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coverup

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Posts posted by coverup

  1. Thanks, it turnd out that links was intalled on my system, I've given it a try...

     

    I was familiar with lynx, but sure links is a lot more usable. Problems so far:

     

    * I have a website for students that requires login authrization. When I am clicking on the link, it does not ask for login name/password. Instead, I get "401 Authorization required". Login to mandrakeusers.org works just fine though.

     

    * Mouse support seems to be limited. I couldn't highlight text on a page and then paste it in another application. That's gonna be a problem...

     

    * Is it possible to setup links to open a home page on start up? I could do links www.yadayadayada.com, though. Not a big deal...

  2. Check /usr/bin/ and /usr/local/bin. Look for a link to /usr/local/netscape/netscape, delete it as well. Also, check if you have /usr/local/lib/netscape/. On my system, there is some stuff in there...

     

    You can capture location of non-rpm application related files by inspecting the output of #make install while you're installing software. Say, you can probably try to install netscape over the exisitng version, this time redirecting the output to a file.

  3. You should ask yourself, who's your audience. If it's one or two "yahoos" who use msoffice and they must be able to edit the document, go for OO.o. If you work on a book or a journal/conference paper, the publisher may not appreciate your creativity when it comes to formatting. LaTeX performs formatting according to publishing standards. Take hyphens, for example. MSWord and the likes are just hopeless... Someone mentioned truetype fonts for LaTeX, that's just another example. Why would you want to use them, publishing standard is usually Type1. I happen to see conference papers prepared using truetype fonts, they look very odd and unprofessional...

  4. Thanks everybody who responded.

     

    SoulSe, which model was that Dell? How long does the battery last? If I am not mistaken, according to a report that I red a while ago (before Intel released centrino), Dell's batteries were rating pretty poorly compared to some others. Indeed, my daughter's Inspiron P4 2GHz, gets very hot. Fans kick in quite often. Compared to my P2 Gateway 5150 that gets barely warm and can run up to 4hrs, a huge difference...

  5. Of course, it's not that hard to install it on there yourself.  I understand not wanting to buy any M$ products at all; hell I bought mine with the absolute bare minimum that Dell would sell me.  If they would have sold me the laptop with no OS installed, I would have scooped that up in a heartbeat.

     

    As far as the wireless goes, with a PCMCIA card, it's actually not all that hard to get it working.  I'm in the process of writing a FAQ about it for this board.  Since I recently hosed my FS and had to reinstall, I have it fresh in my mind so I figure now would be the best time to do it.

    Weel, it's not entirely about not paying MS tax... I've been through that exercise when I was buying my desktop, doesn't work in Australia. The law requires that every computers is sold with an OS, and you can guess which OS is that... I just can't spend much time on tweaking...

     

    BTW, LiquidZoo, I red your notes, about Inspiron and look forward to reading your FAQ. Actually, I got Inspiron 8200 for my daughter a couple of months ago, quite a nice computer, but a bit heavy to carry around... Nevertheless, if she decides to switch to linux, I know where to look for good notes... Thanks for putting that stuff together.

  6. has just written a reply, but the browser got stuck, not sure if the post got through...

     

    Anyway, I've checked the Intel OS compatibility chart,

     

    http://www.intel.com/support/notebook/centrino/os.htm

     

    An interesting thing is that linux is supported in pentium M processor and 855 chipset, but they stop short when it comes to supporting the wireless LAN mini-PCI adapter. A naive question, apart from the wireless, what else does centrino include? I would go without wireless, don't care much about it. It's the size/weight and battery life that amke centrino attractive. And of course, when you buy a notebook, the wireless hardware is already there, you've got to pay for it and pay for a PC card on top... Hmmm, it sounds very familiar....

  7. I red somewhere that a while ago Dell was shipping laptops with Linux preinstalled (at least in the US). They have abolished Linux support a few years ago. Does any other manufacturer ship linux laptops, or does any manufacturer at least claim that their hardware should work with linux? I am after a lightweight notebook with a decent battery life, preferably Centrino from Dell/IBM/Compaq-HP (the university wouldn't like to buy from other companies). I've checked out some linux on laptop websites and am getting an impression that Linux does not keep up with hardware manufacturers. By the time that somebody reports on a successful install, laptop manufacturers seem to change the hardware. I am lost with wireless for example. It seems that there are several standards around, which of them is/will be supported in Linux? What is the current status of winmodem support? Some people say don't go near them, other get them work. Does it all apply to onboard network chips?

     

    It's hard to make a right choice, when it is so confusing... I have enjoyed linux for the last 4 years and wouldn't like to eXPerience anything else... Any good advice/suggestion?

     

    Cheers.

  8. Thanks, I got and installed libpng.so.2, but that was only success...

     

    I've tried kshowmail-2.2.3 beta rpm from the CD again. It showed clock and was trying hard to login to the server, but that was it until I killed it.

     

    Also, I have compiled kshowmail-2.2.3.tar.gz from the source again. Still nothing, except for the popup message "Cannot login to <server name>".I ran it from the terminal, this line might help to shed the light:

    KShowMailApp::slotUIDLsResult: KIO::error

    Also, while running ./configure, I got this warning

    autoconf 2.50 is currently not supported at admin/conf.change.pl line 94, <> line 793.

  9. I did... As I wrote in the first post, kshowmail-2.0-0.i386.rpm from sourceforge seems to be packaged for SuSe and doesn't install on my MDK8.2 system because rpm cannot find libpng.so.2. libpng.so.2 for MDK8.2 is available to club members only.

     

    I got sources from sourceforge as well, compiled them and still have the same problem, kshowmail cannot login to the server... :cry:

  10. Someone on this forum suggested kshowmail for email previewing. I intalled a beta rpm from MDK 8.2 powerpack CDs, but for some reason, it does not poll my POP3 account. I also tried to compile the source for KDE2.2.2, does not work either (I had some developer packages missing, installed them, but not sure whether I used a correct version...). I am certain, this is not a problem on the mailserver. I compiled kshowmail from the source on another box for KDE1.1, it works perfectly with my POP3 account... Ok then, I downloaded another KDE2.2 rpm from sourceforge, tried to install it, but ran into a dependency problem: the RPM is packaged for SUSE and requires libpng.so.2; MDK 8.2 uses libpng.so.3.

     

    Did anybody have similar experience? Where can I find *working* kshowmail rpm?

    MDK offers libpng.so.2 to club members only, I can't get it from them (Hello there in Mandrake, I bought for my Powerpack less than a year ago, BTW...)

  11. I've trying to use the KDE Control Centre to setup up some network shares on my machine.  I can see the shared directories on other machines but it always prompts me for a password and regardless of what user name/psw I use it won't let me in.

     

    I also have the same problem as mentioned in another thread about not being able to see the contents of shares on other machines.  Anyone know what I'm doing wrong?

     

    The security level is set to: Share

    Guest account: guest (with encrypted passwords)

     

    The individual shares are set as: 

    - Read only

    - Guest ok

    - Browseable

    - Available

     

    Sambe users are: Guest & Martin(me)  neither with psw set.

     

    Check permissions and also check user IDs on two computers. I don't know how MDK control centre handles this stuff, but I remember having to synchronise my user ID on both computers in order to be able to work with files mounted to /mnt/shares-from-other-computer.

  12. Okay, I've figured out sort of what I want to do.

     

    I want to connect to the internet with the external serial dial-up modem on my linux box. I want my linux box as a gateway on the WAN side of my router making it's own litle network.

     

    I want my other home computers, (two of them running two differnt OS's (for a total of three different OS's) to be their own litle network on the LAN side.

     

    Here is how ti's all set-up now, and it's not right. Where's my mistake???????

     

    My linux box has it's NIC IP address set to 192.168.1.1 and is successfully connected to the router's WAN port. I have also used drakconnect to set up my internet connection sharing from my modem to eth0.

     

    My "home" PC's are set to DHCP IP addresses and successfully conneted to the router whitch is braodcasting IP's to them. Through them I can access the "internal" confiugartion of the router by putting the router's internal IP address whitch is 192.168.2.1

     

    I should point out that from my past experience, this is pretty fancy router. Kind of cool actualy, the router has a fairly expansive web-interface for configuration with some nice pretty menus. I just open a browser on any computer ojn the LAN side and type in 192.168.2.1 whitch is the default IP for the router.

     

     

    Here's the problem. I'm not sure how to configure the WAN settings in the router itself.

