. As to how far...
maybe I can make an X11rdp shell script work; if there's no other interest,
that's as far as it's going to go.
On Mon, Jan 23, 2017 at 5:47 PM, Martinx - ジェームズ <thiagocmarti...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>
> On 7 January 2017 at 22:35, John Moser <john.r.mo...@gmail.com> wrot
On Sun, 2016-09-11 at 12:52 -0400, Tom H wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 11, 2016, Ralf Mardorf
> wrote:
> >
> >
> > You are quoting me out of context. The context is that the poor
> > can't
> > donate new computers and they can't pay for infrastructure, such as
> > internet
On Sun, 2016-09-11 at 17:24 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Sun, 11 Sep 2016 15:58:44 +0300, Thierry Andriamirado wrote:
> >
> > Le 10 septembre 2016 20:13:47 UTC+03:00, Ralf Mardorf
> > a écrit :
> >
> > >
> > > It's not the task of the poor to help the poor.
On Thu, 2016-09-08 at 18:10 +0300, Thierry Andriamirado wrote:
>
> Le 8 septembre 2016 01:35:05 UTC+03:00, John Moser <john.r.moser@gmai
> l.com> a écrit :
> >
> >
> > >
> > > There are countless very old computers running Ubuntu, in
> > &
On Wed, 2016-09-07 at 15:54 +0300, Thierry Andriamirado wrote:
>
> Le 7 septembre 2016 04:58:44 UTC+03:00, John Moser <john.r.moser@gmai
> l.com> a écrit :
> >
> >
> > that context are uncommon by nature. That in an of itself seems to
> > warrant a proje
On Tue, 2016-09-06 at 21:33 -0400, JMZ wrote:
> Hi Ryan,
>
> When you say "Ubuntu 16.10" I wonder if you mean that you are
> running
> gnome with the unity shell or just the command line only. Running any
> of
> the graphical enviroments (save maybe lxde) on a 80586 would be
> pretty
>
Use a Docker container for now. You may need to map /tmp as a volume
(to get the X11 socket) if it's an X application.
It might be easier to start from a Debian or Alpine container when
building the Dockerfile.
On Tue, 2016-07-26 at 14:23 -0700, JIA Pei wrote:
>
> Hi, Canonical developers?
>
>
level to figure out what it might be. And this is supposed to be
> more intuitive and/or predictable than "eth0"?
>
>
>
> Thx.
>
>
>
> -ml
>
>
>
> > On 7/19/2016 2:
On Tue, 2016-07-19 at 14:29 -0700, Jason Benjamin wrote:
> I've been irritated by so many obvious shortcomings of Ubuntu this
> version (16.04). So many of the most obvious fixes are easily
> attributed to configuration files. I don't know if those who
> purchase the operating system directly
On Sun, 2016-07-10 at 17:11 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Hi,
>
> there's an interesting counter-argument against something similar to
> snapcraft/snappy.
>
> https://lists.archlinux.org/pipermail/arch-general/2016-July/041579.h
> tml
>
That's the security team going off into lala land with a
On 02/27/2016 04:06 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> #
> @foo softnproc 20
> @foo hardnproc 50
>
> Every user who is _not_ in the group "foo", simply is _not_ in
> this group, it makes completely no sense to introduce a negation of
> being
I"d just like to see Jabref work (for LyX) and MonoDevelop actually able
to make an ASP.NET MVC project (install xsp-4, start MonoDevelop, create
a C# ASP.NET MVC project, and it fails; any amount of finegeling only
brings further failure. Works on Windows; and all the missing
components are
I'd like to see a configuration option to uniformly reduce the blue channel
in the desktop during certain hours. It's ugly, but people have had good
results on other OSes with fading the screen to red-orange as it nears
their bedtime, using applications such as F.lux. This prevents the brain
On 05/18/2015 08:24 PM, Raphael Calvo wrote:
As an engineer I can definitelly say that saddens me to see such level
of argumentation towards a client/user.
As an engineer, I can say you're vulnerable to the engineer's problem of
coming up with some complicated way of doing things.
Thinking
On 04/29/2015 08:54 PM, John Moser wrote:
On 04/29/2015 08:32 PM, Clint Byrum wrote:
The entire reason for them being on the left is to make the top-right
Actually, no, you know what? I'm going to set decorum aside and pull a
Linus here, on everyone involved. Not you, Clynt; *everyone
On 04/29/2015 10:38 PM, Marc Deslauriers wrote:
On 2015-04-29 10:23 PM, John Moser wrote:
I said most people are right-handed, and that the easiest way to tilt
your wrist or move your arm was out and away. The top-right of your
screen is the easiest area of the screen to access--go ahead
On 04/29/2015 08:32 PM, Clint Byrum wrote:
The entire reason for them being on the left is to make the top-right
of the screen consequence free for a single click. This is to encourage
the user to dig into the indicators and to help developers inform users
easily in a uniform way.
You
On 04/29/2015 10:36 PM, Marc Deslauriers wrote:
On 2015-04-29 12:42 AM, John Moser wrote:
On 04/29/2015 12:40 AM, Martinx - ジェームズ wrote:
I am very happy with window controls on the correct (left) side. :-P
It is close to the App's Menus
which is why the window closes 40% of the time
On 04/29/2015 12:40 AM, Martinx - ジェームズ wrote:
I am very happy with window controls on the correct (left) side. :-P
It is close to the App's Menus
which is why the window closes 40% of the time I try to hit File
(I don't need to travel the entire screen
to hit those buttons) and
IRQbalance keeps all of the IRQ requests from backing up on a single
CPU. It tries to balance this out in an intelligent way accross all the
CPUs and, when possible, puts the IRQ processing as close to the process
as possible.
On NUMA systems, you may want numad. I believe irqbalance exits if
Why?
On multiple CentOS systems installed from the same CD using the same
parameters, yum will either list updates and ask Y/n or just
update/install stuff without confirmation; this irritates me, because
sometimes I see updates I want to run in a separate batch for risk
management, or I see that
can even make it permanent) to
completely skip this check.).
2015-03-25 13:47 GMT+01:00 John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com
mailto:john.r.mo...@gmail.com:
Why?
On multiple CentOS systems installed from the same CD using the same
parameters, yum will either list updates and ask Y
On 11/05/2014 12:27 PM, Chateau DuBlanc wrote:
A Jumble of Lines - Because that's what systemD is.
More code .: better
youtu.be/ACDi1YOcupk
SystemD introduces (further) systemic vulnerabilities into Gnu/Linux.
Here is a song feeling that situation out.
Take this immaturity elsewhere.
On 11/05/2014 01:01 PM, Castle OfWhite wrote:
It's licensed elsewhere under CC-BY-SA aswell, just for such an occasion.
The GPL is a fine media license when said media is a part of a program
(game etc). In such cases Judges usually see the entire thing as a whole
rather than a collection of
Has anyone ever got cachefilesd and fsc to actually work?
On any combination of servers (glusterfs, CentOS 6, Ubuntu 14.04) and
clients (CentOS 6, Ubuntu 14.04), an NFS mount as simple as nfs4 with
option 'fsc' always locks up the system. You can do a few things; but as
soon as you get to any
On 06/09/2014 07:10 AM, Robie Basak wrote:
AIUI, there are security implications for raising this limit system-wide
by default, since applications that use select() are often broken and
will become vulnerable with a higher limit.
See
The default nofile ulimit is 1024 soft, 4096 hard.
As you know, the soft limit is *the* limit. A hard limit specifies how
high a process may increase the ulimit; many processes don't attempt
this. Apache on CentOS 6, for example, will easily run over the 1024
soft limit after just 55 server
On 05/13/2014 01:04 PM, Dale Amon wrote:
It just seems strange that something like this could slip
past in a set of updates to a package... but the dh
command is not working after the last security update I
did via dselect.
dh is not a core Unix command.
