Okay, thank you. I can tell you're covering the basis well. I will check back later.
Type: Posts; User: shatterblast; Keyword(s):
Okay, thank you. I can tell you're covering the basis well. I will check back later.
No, but I might also have modified my Wacom tablet's internal firmware some months ago. I tend to weird things like that. It could be the naming works differently with me for some reason than with...
That seems like good news. I also think the work gone towards the Wacom Project and the integration for Ubuntu has gone well. The obvious complication comes from the updates to Gnome and similar,...
It works only when using the 10-wacom.fdi file. I remember that way works, but it took both more time and trouble-shooting. It could perhaps still be the best solution for those with "tablet PCs"...
Step 1) Install wacom-tools from Synaptic if available. Xserver-xorg-input-wacom should already be installed.
Step 2) If you use a Bamboo, try running the attached script in this posting.
...
I've done that too, the movement with "copylefting," and I wasn't pleased with the results. I find it amusing that some art pieces I previously distributed found their ways to some image boards.
...
It's a mix of 2D and 3D. As far as 2D, I plan on the PNG format that I heavily use at the moment. Screen-shots might be fine. It's just the numeric data representing objects that I'm wanting...
I only really want obsfucation to hide the I/O values to some extent. The encryption I can delay on because I'm only releasing software to a few people. Sharing pieces of the code doesn't bother me...
As just something I do in spare time, I have been developing a project for entertainment. I thought a side benefit might extend to simulations. I'm not mainly interested in protecting my code, but...
Updating the Linux kernel alone can cause conflicts with other software in different ways. I suggest trying a Live CD of the Karmic test version. While in the Live CD's environment, it might do...
Are you familiar with a bootloader? And does your system even try loading Linux?
I think that accessing Page Setup from most major programs should allow a fix to the margin sizes. Assuming that a system reboot and turning the printer on and off doesn't fix the issue, it could be...
Some USB devices are Windows-compatible only in nature and may take up to 2 years or more sometimes to reach compatibility with Linux. The difference is that it tends to be free in the open source...
If your computer BIOS has the option, you could try enabling something to the effect of USB devices booting first before CD-ROM drives, hard drives, or floppy drives. A USB external might read as a...
You could also try a different account for the different monitor. I think it's possible to keep different configurations for the video for different log-in names. Also in addition to my previous...
I'm guessing a capacitor blew out or something. I kept one of the much older iPod Shuffles for a long time. I even used it for technical work on transferring customer files and such. I had it for...
If you feel secure repeating the process, you could "Lock Version" on your ALSA items in Synaptic. However, I don't encourage it.
Also, you might access the nVidia driver updates from Synaptic by enabling "Pre-Released Updates" within the Software Sources windows. That can be found under:
System -> Administration ->...
Apparently, there exists a slight legal issue with "libdvdcss2" if a trading ban exists between nations or something to that effect. You would probably know if you can't buy DVDs or even CDs for...
Not really. I just brought it up as a conversation piece. Nothing dangerous.
Actually, they are CPU-related, especially during a conversion process, but the greater majority of resources tend to require RAM memory and to a lesser extent the on-board firmware of your computer...
I recommend installing the following links anyway:
http://packages.ubuntu.com/karmic/alsa-base
http://packages.ubuntu.com/karmic/alsa-firmware-loaders...
You could take a risk and try the following:
https://launchpad.net/~nvidia-vdpau/+archive/ppa
I have not tested the contents.
For command-line utilities, there is FSCK. "Testdisk", found within Synaptic, features robust partition repair capability.
For software in a window, GParted (also known as "Partition Editor"...
My bad.