Aron Smith wrote:
On Wednesday 06 April 2005 01:10 pm, Philippe Landau wrote:
Miark wrote:
Try connecting the USB cable _before_ you plug in the external
drive's power supply.
thanks a lot for all the expertly advice, Joe, Mikkel, Miark and jdow.
it looks like the external case is leaking power to
from your description it would appear you have a grounding problem
with your pc, or a defective hard drive. the electric flash as you
plug it in (before the system can recognize/initialize it) should not
be a control signal per se, but rather is likely extraneous current
that improper grounding
Joe Mecklin wrote:
from your description it would appear you have a grounding problem
with your pc, or a defective hard drive. the electric flash as you
plug it in (before the system can recognize/initialize it) should not
be a control signal per se, but rather is likely extraneous current
that
assuming (i know that's a dangerous practice) the
case/motherboard/power supply are all properly designed, the grounding
will be builtin such that you really don't have to worry about it, but
here are some things to look for:
the power supply will have a black wire as part of its wiring harness
Philippe Landau wrote:
when i plug in my new Data-Tec D350U USB 2 external harddisk,
i see a small electric flash which can cause
my PC to shutdown instantly.
i know USB is powered, carrying a small voltage,
so the flash is not unexpected.
also as it is used to send control signals
i can
On Wed, 06 Apr 2005 14:23:03 +0200, Philippe wrote:
when i plug in my new Data-Tec D350U USB 2 external harddisk,
i see a small electric flash which can cause
my PC to shutdown instantly.
i know USB is powered, carrying a small voltage,
so the flash is not unexpected.
also as it is used to
From: Philippe Landau [EMAIL PROTECTED]
when i plug in my new Data-Tec D350U USB 2 external harddisk,
i see a small electric flash which can cause
my PC to shutdown instantly.
i know USB is powered, carrying a small voltage,
so the flash is not unexpected.
also as it is used to send control
Miark wrote:
Try connecting the USB cable _before_ you plug in the external
drive's power supply.
thanks a lot for all the expertly advice, Joe, Mikkel, Miark and jdow.
it looks like the external case is leaking power to USB,
because it happens even when its power switch is off,
but so far not
On Wednesday 06 April 2005 01:10 pm, Philippe Landau wrote:
Miark wrote:
Try connecting the USB cable _before_ you plug in the external
drive's power supply.
thanks a lot for all the expertly advice, Joe, Mikkel, Miark and jdow.
it looks like the external case is leaking power to USB,
Anne Wilson wrote:
Sorry for this, but I need some urgent help. Tomorrow I have to install OOo
under Windows for my daughter. I'm trying to woo her, kicking and screaming,
from her use of Lotus WordPro. I've installed it here under Win4Lin so that
I can look it over. The problem I've found
On Saturday 26 Mar 2005 14:00, SnapafunFrank wrote:
Anne Wilson wrote:
Sorry for this, but I need some urgent help. Tomorrow I have to install
OOo under Windows for my daughter. I'm trying to woo her, kicking and
screaming, from her use of Lotus WordPro. I've installed it here under
Anne Wilson wrote:
Sorry for this, but I need some urgent help. Tomorrow I have to install OOo
under Windows for my daughter. I'm trying to woo her, kicking and screaming,
from her use of Lotus WordPro. I've installed it here under Win4Lin so that
I can look it over. The problem I've found
On Saturday, March 26, 2005, Anne Wilson wrote:
Sorry for this, but I need some urgent help. Tomorrow I have to install OOo
under Windows for my daughter. I'm trying to woo her, kicking and
screaming,
from her use of Lotus WordPro. I've installed it here under Win4Lin so that
I can look
On Saturday 26 Mar 2005 14:35, Mr. Geek wrote:
Anne; Take a look at the title bar in OpenOffice. Go to
ToolsOptionsOpenOffice.org, and open that section. Look for a
subsection called External Programs and change the settings to match
your preferences.
I know you have to be logged in as the
riccardo wrote:
On Tuesday 22 March 2005 06:22 pm, David Anderson wrote:
I want to be able to mount hda1 and sda1 and copy files from one to
the other
~ if, I get the drift . . . you have booted from CD and neither hda1
nor sda1 are mounted?
