On Friday 25 January 2008 15:08:57 Carlos E. R. wrote:
> The Friday 2008-01-25 at 14:03 -0800, Jim Cunning wrote:
[...]
> > However, it may not be possible to copy his public key to the "'remote'
> > router with embedded" (linux?). Carlos didn't say what
On Friday 25 January 2008 13:25:25 Ken Schneider wrote:
> Hans Witvliet pecked at the keyboard and wrote:
> > On Fri, 2008-01-25 at 14:12 +0100, Carlos E. R. wrote:
[...]
> >> I want to enter an ssh session without having to type the password (to
> >> be used by a script). The "remote" is a router
e include file:
articles: :include:/etc/articles.users,\articles
It isn't necessary to use the :include method. For example,
joe:[EMAIL PROTECTED],[EMAIL PROTECTED],\joe
would deliver one arriving message to two external addresses plus the local
mailbox for joe.
Ji
have multiple screen sessions open on a single konsole window, one
visible at a time. You can even open a screen session on a virtual console
of a machine not running X at all, and then view that session inside a KDE
konsole from some arbitrary remote system (provided you can get in, say w
:usb1, ehci_hcd:usb2,
ohci_hcd:usb3
19: 19850 IO-APIC-fasteoi eth0
21: 28041 IO-APIC-fasteoi acpi, bcm43xx
NMI: 0
LOC: 150095
ERR: 0
MIS: 0
Anyone seen this problem or have any suggestions on where to look?
Thanks,
Jim Cunning
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On Wednesday 16 January 2008 20:19:57 David C. Rankin wrote:
> Listmates,
>
> Someone more clever than I must surely have solved this. How can I set
> through .bashrc or some other more secure way, the ability to alias "su"
> with its password so I don't have to type my root password every ti
On Wednesday 16 January 2008 13:28:20 Linda Walsh wrote:
> I'm looking at (and have been resisting the change) in xinet.conf two
> different ways of doing its "configuration".
>
> The can be summed up (using neutral terms) as "Way-A (WA) and "Way-B"
> (WB) and "Way-C".
>
> In WA, we have something
On Tuesday 08 January 2008 12:00:14 Carlos E. R. wrote:
> Ok, whatever you name them, the significance is that /usr is mounted
> separately above, as 'df' shows :-)
>
> > If you cannot mount /usr, then you get a mount failure. Depending on the
> > machine, one could a console message, or one just
0:58 -0500
From: Aaron Kulkis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<...>
Jim Cunning
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On Friday 14 December 2007 21:57:33 Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) wrote:
> Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) wrote:
> Tnx for all the replies, especially James and Brad.
>
> Cloning is the word I was looking for but it certainly seems that XDMCP
> looks like what I need as then I do not even have to have a dual
Good day all,
I recently updaded my laptop from 10.1 to 10.3, and then in Yast selected the
eclipse RPMs: eclipse-archdep-platform and eclipse-archdep-platform-commons
After installation, there is no "eclipse*" in the path, and nothing visible in
the KDE start menus. When I enter "/usr/share/ec
On Tuesday 23 October 2007 21:39:09 Robert Smits wrote:
> I have a number of systems I'd like to regularly back up with rsync. Let me
> describe them.
>
>
> Computer 1 is my main desktop at home. It runs 24-7 and has a 500 GB USB
> SATA drive to do back ups on. It uses OpenSuse 10.2. It is networke
On Tuesday 23 October 2007 14:43:40 ianseeks wrote:
> On Tuesday 23 Oct 2007, Carlos E. R. wrote:
> > The Tuesday 2007-10-23 at 22:02 +0100, ianseeks wrote:
[...]
> > Nobody is expecting you to scan all of your previous
> > email. You are expeted to DELETE all that unneeded text before you write
>
I was looking recently at my laptop music collection under amarok, mostly .ogg
files I have ripped and encoded from my own CDs, and discovered MP3 tracks
for two complete albums that I don't own. The file dates are within the last
month. I don't often visit music sites and don't remember downl
On Wednesday 09 May 2007 11:45:11 Carlos E. R. wrote:
> The Wednesday 2007-05-09 at 20:35 +0200, Caisa Persdotter wrote:
> > Thanks, but it still gives the same message. I've tried to run
> > ./configure in several directories with untared soursces but get the
> > same result. It worked fine before
On Monday 16 April 2007 15:54, Alexey Eremenko wrote:
[...]
