On Sunday 10 June 2018 06:50:38 Gene Heskett wrote: > On Sunday 10 June 2018 09:29:59 William Morder wrote: > > On Sunday 10 June 2018 05:12:19 Gene Heskett wrote: > > > On Sunday 10 June 2018 07:39:32 Pisini, John wrote: > > > > Steven Pusser is one of the MX Linux Devs but I can't see him > > > > doing that to your machine. > > > > > > In that event, neither can I. I must have added that repo because it > > > had something I wanted and have forgotten both when and what. > > > > > > > Hopefully you have backups as the machine should > > > > really be rebuilt. > > > > > > That I do, amanda runs every night. > > > > > > Rebuilt to debian amd64 stretch 9.4, iso coming in now. Next is > > > firmware updates for seagate 2T drives and get another. Then burn a > > > couple dvd's and a cd of the seagate firmware. And a fresh flash of > > > my router's dd-wrt. Busy day ahead. > > > > > > > On Sun, Jun 10, 2018 at 7:32 AM, Gene Heskett > > > > <gheskett@xxxxxxxxxxx> > > > > > > wrote: > > > > > On Sunday 10 June 2018 07:05:32 deloptes wrote: > > > > > > Gene Heskett wrote: > > > > > > > Call me puzzled. Or worse. > > > > > > > > > > > > this doesn't sound good - I would take the machine offline and > > > > > > reinstall from scratch ... unless you are schizophrenic and > > > > > > your other identity is this steven. Cause you won't know what > > > > > > was replaced/installed from this site. Programs might be > > > > > > replaced with compromised etc. > > > > > > > > > > > > this is my opinion. > > > > > > > > > > > > you wanted anyway to upgrade some time soon - what you can > > > > > > save are the configurations you have there - but I would not > > > > > > keep this machine online or at least not in my internal > > > > > > network. > > > > > > > > > > > > regards > > > > > > > > > > That will be difficult as there is not another machine to > > > > > replace it, its the heart of my network. But the thought of > > > > > upgrading to jessie has crossed my mind, maybe even stretch. I'm > > > > > going to look through the logs, and I guess run up to staples > > > > > and get me a couple 2T drives. My normal upgrade it always to a > > > > > new drive so I have the old drive available for the legacy > > > > > stuffs, like my kmail cache that goes back to about 2007. > > > > > > > > > > And this time I think I'll go full 64 bit as some versions of > > > > > linuxcnc will now run on a 64 bit install. Jessie, on an rpi3b > > > > > is running my lathe pretty good. > > > > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------- > > > > > >---- --- To unsubscribe, e-mail: > > > > > > trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For > > > > > > additional commands, e-mail: > > > > > > trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list > > > > > > messages on the web archive: > > > > > > http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not > > > > > > to top-post: > > > > > > http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting > > > > > > > > > > -- > > > > > Cheers, Gene Heskett > > > > This is just a wild guess ... but is there any chance that you have > > downloaded the Pale Moon browser recently? > > > > Steven Pusser's repo appears after you download Pale Moon. > > Bingo. But the last palemoon needs gtk stuffs newer than wheezy has, so > while I was there, I didn't download it THIS time. It was several months > ago when I put it in. And its been running rougher recently. > > > However, I > > don't allow that to happen. I copy the URL of that repo to my > > sources.list manually, then backup and maintain my sources.list on an > > external hard drive. > > > > Bill > > I have found Pale Moon to be a pretty nice clone of Firefox/Iceweasel. I can use Mozilla browsers pretty much interchangeably, and once I get them like I want, I just copy everything from one folder to another, so that my Pale Moon, Firefox, Iceweasel, IceCat, SeaMonkey, and all other Mozilla, quasi-Mozilla and pseudo-Mozilla browsers look almost identical, and I have all my custom search engines, extensions, whatever I want. I like to use them for different kinds of searching online. I don't like to use the same browser for everything. I use them each for dedicated tasks; for example, I use SeaMonkey for my one and only social network, and nothing else. I has one cookie in it, and no browsing information at all, except for my maintenance of the blog itself. I use Pale Moon for browsing news sites, etc., and it keeps no history, cookies, etc. And so on, and so on. I like to experiment with the possibilities, and to try out different browsers, and to see how I can configure them to do different tricks. I have got them to fetch, but not yet to roll over or beg. Anyway, so I backup my sources.list to an external drive: sudo cp -r -v -f /etc/apt/sources.list -t /media/~/sources/debian-jessie/apt/sources.list-20180610.txt (Also, make sure you open up Konqueror or some other file manager as root, and explore /etc/apt/ for whatever else you keep there, especially in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/ - which is where you'll find third-party repositories like Opera, Vivaldi, Open Office, and Pale Moon.) However, I don't allow them to write my sources.list; I copy those repositories to my master copy on the external drive, and maintain my sources.list from there. Make sure to rename it to something else; e.g.,with the date of backup. From this I create my master copy of the sources.list, and whenever I update my sources.list, I can overwrite the version in /etc/apt/ sudo cp -r -v -f /media/~/sources/debian-jessie/apt/sources.list -t /etc/apt/ and run sudo apt-get update. By doing this, too, I can update my sources.list on-the-fly, and maintain different versions of it for different repositories. I set kedit (actually kedit-trinity) to open up my master copy of the sources.list (from my external hard drive), and can edit as I go along, and easily switch between different versions of my sources.list. And I can keep my own personal repository on a flash drive, and use that as my default, and switch back to online repositories whenever I need to download something new. If this seems either obvious or cumbersome, or highly unorthodox, I can only say that it works for me. I get complete control over my repositories, and do my updates and upgrades manually, so that nothing gets installed automatically. Glad that I could be of some help. I would hate to think that I was good for nothing. ;-) Bill --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting