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Rubberman

Rubberman

  • Linux.com Member
  • Posts: 502
  • Member Since: 21 Apr 09
  • Last Logged In: 5 days ago

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  • Rubberman
    RE: HELP
    Which depends upon what you are doing. All Linux server editions will serve for web, mail, directory, dns, firewall, and other services. Which you choose depends a lot on other factors such as versions of software that you need to run, who is going to maintain it, how many users will be on the system. We use RHEL for our proxy browsers, supporting up to 800+ users per physical server (dual quad or six core cpus, 72GB RAM, 500GB+ disc space each).
    Link to this post 25 May 12

    Which depends upon what you are doing. All Linux server editions will serve for web, mail, directory, dns, firewall, and other services. Which you choose depends a lot on other factors such as versions of software that you need to run, who is going to maintain it, how many users will be on the system. We use RHEL for our proxy browsers, supporting up to 800+ users per physical server (dual quad or six core cpus, 72GB RAM, 500GB+ disc space each).

  • Rubberman
    RE: Book
    Check out The Linux Documentation Project: www.tldp.org
    Link to this post 25 May 12

    Check out The Linux Documentation Project: www.tldp.org

  • Rubberman
    RE: Unrecoverable Error
    It may be that some service or driver can't start, but it obviously is not one that you are dependent upon. You can look at the system messages in /var/log/messages* for indicators of what went wrong. It may be that you can just disable some service, or remove an unneeded driver to stop the "nagging".
    Link to this post 17 May 12

    It may be that some service or driver can't start, but it obviously is not one that you are dependent upon. You can look at the system messages in /var/log/messages* for indicators of what went wrong. It may be that you can just disable some service, or remove an unneeded driver to stop the "nagging".

  • Rubberman
    RE: Error messages after Update
    This is usually due to the repository for an installed package to be unavailable, for whatever reason (network problems, servers down, company out of business). Try again in a few days is my usual advice. If the problem persists, find out the web address of the software provider and see what they say.
    Link to this post 09 May 12

    This is usually due to the repository for an installed package to be unavailable, for whatever reason (network problems, servers down, company out of business). Try again in a few days is my usual advice. If the problem persists, find out the web address of the software provider and see what they say.

  • Rubberman
    RE: Ubuntu with photoshop cs6
    I doubt very much if CS6 (the latest and "greatest") works with Wine in Linux. CS5 has plenty of problems, and Adobe doesn't seem too interested in making it compatible with Linux systems. My advice? Run Windows in a Linux virtual machine, and then run CS6 there.
    Link to this post 09 May 12

    I doubt very much if CS6 (the latest and "greatest") works with Wine in Linux. CS5 has plenty of problems, and Adobe doesn't seem too interested in making it compatible with Linux systems. My advice? Run Windows in a Linux virtual machine, and then run CS6 there.

  • Rubberman
    RE: how to
    Unfortunately, java installations can be pretty counter-intuitive. If you do this, "ls -l /usr/bin/java" you will find that it points to somewhere else, such as /etc/alternatives, or /usr/java/... - where depends upon the operating system and version. When you install a new Java version, it doesn't necessarily get linked to the defaults in /usr/bin. This is because you can have multiple java versions installed at any time. I know about all of this because I am a senior engineer in a major software organization that uses java extensively, and a number of versions...
    Link to this post 09 May 12

    Unfortunately, java installations can be pretty counter-intuitive. If you do this, "ls -l /usr/bin/java" you will find that it points to somewhere else, such as /etc/alternatives, or /usr/java/... - where depends upon the operating system and version. When you install a new Java version, it doesn't necessarily get linked to the defaults in /usr/bin. This is because you can have multiple java versions installed at any time. I know about all of this because I am a senior engineer in a major software organization that uses java extensively, and a number of versions...

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