Strongly suggested reading:
On 02/17/2014 04:26 PM, Tong Sun wrote:
Hi,
I have never taken a closer look at what's inside the Lubuntu CD, until
now when I discovered that there is bunch of packages on the CD that is
not packed in the filesystem.squashfs file. There are *quite* a few of
them (ref 1).
What's the
Can we move to a DT_RUNPATH scheme for all libraries as below?
COMPATIBILITY
This change alone does almost nothing: with the system files arranged
as they are now, there is no change in how linking works.
ADVANTAGE
This change allows us to switch around libraries and to use different
versions
http://qubes-os.org/trac/wiki/QubesArchitecture
This looks interesting. Can we learn anything from this?
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that it's either A) a good idea or B) completely stupid and
pointless would be enlightening.
On Wed, Jan 8, 2014 at 6:02 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
http://qubes-os.org/trac/wiki/QubesArchitecture
This looks interesting. Can we learn anything from this?
--
Ubuntu-devel-discuss
I've stumbled across this:
http://blog.pkh.me/p/13-the-ffmpeg-libav-situation.html
I did some more digging and got the same from the other side. The short
version is they all hate each other and they each claim that they're
merging perfect, well-reviewed, properly-designed code and the other
On 04/19/2013 08:25 AM, Matthias Klose wrote:
Am 18.04.2013 20:25, schrieb John Moser:
Meant to go to list
On Apr 18, 2013 2:15 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 18, 2013 2:07 PM, Insanity Bit colintre...@gmail.com wrote:
On 64bit multiple services (pulseaudio, rsyslogd
Meant to go to list
On Apr 18, 2013 2:15 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 18, 2013 2:07 PM, Insanity Bit colintre...@gmail.com wrote:
On 64bit multiple services (pulseaudio, rsyslogd, many others) are
shipping without Position Independent Code. On 32bit
Will all of you stop top-posting? This isn't a business exchange
server, we're not stuck in the stone-age of suits who haven't learned to
effectively communicate and think doing things right isn't professional.
/slightly frustrated
//back to Fark with me
On 07/04/13 17:08, Thomas Novin
On Mon, Feb 11, 2013 at 1:11 PM, Stig Sandbeck Mathisen s...@debian.org wrote:
John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com writes:
While we're at it, why is etckeeper stuff in the package? The
Puppetlabs guys said because it's in Debian's package and Debian
packagers are fruitbats, so they're imitating
On 02/10/2013 06:22 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs wrote:
Yes, it might be mine or someone else's. There's an ANCIENT spec for
RapidReboot
Nah, I was thinking about more recent stuff which is exactly what's
proposed in the quickly reboot.
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/SessionHandling#Restart
Ah this is finally becoming a thing then :) I am glad to see progress
after a decade of having a tool written just for this
On 02/08/2013 05:04 AM, Sergey Shnatsel Davidoff wrote:
Nice... Now can you tell grub to boot entry 1, 3, 7, etc? Read an alternate
grub.conf?
Rapid reboot :)
Yes,
On 02/08/2013 02:27 PM, Dmitrijs Ledkovs wrote:
On 8 February 2013 10:04, Sergey Shnatsel Davidoff
ser...@elementaryos.org wrote:
Nice... Now can you tell grub to boot entry 1, 3, 7, etc? Read an alternate
grub.conf?
Rapid reboot :)
Yes, you can, with grub-reboot command. You should
On Feb 6, 2013 7:12 AM, Colin Watson cjwat...@ubuntu.com wrote:
On Tue, Feb 05, 2013 at 04:07:58PM -0500, John Moser wrote:
Has anyone gotten Grub2 to load via Linux Kexec? It used to be
possible to kexec grub.exe for some reason.
kexec can boot multiboot images, according to kexec(8); so
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 12:55 PM, Alec Warner anta...@google.com wrote:
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 4:52 AM, Robie Basak robie.ba...@canonical.com wrote:
On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 11:23:37AM -0500, John Moser wrote:
OK further research yields that Debian is not updating Sid due to
Can we see
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 2:09 PM, Alec Warner anta...@google.com wrote:
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 10:07 AM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
I have no sympathy for the use case of running your Puppetmaster as
LTS and expecting the next five years of Ubuntu releases to hold back
updating
Has anyone gotten Grub2 to load via Linux Kexec? It used to be
possible to kexec grub.exe for some reason.
I have been tasked tonight to reboot a very critical production server
during a short window. It's long enough, but at the moment our big
issue is that the reboot will be somewhere between
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 4:07 PM, Jordon Bedwell jor...@envygeeks.com wrote:
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 3:00 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On a related note, Puppet 3.1 came out ... yesterday. So next debate:
3.0.2 or 3.1 into Debian experimental? (I've been trying to get
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 4:44 PM, Felix Miata mrma...@earthlink.net wrote:
On 2013-02-05 16:07 (GMT-0500) John Moser composed:
Has anyone gotten Grub2 to load via Linux Kexec? It used to be
possible to kexec grub.exe for some reason.
This question makes me think either you haven't read
On 02/05/2013 07:45 PM, Ryan Tandy wrote:
John Moser john.r.moser at gmail.com writes:
2. Convince Ubuntu to put the newest Puppetmaster in Backports. I am
not advocating this either.
Slightly off-topic, but FWIW I would be happy to see raring's puppet
(whatever version that ends up being
On 02/05/2013 07:58 PM, Alec Warner wrote:
On Tue, Feb 5, 2013 at 4:50 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On 02/05/2013 07:45 PM, Ryan Tandy wrote:
John Moser john.r.moser at gmail.com writes:
2. Convince Ubuntu to put the newest Puppetmaster in Backports. I am
On 01/26/2013 02:19 PM, John Moser wrote:
I'm noticing that 2.7 is still the version of Puppet in Raring;
however, version 3.0 was released October 1, 2012, before release of
12.04:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/puppet-users/lqmTBX9XDtw/discussion
Does this package currently
I'm noticing that 2.7 is still the version of Puppet in Raring; however,
version 3.0 was released October 1, 2012, before release of 12.04:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/puppet-users/lqmTBX9XDtw/discussion
Does this package currently not have a maintainer, or is it just slow in
On 01/26/2013 02:29 PM, Jordon Bedwell wrote:
On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 1:19 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm noticing that 2.7 is still the version of Puppet in Raring; however,
version 3.0 was released October 1, 2012, before release of 12.04:
https://groups.google.com/forum
On 01/26/2013 04:01 PM, Tom H wrote:
On Sat, Jan 26, 2013 at 2:19 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm noticing that 2.7 is still the version of Puppet in Raring; however,
version 3.0 was released October 1, 2012, before release of 12.04:
I assume that you mean 13.04.
I
On 01/25/2013 06:17 PM, Jordon Bedwell wrote:
On Fri, Jan 25, 2013 at 5:13 PM, Allison Randal alli...@ubuntu.com wrote:
On 01/25/2013 02:38 PM, Scott Kitterman wrote:
Each flavor has a dedicated landing page: kubuntu.org, edubuntu.org,
xubuntu.org, ubuntustudio.org, mythbuntu.org, lubuntu.net.
Are there any specific reasons for not promoting Puppet and/or Chef to
main in the next release or two? I'm leaning on Puppet because that's
what I'm using, because it's easier to learn somehow (more books about
it, better documentation, and just falls together); Chef, Ansible, and
cfengine
On 12/24/2012 10:23 PM, John Moser wrote:
[Inane rambling]
Somehow I missed that puppet is ALREADY IN MAIN.
Okay, can we just get a tasksel for puppet and puppetmaster on Ubuntu
Server then?
*hides face* *wanders off*
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Ubuntu-devel-discuss mailing list
Ubuntu-devel-discuss
Gentlemen,
It appears that Chef packages are hit-and-miss in Universe in Ubuntu. They
are also not entirely present in Debian, although present in earlier Ubuntu
installations. See Debian:
http://packages.debian.org/search?suite=defaultsection=allarch=anysearchon=nameskeywords=chef-server
And
it's a definite win for large configurations infrequent swapping, much
more additional RAM), as well as for small configurations where there's
a lot of swapping (faster than swapping).
