Hi Jett,
I think the problem could be the driver, From what source did you install your driver or what did you use to do so?
Did you use envy?
change lcd resolution
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Re: yeah im using bea
Probably because this alias:jett wrote: i have to use fedora 6 for school and i type ll and it brings a long list format but when i do it in ubuntu/mint it doesnt work.
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alias ll='ls -l'
You are misinformed and mistaking and messing up a lot of things here. "ll" is not a standard command anyway.jett wrote: on another note i always believed that linux was totaly standards compliant but its not.
It's called POSIX ... and you are misinformed. Do you even know what POSIX standards are and what they stand for??jett wrote: Linux doesnt fully follow the POSTIX standard.
Re: yes
To that part I agree. But you see the problem? You'd have to get the Fedora, the Ubuntu and the SUSE people on the same table, have them talk to each other, have them to agree to some sorts of common standard ... And this was tried in the past, e.g. with the "LSB" and so forth. And this stuff still hasn't gone anywhere yet.jett wrote: but its stupid how fedora does this and ubuntu does not. its annoying and inconsistent.
So it's simpler if you setup your .bashrc and .profile in a really good way and then just copy those files whenever you install a new Linux distro and/or get an user account somewhere somehow.
Exactly. This stuff defines how programs and the operating system talk to each other ... it has next to nothing to do with commands such as "ll" working or not And Linux complies "mostly". What's different is some I/O stuff and some error codes the OS is supposed to throw up when some stuff goes wrong. Torvalds was writing Linux from scratch back in 1991, and he didn't have access to that expensive documentation (back then) so he came up with his own solutions in some cases; And so far nobody has really cared to have Linux POSIX certified in all those years. Not that it really matters, there aren't really many programs where this would have any influence whatsoever. You can compile most UNIX programs on Linux and vice versa, so whatever the POSIX compliance of Linux, it's obviously good enough. But again, this has no meaning what the names of certain user-space commands are supposed to be like or not. Take HP-UX and Solaris as an example ... Both are fully POSIX compliant and yet the differences between the commands of the two are so drastic to the point where one and the same command has a different meaning on both of themjett wrote: Portable Operating System Interface for Unix
It's called freedom ... e.g. Freedom of choicejett wrote: it would only make to much sense though. i believe in unity like there should be only one type of package management system and one type of window management system that is highly customizable.
But what if they do not want to work together? Their freedom grants them this possibility too. And we are free to choose whose project / product we will use or not. Nobody is forced to anything.jett wrote: it doesn't make sense to have multiple types. it only creates more work for developers than if they were to work on one project together.
Well, they are following it. But whether or not aliases are defined or not and what aliases are defined or not just isn't part of the standard See above. I just copy over my shell profile to all my accounts on all distros and I don't need to worry about those things any longer.jett wrote: so if there is a standard like POSIX and maybe a shell standard then distro's should follow
Well .... how often are you forced to render smileys via HTML? Whatever the compliance level of Firefox I think it's good enough for everyday use.jett wrote: just like how opera is fully w3c compliant and suprise suprise Firefox is not.
Oh well ... maybe the folks at Mozilla will improve Firefox over the next few releases?
Re: yes
Oh well ... the latest update now renders something that looks like a one-eyed pirate with a knive between his teeth It's still not in compliance with the standard but it's highly amusingscorp123 wrote:Oh well ... maybe the folks at Mozilla will improve Firefox over the next few releases?
Re: envy?
Dunno if this question was answered or not .... "envy" is a tool in the newer versions of Mint which will help you setup your graphics card correctly. You just need to answer "yes" or "no" (y/n) to some questions it will ask you and the rest happens more or less automagically.jett wrote:what is envy? what does it do?