|   Multimedia codecs     Posted: 18 May 2008 01:49 PM PDT com wrote:
 
 What Linux distribution do you use? Most probably you can find a guide
 specific for your distro - or somebody here can tell you.
 
 It's a lot easier if you use the tools specific to your distro, not some
 generic, outdated guides.
 
 E.g. for Ubuntu have a look at <https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Medibuntu>.
 
 
 Michael
 
 | 
    |   DDS-4 tape drive compatiblity     Posted: 18 May 2008 07:06 AM PDT Scott Hemphill wrote: 
 
 I was guessing something like that.  I think you are saying that the
 format is as standardize as say ext3 or fat16.
 
 
 
 
 Thanks, Scott, I'll try that.  So we are expecting/hoping to be able to
 interchange any non-compressed DDS-4 tapes among DDS-4 drives.
 
 I found the following doc which gives a lot of technical detail on the
 Compaq (rebadged Sony) drive.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 I haven't found anything definite yet about DCLZ for the DAT40i.  More
 about that later.
 
 
 | 
    |   CentOS 3.9 installation problem     Posted: 17 May 2008 02:11 AM PDT "F8BOE" <ch> wrote in message
 news:48306bff$0$19976$free.fr...
 
 
 I agree. Why use such an old distro???
 
 
 
 | 
    |   Does rysnc works for this?     Posted: 17 May 2008 02:06 AM PDT On 5$B7n(B18$BF|(B, $B2<8a(B4$B;~(B39$BJ,(B, Nico Kadel-Garcia <com> wrote: 
 Great thanks guys.
 Your help is highly appreciated. I will try all the suggestions.
 Good luck to me. Thx. ^.^
 
 | 
    |   Linux to be embedded in Asus motherboards, offering 3-second startup.     Posted: 16 May 2008 12:12 PM PDT On May 16, 7:18 pm, Leonard The Committed <com>wrote:
 
 
 Keep in mind though that even if Asus provided some source
 code for the built-in Linux, that doesn't mean the object files in
 the motherboard's flash memory correspond. They could
 potentially put spyware in there and you don't know that
 it's truly safe until you inspect the code and more importantly
 compile and install it yourself.
 
 As an example, what if someone at DeviceVM, which makes
 the distro, is highly pro-China and decides to prevent
 the embedded Firefox from loading to a pro-Tibet website?
 
 What's needed really is for Linux partisans to te
 what DeviceVM has done.
 
 
 | 
    |   Fedora 9 | changing login screen?     Posted: 15 May 2008 12:36 PM PDT net wrote: 
 Actually it's Gnome (i.e., the Gnome Project) that doesn't provide the
 option/utility to change the greeter (aka login screen).  Lots of other
 folks have complained about its inflexibility, too.
 
 If you get ambitious, there are some things you can change by editing
 the GConf structures for the gdm user.  Like you can hide the
 reboot/shutdown buttons if you want (and a very few other useless
 things).  As of about a week ago, Gnome added an option to hide the user
 list on the login screen, an excellent improvement that would be nice if
 it came downstream to Fedora.
 
 The best doentation on what you can and cannot do is at www.gnome.org.
 
 | 
    |   32-bit library on 64-bit SUSE 10 system     Posted: 11 May 2008 04:26 AM PDT Darren Salt wrote: 
 Hi Darren, hi Andrew
 
 Thank you both for your help. I checked your proposals and everythink was fine.
 Meanwhile I browsed through some forums and found that I have a memory problem.
 My (1und1) virtual server has very little memory. This makes yast fail. I succeeded in
 using yast by killing unneeded processes. This minimum memory usage made yast
 work. Now I have installed the 32-bit version of openssl and my program is
 completely happy.
 
 Thanks.
 Andreas
 
 
 | 
    |   Linux stopped reading my 2nd HDD - Help!!     Posted: 10 May 2008 03:05 AM PDT DOES KUBUNTU / UBUNTU Linux take care of this problem.It recognizes MTNL internet flawlessly with firefox----- where the
 Debian distribution failed.
 Why don't u run VirtualBox on your Windows XP system until Kubuntu
 comes up.
 
