There is a very good article about how to manage the LCD backlight of your Dell laptop
I’ve tried it out and it works very well.
There is a very good article about how to manage the LCD backlight of your Dell laptop
I’ve tried it out and it works very well.
DivFix++ designed to repair broken avi file streams by rebuilding index part of file.
This program is very useful when trying to preview movies which has no index part,
like some files are currently downloading at “eMuLe”
How to install DivFix++
Either download the package from here or add the Treviño’s Ubuntu Repository to your /etc/apt/sources.list by: deb http://download.tuxfamily.org/3v1deb feisty 3v1n0
deb-src http://download.tuxfamily.org/3v1deb feisty 3v1n0
and install it via APT by:sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install divfix++
This repository has many other packages included and worth to have a look at them
On Ubuntu Documentation you can find the CompositeManager/Xgl Howto for Ubuntu.
There is also an howto on the official Beryl Homepage: Install Beryl on Ubuntu Feisty with XGL – Beryl Wiki
Complete How To: Dell Inspiron 6400 also covers the setup of Beryl on Ubuntu.
If you want to use Beryl instead of Compiz you need to extract beryl-xgl from http://ubuntu.beryl-project.org/pool/feisty/main/0.2.0/beryl-core_0.2.0~0beryl1_i386.deb and copy to /usr/bin. You can refer to this bug for more details.
In my thread How to organize disks with Disk Explorer Pro 3 under wine, I got many replies with other similar tools. One if them was CdFly.
How to compile CdFly
First you need to download the source or from SVN repository.
Install libraries needed to compile CdFly$ sudo apt-get install build-essential libqt4-dev
Go to the directory with the extracted source and create a Makefile and compile it$ qmake-qt4
$ make
Now you can start CdFly by./cdfly
The purpose of disktype is to detect the content format of a disk or disk image.
Install the pakage
$ sudo apt-get install disktype
coreutils: /bin/ls
How to use disktype
Analyzing a CD Image:
#
sudo disktype image.iso
Analyzing the first IDE hard disk:
#sudo disktype /dev/hda
Analyzing a CD or DVE
#sudo disktype /dev/cdrom
I found the webpage Ubuntu Tips and Tricks which has some nice hints on how to find the package that provides a file or directory
How to find the package that provides a specific file:$ dpkg ?S /bin/ls
coreutils: /bin/ls
How to find the package even if it’s not installed that provides a specific file:
First you need to install apt-file
$ sudo apt-file update
Now you can look for the packe by
$ apt-file search /usr/bin/jove
jove: usr/bin/jove