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Main.FAQ HistoryHide minor edits - Show changes to markup November 12, 2004, at 07:07 PM
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Q. Is it possible to access my Pantheon space from a Unix machine in theZoo?I have tried to use gFTP. After entering the host, port, username, and password, the program says "Connecting..." but never makes a connection. In my experience, gnomevfs, upon which gftp may be relying, is very flaky. You should use konqueror, which I know to work. type 'konqueror&' at a prompt, or find it in the (KDE) menus. enter sftp://netid@eli.yale.edu/homexx/wxx/ to:
Q. Is it possible to access my Pantheon space from a Unix machine in the Zoo?I have tried to use gFTP. After entering the host, port, username, and password, the program says "Connecting..." but never makes a connection.Added line 29:
In my experience, gnomevfs, upon which gftp may be relying, is very flaky. You should use konqueror, which I know to work. type 'konqueror&' at a prompt, or find it in the (KDE) menus. enter
sftp://netid@eli.yale.edu/homexx/wxx/ Changed lines 31-32 from:
Or if you want to fetch a file off the Pantheon using only the shell, you
can try: to:
Or if you want to fetch a file off the Pantheon using only the shell, you can try:
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("ssh" gets you in; "scp FILENAME HOST:" copies FILENAME to your home
directory on HOST) to:
("ssh" gets you in; "scp FILENAME HOST:" copies FILENAME to your home directory on HOST) November 12, 2004, at 07:06 PM
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Please use the tightvnc distribution's vncviewer program until Suse fixes this bug: http://www.tightvnc.com/download.html
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Please use the tightvnc distribution's vncviewer program until Suse fixes this bug: http://www.tightvnc.com/download.html Q. Is it possible to access my Pantheon space from a Unix machine in theZoo?I have tried to use gFTP. After entering the host, port, username, and password, the program says "Connecting..." but never makes a connection. In my experience, gnomevfs, upon which gftp may be relying, is very flaky. You should use konqueror, which I know to work. type 'konqueror&' at a prompt, or find it in the (KDE) menus. enter sftp://netid@eli.yale.edu/homexx/wxx/ Or if you want to fetch a file off the Pantheon using only the shell, you can try: ssh -t eli.yale.edu "scp YourFileNameHere tiger.zoo.cs.yale.edu:" Give the file name relative to your home directory. ("ssh" gets you in; "scp FILENAME HOST:" copies FILENAME to your home directory on HOST) Not terribly intuitive, but nice if you're in a hurry. October 07, 2004, at 06:01 PM
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The volume control applet in the taskbar of KDE and gnome adjusts the volume on the wrong control, and individual music playing apps seem to vary as to what control the volume slider adjusts. So I recommend running "alsamixer" in a terminal window and fiddling with the "PCM" and "Headphones" controls if you want to adjust the volume.
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The volume control applet in the taskbar of KDE and gnome adjusts the volume on the wrong control, and individual music playing apps seem to vary as to what control the volume slider adjusts. So I recommend running "alsamixer" in a terminal window and fiddling with the "PCM" and "Headphones" controls if you want to adjust the volume. Q. VNC doesn't seem to be working anymore. What gives?it looks like there's a bug in Suse's VNC server, it doesn't allow a lot of VNC clients to connect to it.Please use the tightvnc distribution's vncviewer program until Suse fixes this bug: http://www.tightvnc.com/download.html October 07, 2004, at 05:59 PM
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In most cases, 19 months. See this page for more details.
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In most cases, 19 months. See this page for more details. Q. Does sound work in the zoo?Sound is working in the Zoo now. Plugging in headphones will work fine.The volume control applet in the taskbar of KDE and gnome adjusts the volume on the wrong control, and individual music playing apps seem to vary as to what control the volume slider adjusts. So I recommend running "alsamixer" in a terminal window and fiddling with the "PCM" and "Headphones" controls if you want to adjust the volume. September 10, 2004, at 05:02 PM
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Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it. September 10, 2004, at 05:00 PM
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Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it.
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Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it. Q. How long will I get to keep my zoo account after I graduate?In most cases, 19 months. See this page for more details.August 04, 2004, at 10:47 PM
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Q. AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?to:
Q. AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?Changed line 8 from:
Q. How do I jump to a line in Emacs?to:
Q. How do I jump to a line in Emacs?August 04, 2004, at 10:47 PM
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AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?
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Q. AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?While the shell accepts two keystroke inputs as backspace, Emacs declares that there can only be one. There are two ways to get around this that will be described here.Changed lines 8-9 from:
How do I jump to a line in Emacs?
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Q. How do I jump to a line in Emacs?Press ALT+x, then type goto-line. This is annoying to have to do every time you want to use this functionality, and it doesn't even work by default over remote login from Windows, so I recommend that you edit your .emacs file with something like this:August 04, 2004, at 10:46 PM
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Q. AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?
A. While the shell accepts two keystroke inputs as backspace, Emacs declares that there can only be one. There are two ways to get around this that will be described here. to:
AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on?
Changed lines 8-9 from:
Q. How do I jump to a line in Emacs?
A. Press ALT+x, then type goto-line. This is annoying to have to do every time you want to use this functionality, and it doesn't even work by default over remote login from Windows, so I recommend that you edit your .emacs file with something like this: to:
How do I jump to a line in Emacs?
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Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it.
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Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it. August 04, 2004, at 10:46 PM
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Describe FAQ here.
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Q. AGH! When I type "backspace" in Emacs, bizarre things happen, none of which include the deletion of the character immediately preceding the cursor position. What's going on? A. While the shell accepts two keystroke inputs as backspace, Emacs declares that there can only be one. There are two ways to get around this that will be described here. The first: under remote login, if you're using SSH Secure Shell, you can change your settings to map "backspace" to "delete". (Edit->Settings->Profile->Keyboard). If you don't like that (and there's good reason to feel that way, since it has to be done at every SSH client you use), you can put the following line in your .emacs file in your home directory: (global-set-key "\C-h" 'backward-delete-char) Q. How do I jump to a line in Emacs? A. Press ALT+x, then type goto-line. This is annoying to have to do every time you want to use this functionality, and it doesn't even work by default over remote login from Windows, so I recommend that you edit your .emacs file with something like this: (global-set-key "\C-xg" 'goto-line) Wow, that FAQ was lame. We'll add more content as we're reminded of it. |