work
This is what I’m currently working on.
I spread a sheet of drawing paper on my actual desk and drew up a diagram. The idea is to use an existing local network cable run to route a phone line into the server room, connect it there to a splitter and a dial-up modem, and then โ after the modem โ bring the line back to the office over the other pairs of the same cable and plug it into the phone.
GNOME Calendar
dial-up
Connected an IDC 2814BXL VR โ a voice dial-up modem โ to the 2003 server. Planning to set up dial-up connectivity with my subordinate sites; drew up a diagram for moving the phone into the server room and back again :) True to form, this Microserf offspring couldn’t find the drivers and didn’t recognize the ones that were there. Maybe it’ll dial just fine without drivers.
2009-09-01 20:42:30
To be able to use the Win keys for hotkeys in GNOME, you need to do the following:
Gimly comments…
You can use the familiar Win+D, Win+L, and similar combinations for this purpose โ found it here.
Tested on Ubuntu 8.04 (Hardy Heron) โ dialog translations are as of the publication date.
System -> Preferences -> Keyboard Select the Layouts tab, then click the Layout Options button at the bottom.
Mint, Firefox & Google
It turned out that Mint has its own search engine baked into Firefox (wrapped around Google). You can remove it, but I couldn’t figure out where it installs from in the first place. And the search itself is pretty lame โ the relevance is off, the menu at the top is awkward, and there are no settings whatsoever. Thanks to Yandex, I found an XML file, replaced the default one, and got the native familiar Google search back. By the way, lately it’s been helping me more than Yandex. I’m wondering โ have the search engines changed, or am I just searching for different things now…
krusader...
I’m suffering. There’s no decent dual-pane file manager in GNOME :(
skype
Got Skype working on Mint today. My webcam with built-in microphone was recognized without any issues. What I didn’t expect was sound problems: Skype refused to either play or capture audio. Googling turned up this solution: set everything in the system sound settings to OSS (except recording โ there, point it to the microphone via ALSA), and in Skype set the input directly as well, while the output โ to pulse. After that everything works. No time to dig into audio subsystems right now, but there’s clearly a mess going on there.
one plus for gnome
In the desktop unlock dialog it shows the current keyboard layout. KDE doesn’t show it.
gnome screensaver
another gnome annoyance โ the screensaver doesn’t dismiss with just the mouse, you have to press something on the keyboard.


