Hi James,
On Tue, 2007-10-09 at 14:03 +0100, James Ogley wrote:
> I've disabled pidgin-nonblock-common*.patch in GNOME:Community/pidgin
> for the time being because the first of these patches doesn't apply on
> 2.2.1 and the second depends on the first.
>
> I don't know who created these patches as they're not referenced in
> pidgin.changes - does anyone know?
Probably some GAIM leftovers.
thoenig@zimtstern:/mounts/dist/full/full-10.2-i386/suse/i586> rpm -qp gaim.rpm --changelog |grep block -C 1
* Tue Nov 15 2005 - hpj(a)suse.de
- Updated nonblock patches to handle more cases.
- Updated system proxy patch to actually work and use system
CC'ing hpj as I'm unsure whether Hans Petter is monitoring this list.
Thanks,
Timo
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I've disabled pidgin-nonblock-common*.patch in GNOME:Community/pidgin
for the time being because the first of these patches doesn't apply on
2.2.1 and the second depends on the first.
I don't know who created these patches as they're not referenced in
pidgin.changes - does anyone know?
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James Ogley
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GNOME for openSUSE: http://software.opensuse.org/download/GNOME:/
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Hallo.
I am just going to stop publishing of GNOME:STABLE and repopulate it
from GNOME 2.18 to GNOME 2.20.
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Stanislav Brabec
software developer
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Before I submit this to 10.3 or factory I'd like to get some
feedback/testing for this package. The following fixes/enhancements
have been added:
1. Speed improvements when performing a search in the package selector
2. The left-hand column (Available Software) should now be alphabetically sorted
3. The left-hand column (Availbale Software) should now only contain
packages that are not installed or are upgradable
4. You should get a warning if canceling a non-submitted transaction
You can download the package here:
http://151.155.4.222/opensuse-10.3/
Thanks for the help!
-Boyd
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I have added the Mugshot package to my home project if anyone wants to
check it out, or potentially add it to GNOME:Community, etc..
http://build.opensuse.org/package/show?project=home%
3Ajhaygood&package=mugshot
The SPEC was based on Fedora's with modifications to use openSUSE
packages instead of Fedora packages. It also includes a patch to build
system to detect xulrunner-devel instead of firefox-devel. The SPEC &
build patch could use some work in order to be built on openSUSE 10.2,
but the provided SPEC and build patch works fine on openSUSE 10.3
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I tried to remove Skencil a while ago (openSUSE 10.3), and the package
manager told me Inkscape depends on Skencil.
Now, I don't know how Inkscape is built or packaged, but I've never
seen it depend on Skencil before (at least not on distros I've used),
so I am a bit confused. Why is this so? Or is the package manager
simply wrong?
I don't mind having Skencil installed, but I don't really need it.
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Branko
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Please keep your replies on-list.
> Because different players use different methods of organizing music,
> and Exaile (as well as amaroK) seem to use a method that is prefered
> by many people (if not most).
^^ Included for the help of the list
> > and it's core developers are employed by Novell?
> Ah, okay then. Makes sense. Can Exaile be made at least optional, then?
You said there's a package in Factory - which would qualify as optional
but I can't find it - are you sure?
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I would like to suggest that Exaile be made the default player in
GNOME version of openSUSE.
http://www.exaile.org/
The player is quite stable, very uable, and it has many features
similar to KDE's amaroK, which is, as you probably already know, the
most popular OSS music player. There seems to be a package in the
Factory that does not work with 10.3, but maybe it would be a good
choice for future releases. And it would also be nice if it could be
made available for us, 10.3 users as well.
Best regards,
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Branko
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I have already posted this to the general mailing list
(opensuse(a)opensuse.org), so my apologies to all that are reading both
this list and the opensuse ml.
Original post:
I see that the applications list (Computer > Applications > More
applications...) is "integrated", so to speak, with the package
manager. The right-click menu gives me an option of removing an
application. That is very nice. However, if I choose that option, it
loads the full package manager, which in turn loads the full package
list from the on-line repos.
IMNSHO, I think that it is not necessary to load the on-line package
lists if I only want to remove an application that is already
installed on the local system. The info needed for removal should
already be on my box. Or am I wrong? If I'm wrong, shouldn't the info
needed to remove a package be available off-line?
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Branko
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