 Erach
 
 
 On May 12, 10:34 am, sridhar <com> wrote:
 
 
 | 
    |   Where do I find a list of repositories?     Posted: 09 May 2008 05:00 PM PDT Thank you!
 "s. keeling" <com> wrote in message
 news:nucleus.com...
 
 
 
 | 
    |   video driver / only low resolution possible?     Posted: 30 Apr 2008 08:59 AM PDT On Fri, 02 May 2008 10:44:53 +0200, Eilko wrote:
 
 You should probably have a file /etc/X11/xorg.conf.  If it exists it can
 be modified slightly to get your higher resolutions.
 
 SubSection     "Display"
 Viewport    0 0
 Depth       24
 Modes      "1280x1024" "1600x1200"
 EndSubSection
 
 If the file does not exist it can be created in a number of ways.  You do
 need to know a few data ahead of time such as the capabilities of your
 monitor.
 
 
 Install a more newcomer-friendly distribution such as Ubuntu.
 
 | 
    |   GRUB or LILO on NTFS?     Posted: 24 Apr 2008 07:13 PM PDT "Kertis Henderson" <com> wrote in message
 news:googlegroups.com...
 
 
 First off, though I know of no way to install grub or lilo on an NTFS
 partition...
 that's *not* where you'd want it to reside.
 
 If you really want to use such a boot loader...you'll need to install it on
 your MBR
 
 
 I never tried it as I'd see no possible use for doing so...
 but you could probably boot from a Linux live cd such as Damn Small Linux
 and install lilo or grub from there.
 
 If you end up trashing your mbr in the process you can
 use the fixmbr command from the repair console
 
 
 
 | 
    |   md5sum     Posted: 24 Apr 2008 03:47 AM PDT On Thu, 24 Apr 2008 15:44:24 +0100, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
 
 Obviously, You did not read the lines: "It is important to note that the
 hash value shared by the two different files is a result of the collision
 construction process. We cannot target a given hash value, and produce a
 (meaningful) input bit string hashing to that given value"
 
 http://www.win.tue.nl/hashclash/SoftIntCodeSign/
 
 
 --
 Regards/mvh     Joachim Mæland
 
 If everything seems under control, you're just not going fast enough.
 -Mario Andretti
 
 | 
    |   2 files, 2 sizes, identical md5sums     Posted: 22 Apr 2008 11:11 AM PDT gamename writes: 
 
 Which means that if you can test a million files a second you will need on
 the order of 10000000000000000000000000 years to find a match.
 --
 John Hasler
 gt.org
 Dancing Horse Hill
 Elmwood, WI USA
 
 | 
    |   Strange mount     Posted: 22 Apr 2008 05:03 AM PDT "Guillaume Dargaud" <gdargaud.net>wrote:
 
 I've seen it but it seemed strange to me.  Have not yet
 had time to look up version differences and why a
 "rootfs" type filesystem appears as an extra mount on
 a few systems I support.
 
 ...
 ...
 ...
 
 | 
    |   How to set ACPI governor?     Posted: 19 Apr 2008 02:43 PM PDT John Hasler wrote: 
 Wait. No. This is not what he stated. And the NSA has a long history of
 casually monitoring civilian traffic, in direct violation of its charter, the
 law, and the constitution. (Look at the warrant-free taps they put on the
 backbones of AT&T, mentioned all over various media including this article:
 http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2006/05/70908. They can, and do,
 monitor at any time and in any way they deem suitable.
 
 Then look at their role in the creation of the Clipper Chip, an encryption
 technology designed to rest the decryption keys in federal hands, and its
 abandonment when it was discovered the chips could be used with unregistered keys.
 
 
 That's a different story. I can easily believe that they, as its authors, are
 aware of a few subtleties not widely published. A backdoor doesn't have to be
 robust, merely buried in many thousands of line of complex code. And it
 doesn't have to be permanent.
 
 This does not mean SELinux is useless, but that it should be viewed with a
 very cautious eye, considering its source.
 