     

    Here are the WAN options in the routers interface.

     

    DynamicIP

    PPPoE

    PPTP

    BigPond

    StaticIP

     

    EAch of these has all the appropriate options underneath it, but I dont' know what to do.

     

    All I want to know is what is the best way to configure my conection.

     

    I figured it would either be dynamic IP or static IP and not one of the other protocals.

     

    If I select Dynamic IP, I'm asked for a hostname and an MAC address. I don't know what to put for either one.

     

    If I put static IP, I'm asked for three things

     

    IP address given to me by my service provider

    Subnet mask (I used 255.255.255.0 everywhere else)

    Service provider gateway address

     

    I tried static using 192.168.1.2 for assigned IP and 192.168.1.1 for the gateway, but that didn't work.

     

    So, tell me what I'm doing wrong.

     

    Yes, the "service provider" for your router is the Linux box. Therefore, the Linux box must accept connections of one kind or another. Eg, you have to run a DHCP server that supports DynamicIP, or PPPoE server or something like that... In the case of static IP, your Linux box probably has to run a Samba server to accept connections from the LAN. Say, if you were connecting a Windows PC directly to the Linux box, you would run Samba for that, right?

     

    Once you set up Samba server on 192.168.1.1, static IP 192.168.1.2 on the router will likely do the job. Try 192.168.1.0 or 192.168.1.254 as a gateway address, I don't remember which one is right.

  13. I had to provide my ISP's DNS to the computer on my LAN so that they could access the web. XP wasn't able to 'share' the net as cleanly as Mandrake does.

     

    But if that is the case, where do I put the DNS address in /etc ?

    That's already been done:

    gd@localhost gd]$ cat /etc/resolv.conf
    
    search localdomain AEI
    
    nameserver 206.123.6.10
    
    nameserver 206.123.6.11
    
    
    
    
    
    # ppp temp entry
    
    nameserver 206.123.6.11 # ppp temp entry
    
    nameserver 206.123.6.10 # ppp temp entry

    You may want to try to add these lines to /etc/resolv.conf on the clients...

  14. For private subnets and static IP addresses, you don't have to run a dns server, 'cause names can be resolved using hosts file. I don't have dns server running. As long as static IP addresses are listed in /etc/hosts and /etc/lmhosts (for samba), everything works fine. I think that its a routing or NAT problem 'cause things go wrong after ISP assigns different IPs. Once you've been assigned a different IP, you must change the default gateway as well.

  15. Sorry, I forgot your first question. Check your default gateway. If it's eth0, then browsers will send packets to eth0 while you want them to send packets to ppp0. Post here outpus of

     

    ifconfig

    route -n

     

    Both commands must be run as root. Run them before you dial in, and after you've successfully connected.

  16. How do you want to connect your lan? That for example could be

     

    ISP <-> modem <-> ppp0 Linux eth0 <-> WAN router LAN ports <-> other PCs.

     

    In this case, your linux box must act as a router performing network address translation (IP masquerading).The best place to start is the IP Masquerade HOWTO

     

    http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/IP-Masquerade-HOWTO/

     

    Your router can probably do NAT as well. If so, you may need to have two private networks. Say, if your Linux box eth0 has 192.168.100.1, then the router's WAN should be 192.168.100.2. The router will translate this IP to 4 other computers that are connected to the LAN ports and have IP addresses 192.168.0.*

  17. ranger:

    Where have you got the IP address??? The only places you need an IP address in samba are for the WINS server (if you use one) and hosts allow/deny etc. Everything else can use names.

    In my smb.conf, I have these lines

    [global]
    
           interfaces = 192.168.161.1/255.255.255.0 192.168.0.2/255.255.255.0
    
           name resolve order = lmhosts bcast wins
    
           dns proxy = No
    
           wins support = Yes
    
           remote announce = 192.168.161.255/WORKGROUP 192.168.0.255/WORKGROUP

    I don't know anything about WINS, swat set yes for me, so I accepted it. I undertand, names are resolved using lmhosts file in my case. Anyway, do you suggest that in interfaces, I can replace 192.168.0.2 with name.domain? What about remote announce? Also, is WINS server a part of samba?

     

    I'll check output of the nmblookup as soon as I connect the laptop to LAN at home...

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