arctic
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Posts posted by arctic
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Because they believe in cloud-computing and want to offer the "perfect browser" for supporting cloud-computing. Once cloud-computing is more popular, they will most likely charge for using google-docs etc.But the question remains. Why did they do it?Bah!....
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Nice move (I think :unsure:)
Yepp. Nice move.
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Well, that "privacy problem" is hardly surprising as something similar was/is already included in the Picasa license agreements IIRC. Actually, I tend to not use google and its services whenever possible (the only real showstopper is that my mail-account is at google since years. Meh...). Google has become way too big, way too powerful and too snobbish for my taste.
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Now, let me count... I have:
Iceweasel
Firefox
Galeon
Epiphany
Safari
Konqueror
Opera
Dillo
Lynx
...
to choose from.
...and now I get Google Chrome...
Do I need it? No. And if it is as useless as Googles Office application, then the much better.
Move along. :P
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Not yet, I was still looking for a solution to the problem, but after searching the web for hours without finding an "easy fix" for this and hacking the C3 boxes again and again, I will file a bug.Did you file a bug?I guess that it is not i586 related in general but exclusively to the C3 processor (which is not as popular as AMD or Intel.).
PS: Bug was already filed by someone else
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4GB of swap is a total waste of space, but it's also true that HD space is quite cheap currently...
AFAIK, if you have 2 GB RAM and want to have a working hibernate mode, you need the 4GB RAM. Or am I wrong?... :unsure:
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Well, it simply doesn't work on the old C3 processors. Trust me. All previous Mandriva versions work okay, but sadly not 2008.1. I have worked a whole week on getting 2008.1 to run on a rather old laptop and a desktop system that are both powered by the C3 processor. I even went back to a minimal 2008.0 and did an upgrade later using the ftp-mirrors. Same result on both machines: System hangs when trying to decompress the kernel.That shouldn't be the case, the installer's supposed to work on i586. -
In case anyone wonders why he/she cannot install Mandriva on a system using the VIA C3 processor, the answer is that the C3 processor architecture does only work with i386, i486 and i586 compiled kernels. Mandriva ships since 2008.1 spring an i686 compiled kernel on the install-media which will not work with the processor. The system will install, but it will not boot as it is unable to decompress the kernel. Quick solution to this problem: Use Mandriva 2008.0 and stick to it (or install another distro that does support the C3 processor, like Debian, Slackware, Suse and Fedora).
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As said, everything is okay. Normally, Windows should have appeared automatically on the boot-menu. At least it always did when I installed Mandriva alongside XP or Vista on any system during the past years.
Admittedly, vi is a rather hard to use editor for a newcomer. Nano would be a much better choice and I do not understand why it isn't installed by default yet. *shrugs*. If you want to install this really easy to use editor, just install the nano package through the Mandriva Control Center (aka Configure your system) and start nano later from a terminal or the command line/virtual terminal (you get to the latter one by pressing e.g. ctrl+alt+F1 and get back to the desktop by pressing ctrl+alt+F7).
the procedure would be:
ctrl+alt+F1
user@localhost Desktop]$ su
now enter the root passsword (can not be seen)
[root@localhost Desktop]# nano /boot/grub/menu.lst
the file will open now and can be altered. Add the changes you want, then press
ctrl+o for saving and ctrl+x for exiting
[root@localhost Desktop]# exit
ctrl+alt+F7
finished! :)
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Use the Mandriva Linux Control Center to remove all your sources.
Go to http://easyurpmi.zarb.org and follow the instructions for the desired version, you need at least the main source but it is recommended that you include also contrib and non-free. If you want access to a lot of extra programs that are not officially 'approved' you can also add the plf-free and plf-nonfree sources. Note also the licenses for these are different!
Make sure the command that you obtain to be typed is all on one line - word wrap will destroy the command. This will download the package list (around 10MB)
Now execute
urpmi --auto-select
This will ask to update lots of packages and their dependencies. Accept... wait... wait a little more (it may ask to remove some packages, this is normal as some programs become obsolete or conflict with new versions)... wait for the installation...and enjoy.