So ~
SnapafunFrank wrote:
riccardo wrote:
On Tuesday 22 March 2005 06:22 pm, David Anderson wrote:
I want to be able to mount hda1 and sda1 and copy files from one to
the other
~ if, I get the drift . . . you have booted from CD and neither hda1
nor sda1 are mounted?
On Tuesday 22 March 2005 06:22 pm, David Anderson wrote:
I want to be able to mount hda1 and sda1 and copy files from one to
the other
~ if, I get the drift . . . you have booted from CD and neither hda1
nor sda1 are mounted?
So ~ make an extra mount
From: Aron Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tuesday 22 February 2005 09:31 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If this is old I apologise but it's new to me.
http://nolte-net.de/en/article/unix_hotline.html
I like the one on their site which will make sense if you are an
Abbot Costello fan
Unix
On Tuesday 22 February 2005 09:31 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If this is old I apologise but it's new to me.
http://nolte-net.de/en/article/unix_hotline.html
LOL post it to the OT list they could use some humor around now ;-)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tuesday 22 February 2005 09:31 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If this is old I apologise but it's new to me.
http://nolte-net.de/en/article/unix_hotline.html
I like the one on their site which will make sense if you are an
Abbot Costello fan
Unix tech support
On Thursday 17 February 2005 04:01 am, Inhabitant of Zion wrote:
Hi
I have a server here at home that I mess around with running a none
too interesting family site :-)
I have a second site that i would like to get up and running.
I was wondering if its possible to run two totally separate
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On Thursday 17 February 2005 04:33, Amy wrote:
Let me know if the original 10 offered are gone, I've got more than I
can ever give out, and will be more than happy to share. ^_^
Why don´t you all get rid of these gmail invites at the site:
On Tuesday 15 February 2005 09:03 am, Jamie Kerwick wrote:
Hi there,
I have 10 gmail invites going spare, so if you would like on just
email me (reply off list please.)
1st come 1st served.
Those things are gettng harder and harder to give away.
--
/g
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 18:11, Greg Meyer wrote:
On Tuesday 15 February 2005 09:03 am, Jamie Kerwick wrote:
Hi there,
I have 10 gmail invites going spare, so if you would like on just
email me (reply off list please.)
1st come 1st served.
Those things are gettng harder and harder to give
On Fri, 18 Feb 2005 08:09:57 +1300, Rosemary McGillicuddy
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thu, 17 Feb 2005 18:11, Greg Meyer wrote:
On Tuesday 15 February 2005 09:03 am, Jamie Kerwick wrote:
Hi there,
I have 10 gmail invites going spare, so if you would like on just
email me (reply off
On Tuesday 21 December 2004 17:14, Al Yaemes wrote:
Hi all,
I have to setup a Win XP box.
I think I remember somebody on this list saying something about
what services should be shut down
and which software firewall / antivirus / anti spyware should be
installed prior to allowing said box
hear are some links for help with windows xp...i use norton anti virus and
zone alarm for a firewall
http://www.helpwithwindows.com/WindowsXP/
you can read on that website and there are some steps under custom to tweak
out your windows xp
http://www.helpwithwindows.com/WindowsXP/
very good website for what to setup with windows xp...norton antivirus is
good and zone alarm is good for a firewall
On Tuesday 21 December 2004 11:14, Al Yaemes wrote:
I have to setup a Win XP box.
Famous last words.
I think I remember somebody on this list saying something about what
services should be shut down
and which software firewall / antivirus / anti spyware should be installed
prior to allowing
hear is just one other program good for start with winxp
http://www.windowsstartup.com/
and its freee its a good thing not sure on another player for linux i am
very new with mandrake but this will help what boots up when you boot your
winxp
On Sunday 12 December 2004 07:57 pm, Adolfo Bello wrote:
My wife is spending a couple of days in South Florida and I asked her to
buy me some Linux books. She went to Barnes Noble and found some of
them but others are still missing.
I wonder if there is in South Florida any bookstore with a
Duncan Anderson wrote:
Hello Graham
Anyhow, what I want to know is what is the best way to recover data
from a hard drive that is about to fail, but contains part of my
Mandrake installation (usr home) when I get a new box up and
running. Can I install it as a slave disk an access it through
JoeHill wrote:
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004 19:35:31 +
Graham Watkins disseminated the following:
It is an ex-motherboard, it has ceased to be
No, no, it's just pining for the fjords...
If you hadn't screwed it to the case it would be pushing up the daisies
by now.
