I found it sort of ironic to bind the left Windows-key to Gnome-terminal, and the right one to Nautilus.
Ironic, and useful.
Type: Posts; User: Heliode; Keyword(s):
I found it sort of ironic to bind the left Windows-key to Gnome-terminal, and the right one to Nautilus.
Ironic, and useful.
sudo apt-get install apache2
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 start
sudo gedit /var/www/index.html
Fill the file with:
<html>
Blocked!
</html>
What I would do is scan the thing with NMAP. That should give you the MAC-address.
Very good... just what I needed. Thanks!
You might be right with that... I noticed on another machine that restarting FF was enough.
When will people learn that rebooting a machine to apply something is a Windows CrazyThing(tm)
(See...
You don't need to reboot. just do
/etc/init.d/networking restart
And it should work.
EDIT:
Don't have an iPod Video, just an iPod Photo. And I don't feel like ponying up another $300 :p
Your howto was useful for me to get the latest version of GTKPod running though... the older one was...
Doesn't even take a minute on my PC. The only thing GTKpod screws up for me is the top-25 most played list, which it fills with whatever I last copied onto the pod...
Well, I regularly use iTunes as well as GTKPod, but all I get from GTKPod after using iTunes is this:
iTunesDB '/media/ipod/iPod_Control/iTunes/iTunesDB' does not match checksum in extended...
When you first connect your iPod in Windows and install the iPod software, the gets formatted fat32. Not sure how to convert it to fat32 when you first connected it on a Mac though.
Nice howto....
Same for me. Has anyone found a way around this yet?
Using your .deb right now... it's great, but it would be even greater if you managed to add those things.
Keep up the good work!
Cruise control works very well.
However, middle mouse button generates no event in xev. All the other buttons do:
4, 5, 6 & 7 for the scroll wheel, 1 and 3 for left- and right-click, 11 and 12...
Indeed it was... although a very minor one... to get it to work I had to change this:
Option "Device" "/dev/input/event1 "
to this:
Option ...
No, it doesn't show anything... so I modprobed evdev, and now it shows 'event1'. (there is now also an 'event1' in /dev/...) But it still crashes the Xserver on restart, with the message that it...
Hey, I've got an MX1000 so I thought I'd try this, but where you have this line:
*H: Handlers=mouse0 event1 ts0
But I miss the 'event*' part. (the rest is there though)
there is no...
Thanks for this guide. I didn't do any benchmarks, but I think its faster now. Plus it feels better to have services disabled that I'm not using anyway, like bluez and ppp... the descriptions and the...
The interface completely sucks, but I'm going to keep Cedega 5 around because it runs UT (classic) a lot better than the previous version. Guess I'll just have to get used to running it through the...
Ok, I figured out the VMWare part, and made some progress on the other two...
For VMWare:
fist of all, you need to add vmware to the default runlevel with:
sudo ng-update add vmware default...
Thanks for your very well worded and easy-to-use howto, temcat. I've tried it in a virtual machine first, and it worked perfectly, turning a 53 second boottime into a 38 second one. This encouraged...
I don't actually mind MS copying stuff from Apple. What I mind is them getting away with it. When people who use Vista and Office 12 see OSX, they'll be like "Does Apple do that as well??" (instead...
Except that you don't have to actually do anything to get spyware... If you leave a freshly installed WinXP machine directly connected to the internet for a while, it takes an average of 12 minutes...
To answer your question, yes spyware is a very big problem in the Windows world, and yes, it certainly played a part in my decision to switch to Linux completely.
I did one of my internships for a...
The more I see of new MS products (Vista, Office 12, MSN 7) the happier I am that i've learned to use Linux! Looks like it was just in time, too!
Personaly, I would STRONGLY recommend Kompose over Skippy. Basically does the same thing, only better and more configurable imho. Allthough it's KDE, it works fine with Gnome.