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* Re: Using Grub with Speech
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Steve Holmes
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

I just found some sample menu.lst files.  Here's one with a lot of stuff 
in it but it shows a few lines with boot perameters after the kernel name 
and lines with windows 95 loaded, or one of those windows systems.
http://www.antlinux.com/lifebook/menu.lst
here's another posted at
http://www.dewback.cl/files/public/confs/menu.lst
how would you get lilo to talk?  I may use it instead.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Karen Lewellen
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

What kind of machine do you want size, type of internet connection .  How 
old is your doss machine?  You may just be able to set up as a linux 
machine.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Thomas Stivers
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

You mention  using du -ms to find out how much data you have.  What is the 
difference between that and using df -k .  ?




Janina Sajka <janina@rednote.net>
Sent by: speakup-bounces@braille.uwo.ca
09/27/2004 11:11 AM
Please respond to "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 

 
        To:     "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup@braille.uwo.ca>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: Linux and data storage?


Hi, Karen:

You don't say how much data you have there? Issue the following command
from your home directory to find out how much data you have:

du -ms .

It will give you a number in megabytes. It may take some time to run.

Now, to your question. You ask whether it would be easy. Well, yes, it
might be, or it might not be.

It's not likely to be pleasant to move copious amounts of data over a
dial up modem connection, but there are easy technologies that can
insure you get a true copy even if it takes some time to accomplish.

I'm thinking of rsync.

And, yes, you are on the right track. Hardware and software can be
replaced. One's work/data files cannot be so readily replaced. So, it is
wise to have one's important data in two physical clocations.

But let's start out by defining how much "a lot" is.

Karen Lewellen writes:
> Hi all,
> This is an odd one, so I hope I ask it in such a way to make sense.
> I do not have a Linux machine.  I have been trying to get this, and 
> thought I had one in the he works but it seems that party either made up 

> the machines they were offering, or  for some other reason is not coming 

> through.
> In any case, I do use a Linux shell service extensively.  I fear almost 
> too extensively, as you will understand in a moment.
> The OS on the system i use mostly is dos, and I use nettamer to telnet 
to 
> my Linux shell.
> In the workspace of my shell service i have a great deal of 
irreplaceable 
> files and programs.  I eave them up here, for ease, but I just was 
> reminded that this may be a venerable state of affairs.
> Fortunately when the server went down nothing was lost or so it seems, 
but 
> I have a serious factor to consider.
>  My question has two parts.
> first, is there a way to move large amounts of data stored in the 
> workspace of a Linux shell service to another location in tact, with 
> relative ease,  and without taking all of the data on the entire system?
> second, if my machine was also a Linux one, would this kind of storage 
be 
> easy to do?
> As I said before I do not have such a machine, but this has shaken me up 

> enough that if a full Linux or Linux/dos or Linux/windows machine would 
> give me some firm safe backup, I will have to start advertising for 
> someone to build this for me and encurl the expense.
>  I have too busy a professional life to do this myself, and would rather 

> pay someone with the skills than lose valuable time trying to re-invent 
the 
> wheel.
> Thanks,
> Karen
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup

-- 
 
                                                                 Janina 
Sajka, Chair
 Accessibility Workgroup
                                                                 Free 
Standards Group (FSG)

janina@freestandards.org                 Phone: +1 202.494.7040


_______________________________________________
Speakup mailing list
Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

What's wrong with zipping files into a archive then uncompressing them at 
their new home?  I think the rsinc solution you were given should fulfil 
this need.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Karen Lewellen
   ` nick G
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

Actually I found her fadora howto  much more helpfull, if you use fedora, 
then her email stream today would lead you to think.  We all can play 
different roles I guess.  It seems to have a lot of good suggestions for 
how to get speakup if you use a kernel compiled with speakup as modules, 
that means you can start and stop speakup on a running system.  If you 
choose to use a system like debian, there other places which might serve 
you better if you use a version of speakup deb provided on the debian 
site.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Karen Lewellen
   ` Gregory Nowak
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

Someone will undoubtedly correct me about this, zip does not compress 
music files more then they are already compressed.  Zip is a loss-less 
compression format.  All your data could be there.  Yes in answer to your 
question, there are methods which have been suggested which will meet your 
goals and not compress your data.