Graham Watkins wrote:
Hi Guys,
First off, apologies for posting from a Windows box. I'm slowly
rebuilding a system after a major hardware catastrophe (see earlier
post).
After looking at a few options for data recovery from a linux system,
I finally opted for the System Rescue CDROM at
Duncan Anderson wrote:
Graham Watkins wrote:
It may be a while before I get a new linux box up and running as I'm
pretty busy just now. But when I do, I shall be moving up from 9.2 to
10.1 Community.
I'm looking forward to it.
Cheers,
Graham
When you do get around to it, have fun!
cheers
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On Friday 03 Dec 2004 00:16, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Thanks Dennis. I just spent a few hours surfing around my local
(Danish) resellers, found hundreds of USB sticks, but no one - that
is NO ONE - specified anything but Windows or Mac.
Then, my
On Friday 03 December 2004 10:50, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Friday 03 Dec 2004 00:16, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Thanks Dennis. I just spent a few hours surfing around my
local (Danish) resellers, found hundreds of USB sticks, but no
one - that is NO ONE - specified anything but Windows or Mac.
On Thursday 02 December 2004 01:33, Amy wrote:
snip
I remember there was a thread where
one of the members of our list was struggling with a windows
computer for something school related for his daughter. In the
process of the discussion, someone mentioned a site that one
could download all
On Thursday 02 December 2004 09:57, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Now, my daughter uses her Windows box completely disconnected from
everything. When she wants something from the net, she uses her
account on my Mandrake box and transport it via floppy or CD to her
box. (Maybe a USB memory stick could
If you do get a USB stick , Mandrake should detect it with no probs. I
picked up my first USB stick yesterday, plugged it in and Mandrake
detected it and created and icon for it on the screen automatically.
Currently I am playing a few MP3s from it right now.
On Thu, 2004-12-02 at 20:10,
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:10, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 09:57, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Now, my daughter uses her Windows box completely disconnected
from everything. When she wants something from the net, she
uses her account on my Mandrake box and transport it via
On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 02:24, JoeHill wrote:
I run Smoothwall as a fire wall. It will run on a p100 or better with 32mb of
ram and a 1 gig drive. Does not need a moniter or keyboard once set up This
setup will be more than powerfull enough to protect a home network. Then run
a decent av
On Wednesday 01 December 2004 21:24, JoeHill wrote:
On Wed, 1 Dec 2004 20:10:11 -0500
Bryan Phinney disseminated the following:
2 weeks before the machine gets compromised.
...I must say though (not bragging, by any stretch), that I do have a
Windows XP box running on my LAN, default
On Thursday 02 December 2004 04:38 am, Bryan Phinney wrote:
On Wednesday 01 December 2004 21:24, JoeHill wrote:
On Wed, 1 Dec 2004 20:10:11 -0500
Bryan Phinney disseminated the following:
2 weeks before the machine gets compromised.
...I must say though (not bragging, by any
On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 02:24, JoeHill wrote:
I run Smoothwall as a fire wall. It will run on a p100 or better with 32mb
of
ram and a 1 gig drive. Does not need a moniter or keyboard once set up
This
setup will be more than powerfull enough to protect a home network. Then
run
a decent av
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:10, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
BTW : Do you know a USB memory stick (about 512 MB) that works with
Linux ?
Kaj Haulrich.
There are at least 3 brands that work listed on
http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org and I think most others work. I have tried 3
different brands so
On Thursday 02 December 2004 16:39, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:10, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
BTW : Do you know a USB memory stick (about 512 MB) that works
with Linux ?
Kaj Haulrich.
There are at least 3 brands that work listed on
http://twiki.mdklinuxfaq.org
On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 15:36, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Maybe overkill but had the bits lying around so why not, originally ran it on
a 486 DX 120 with 32Mb same Hd and a 56K modem.
On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 02:24, JoeHill wrote:
I run Smoothwall as a fire wall. It will run on a p100 or better
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:26, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Maybe I'm paranoid, but after that experience we don't allow her
Windows box contact with anything outside her room.
You are;) Confined to the LAN can't really hurt can it, especially with static
IP and a dedicated router/firewall.
Then
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:51 am, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:26, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Maybe I'm paranoid, but after that experience we don't allow her
Windows box contact with anything outside her room.
You are;) Confined to the LAN can't really hurt can it,
On Thursday 02 December 2004 20:11, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
sandisk mini cruzer's do not work
Do you know why not?
