On Wednesday 14 March 2007 02:49:14 pm you wrote:
> > Telling someone you don't have a particular problem is the equivalent of
> > telling them you don't know anything. Doesn't really contribute much to
> > the solution.
> It shows that the problem is on your end, and that's where the solution
> would need to be as well.
No, it shows that I have a combination of settings, software, and
circumstances that triggers the problem, and that you know nothing about the
…
[View More]problem. See "!works for me" in the #kubuntu irc channel.
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Nevertheless, there are those that would prefer to keep their kids from any semblence of porno, whether it gratifies you or not.
I know for my kids, who are in the single digits, a lot of primetime stuff is more risque than I care for them to see.
-Michael
----- Original Message ----
From: Jonathan Hutchins <hutchins(a)tarcanfel.org>
To: kclug(a)kclug.org
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2007 11:08:11 AM
Subject: Re: Linux PVR as possible self-control of content for families?
Before we all …
[View More]break out the tinfoil hats, I thought it might be a good idea to
check the Movie Channel's schedule. I know it wouldn't be the first place
I'd look for any gratifying pornography.
It appears that what Orin calls a "pornfest" was either "New York Doll", a
documentary about the reunion of the glam-rock band New York Dolls (6:20
a.m.), or possibly "Night of the Comet", a zombie flick (7:40).
You may safely return your children to their video games.
_______________________________________________
Kclug mailing list
Kclug(a)kclug.org
http://kclug.org/mailman/listinfo/kclug
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Speaking of unsupported software...
I recently added a new Brother laser printer to my network as the default
printer. Whether that had anything to do with it or not, suddenly OpenOffice
can't open any of it's old documents. It started out by crashing when asked
to print, cycling through it's "recovering document", but then it started
crashing as soon as the document was opened. Strangely, this behavior
happened on two different machines.
I joined the #openoffice.org channel on …
[View More]Freenode, hoping for some help in
troubleshooting this problem, and followed it for a couple of days. Question
after question was asked, and I saw very few answers. An actual dialog
appears in the channel this morning, but it certainly seems to be a problem
in search of a solution.
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>-----Original Message-----
>From: Oren Beck
>Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2007 8:22 AM
>
<snip>
>Can the Linux projects for PVR media centers be used to create
>a personal content firewall?
>
<snip>
>I want to have some method of recording kid safe content and
>-an ability to audit anything questionable if ratings or other
>rule sets make that indicated. So the only content that the
>kids see is as censored as practical. My stepdaughter has 4
…
[View More]>kids under 10 years old.
>So she's become the target customer for my application question.
>She does NOT have time to either hand censor all the
>kids' content in real time, nor the computer skills we do to
>even semi automate the task. Can we offer any help?
>
>Let me close with my overwhelming reasoning for posting this.
>
>The only person having final veto over what their children
>watch is their parent in control.
>And we can create an instrumentality of that control.
Most of the newer TVs and cable boxes have parental controls built-in.
You can set the parental controls to lock-out individual channels,
lock-out anything that is rated TV-14 or TV-MA. You can also combine
these with timed lock-out so that the channels are unlocked after a
certain time or so nearly all channels are locked-out before Family
viewing time starts (time for kids to do homework). I can attest to
this system working, BUT beware, it can make it a PITA for you the adult
to watch TV. You constantly have to enter the pin code to watch the
channel, even if you are just skipping around to find something to
watch.
One of the easiest things you can do is remove the bad channels from the
line-up. Cancel a movie channel subscription of remove it from the
remote. That way if the kids are scrolling thru the channels they won't
roll thru the baddies, but you can manually enter the channel number.
Until MythTV and Freevo get something like Dan's Guardian for TV
channels, there are your answers. Or you could just unplug it.
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>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jason D. Clinton
>
>On Fri, 2007-03-09 at 16:00 -0600, Billy Crook wrote:
>> I've looked around the web for ways to optimize your Linux system.
>> hdparm was mentioned a lot, but my drive is sata, and my
>cdrom is set
>> to be recognized as SCSI because as IDE, its throughput was
>too jerky
>> to watch DVDs. When I tried to turn on DMA, hdparm kept throwing a
>> fit about "HDIO_SET_DMA failed: …
[View More]Inappropriate ioctl for device".
>> sdparm doesn't seem to offer the same. For example, I wand to use
>> 32-bit transfer mode with sync, hdparm won't cooperate, and sdparm
>> doesn't know what I'm talking about.
