@derobert It is most definitely an inverted pyramid. I wasn't really specific about what the pyramid is. To be clear, it is the users of Debian tools and processes vs the people who work on them.
Examples: dpkg, apt, aptitude, debconf, debhelper, the Debian installer, lintian. With the possible exception of the installer, all of the these are 1 person affairs. Occasionally, they are 0 person affairs. For example, apt did not have a maintainer for some years, before David K. stepped up. debconf and debhelper are one-man efforts going back many years, by joeyh. The aptitude maintainer disappeared in 2011, and hasn't really been replaced.
There was a sort-of replacement by two people who don't really get on, and have been seen publicly quarreling on the mailing lists. dpkg is a one person effort these days. Another person who was trying to assist got tired of trying to work with him and has mostly retired from the fray. You get the idea.
> Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers. See: How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example.
I generated a key and copied it to my target:
ssh-keygen
ssh-copy-id username@hostname
I left the the location of the key as default and did not set any passphrase.
For a small while after that, I was able to ssh username@hostname without being prompted for a password, and then it stopped wor...
@FaheemMitha looking forward to your blog post you mentioned earlier. I also know about the issue you mentioned, would be good that you blog and I re-share the post :)
I have Nokia N9 phone which is running small web application using web.py. I have an external IP from ISP and on the router I forwarded port 8081 to the phone (which is assigned 192.168.1.22 on LAN). However, I cannot reach it from outside. But I can reach it from LAN: 192.168.1.22:8081/app will...
@terdon N9 is probably the only truly on-topic phone. It runs a full linux environment (as you discovered) so its basically just a very compact linux box with a cell radio
the problem is that either they slept or didn't care, and now they have a product and they have to try if it is cost effective to just try and win a case.
Unfortunately you seldom can insure yourself against incompetent trademark lawyers that don't do their job for you. But like Gnome.org wrote, it is kind of difficult to miss Gnome if you google.
@slm is there some way to get this quickly in the advertisements?
you can create an A to the meta that Gilles linked to. Once it get's to the 6 UV threshold it'll get into the sidebar advertising, if I understand it correctly.
I know this questions doesn't links too much to Ubuntu but I have a question about Unix and Linux and their licenses.
If you choose to make an operating system based on the Linux kernel then you have to distribute it for free under the GPL License, but if you choose to make an OS based on the Uni...
@slm, when should I flag for mod attention? For example, I could have instructed the user to provide more explanation here. So, is mod flag required only for contents that require deletion?
@terdon I finally wrote up the q&a for why Coriolis force makes hurricanes spin a certain way but does not affect the direction a toilet flushes, per an old conversation we had.
It is a common misconception that Coriolis is responsible for the direction the water swirls down a toilet, tub or sink drain. E.g. does a toilet flush the other way in the southern hemisphere? (If it does, it is due to the construction of the basin, not Coriolis). This misconception has been d...
If you're unsure how to deal w/ something you can flag for mod, generally you should be able to deal w/ most things though. Instructing other users, I usually encourage everyone to use this browser plugin AutoReviewComments - Pro-forma comments for SE http://stackapps.com/questions/2116/autoreviewcomments-pro-forma-comments-for-se
The msgs there can be customized if you want them to be worded differently. I always liked using that since it gave me stock comments I could use for others.
@DisplayName In my book, I think it is a bit unfair to have this closed because so many people have favorited this question, so there is a lot of interest. Unfortunately a small oligarchy of 24/7 SE geeks always feel that they have to impose their opinion on the enormously huge rest by these hasty closings. Yes: it's always THE SAME names I read there. Over 5,000 views by now - but 0.1 percent of people dictate a closing. Reminds me of Mozilla developers who always think that what they remove from their software is what their users want to have removed as well. — syntaxerror11 hours ago
@syntaxerror interest is irrelevant. If you were to post a question asking for naked pictures of celebrities, it would get thousands of views and quite possibly upvotes. That does not make it on topic. This question is a classic example of too broad. Just look at the number of answers. Also note that the OP did not specify any limitations which makes the possible answers essentially infinite. In any case, closing is not deleting. The question and all of its 23 answers will still be here. Closing just means that no more answers are accepted. Do we really need even more ways to print π? — terdon ♦5 hours ago
The only thing that made me hesitate originally on it was that the OP asked if there was a standalone command and I knew about the pi utility. The other A'ers probably should've been deleted on that merit alone, but we tend to allow for alternate solutions to the tags, which in this case bit the site in the @ss.
@FaheemMitha - the implication by the comment that there are only a few that participate in the closings, yet on this we have 3 of the 5 that are not typically doing it.