--
Good luck,
HarM
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Join the Club :
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On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 19:11, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:51 am, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:26, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Maybe I'm paranoid, but after that experience we don't allow her
Windows
On Thursday 02 December 2004 01:11 pm, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
sandisk mini cruzer's do not work
Actually, they do. My boss and I both have Sandisk Mini Cruzers (256 megs),
and they work like a charm:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mandrake]$ mount /mnt/sandisk/
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mandrake]$ df /mnt/sandisk/
On Thursday 02 December 2004 11:15 am, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Thursday 02 Dec 2004 19:11, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:51 am, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:26, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Maybe I'm paranoid, but after that experience we don't allow
On Thursday 02 December 2004 11:13 am, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 20:11, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
sandisk mini cruzer's do not work
Do you know why not?
no
--
Alan
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
On Thursday 02 December 2004 11:22 am, Randall D. Hobbs wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 01:11 pm, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
sandisk mini cruzer's do not work
Actually, they do. My boss and I both have Sandisk Mini Cruzers (256 megs),
and they work like a charm:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] mandrake]$
On Thursday 02 December 2004 01:46 pm, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
i gave mine away to a windows user (where it worked fine [xp]) when it
locked up 9.2 as soon as i plugged it into the usb port. i replaced it
with a kingston data traveller which has never required any special
handling on 9.2 10.0
On Thursday 02 December 2004 14:11, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
sandisk mini cruzer's do not work
Don't know what you are talking about. I have a Sandisk 512MB mini cruzer,
works just fine, automounts and everything.
--
Bryan Phinney
Want to
On Thursday 02 December 2004 20:22, Randall D. Hobbs wrote:
Actually, they do. My boss and I both have Sandisk Mini Cruzers (256 megs),
and they work like a charm:
Thought as much, that's why I asked.
I mean how far can any vendor f**k_up a vfat formatted chip connected to a USB
plug?
--
On Thursday 02 December 2004 20:46, Alan Shoemaker wrote:
i gave mine away to a windows user (where it worked fine [xp]) when it
locked up 9.2 as soon as i plugged it into the usb port.
My laptop did that too every now and then.
Turning off harddrake as a service at boot was the solution.
--
On Thursday 02 December 2004 03:26 am, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:10, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 09:57, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Now, my daughter uses her Windows box completely disconnected
from everything. When she wants something from the net,
On Friday 03 December 2004 00:53, you wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 03:26 am, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 10:10, H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Thursday 02 December 2004 09:57, Kaj Haulrich wrote:
Now, my daughter uses her Windows box completely
disconnected from
Build him a firewall out of a $150 PC (P-III 400 or similar), or use one of
those router/switches that includes NAT. The D-Link ones, with an 802.11b
wireless thing and NAT are about $50, and will probably keep a lot more out
(leave the wireless disabled unless you really want it) than you'll
On Wednesday 01 December 2004 19:33, Amy wrote:
So what I need from you guys? I remember there was a thread where one
of the members of our list was struggling with a windows computer for
something school related for his daughter. In the process of the
discussion, someone mentioned a site
On Wed, 1 Dec 2004 20:10:11 -0500
Bryan Phinney disseminated the following:
Then, install win, leave the modems and net cards disconnected, install all of
those apps along with the patches and then you should be okay for about 2
weeks before the machine gets compromised.
LOL! You always give
On Wed, 1 Dec 2004 16:33:53 -0800
Amy disseminated the following:
however, since I'd gotten him to agree, he's changed his mind *Grumbles*
I know he's your dad, and you want to help him, but there is a term you may be
familiar with: 'enabler', and you may or may not want to be one of those.
On Wed, 1 Dec 2004 20:10:11 -0500
Bryan Phinney disseminated the following:
2 weeks before the machine gets compromised.
...I must say though (not bragging, by any stretch), that I do have a Windows XP
box running on my LAN, default install, *no Service Packs installed*, just
running AVG, and
On Thursday 02 December 2004 15:24, JoeHill wrote:
...I must say though (not bragging, by any stretch), that I do have a
Windows XP box running on my LAN, default install, *no Service Packs
installed*, just running AVG, and it's never been in any way compromised,
not even with spyware. I can
On Thu, 2 Dec 2004 15:41:33 +1300
Brenda O'Hagan disseminated the following:
On your LAN? That's usually the difference.
A windows boxen behind something else (such as a router, or a linux box) is
much much safer than a windows boxen with an internal connection to the
internet (such as an
it depends... if there's something there claiming that port, and you trust
that software, then why not???
open port 80, and send it to apache on windowsdoesn't do any harm. (though why
you'd want to run apache on windows i dunno).
it's all the other RPC ports that the worms exploit. (at least
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 19:19:23 -0600
Chris disseminated the following:
Joe, let me ask you at least one more question, I've got postfix working in
this manner:
Nov 26 19:00:02 cpollock postfix/nqmgr[2195]: 3D2E3584005:
from=[EMAIL PROTECTED], size=5272, nrcpt=1 (queue active)
Nov 26
On Saturday 27 November 2004 08:52 am, JoeHill wrote:
which is forwarding all my spam that I receive at my EL address to EL's
junkmail address. I guess its possible that I don't have much else to
do with it except possibly add in the procmail call?
Okay, you just zoomed right by me in
On Sat, 27 Nov 2004 19:35:31 +
Graham Watkins disseminated the following:
It is an ex-motherboard, it has ceased to be
No, no, it's just pining for the fjords...
--
JoeHill / RLU #282046 / www.freeyourmachine.org
16:12:37 up 6 days, 7:22, 10 users, load average: 0.33, 0.13, 0.06
Hello Graham
Anyhow, what I want to know is what is the best way to recover data from a hard
drive that is about to fail, but contains part of my Mandrake installation (usr
home) when I get a new box up and running. Can I install it as a slave disk
an access it through a new Mandrake
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 16:22:11 -0600
Chris disseminated the following:
Realizing this is OT, I'm confused and have some questions. If someone can
help please mail me off list as I don't want to get the current list Nazi
after me :)
I don't see this as OT at all, though it's been covered
On Friday 26 November 2004 23:23, JoeHill wrote:
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 16:22:11 -0600
Chris disseminated the following:
Realizing this is OT, I'm confused and have some questions. If someone
can help please mail me off list as I don't want to get the current list
Nazi after me :)
I don't
On Friday 26 November 2004 05:23 pm, JoeHill wrote:
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 16:22:11 -0600
Fetchmail is pretty simple. Install it, run 'fetchmailconf', yer done. If
you have Postfix installed ('urpmi postfix' if you don't), then you've
already arrived at the point where you can start the
On Friday 26 November 2004 06:10 pm, Chris wrote:
Status: U
Return-Path: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Now whats wrongback to having kmail check until I get this straight.
I'll reply to my own msg here since I did notice one thing amiss, normal
messages have a 'Status: R, this one I see has a
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 18:22:09 -0600
Chris disseminated the following:
Now whats wrongback to having kmail check until I get this straight.
I'll reply to my own msg here since I did notice one thing amiss, normal
messages have a 'Status: R, this one I see has a Status: U, meaning
On Friday 26 November 2004 06:56 pm, JoeHill wrote:
Sorry, I'm not familiar with how this would work with skipping the
Postfix step in the process.
Perhaps KMail isn't seeing the mail in /var/spool/mail/chris as new mail,
and so is not delivering it to your inbox? Also, check in the KMail
On Fri, 26 Nov 2004 19:01:39 -0600
Chris disseminated the following:
kdeinit: dcopserver --nosid --suicide?
I wouldn't touch anything that begins with a 'K' if you paid me ;-) I *am*
encouraged by kdeinit committing suicide, it's finally realized it has no reason
to live.
Go here:
On Friday 26 November 2004 06:56 pm, JoeHill wrote:
Postfix does not add much 'overhead' to the process, in fact the
anti-spam processing is going to take up a lot more. Why not save
yourself the headaches and go with a process that works off the bat?
Postfix also gives you the opportunity
On Saturday 30 October 2004 03:50 pm, Amy wrote:
Then I suppose it's time to bug the gmail team. Very weird
though, considering it's let me select a blank field for the
replyto address. Oh well, I'll bug them about it now. Thanks
for checking for me though. ^_^
Well, I replied to the
On Sunday 31 Oct 2004 14:04, Tom Brinkman wrote:
FWIW, I use Kmail and simply tapped the 'L' key to reply to
the list. The 'R' key would've replied only to you Amy. If I
chose to use a mail client without this simple feature, the
responsibility to reply properly is still mine.
The
On Sunday 31 October 2004 08:24 am, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Sunday 31 Oct 2004 14:04, Tom Brinkman wrote:
FWIW, I use Kmail and simply tapped the 'L' key to reply
to the list. The 'R' key would've replied only to you Amy.
If I chose to use a mail client without this simple feature,
On Sunday 31 October 2004 09:24 am, Anne Wilson wrote:
On Sunday 31 Oct 2004 14:04, Tom Brinkman wrote:
FWIW, I use Kmail and simply tapped the 'L' key to reply to
the list. The 'R' key would've replied only to you Amy. If I
chose to use a mail client without this simple feature,
I do sort my mail into folders but I don't have the list parameter
set, and the L key works just fine. (KMail 1.5.4 under KDE 3.1.4)
I think all the good mailers grab info from headers like this:
List-Post: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
eric
--
Mandrake HowTo's More:
My friend was actually ranting on and on about the whole being lazy
and the list messing with the reply-to field, and things of that
nature, then eventually threw this link at me explaining why we
shouldn't be worrying about it in the first place because we should
have the reply-to set for the
On Saturday 30 October 2004 16:43, Amy wrote:
Hey everyone!
I've noticed a lot of people have been complaining about the reply-to
address issue with gmail. I think I've fixed it on mine. If gmail
users go into settings, there are two options for the reply-to, their
gmail address, and a
On Saturday 30 October 2004 22:43, Amy wrote:
Hey everyone!
I've noticed a lot of people have been complaining about the reply-to
address issue with gmail. I think I've fixed it on mine. If gmail
users go into settings, there are two options for the reply-to, their
gmail address, and a blank
On Sat, 30 Oct 2004 13:43:32 -0700, Amy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've noticed a lot of people have been complaining about the reply-to
address issue with gmail. I think I've fixed it on mine. If gmail
users go into settings, there are two options for the reply-to, their
gmail address, and a
Then I suppose it's time to bug the gmail team. Very weird though,
considering it's let me select a blank field for the replyto address.
Oh well, I'll bug them about it now. Thanks for checking for me
though. ^_^
On Sat, 30 Oct 2004 16:46:40 -0400, et [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Saturday 30
On Sat, 30 Oct 2004 13:43:32 -0700, Amy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've noticed a lot of people have been complaining about the reply-to
address issue with gmail. I think I've fixed it on mine. If gmail
users go into settings, there are two options for the reply-to, their
gmail address, and a
Okay guys, I just submitted a feature request for the option of
disabling the reply-to. If those of you using gmail haven't already
done so, could you do that too? If we bug them about it enough, maybe
they'll fix it!
Want to buy your Pack or
On Sat, 30 Oct 2004 13:43:32 -0700
Amy disseminated the following:
I've noticed a lot of people have been complaining about the reply-to
address issue with gmail.
Looks like you may have a lot more to complain about.
Webmail is not a Good Thing. I don't know what Google was thinking.
On Tue, Oct 26, 2004 at 11:16:40PM +0800, frankieh wrote:
Todd Slater wrote:
I am hosting a few sites for friends that need cgi access. I read
something about cgi scripts shouldn't be in the web document root for
security purposes--people being able to read them as text. I turned on
cgi by
Todd Slater wrote:
I am hosting a few sites for friends that need cgi access. I read
something about cgi scripts shouldn't be in the web document root for
security purposes--people being able to read them as text. I turned on
cgi by adding the ExecCGI in Directory /home/*/public_html which if I
On Saturday 23 Oct 2004 12:27, Erylon Hines wrote:
I just put them in my missed_spam folder and run an sa-learn on them (I
use spamassassin as my spam filter). After I did that a few times, 90+% of
them are tagged as spam and go to the trash. Worked for those bounced
virus messages from mail
On Saturday 23 October 2004 01:40 am, Graham Watkins wrote:
| Hi guys,
|
| This past week or so, I have been mailed a number of virus attachments.
| Usually with only a smiley face in the message body. These have caused
| no problem as they are Windows viruses (viri?) and I only ever download
| my
On Tue, 2004-09-28 at 22:35, Todd Slater wrote:
Anyone on the list use a Mac with OSX? I'm about to get one at
work and was wondering how easy it is to use the FreeBSD under
the hood--such as for installing apps I'm accustomed to like
vcdimager, instiki, and others.
Todd
Laura just got an
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