 
 Again, no. He didn't say this. Please don't extrapolate his thoughts into
 complete nonsense: while SELinux has been widely used and reasonably reviewed,
 it deserves careful and justified distrust of its source.
 
 
 Now, you're just trolling.
 
 | 
    |   beginning     Posted: 19 Apr 2008 04:08 AM PDT Thank you all for the tips on linux and newsgroups!
 The reason I've posted the same questions is that I wasn't sure where to get
 the right answer, as I've just subscribed. I would not do the same thing
 now.
 
 "Allodoxaphobia" <com> wrote in message
 news:config.com...
 
 
 
 | 
    |   Debian's Kernel 2.6.24 and future versions: Use amd64 or 686?     Posted: 18 Apr 2008 04:00 PM PDT Meat Plow <net> writes:
 
 Or you could not bother and compare the config files that ship with the
 bespoke debian kernels. You will find little difference.
 
 You would be far more interested in "standard" kernel stability and
 performance than some optimised mish mash assuming you want to
 use it on your desktop.
 
 Clearly if you have very specialised needs then the above might not be
 so valid. I know that whenever I have compiled my own there is very,
 very little difference in performance and one of the only times I would
 consider it would be for very specialised HW situations where I know I
 can leave out 90% of the default drivers.
 
 
 
 | 
    |   linux server setup - in the deep end     Posted: 16 Apr 2008 11:50 PM PDT In comp.os.linux.setup Keith Keller <san-francisco.ca.us>: [..]
 
 
 Seconded! I'd also look into http://www.ltsp.org/ a halfway
 reasonable server could easily serve +300 students with thin
 clients and save tons of money + time for administrative
 purposes.
 
 You can run an extra citrix server for some software needing M$,
 though most things can be done with Linux apps. You might want to
 run the citrix client on the thin clients to save the server some
 horse power and speed things up.
 
 --
 Michael Heiming (X-PGP-Sig > GPG-Key ID: EDD27B94)
 mail: echo qr | perl -pe 'y/a-z/n-za-m/'
 #bofh excuse 112: The monitor is plugged into the serial port
 
 | 
    |   Network Printer in Ubuntu     Posted: 16 Apr 2008 02:59 AM PDT On Apr 16, 9:06 pm, Maurice Batey <removethis.org.uk>wrote:
 
 Maurice Thanks
 -  Ubuntu comes with a HPLIP toolbox which did the configuration for
 me. Though I still have no clue as to what I did wrong back there:-))
 Vivek
 
 | 
    |   Fedora and I are not mixing     Posted: 15 Apr 2008 12:51 PM PDT com wrote: 
 It is not a good idea to log in as root. Log in as a user and go root. Be root
 only when necessary. Anyway when you exit root you become the user again.
 
 You should be at a run level where ctrl-alt F1-F6 give you separate terminals.
 I think that is at least 3.
 
 However it does not make sense that an exit does not simply give you a login
 prompt instead of shutting down.
 
 --
 Palestinians have nothing to negotiate with Israel but the schedule for its
 withdrawal to its 1948 borders.
 -- The Iron Webmaster, 3963
 http://www.giwersworld.org/holo3/holo-survivors.phtml a3
 
 | 
    |   Install Win XP over Linux     Posted: 15 Apr 2008 06:43 AM PDT On Tue, 15 Apr 2008 13:03:22 -0700 (PDT), "com"<com> wrote:
 
 XP Home running in Xen or VMWare or VirtualBox or Qemu is real XP
 Home.
 
 Since the first time I installed Redhat, I have always followed the
 same procedure. Use partition magic to partition and format the
 Windows partitions. Use it to partition but not format the linux
 partitions.  Install linux. Install windows. Use a liveCD or a linux
 floppy to boot into linux  Mount the linux partitions. add the Windows
 partition to lilo.conf. run lilo.
 
 The only time I have ever had *any* problems, was when I tried to make
 a SCSI drive a boot drive. Then I had to figure out how to modify irq
 mappings in the boot options.
 
