layout, but it doesn't work on
my LTSP. I'd like to have German and Swiss-french keyboards. I've tried
to set XKBlayout to "de,fr_CH", with and wit
No problem, James,
It is a worry that you are saying words that don't make sense ...
> When you plug in a printer to a thin client parallel port no body says
> anything at all.
You're Vulcan, aren't you...? :-)
I guess it would help to see your lts.conf file.
Ok, this is an excerpt:
#Buch
Hello,
I have an LTSP installed on a MEPIS (2.8 Ghz and 1Go of RAM) and one of my
three thin clients (P133, 31Mo RAM) seems to disconnect after a while,
roughly every 10 minutes, whatever I do.
Being logged in or not (with KDM still displayed), using the machine or not,
the client seems to res
On Thu, 2005-11-17 at 01:43 -0600, Tom Griffing wrote:
> Hello;
>
> First of all: Kudos to everyone for the fantastic work on LTSP.
>
> I'd like to know if anyone has tried adding a Ruby kernel to LTSP
> and tried making multi-headed LTSP clients?
Hello Tom,
I have a LTSP 4.1.1 setup but I don'
Hi,
Eilert wrote:
> I think you're asking the opposite - using multiple X sessions for
> single, multi-screen session? You can do this with a multi-head
> video card and running one X session per video port. The X
> sessions can be combined into one, multi-screen session.
Yes, but you nee
Moin Anselm,
I just tried this
> This could be related to lots of things. First, you should make sure the
> parallel port is "activated" in the BIOS setup of that Mini ITX device
> (after all, it's a regular computer just without harddrive, right?). It
> should be setup to use the standard port
No, I did get you right, Tom
> Hmmm ... perhaps I worded my message incorrectly. My aim
> is for each LTSP client to serve multiple users, each with his/her
> own monitor, keyboard, mouse and session.
Just didn't think of the multi-user variant...
>
> I think you're asking the opposite - usin
On Thursday 17 November 2005 12:23, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> I'm playing with a new client, a Mini-ITX Thin Client. There are two
> things I cannot solve:
>
> 1. When I attach my printer to its lp0, it says nothing. The values in
> lts.conf etc. are all correct. Yast says, there is a printer ser
Hi Tom,
Tom Griffing wrote:
Eilert;
Hmmm ... perhaps I worded my message incorrectly. My aim
is for each LTSP client to serve multiple users, each with his/her
own monitor, keyboard, mouse and session.
this sounds really interesting, hope you'll post whatever you find to
this list!
How ma
Eilert;
Hmmm ... perhaps I worded my message incorrectly. My aim
is for each LTSP client to serve multiple users, each with his/her
own monitor, keyboard, mouse and session.
I think you're asking the opposite - using multiple X sessions for
single, multi-screen session? You can do this with a
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