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I don't think that John was upset when he wrote that. It can be read in two ways. "Upset-mode" and one "slightly-puzzled-mode". JMHO. :)
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If your partitions are ntfs, then try
mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /mnt/part1
or
mount -t ntfs /dev/sda1 /mnt/part1
maybe that one works...
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IMHO, the 3D stuff is a nice graphical toy, but it will not improve the usability of the system for the average user. The only thing I have activated in compiz on my computers is the dropshadows. The cube was always useless and annoying for me.
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Set up a new user account for testing purposes and check if the delay happens again if you log into that new account.
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Just for clarity: Was the Blue screen of death caused by Windows after selecting the Windows boot entry in grub, that is, when Windows took over the booting process? In that case, the problem was caused by Windows, not by Mandrivas grub. Changing or replacing the bootloader will not repair a borked Windows installation.
Where exactly? Please add all the error messages and hardware specs that you can provide.My Mandriva 2007 CD hangs in installTo me it smells like a serious case of "format the whole harddrive and start from scratch".
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Welcome aboard.
1. please do not post the same issue in more than one forum-section. Thanks. :)
2. can you please post here what you get as an error message (if there is any) when you want to run e.g. the mcc from a terminal?
[root@localhost]# mcc
This will perhaps give us more information on what causes your problem. Also: check with an editor like vi or nano the /var/log/messages file for error messages.
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Yes, it does. Have you checked your system already, booting with a different kernel?so I guess that rules-out hardware -
Now, after having tested it, I share your opinion. Just firefox with some extra-plugins. It might be useful for those who hang around in flickr, youtube etc. all the time, but it is definitely not something that I will ever need.
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The so-called "social webbrowser". In case anyone has tried it: What do you think of it? Worth a shot? Or is it more of a toy for those with too much spare-time on their hands? :unsure:
(Downloading it right now in order to test it )
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harddrake is only necessary/useful if you add new hardware to your computer, say e.g. a new soundcard or a new graphics card. In this case, harddrake will automatically detect the new hardware and configure it as needed/load the modules. If you do not plan to alter your hardware on a regular basis, you can safely disable it.
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Linspire, the distribution originally launched as Lindows, is no more, says Xandros CEO Andreas Typaldos.
Xandros purchased Linspire, the company, earlier this summer. This week, the company announced that it was going to revamp community distribution Freespire, basing its next version on Debian instead of Ubuntu, and using it as a precursor for Xandros Desktop Professional, in much the same way Red Hat uses Fedora and SUSE uses openSUSE. But the company didn't need multiple for-pay desktop distributions, so Linspire is getting the boot.
Full story at linux.com
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Hello.
Perhaps you should keep in mind that if you want to use Mandriva on your companies computers, then you should test it on exactly the hardware that you will be using, not any "old test rig". It is well possible that everything will work out of the box on computer rig A while some hardware-piece will cause problems on computer rig B. Just keep that in mind next time your company considers a switch. Also, make a list of the things that you will need to function. While most things work excellent in Linux, some applications are IMHO still not ready for prime-time.
Mandriva is surely one of the best, maybe even the best distro out there right now in terms of ease of migration and hardware-support. And next time your consider a switch I recommend that you contact our Forum member Adam Williamson (adamw) or visit the #mandriva channel on IRC for instant replies to problems.
2009 rc1
in Cooker
Posted
Thanks for sharing your impressions. BTW: [flame]Who cares about KDE?[/flame] :P
On a more serious note: The package removal is a nice idea, but it could make some people nervous, that is true. BUT: If I were a complete noob and would see the distro telling me that a number of packages is not needed, I would always go the safe route and click on "no" and thus stop the removal process. After all, harddisk-space is not as limited and expensive nowadays as it was ten years ago.