> AFAIK there's no such rebuild of SLES.
I don't think so... sources are available, but I don't
now about projects to rebuild SLES.
__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new Resources site
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Hi,
I wonder if there is a way to burn a file that is slightly too big. E.g.
putting a file of 710MB on a 700MB cd.
The last 10MB being lost by this operation would not bother me too much
as it's a divx.
I have not found a way to do this with k3b... is there maybe a way using
cdrecord directly?
Thanks and regards,
Yves
--
Linux 2.6.11.10 #1 Wed May 18 17:50:55 CEST 2005 i686
00:30:30 up 2 days, 4:57, 1 user, load average: 0.71, 1.32, 1.26
--- Patrick Useldinger <pu(a)vo.lu> wrote:
> I have a question for all of those who use Linux at
> work. I am aware
> that there are 2 major "enterprise" distros which
> are of course RedHat
> and Novell/SuSE. Besides those, Mandriva, Ubuntu and
> especially SunJDS
> all have commercial offers.
Hi,
c.f www.centos.org
CentOS is an Enterprise-class Linux Distribution
derived from sources freely provided to the public by
a prominent North American Enterprise Linux
vendor...(RHEL).
__________________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new Resources site
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/resources/
Hi all,
This is to announce that on friday 3th june 2005 the first 2600 meeting
will take place in Luxembourg at the 'Art Scene' café, from 17h00 to
20h00.
Everyone is welcome.
ciao,
pst
--
Pascal Steichen
pascal.steichen(a)lilux.lu
Lilux ASBL
http://www.lilux.lu/
I don't see the relation between CaCert.org root certificate and plain
text mails...
Francois Zellinger a écrit :
>On Tuesday, May 31, 2005 at 12:25 AM (UTC +0200)
>Brent Frère <brent(a)bfrere.net> wrote:
>
>
>>If you have problem with my digital signature, please install the
>>appropriate authority certificate by browsing
>>https://www.cacert.org/certs/root.crt.
>>
>>
>Why? Unix people prefer plain text!
>
>
> François Zellinger
>_______________________________________________
>Lilux-help mailing list
>Lilux-help(a)lilux.lu
>http://lilux.lu/mailman/listinfo/lilux-help
>
>
--
Brent Frère
Private e-mail: Brent(a)BFrere.net
Postal address: 5, rue de Mamer
L-8280 Kehlen
Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg
European Union
Mobile: +352-021/29.05.98
Fax: +352-26.30.05.96
Home: +352-307.341
URL: http://BFrere.net
If you have problem with my digital signature, please install the appropriate authority certificate by browsing https://www.cacert.org/certs/root.crt.
I have a question for all of those who use Linux at work. I am aware
that there are 2 major "enterprise" distros which are of course RedHat
and Novell/SuSE. Besides those, Mandriva, Ubuntu and especially SunJDS
all have commercial offers.
But which distros are _really_ used (on servers) here in Luxemburg, or
in Europe? Is RedHat also dominant here?
Do companies always go for commercial solutions, or are the
non-commercial ones catching up (I heard of Debian being used on a major
site in Luxemburg, and also being used in Munich)? If so, how is support
organised?
The point of my question is not to find out what one should use at work,
but what is actually used, i.e. what decisions companies have taken in
the past. I suppose it is best not to mention the companies explicitely.
Thanks for your input.
Hi
I have to test a switch UNDER traffic, to find out, which ports don't work.
But I don't know how. I do not want to use 24 PC's on 24 ports, but I have
enough network cards.
What do I do to simulate traffic on each port???
Any idea?? (udpcast??)
Does anybody know such a project??
--
Thanx for the fish
<°(((((-<
Al
Hi everybody,
An exhibition of old computers and calculators has opened at the Lycee Classique Diekirch
from 28/05 to 02/07: opening hours every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday afternonn from
14:00 to 18:00. Entrance is free.
I attach a poster, hope it will not be removed by some filter.
This is the first exhibition of this size here in Luxembourg, covering micros, minis (up
to 1965, some very rare pieces), electronic and mechanical calculators and a nostalgic
corner!
See you !
Francis Massen
--
Just read this and thought you might be interested.
In about:config,
- Set "network.http.pipelining" to "true"
- Set "network.http.proxy.pipelining" to "true"
- Set "network.http.pipelining.maxrequests" to some number like 20. This
means it will make 20 requests at once (although I also read than 8 was
the max).
- Right-click anywhere and select New-> Integer. Name it
"nglayout.initialpaint.delay" and set its value to "0". This value is
the amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it
receives.
On my Mozilla 1.7.8 with an ADSL line, the differences are noticable.