This isn't what I would consider a good example if you're trying to make that argument
The entire rationale of why we close seems to go over people's heads too. The closings are done b/c the Q is off-topic, or poorly written. Both of these reasons are to protect the site from poor quality and so as to not waste peoples' time chasing a moving target when trying to answer.
There should be possibility to add labels to favourite questions and answers. I tend to forget even my own solutions for some problems, so sometimes I mark a question as favourite not for question but for one of answers, but later on I forget why in fact that question was marked as favourite. It would be nice to have a possibility to attach short description to favourites.
@slm Not sure what you mean. But I actively participate in closing of questions. Do you mean that while closing we need to leave some comments as well after choosing to close?
Suppose I use my favorites as learning. If I do it, specifying favorites's category is hard.
Suppose unix.staxexchange is Firefox, and favorites of unix.stackexchange is bookmarks of firefox, How i create folder for bookmark?
I like to star/favorite questions on StackOverflow that I would like to revisit some time in the future. Some of them are interesting, some because I'd like to reread when I get home from work. After a while, these pile up-- there are a lot of them.
My question is, can we have a feature or way...
There are many, many old posts on meta asking for suggestions on how to better organize favorites. 1, 2 and 3, among others.
This is not meant to be an open discussion on how to improve favorites, but rather a specific feature request that I'd like feedback on.
I would love to see a featur...
When I try to compile my c++ code, I got an error saying I need to update the cmake I use. I downloaded the latest one
I followed the instructions in the README In the cmake-3.0.2 folder, that is I ran ./bootstrap && make && make install. It all worked alright until I tried 'make install'. It sh...
@Gilles Installing software withour root access is really just a no-win situation. It means that (a) you are not the sysamin and (b) the sysadmin is MIA or hates you. Either way, bad situation.
@FaheemMitha installing some version of cmake? Sure. But installing a more recent version than what the distribution has? Not only does that take time, but it could also break things for other people if it's installed as the default, so it has to be installed in a non-default location anyway (i.e. not in /usr/bin or /usr/local/bin).
@Gilles With those build systemy things you generally want to stay as current as possible. But we don't know the context of this upgrade, so speculation is not useful.
@Gilles The advice I've generally received is to stay as current as possible with the build tool. Well, the advice for specifically for autotools, but I think it applies to cmake too. And any software can have bugs.
We should make a loop-instruction (name?) tag. People keep misusing loop-device when they want to have a loop in their shell script. And merge for into that new tag.
@FaheemMitha every author will tell you to use the latest version of their software
I think autotools incompatibility is a major problem because they are prone ot backward incompatible changes. So staying very current helps to mitigate that.
@Gilles I guess that is true much of the time.
Debian still has multiple versions of autotools in the archives. Must be a drag to deal with.
@Gilles The advice in this case was "third party".
How likely is it that this would get an answer here?
I'm trying to figure out how to build my project for multiple versions of Python.
I'm testing this on Debian wheezy, where the default version of Python is 2.7.
but 2.6 is also supported and installed. However, automake is only installing
and compiling for Python 2.7. I'd like it to compile for 2...
you may be running against the SO problem that your big wall of code (which isn't terribly relevant) is scaring people away, but if you remove it, your question will get closed for lack of code
@Gilles It's not really that big. And people often post their complete Makefile.am/configure.ac. (Because the thing is a unit, and coming up with dummy/minimal examples is hard.) I suspect it is just that nobody knows the answer.
I guess I could trim it down, but I doubt it would help.
@FaheemMitha if the s/w is in a repo and is available it can be easy, but installing s/w is generally not trivial, esp. when you need specific versions, which is typically the case with gcc, cmake, and libraries. The entire move to docker has been fueled by this, btw.
@Braiam agreed, do we just need to delete the advertisement from the meta post?
For example, Debian supports multiple versions of gcc, along with supporting libraries and stuff, so there is no problem there. But that adds considerable overhead.
SUSE Linux (/ˈsuːsə/ or /ˈsuːzə/; German: [ˈzuːzə]) is a computer operating system. It is built on top of the open source Linux kernel and is distributed with system and application software from other open source projects. SUSE Linux is of German origin and mainly, was developed in Europe. The first version appeared in early 1994, making SUSE one of the oldest existing commercial distributions. It is known for its YaST configuration tool.
Novell bought the SUSE (then "SuSE") brands and trademarks in 2003. Novell, one of the founding members of the Open Invention Network, decided to make th...
It was like sending them down a black hole. Not that Debian is exactly perfect in that regard, but at least I know there are people out there who might read it.