 I don't particularly use lilo over grub for any reason except: I know
 lilo it has preformed well so i see no reason to change
 
 
 
 | 
    |   Install Debian on a Machine with Windows XP     Posted: 12 Apr 2008 04:57 AM PDT <com> wrote 
 This is a lot easier than some replies seem to suggest. While I don't
 disagree that doing lots of study and reading will be helpful, it's not
 actually necessary to get Debian up and running on your machine. Try this:
 
 1. Boot from the CD you burned, hit enter at the prompt for a 'normal'
 install
 2. When it gets to the partition manager stage, choose Manual partitioning
 3. Select your Windows partition (it is probably the only one, unless you
 have one of those wanky OEM recovery partitions or something).
 4. Choose "resize the partition" - it will tell you the minimum size you can
 make it - this of course depends on how full it is.
 5. Reduce it by at least 10GB (this is plenty for messing around with Linux,
 but more doesn't hurt if you can spare it).
 6. Create TWO new Logical partitions: a small one (1 or 2GB, ideally 2x the
 computer's RAM) and a large one (all the rest of the space)
 7. Make sure the small one is set as "use as swap space" and the large one
 is set to be mounted as / (the root partition).
 8. Exit the partition manager and write the changes
 9. Proceed with the rest of the install
 10. Reboot into Debian and enjoy.
 
 Good luck,
 
 CC
 
 
 
 | 
    |   PC / Mac / Linux benchmarks (programs) that compare performance to Cray and other supercomputers...     Posted: 07 Apr 2008 11:33 PM PDT In article <net>,James Wilson  <info> wrote:
 More of historic interest.
 True.
 Historic.  Current models are a bit more complex.
 Old Crays.
 
 PCs will also tend to out perform the ENIAC as well.
 
 --
 
 | 
    |   problem with samsung S203D DVD writer on suse linux 10.2     Posted: 07 Apr 2008 04:10 PM PDT Fernando Peral Pérez wrote: 
 
 
 
 
 
 Not that I am aware of. I thought Toshiba and Samsung were different companies
 in Japan and Korea respectively. I had never heard of TSSTCorp and found nothing
 to indicate its connection to any other company when I googled it.  When I came
 into possession of one as part of a pre-built computer it was identified as
 TSSTCorp not any other company.
 
 Google that drive and see the web has nothing but complaints about it. So if it
 is a subsidiary and to unload a known defective product by using the parent
 company name that is sufficient reason to stop buying Samsung.
 
 I am talking something that was known defective about two years ago. I forget
 exactly how long ago I asked after my problems with it and lots of peopletold
 me about it.
 
 Over the years I have had a lot of CD and DVD burners and this is only one that
 has been a disaster. Replacements are a max of $50 these days. No real effort to
 find one for $30. It only takes a driver.
 
 But until you have a new burner there is no way to eliminate it as the problem.
 
 As long as you are going root to burn it should work. I have used k3b with no
 problems the first time I tried it so I know it works if the burner works. I
 have over 400 CDs and DVDs burned and no problems. Failures are uncommon and I
 verify every burn.
 
 With the TSST I was griping about the deteriorating quality of blank media
 going the way of 3.5" floppies with maybe half or more failures.
 
 --
 Despite all the questions about the official version of 9/11 the fact
 remaains the government has no official version of 9/11. That is immensely
 convenient for all parties concerned.
 -- The Iron Webmaster, 3975
 http://www.giwersworld.org/israel/bombings.phtml a5
 
 
 | 
    |   Dual Booting     Posted: 04 Apr 2008 11:29 PM PDT JAG CHAN wrote: 
 Leave the small drive installed and put linux on the new drive. This will keep
 linux safe from almost any stupid thing XP might do. Linux will detect the XP
 formated drive and include it in /etc/fstab with the correct parameters so you
 can access any data from linux.
 
 
 If needs to partition it for some other reason it is sort of arbitrary mainly
 dependent upon how much data he wants to access when running XP as it can only
 MS type file formats.
 
 --
 Tell me what convinced you when you were skeptical about the Jewish gas
 chambers. If you never questioned them, why not?
 -- The Iron Webmaster, 3958
 http://www.giwersworld.org a1
 
 |