You are not logged in.
And while we're at it: Where is the delete-my-account function hidden?
It is not possible to delete an account if you have posted. Users with 0 posts can be removed at their request. A user who recently deleted all their posts (about 30) is what started the quest to find a better solution that would not break threads. There are still quoted references to this user that now have no antecedent.
The timeout is a day, or 86400 seconds, since the creation of the post.
'edit' and 'delete' are treated the same based on my reasoning that editing lets you remove all content, and a blank post is basically the same as a deleted post.
IMO, that time is too short.
People edit for many reasons, not just to delete. I have sometimes edited content days, weeks, even years after posting. There should be a more conservative time limit for deleting the first post of a thread. That should only be allowed if there have been no responses. My .02 . . .
I can still edit my posts on the debian forum even from 2015 but there's no longer a delete option. It is possible to have different timeouts for those 2 functions. We need to find the sweet spot for each of the options.
Ralph has been tweaking the timeout limits on editing and deleting posts because there was a user who recently deleted all of their posts. Please suggest time limits for consideration.
Vivaldi handles jitsi better than chromium does! Of course, that's still on jessie 32 bit. LOL!! FF has never been able to handle it. Chrome did till recently then suddenly wouldn't work. I don't care much for the layout or look (too shiny) and the community was not to my liking either. jitsi is the only thing I'm using it for.
golinux wrote:Seems no one reads the Release Notes anymore
Please, don't think so. A lot of people do read this and much more. Keep up!
Unfortunately, those of us on help-desk just see the ones who don't. A few every day on average.
If the fix in the Release Notes doesn't work, you might try an .asoundrc configuration.
Seems no one reads the Release Notes anymore or is aware of the content of the Old English epic poem Beowulf. It was a bloody mess. But I guess the mind just relates to what it knows best . . .
Have you read the Release Notes?
@Altoid . . . perhaps you could adopt, adapt and maintain SLiM for devuan . . . or even upstream . . .
golinux wrote:Good grief, you had help from Bruce Perens? What a legend...
Yeah, he's been around the campfire since the beginning and pops in on occasion. I have had some off-list as well as official contact with him over the years . . .
I am currently dealing with a misbehaving external harddrive that would not mount because of this error:
Error when trying to mount:
Failed to open directory "cstwo".
Error when getting information for file '/media/xxxxxx/cstwo/600':
Input/output error.
There is currently a long thread on DNG about what I have done to get it back in shape short of the nuclear option.
Start by running SMART to get some general info about the state of your drive.
In the end an fsck fixed things for me.
The first response came on DNG
mason commented on #devuan-dev
Welcome! This would be a good place to post your How-To:
https://dev1galaxy.org/viewforum.php?id=7
I'm pretty sure you will be able to edit your posts.
OT but relevant . . . doesn't your browser have a spellcheck?
From the Pegasus Mail and Linux Open Source page
The other major issue with Pegasus Mail is that it uses a proprietary third-party product as its core editor, and I would not be able to take that product with me into an Open Source environment. The same problems do not exist with Mercury, because I have written every line of the package myself, but with Pegasus Mail, the problem is significant.
No way of knowing what that proprietary core of Pegasus is doing. Also perhaps some wine overhead?
Stat alert . . . my 2000th post!
You shouldn't need to download any packages directly from Debian. The "merged" designation in the devuan source line takes care of fetching packages directly from Debian.
Interesting about backports, how to proceed, which is the link or the guide to get more recent versions?
You can find that information exactly where you might expect it to be - the devuan.org website.
and it would also be good to try the full "trial" version, called a chimaera.
To get to chimaera you'll have to install beowulf and upgrade. Note that it is recommended to use the release name not the suite designation in your sources.list.
You seem to be missing the point of Devuan, which is to be a systemd-free fork of Debian, and which it accomplishes quite nicely.
And as with Debian, the goal is STABILITY not the latest shiny, shiny.
I don't like systemd, either but the hardware desktop of Linux Mint in Xfce automatically detects the devices when you plug for to the ports,
Debian/Devuan are NOT Mint or Ubuntu.
@ofvergara . . .
The refracta website:
https://refracta.org/
Download iso images. refracta 9 is available:
https://get.refracta.org/
You can read about creating a persistent partition on usb here:
https://refracta.org/docs/readme.refracta2usb.txt
That should get you started.
You have to ask the right question to get the answer you want. Many ways to skin a cat, as they say.
I use -ubuntu a LOT! LOL!
It's why I'm glad I just use a wired ethernet connection :-)
Amen to that!
That looks really tempting, Miyo!
Double quote the search term: "devuan"
And use the -debian operator also.
https://bugs.devuan.org/ but these are most likely debian bugs aren't they?