> P.S. How to spell "errorously" word correctly in the case above?
Since no one has given you the answer, it is:
erroneously
Compliments to you for wanting to spell the word correctly, something many
native speakers don't bother to
On Wednesday 07 March 2007 21:01, Randall R Schulz wrote:
> On Wednesday 07 March 2007 19:41, Fred A. Miller wrote:
> > On Wednesday 07 March 2007 7:44:05 pm Randall R Schulz wrote:
> > > On Wednesday 07 March 2007 16:31, Fred A. Miller wrote:
> > > > On Wednesday 07 March 2007 12:57:09 pm Anders J
On Wednesday 07 March 2007 16:31, Fred A. Miller wrote:
> On Wednesday 07 March 2007 12:57:09 pm Anders Johansson wrote:
> > On Wednesday 07 March 2007 18:47, I wrote:
> > > chmod -R .users /home/
> >
> > Oops, that should of course be
> >
> > chown -R .users /home/
>
> No, it should be:
>
> chown
On Monday 05 February 2007 19:05, Rajko M. wrote:
> On Sunday 04 February 2007 21:27, Charles R. Buchanan wrote:
[...]
> > (I'm not coming to tell you I was holding the ctrl key while using the
> > scroll wheel) :-D
>
> Never too old to learn something :-)
Very interesting. Nonexhaustive, nonscie
On Tuesday 23 January 2007 22:24, Greg Wallace wrote:
[...]
> > This feature of most routers is essential, however,
> >when an ISP requires that packets arriving at the cable modem be from some
> >known (to them) MAC address, often one registered with them when signing
> > up
> >
> >for their servi
of most routers is essential, however,
when an ISP requires that packets arriving at the cable modem be from some
known (to them) MAC address, often one registered with them when signing up
for their service. This way it looks like the original computer NIC is still
connected directly to the modem
On Tuesday 23 January 2007 15:19, Greg Wallace wrote:
> On Tuesday, January 23, 2007 @ 4:22 PM, Jim Cunning wrote:
> >On Tuesday 23 January 2007 13:41, Greg Wallace wrote:
[...]
> >One way to avoid this situation is to use the "Clone MAC Address" function
> >many
On Tuesday 23 January 2007 13:41, Greg Wallace wrote:
[...]
> Well John, I went down to Fry's today and bought a Netgear 4 port router.
> I tried to set it up and it couldn't even connect to my ISP, which is cable
> modem and assigns ip addresses automatically (so how could it fail to get
> the ad
On Friday 05 January 2007 11:38, Mike Noble wrote:
> On Friday 05 January 2007 06:06, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
> > * Paul Abrahams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [01-05-07 00:33]:
> > > I'm trying to send mail through my ISP using sendmail (postfix under
> > > the covers). I have to use sendmail because the a
glimpse. As I
recall it did a pretty good job of preserving the formatting--as much as is
possible with ascii text--and it certainly removed the 'glop'.
Jim Cunning
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nced, only 3 were his, and the
changes (additions) he made were not major.
Jim Cunning
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res two machines and a serial port
or ethernet connection between them. Perhaps more than you wanted to get
into.
See: http://kgdb.linsyssoft.com
Jim Cunning
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On Wednesday 15 November 2006 13:49, BandiPat wrote:
> On Wednesday 15 November 2006 16:36, Jim Cunning wrote:
> > I'm forwarding this message from my sent mailbox to
> > suse-linux-e@suse.com because I cannot get messages accepted by
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
...
> Tha
I'm forwarding this message from my sent mailbox to suse-linux-e@suse.com
because I cannot get messages accepted by [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Jim Cunning
-- Forwarded Message --
Subject: Trouble posting to the new list address
Date: Wednesday 15 November 2006 13:32
From: Jim Cu
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