Karen Lewellen <klewellen@shellworld.net>
Sent by: speakup-bounces@braille.uwo.ca
09/27/2004 04:21 PM
Please respond to "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 

 
        To:     "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup@braille.uwo.ca>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: Linux and data storage?


Much of this is music materials and the like which do not compress well 
when using those programs  as I have tried.
I do not want to chance it.
Call me a chicken if you wish but it is my data.  Will the methods 
suggested do this, no compression involved?
Karen

On Mon, 27 Sep 2004, Luke Davis wrote:

> On Mon, 27 Sep 2004, Karen Lewellen wrote:
>
>> I have no intention of risking a zip of any of these files, nor do i 
want 
>> to
>
> Risking a zip?  What does that mean?  Where is the risk?  Gnu Zip (not 
PK 
> Zip), and Bzip2, are highly stable formats.
> Tar is an archiving method used for decades on unix.  In fact, Linux 
uses 
> bzip2 as its kernel format these days.
>
> This exact method is how many of us who backup shellworld user data, do 
it, 
> on a regular basis--tar archived into bzip, or gzip.
>
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>
>

_______________________________________________
Speakup mailing list
Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Gregory Nowak
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

I didn't know that about rsinc.  I always thaught you'd have to use cvs 
for that kind of backup.  Informative indeed.




Janina Sajka <janina@rednote.net>
Sent by: speakup-bounces@braille.uwo.ca
09/27/2004 04:34 PM
Please respond to "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 

 
        To:     "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup@braille.uwo.ca>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: Linux and data storage?


Just to finish up on backup strategies:

The first backup is the big chore. But, it's not the last word--unless,
of course, one never changes one's data. Not likely.

So, a backup routine is the real target.

rsync is the right tool especially for the backup routine because it
intelligently copies only those portions that have changed. Very
effective, especially on low bandwidth connections.

Luke Davis writes:
> On Mon, 27 Sep 2004, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> 
> >You have already shown that you are not first hand aware of the 
shellworld 
> >setup, given your mistake in using the du program.
> >It is better that Luc give me the answers as he knows this service 
better
> 
> Be careful with exclusionary statements such as that.  You will alienate 

> help.  I happen to be here right now.  When I leave tonight, I may not 
> pick back up on this conversation for days.
> 
> Take help where you can get it.  You told her that Shellworld was Linux. 

> It is not, it is FreeBSD.  She gave you a Linux command syntax, because 
> you told her that was what you were using.
> 
> Luke
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
> http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup

-- 
 
                                                                 Janina 
Sajka, Chair
 Accessibility Workgroup
                                                                 Free 
Standards Group (FSG)

janina@freestandards.org                 Phone: +1 202.494.7040


_______________________________________________
Speakup mailing list
Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Gregory Nowak
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

Tar using the compression option compresses well, without specifying that 
option, it only creates an archive.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
   ` Gregory Nowak
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

