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Ankit Fadia : The real picture - Forums Linux

Ankit Fadia : The real picture - Forums Linux


Ankit Fadia : The real picture

Posted: 04 Apr 2006 06:29 AM PDT

prabhat_sandy wrote: 

[ Off-topic and badly aimed political ranting deleted. ]

Folks, it's a throwaway Gmail account used by a troll. Killfile him and move
on: send a note to Gmail if you think it's off-charter or deliberate
trolling.


Boot floppy for Knoppix on the hard drive?

Posted: 01 Apr 2006 07:30 PM PST

On Sun 02 Apr 2006 11:20:41a, "Nico Kadel-Garcia" <net>,
wrote:
 

That could have been the problem. Perhaps I'll try one more Knoppix
install. Or maybe I'll see if I can download a newer version of the
Debian. I like what I've seen in the Debian distributions better than
Red Hat, SuSE or Mandrake. The install seems to be "leaner" or
"cleaner" or something.
 

I don't know how yet. But if it works I'd be glad to use it.

Thanks for the response.

--
RonB
"There's a story there...somewhere"

wierlessbelkin

Posted: 01 Apr 2006 04:02 PM PST

Bill Davidsen wrote: 
Hi Bill I have just run iwconfig it has come up with wlan0 IEEE
802.11b ESSID:"Belkin54g" Nickname Linux" mode:managed Frequency:2.462
Ghz Access Point 00:12: bf :04: 4d: 25 then my encryption key
followed by security mode:open Power management :off
Link quality 100/100 nwid:0 Rx invalid crypt:0 Rx invalid frag:0 Tx
excessive reties:0 Invalid misc:9 Missed Becon :0
I am using a DHCP can you help from this information . Thanks Paul

Can't browse with Konqueror (backward compatibility trouble?)

Posted: 01 Apr 2006 03:12 PM PST

Gaétan Martineau wrote: 

That sounds like the way to go.
 

Yeah, there was. Better kernels, better option handling for KDE, better
support for a broader range of video cards, etc., etc. It really made a
difference in system management and hardware compatibility.


Internal DNS Configuration

Posted: 01 Apr 2006 06:22 AM PST

> > * SMB-HOWTO 

Firstly;
the other two responders are WAY WAY more experienced than I am, in
both Linux and networking...with that said;

Have you installed the GNU/Linux system as a "File Server" ?
I ask (...we have no idea what Linux distribution and/or version you're
using) because when I recently reinstalled Debian Sarge 3.1r1 (kernel
2.4.27-2-686), I *also* chose _File Server_ from the list of options at
some time during the installation (Some of the choices are Desktop
System, File Server, Mail Server, etc). By doing so I was presented
with MANY options about configuring the network and SAMBA specifically,
and all those necessary components were installed.

Just something to chew on

SuSE 10.0 OSS + ip alias and firewall how to?

Posted: 30 Mar 2006 05:22 PM PST

Hi,

On Sat, 01 Apr 2006 09:16:05 -0500, Nico Kadel-Garcia wrote:
 

And serial to ethernet adapters, and firewire, bluethoot and God knows
what more. But the simple and obvious solutions is to make the ethernet
work with two IPs.
In this case I really need just to make the ethernet card work with
two ip's. I really have to hack and remove the susefirewall2 scripts, or
maybe change to Fedora 5 ...


Pedro

FREE Linux ebooks

Posted: 29 Mar 2006 05:58 PM PST

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Hash: SHA1

Daniel :-} wrote: 

[rest deleted]

I'm sorry to say, but there is a very good chance that the materials provided
by this site are stolen. I certainly recognize several texts that I know have
*not* been released by the author or publisher for distribution in this
manner. I would advise anyone thinking of using this service to consider that
they are receiving "stolen" goods, and while most countries do not have laws
that make it illegal for you to download such material, most have laws making
it illegal (and recognizing that, without permission, it is immoral) to make
copyright protected material available in this way.

I have forwarded the original post here on to the author(s) of the books in
question. I'm certain that they will follow this up with the proper
authorities, and the owners of the website will have to answer in court for
their actions.

- --
Lew Pitcher

Master Codewright & JOAT-in-training | GPG public key available on request
Registered Linux User #112576 (http://counter.li.org/)
Slackware - Because I know what I'm doing.
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Basic RAID concerns and Linux OS

Posted: 27 Mar 2006 09:54 AM PST

com wrote: 
I would go out and buy an external enclosure with a few drives and
backup right now.

Then buy the "mdadm" book for education on how it all works. You might
also learn about RAID-6 storage, it will survive the failure of any two
drives, like RAID-10, but needs far fewer drives. For data on N drives,
R10 needs 2*(N+1) and R6 needs N+2. You want a hot spare with either,
and RAID-10 performs better after a two drive failure.

Start climbing the learning curve, people on the net can only provide
places to look.

--
bill davidsen
SBC/Prodigy Yorktown Heights NY data center
http://newsgroups.news.prodigy.com