No problem. :D
On a Debian or Deb-like, just apt-get install gtk-qt-engine. Enjoy!
You can adapt the GTK look and feel in KDE within the KDE Control Center. You can either choose to have GTK apps look & feel like your current KDE...
I agree. As far as kernels go, it doesn't really get any more user friendly than Linux. Also, UNIX is a very simple and elegant concept for an...
What distro do you run? If you run Debian or a derivative (such as *ubuntu), you can follow the directions here to add WINE to your repositories....
Linux/Unix actually has a simpler permissions structure by default than Windows. However, it is important to understand how it works or you will...
My intent wasn't to turn this into a flame-fest, believe it or not, so sorry for the rant. :O But, I might as well clarify further. That detail...
Never had that issue in Debian, Mandriva, Suse, Gentoo or RHEL/CentOS. Could be the case in Kubuntu, but I dunno. Seems like a lot of things about...
Stick bass! :agree:
This is a community forum, not a place of business. From the rules: This includes buying or selling services, and isn't just limited to hardware....
Not at all! Did you at least clear-coat it though? Seems like it would feel rough and nasty.
Just got a new Gretch myself, check 'er out: [IMG]
Persistence - DSL Wiki
The problem seems to be that your LAN segment has no route to DMZ segment, so the connection fails. That or your Linksys doesn't have a stateful...
No.
Don't try to install Ubuntu debs on Debian if you can help it. Ubuntu debs are often built against unstable versions of GCC and other critical...
Wooo, you're lucky. :) I just had a friend who had his TCP-stack hijacked recently. In that case there's no elegant way to fix it. Probably this...
You need to create shares on your Linux box, via your /etc/samba/smb.conf file. Afterwards, you need a Samba account to access the share with; you...
Sounds like the spyware installed a nasty little loopback proxy, which when removed, left a hole in your network stack. In other words, "Windows...
Sounds like a Windows permissions problem, not a network problem. This is a bit general, but try reading this:...
Separate names with a comma.