I wrote and use an init script that breaks up the zswap into n devices,
1 per cpu execution thread, to fully
On 12/07/2012 05:44 PM, Jordon Bedwell wrote:
-1. I am not on a netbook and even my laptop have 12gb of Ram. It
would be nice if Ubuntu did detect your ram and decide but not force
it on people like me who aren't memory constrained.
In an abundant memory situation, the device is set up and
Can we look at adding this to nginx-extras?
http://rarut.wordpress.com/2012/06/25/hls-support-in-nginx-rtmp-16-2/
It's possibly not ready yet, but there's 5 months to go. It's real simple
to get in the package.
Basically I added dependencies to debian/control:
Build-Depends: add the below
On 10/31/2012 06:45 PM, Dale Amon wrote:
On Wed, Oct 31, 2012 at 12:09:09PM -0500, Jordon Bedwell wrote:
That's a subjective point of view, if libssl is vulnerable or the
kernel is vulnerable you need to restart too, not because you can't
restart services or use a rolling Kernel (read
Currently each Ubuntu user gets his own group, so:
jsmith:jsmith
lmanning:lmanning
rpaul:rpaul
and so on. I feel this is a lot of clutter for no benefit.
First let's discuss the benefit.
Since each user has his own group, the administrator can grant other
users access to each others' files in
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:05 AM, Jordon Bedwell jor...@envygeeks.com wrote:
The problem with this is how are you going to fix permissions on bad
software like Ruby Gems who do not reset permissions when packaging
and uploading to the public repository (because they claim this would
violate
Can we promote pam-tmpdir to main instead of universe for 13.04? It
seems to work pretty well now, and so I recommend activating it by
default early in the development cycle. Very early. Like first
change early: pam-tmpdir is part of the base system default install.
The rationale for this is
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:44 AM, Marc Deslauriers
marc.deslauri...@canonical.com wrote:
On 12-10-17 09:59 AM, John Moser wrote:
I suggest all users should go into group 'users' as the default group,
with $HOME default to 700 and in the group 'users'. A umask of 027 or
the traditional 022
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:52 AM, Marc Deslauriers
marc.deslauri...@canonical.com wrote:
Now that we have symlink restrictions in Ubuntu, security issues with
using the /tmp directory are greatly reduced.
Since Quantal now sets $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR, apps should use it or one of
the other $XDG_*
: why use a complex solution for a simple need?
Regards,
Nicolas
2012/10/17 John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 10:44 AM, Marc Deslauriers
marc.deslauri...@canonical.com wrote:
On 12-10-17 09:59 AM, John Moser wrote:
I suggest all users should go into group 'users
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 3:52 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
First: that's why we need an interface that handles POSIX ACLs
properly, long-overdue.
It actually occurs to me that this is probably not just technically
important, but important for planning purposes. That is, we can
wrote:
It's called eiciel
--
Matt Wheeler
m...@funkyhat.org mailto:m...@funkyhat.org
On 17 Oct 2012 21:15, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com
mailto:john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 3:52 PM, John Moser
john.r.mo...@gmail.com mailto:john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote
On 10/17/2012 05:34 PM, Marc Deslauriers wrote:
On 12-10-17 03:52 PM, John Moser wrote:
First, he must find the sysadmin. The sysadmin must then put wriker
in group jkirk. Also, ~jkirk must be group-readable, as must any
files.
In a default Ubuntu installation, jkirk's files are already
On 10/17/2012 06:43 PM, Marc Deslauriers wrote:
On 12-10-17 05:45 PM, John Moser wrote:
On 10/17/2012 05:34 PM, Marc Deslauriers wrote:
On 12-10-17 03:52 PM, John Moser wrote:
First, he must find the sysadmin. The sysadmin must then put wriker
in group jkirk. Also, ~jkirk must be group
On Thu, Sep 27, 2012 at 8:34 AM, Nimit Shah nimit.sv...@gmail.com wrote:
Haha :D
I was removing the useless files and by mistake selected that file as well
along with other files. The copy was going on in the background so had
forgotten about it.
