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Joined
3 yr. ago

Yeah right

  • As seen on the cover of a dead can dance record, but with a different angle.

  • Rolls Royce has produced new engines for the Gripen

  • Yes

  • The last time RN was in an election, it was roundly defeated because French people don't like it. To the point that they'd rather vote for Macron's party, even though he is universally hated in France.

  • Ribbentrop - Molotov Pact anyone?

  • And another vote for osmand+

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Who would win? A big fat static target of an aircraft carrier or a small submarine who can go to Greenland, torpedo the big fat target, and go back home?

    Before you say "Murica!!!", remember that the US Navy has a history of being surprised and kicked in the nuts by other nations submarines.

  • Or tax their billionaires, keep their social security and kick Moscow butt.

  • Clinton decided not to read the benefits of the collapse of the Soviet union.

    Obama was the first to put pressure on Europeans to raise their defense budgets.

  • In the immortal words of Robin Williams: "Tits are little birds, boys and girls, and so are cocks!'

  • Corgi in a baggy

  • It's either Slackware (Linux, no systemd), OpenBSD or NetBSD.

    True story: I install a Red Hat server with a disk shelf with about 12 SAS disk in it. Red Hat has systemd. Everything works fine for a month.

    One (1) disk out of the 12 fails. No biggie. Shutdown the server cleanly. Replace disk. Flip power back on. Rebuild disk config. Simple, right?

    Wrong. You see, systemd is unhappy. It detects a new disk. It has lost a previous disk. And so, it refuses to boot. Period.

    Yes, there are ways out of this. But that was the day I decided systemd was the down of the devil.

  • I would say, like many others, Remmina.

    Putty also has a Linux version, so you can use that as well. Its session management is a bit clunky, but it works and it offers some fairly good functionalities.

    But ssh is first and foremost a command line tool. As others have said, invest some time to learn its commands and configuration files.

  • C'est déjà fait depuis longtemps : les Allemands (BMW, Mercedes, etc.) et les Japonais ont des usines dans le sud des États-Unis. Et des vraies usines, pas juste des vissages de dernière ampoule.

    Par contre, les taxes décidées par Trump portent aussi sur les pièces détachées provenant d'Europe...

  • If the interfaces are the same, and the first machine picks it up and configures it, but not the second, then the configuration might be slightly different.

    Again, you should use dmesg on both machines, to make sure the interfaces are the same. I suspect the 2nd machine may have a different card than the 1st.

    Another possibility is that the 2nd machine has an additional, and different, network card that is picked up as the primary one by the system. But dmesg should be able to tell you what the issue is.

  • You mentioned the DVD drive and the network card, and I think that's the two major ones. If your machine uses wifi, you will definitely need to configure that as well.

    Once booted, I would go through your system dmesg and try to figure which peripheral is different from the machine used to create the boot disk. These are the ones you want configured.

  • Not really at much risk... YET.

    Give it another 6 months or so.