>
>This will happen if the BIOS currently has the device in PIO
>mode. See if you can put the device in UDMA mode from within
>the BIOS drive view.
>You definitely do not want to use SCSI emulation these days.
>
I thought that Linux completely ignored the BIOS settings and they were
just there to get the hardware initialized and spun up. And then once
Linux booted that it would assign its own settings to hardware.
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Are there any OSes out there that make it simple to install and
automatically update a chrooted, full-featured apache install? I'm
aware of how to do it in Gentoo and Ubuntu, and I've seen it done in
FreeBSD, but I've never seen it done in a manner that allows the OSes
package management system to still be used.
If not, will a dually P3 with a half-gig of RAM and a couple 7200RPM UW SCSI
drives be enough of a machine to run my apache, php, etc daemons in
User Mode Linux or under Xen without a …
[View More]hiccup?
Not planning on trying to get slashdotted or dugg anytime soon, and I
can probably arrange to get mirrored in a couple of places if I see
something like that coming.
Thanks,
Sean Crago
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On Tuesday 13 March 2007 01:47:18 am Luke-Jr wrote:
>I've run a number of RPM based servers that didn't have X or >ALSA. I've had
>problems with gentoo wanting to support wacom drawing >tablets for almost any
>application I tried to install - including documentation >packages!
Debian & Ubuntu's server & LAMP installs can also quite easily be
installed without X. X is not installed by default on either of the
latter.
I installed the Ubuntu over Gentoo when I needed …
[View More]to drastically cut
the staging time/axe the overhead of make. Used the same partition
scheme, and had absolutely no issues. I believe it used a similar
amount of space on disk for the nearly identical package set I
installed.
On the matter of hardware support in Gentoo, on occasion it can be a
little finicky, but when running astandard hardware or doing other
screwball things, I've generally had better luck with Gentoo than
most.
-Sean
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Anyone know of a way to share a block device like Raid-1 across multiple
machines? I want to get two machines to share files to the same group of
clients for R/W access and have changes replicated between the two machines,
so they'd be effective immediately for the other clients. A month ago, I
googled, and found a wiki of a bunch of different systems but they each had
some fault. Some could only be written to from one place. The comparison
section of the page left me ultimately thinking …
[View More]the only things that did
what i wanted were GoogleFS (NOT public) and a couple others that were
really expensive.
I don't even so much care that the block device is whats replicated, but
trying to replicate a file system on demand like that I'm guessing is not
possible for locking reasons. (Two people from different servers could lock
the same file in the same place and make changes to it. Has anyone here
done anything like this before?
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>What flavor of Linux would you run on it?
>Mainly I'm looking for someone with experience
>running Linux on this machine but opinions are
>welcome as well.
I built a simlilar P3-600 last year to do the same sort of thing.
Just wanted to point out the obvious, because it didn't hit me until
I'd had make and gcc running for a couple of days straight:
Don't use Gentoo.
I ended up using Ubuntu Server, but there's not much different between
it and Debian. In some cases, Debian …
[View More]actually is more up-to-date than
Ubuntu with regard to some server-side applications, like the
IlohaMail PHP webmail client package.
Apparently still is, 8 months later:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ilohamail/+bug/52462
I'd just say go with what you're comfortable with, unless it's mostly
compiled from source.
-Sean Crago
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Every once in a while, on average once every ten or so seconds, my display
flickers black and comes right back. Almost like what I would expect if I
were changing resolutions, but the resolution is not changing and I have no
idea what causes this. The video chipset is nvidia quadro fx2500 w/512mb.
The driver is nvidia's latest (1.0-9755). Xorg is at 7.1.1 (70101000). I'm
running FC6 on kernel 2.6.19-1.2911.6.5.6.1.fc6.jwltest.27 on a core2duo.
The display is the laptop display, and while I …
[View More]haven't tried with an
external, I am reasonably sure it's not the display. It happens when the
laptop is idle or in use. It happens with or without beryl. It happens on
JWL's testkernel and without. JWL is a redhat kernel devel, and his patch
enables my PCIE wireless card. I've only seen it while in X, but that's
99.9% of time anyway.
What's a good place on the system to look to figure out what the glitch is?
People look to this system as an example of Linux, and I hate to have them
think it's that sketchy.
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