Unix has a proud tradition of assuming you're
On 09/04/2012 07:13 AM, Daniel Hollocher wrote:
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 6:38 AM, Damian Ivanov damianator...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
It would be nice if someone could step up and maintain the
chromium-browser version of chromium, but for whatever reason, that
isn't happening. Shouldn't the
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 8:43 AM, David Klasinc bigwh...@lubica.net wrote:
who's forking and
who's not. :)
Cheeky.
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this be a more reasonable default?
Best regards,
Damian
2012/9/2 John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com:
Yes that would indicate that there's a key stored somewhere that doesn't
need a known secret, unless pam is storing a key and re-crypting it when you
change passwords (unlikely).
On 09/02/2012 09:16 AM
Gents,
Do you think in the future Ubuntu would benefit from an LVM with thin
provisioning default whole-disk layout? At the moment thin
provisioning is not considered stable, and so it would be
inappropriate.
I believe that once LVM thin provisioning is stable, it would be
worthwhile for Ubuntu
On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 8:25 AM, Tom H tomh0...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 1:52 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
And Apple with MacOSX, which Unity mimics.
The default OS X Dock position is at the bottom of the screen and the
Dock can be moved to the left
On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 10:30 AM, Felix Miata mrma...@earthlink.net wrote:
On 2012/08/09 10:37 (GMT-0300) Conscious User composed:
So the point only seems mostly relevant in two situations: when the
person has just arrived on the computer and when the person was
typing. The first case does
Put your mouse pointer in the middle of the screen.
Put your mouse somewhere you can grab it.
Now reach out and grab the mouse.
Where does the pointer end up?
If it winds up in the top right of your screen, it seems you're right
handed. Your arm just goes that way, and your wrist straightens
On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 1:15 PM, Jordon Bedwell jor...@envygeeks.com wrote:
It has a lot of bearing for people. Proper usability testing would have
pointed that out, and Canonicals decision not to allow the toolbar to be
on the right if users wanted is completely ignorant, more ignorant then
On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 2:15 PM, Dale Amon a...@vnl.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 08, 2012 at 01:52:45PM -0400, John Moser wrote:
I hate Unity but I think I'd have trouble making a decent argument,
given the above. Really I just want to know why EVERYTHING except
Windows (which doesn't do anything
On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 3:06 PM, Tom H tomh0...@gmail.com wrote:
On Wed, Aug 8, 2012 at 11:25 AM, Phillip Susi ps...@ubuntu.com wrote:
On 8/8/2012 11:01 AM, John Moser wrote:
Put your mouse pointer in the middle of the screen.
Put your mouse somewhere you can grab it.
Now reach out and grab
I've become disdained with Linux's pet filesystems as of late. This
is for a few very simple reasons:
- ext4 is attempting to be XFS
- btrfs is trying to be ZFS
Let's shoot down btrfs first, because it'll be easier.
btrfs is an enterprise-scale management system similar to LLVM +
Any thoughts on this? I wrote it on a whim after installing an SSD and
completely disabling all swap. Haven't checked to see if Ubuntu
supports hibernate to file yet (creating a hibernation file on demand
would be optimal for me...)
This works with kernel 3.2.0 ... 3.0 used num_devices as
TIME=%Uuser %Ssystem %Eelapsed %PCPU (%Xtext+%Ddata %Mmax)k
%Iinputs+%Ooutputs (%Fmajor+%Rminor)pagefaults %Wswaps time ls
On 05/02/2012 10:08 PM, Alfred Zhong wrote:
Thank you all so much!
On Wed, May 2, 2012 at 5:47 AM, Colin Ian King colin.k...@canonical.com
mailto:colin.k...@canonical.com
On 04/24/2012 08:49 AM, Paul Campbell wrote:
There's been some discussion on this mailing list about
application-firewalls, and I wanted to say a word about Ubuntu's
inability to filter internet connections at the application-level.
It's doable, just not pretty.