I don't know of any site which compares distrobutions.  The thing to 
remember is  distrobutions are a method of collecting and packaging 
programs.  The main difference you see is where things are located on your 
system, how your system handles upgrades, what comes with a "standard" 
system.  Some are very large in size while others are not.  Most of the 
programms are the same.  when you get a functioning system using info and 
man will tell you the options for that program.  I can really only speak 
with limited authority on two distrobutions, fedora(formerly redhat) and 
debian.  Both have pre-compiled speakup kernels with speakup available. 
That means that you can boot speakup and linux with speach if you have a 
hardware synthesiser.  All distrobutions use the same keywords for the 
name of your synthesiser because that is controlled by speakup and that 
information is available in a few places on the speakup website.  Both 
distrobutions have a ystem for organizing, managing software.  Debian's 
system is more advanced I think then rpm because if you install a package 
which needs another package, you should get that package as well whithout 
having to specify you need that package.  Debian clasifies their versions 
as either stable, testing or unstable.  Stable is what they determine as a 
production system, it's disadvantage is that it may lack some features or 
software you need.  Testing will have a few more buggs but  more features 
and unstable continues this trend.  The standard Fedora distrobution with 
speakup will be more recent interms of what it offers for software, how 
well it detects your hardware like usb and cd berners then the standard 
speakup debian distrobution.  To install debian you can get or bern  cd 
images of all the cds or do an installation which starts with floppies 
and/or cd images and install the rest as you need it over a internet 
connection.  The standard fedora distrobution is better suited for berning 
cd immages and installing.  Fedora has a better howto for installing 
itwith speakup, but debian also has great documentation explaining the 
general installation procedure.  Keep in mind these are just two 
distrobutions to choose from there are several others, slackware, gintu, 
etc.  Because this is linux, you don't have to stick to one distrobution's 
philosophy or even use a packaged distrobution at all.  You could start 
with one distrobution and install everything else from source not using a 
package manager.  I chose Debian because I like it's package manager, it 
was easy for me to setup as a command-line or console system, I could 
install what I needed over a network and I have a co-worker who is 
familear with Debian.  I can't say one distrobution is better then another 
or that speakup runns better on one or another because everything is so 
customizable.  Some may need more tweeking to make everything work the way 
you want.  I hope that answers some of your questions, that I haven't 
confused you and that I haven't said anything incorrect here.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread
* Re: Linux and data storage?
@  Sean M McMahon
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 176+ messages in thread
From: Sean M McMahon @  UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.

Gladly:  Not knowing about rcink's capabilities, the only program I'd seen 
which can update parts of a file is cvs.  Only knowing that I assumed to 
perform a backup from one system to another, you'd have to setup one 
system as the cvs server, the other as the client.  That's how I came to 
that conclusion  Of course it isn't really that usable because you can't 
files with . in them.  And it would take a lot of configuring. 




Gregory Nowak <greg@romuald.net.eu.org>
Sent by: speakup-bounces@braille.uwo.ca
09/27/2004 05:09 PM
Please respond to "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." 

 
        To:     "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux." <speakup@braille.uwo.ca>
        cc: 
        Subject:        Re: Linux and data storage?


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

On Mon, Sep 27, 2004 at 04:45:09PM -0700, Sean M McMahon wrote:
> I didn't know that about rsinc.  I always thaught you'd have to use cvs 
> for that kind of backup. 

Hmmm, cvs? Can you explain your reasoning for reaching such a
conclusion? I'd be genuinely interested in hearing it.

