Disclaimer: :DAs I do NOT know how to code, I may not truely understand the difficulty of what I am going to suggest.
Hello Crunchbang(#!) Member,I am a IT student here at philippines. Then our professor has give an OS review. Our group choose CrunchBang . Now my topic for the documentation for Crunchbang(#!) is Process Management. I don't have an idea about Process Management of Crunchbang(#!) . Please Help me to answer this question below about Process Management. 1.
Pyroom was part of the default CrunchBang install back in the *buntu days; I've never understood why Philip saw fit to leave it out of the Debian-based releases. It's tiny, has no dependencies that weren't already installed at the time I installed it, and it fits quite well with the CrunchBang get-the-f*ck-out-of-our-way philosophy.
I'm trying to install PHP5, by compiling it myself.
I'm doing this on Crunchbang Linux, version 11. Specifically, the version using the 3.2 kernel. Crunchbang 11 is based on Debian. This is a 64-bit Virtual machine, running on a 64-bit Win7 Professional.
Hello
My klipper doesn't allow me to copy text from one program to another. For example if I want to copy a url across from my browser into kate, I copy the text out of the url, then I right click and paste into kate and instead of pasting the url into kate the last thing I copied in kate is then repasted into kate.
Any help in solving this problem would be greatly appreciated.
Before I start, this should work for both Stable/Unstable/Beta.Alright so I was trying to install CrunchBang on my good ol IBM Thinkpad lappy, and I started running into a problem, later on it jumped to 3 and then 6, and I was freaking out because I spent my weekend/3 days trying to install the only linux os that I see in my eyes amazing (Crunchbang), anyways enough with useless talk.I had this id
Eduardo Mercovich wrote:Hi Everyone. My Waldorf install runs beautifully in every sense. :-)However, I need newer versions of a couple of packages, namely Inkscape & Python.
Google is introducing new packaged apps that will break out of the browser, work offline by default, and enable richer, more immersive experiences.
Packaged apps will deliver an experience as capable as a native app. Just like web apps, packaged apps are written in HTML5, JavaScript, and CSS.
I'm a Linux user back from the days of Slackware on floppies, but I have been on Windows and OS X for the last seven years. Now I'm messing around with Linux again, and I'm checking out a bunch of different distributions.