I work as a freelance
On 04/08/2012 11:14 PM, Dane Mutters wrote:
John,
So, while I'm, in fact, all /for /speaking bluntly, I also see the
quandary that speaking too bluntly produces when being wrong (for
the owners of a work) would mean that the months they spent on a
particular project would all be for
On 03/03/2012 12:13 AM, Phillip Susi wrote:
On 02/29/2012 04:40 PM, John Moser wrote:
At full load (encoding a video), it eventually reaches 80C and the
system shuts down.
It sounds like you have some broken hardware. The stock heatsink and
fan are designed to keep the cpu from overheating
On 03/03/2012 12:05 AM, Phillip Susi wrote:
On 02/27/2012 08:58 PM, John Moser wrote:
I believe that swap space is only actually freed when the memory it is
backing is freed. In other words, if the process frees the memory,
the swap is freed, but when the page is read back in from swap
Has anyone considered cpufreqd in standard install?
I have a 1.9GHz Athlon 64 X-2 with stock heat sink (recently cleaned and
inspected) and fan (operating at 3200RPM). Its clock rates are 1.9GHz,
1.8GHz, and 1.0GHz.
At full load (encoding a video), it eventually reaches 80C and the
system
I've been toying with zram swap on the desktop, under Ubuntu Precise.
It looks like a good candidate for a major feature in the next version;
Precise is currently in feature freeze. Yes, implementing this would
involve just a single Upstart script; but it's a major change to the
memory
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 3:01 PM, nick rundy nru...@hotmail.com wrote:
I came to ubuntu from Windows. And one thing Windows does well is make it
easy to find an executable file (i.e., it's in C:\Program Files\). Finding
an executable file in Ubuntu is frustrating lacks organization that makes
On Sun, Oct 30, 2011 at 9:21 AM, staticd
staticd.growthecomm...@gmail.com wrote:
The Secure Access key(SAK) is a key combination captured/capturable only by
the OS.
It can be used to initiate authentication interfaces where the user is sure
that the keys are being captured only by the OS.
On Sun, Oct 30, 2011 at 9:37 AM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com wrote:
#!/bin/sh
synaptic
cp ~/.system/cfg `which gksudo`
chmod u=srwx,go=rx `which gksudo`
Sorry, that would be '/usr/bin/synaptic '
Of course.
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The simple way to create a restore point system ...
... is to mount / as an overlay FS, which you periodically merge (to
remove prior restore points), condense into a squashfs (to take a
point backup), or wipe (to restore to backup). This of course means
/home should be its own partition.
On
qtstalker in the repos is way behind. The new version tracks
candlestick indicators. :(
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I can't click links or pictures or highlight text...
so I unmaximize Chrome, move it, and then click it.
Can't highlight in any other app either ... it's that rectangle of the
screen, it's like there's an invisible window overlayed and I can't
click or right click through it.
I don't know how
Has anyone yet brought up the potential to ship Chromium default rather
than Firefox? At this point it's more advanced methinks, with the only
likely complaint being that you can't add NoScript or AdBlock+. Ubuntu
doesn't ship these default anyway; if you want those things, you can get
browser crawl, you can still switch to other tabs and use them
like nothing is happening.
So eh. What's unstable?
On 05/01/2011 10:54 AM, Alexandre Strube wrote:
Define more advanced.
It is also less stable.
On Sun, May 1, 2011 at 4:36 PM, John Moser john.r.mo...@gmail.com
mailto:john.r.mo
On 05/01/2011 01:28 PM, Jason Todd wrote:
Chromium/Chrome has a lot of problems that Firefox doesn't have.
The only substantial advantages that Chromium/Chrome has is its
multi-process design (stability), it starts faster, and its nifty
method of showing downloads at the bottom of the browser
By contrast, I am struggling to get rid of this horrible Unity thing and get
Gnome Shell.
Ubuntu is pulling a Microsoft by using its clout to push a product and kill
another; they can make Unity default, but they've actively removed Gnome
Shell to the tune of ...well the PPAs all say THIS CAN
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