Greg



- -- 
Free domains: http://www.eu.org/ or mail dns-manager@EU.org
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_______________________________________________
Speakup mailing list
Speakup@braille.uwo.ca
http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 176+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~ UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 176+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
 Using Grub with Speech Sean M McMahon
 ` Steve Holmes
   ` Janina Sajka
     ` Steve Holmes
       ` Janina Sajka
   ` Janina Sajka
   ` Linux and data storage? Karen Lewellen
     ` hank
       ` Karen Lewellen
     ` Chuck Hallenbeck
       ` Sina Bahram
         ` Karen Lewellen
           ` Sina Bahram
             ` Karen Lewellen
               ` Hart Larry
                 ` Terry D. Cudney
                   ` Karen Lewellen
                     ` Terry D. Cudney
                       ` Hart Larry
                         ` games doc
                           ` games Jayson Smith
                           ` games Gregory Nowak
                       ` Linux and data storage? Ann Parsons
     [not found]                       ` <Pine.BSF.4.61.0409271506320.884@server2.shellworld.net>
                         ` Linux system...dressed downfrom yesterday Karen Lewellen
                           ` Janina Sajka
                             ` Karen Lewellen
                               ` Janina Sajka
                                 ` Karen Lewellen
                                   ` Janina Sajka
                                   ` Ann Parsons
                                     ` Karen Lewellen
                             ` Gregory Nowak
                               ` Janina Sajka
                           ` Kenny Hitt
                             ` Karen Lewellen
                             ` Correction about Pine and debian; was " Cheryl Homiak
           ` Linux and data storage? Janina Sajka
             ` Sina Bahram
               ` Karen Lewellen
                 ` Janina Sajka
                 ` Sina Bahram
             ` doc
               ` Janina Sajka
                 ` Luke Davis
                   ` Janina Sajka
                     ` Luke Davis
                       ` Janina Sajka
                         ` Luke Davis
                           ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Janina Sajka
               ` Luke Davis
             ` Karen Lewellen
               ` Luke Davis
                 ` Karen Lewellen
                   ` Luke Davis
                     ` Karen Lewellen
                       ` Luke Davis
                         ` Karen Lewellen
                       ` Luke Davis
           ` Luke Davis
             ` Janina Sajka
               ` Luke Davis
                 ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Karen Lewellen
                     ` Luke Davis
                       ` Janina Sajka
                       ` Karen Lewellen
                 ` Janina Sajka
               ` Karen Lewellen
               ` Sina Bahram
             ` Karen Lewellen
         ` nick G
           ` Sina Bahram
         ` Janina Sajka
           ` Sina Bahram
             ` Janina Sajka
               ` Sina Bahram
                 ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Karen Lewellen
                     ` Janina Sajka
                       ` Karen Lewellen
                         ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Sina Bahram
                     ` Janina Sajka
                       ` Sina Bahram
                 ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Sina Bahram
                     ` Janina Sajka
               ` Luke Davis
                 ` Janina Sajka
                   ` Luke Davis
                     ` Janina Sajka
                       ` Luke Davis
                   ` Karen Lewellen
                     ` Janina Sajka
       ` Karen Lewellen
       ` Janina Sajka
         ` Karen Lewellen
           ` Janina Sajka
             ` Karen Lewellen
               ` Luke Davis
                 ` Karen Lewellen
     ` Luke Yelavich
       ` Karen Lewellen
       ` Luke Davis
         ` Janina Sajka
           ` Luke Davis
             ` Janina Sajka
               ` Luke Davis
           ` Karen Lewellen
             ` Luke Davis
               ` Karen Lewellen
                 ` Luke Davis
                   ` Karen Lewellen
                     ` Chuck Hallenbeck
                       ` Karen Lewellen
                 ` Luke Davis
             ` nick G
     ` doc
       ` Luke Davis
       ` Janina Sajka
     ` Janina Sajka
       ` Luke Davis
         ` Janina Sajka
         ` Karen Lewellen
           ` Luke Davis
       ` Karen Lewellen
         ` Janina Sajka
         ` Luke Davis
           ` Karen Lewellen
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Karen Lewellen
   ` Janina Sajka
     ` Karen Lewellen
       ` Janina Sajka
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Thomas Stivers
 ` Luke Davis
 ` Janina Sajka
   ` Luke Davis
 Sean M McMahon
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Karen Lewellen
   ` Luke Davis
     ` Gregory Nowak
       ` Luke Davis
         ` Hart Larry
           ` Karen Lewellen
             ` Steve Holmes
               ` Chuck Hallenbeck
                 ` Karen Lewellen
                 ` Janina Sajka
                 ` Adam Myrow
                   ` Chuck Hallenbeck
         ` Karen Lewellen
           ` Luke Davis
             ` Karen Lewellen
               ` Luke Davis
                 ` Karen Lewellen
       ` Karen Lewellen
         ` Luke Davis
           ` Karen Lewellen
     ` Karen Lewellen
       ` Janina Sajka
   ` Gregory Nowak
 ` nick G
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Karen Lewellen
 ` Gregory Nowak
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Gregory Nowak
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Gregory Nowak
 Sean M McMahon
 ` Gregory Nowak
 Sean M McMahon

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