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  How is the VLC video picture size changed in LL2.8?
Posted by: m654321 - 09-04-2016, 08:11 PM - Forum: Other - Replies (1)

I often plug my dual-boot (win8.1/LL2.8  laptop into the TV to play our i-player programmes saved on the laptop's drive. 

However I always  do playback of the saved programmes on win8.1, as the VLC media player I'm using gives me an excellent full-screen view with this operating system. 

With LL2.8, the situation is different:  VLC player behaves less satisfactorily - it wont give me a full-screen view: the picture covers the width of the TV screen but does not fill the whole of the vertical axis of the TV display. 

So, how can I fix this for LL, as I'm loathe to go to an LL-only (single boot) laptop if VLC wont provide a decent whole screen display on my TV screen when using LL..?

I'm sure there must be a simple tweak here I'm a bit clueless on where to find it... :-[

Mike 

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  Tutorial/ Configure Linux Lite 3.0 Ad Hoc Wifi/ SSH From Other Linux Computer
Posted by: trinidad - 09-03-2016, 10:56 PM - Forum: Tutorials - No Replies

Tutorial/ Configure Linux Lite 3.0 Ad Hoc Wifi/ SSH From Other Linux Computer

Setting Up Our Ad Hoc Wifi Connection In Linux Lite 3.0 For SSH Server Access/ SFTP

          At the outset it is sensible to remember the Windows idea of a “hosted network” when considering Linux ad hoc wifi. What I mean by this is that the new ad hoc wifi network must be set up on the same Linux computer where the SSH server resides. The SSH client side of ad hoc wifi is only to make a secure connection to the SSH (hosted network connection) of the wifi network created on the SSH server side. It’s nature (no DHCP) makes it technically difficult to test with ping so we won’t. Certain things done in a correct order can ease the creation of such an ad hoc connection in Linux Lite 3.0 as network manager in Xenial (Linux Lite 3.0 version) is now predisposed to often correctly configuring an ad hoc wifi network (except for WPA) and generating a private IPv4 address during setup. To avoid IP conflicts, and allow shared Internet provider connections via ethernet cable, Linux network manager generally defaults to the address range 10.0.0.0 to 10.255.255.255 for ad hoc wifi, reserving the 192.168 range connections for DHCP router host/client assigning.

          The first thing we need to do is download and install SSH server on our Linux Lite computer. Make sure you are connected to the Internet and click >Menu>System>Install/Remove Software to open Synaptic in Linux Lite. Type in your password when prompted and click the >Authenticate button. Make sure the left pane is set to >All and in the search box type ssh. Scroll through the package list and find the package: openssh server – 1:7.2p2-4ubuntu2.1. Left click on it, and select mark for installation. Agree to the dependencies and download and install it to your Linux Lite 3.0 computer.

          If you’re a new Linux user or nervous about the terminal and/or the nano editor, open a terminal and enter the following command: sudo cp /etc/ssh/sshd_config{,.bak} This will back up the default sshd configuration file in case you mess up.

          Now type the command: sudo nano /etc/ssh/sshd_config and the configuration file of your newly installed ssh server will appear. It will run as is, with the defaults enabled from Ubuntu, but to simplify things for setting up our ad hoc wifi connection we are going to edit the file. Use the down arrow on your keyboard to navigate through the file. In the first few lines find: # What ports, Ips and protocols we listen for. The next line should read: Port 22. The next line should read: # Use these options to restrict which interfaces/protocols sshd will bind to. At the first:  #ListenAddress line navigate to the end of the line with keyboard arrows and backspace out the existing entry and type 10.42.0.1. At the second #ListenAddress line repeat the navigation and backspace out the entry and type: 0.0.0.0 if it’s not already there.

          Next navigate through the file to the line PermitRootLogin and check to see that it reads prohibit-password. The line below: StrictModes should read- yes. Navigate further down with the arrow key until you find the line: x11Forwarding and backspace out the no replacing it with yes. Navigate down to the SFTP subsystem files and make sure the last line UsePAM is set to yes. Now hit control+x and then enter shift+y at the prompt, and then hit >enter at the file selection prompt. You new sshd configuration file is saved.

          Now if you a using a wifi Internet connection you will have to disconnect from the Internet so copy this tutorial to a Libreoffice file first, and save it.

          Disconnect from the Internet and open a terminal and type the command: sudo systemctl restart ssh. Your ssh server will now start. Click on the tray wifi icon (exclamation point when disconnected) and open the window dialogue from the menu >Create new wifi network. Leave Connection set to new. In the box next to name enter any name you like for your network. For wifi security choose WEP 128bit passphrase. Check the show key box, and then click on the key box and enter a password of thirteen mixed characters. Click the >create button. Because SSH server is running, and we have already bound it to a lower scale IP addressed interface, network manager will create an ad hoc wifi network with the IPv4 address we bound SSH server to which will connect immediately after prompting for and confirming the password. If it connects, disconnect it and click the >wifi tray icon again, clicking >edit connections, and select it from the list to uncheck the >automatically connect to this network box, and uncheck the >automatically connect to vpn box, and check the >All users may connect this connection box.

          If your new network connected immediately you are done and have working Linux ad hoc wifi so now click >Save. If it did not connect Click the >Wifi Security tab and check the box >show password and verify you have entered the correct password, also verify that the security box reads >WEP 128bit passphrase. Also click the >Wifi tab and verify that mode is set to >ad hoc. Finally click on the >IPv4 tab and verify that the method is >Shared to other computers. Click the >Save button and close the remaining >Network Connections window. Find the network again by clicking on the tray icon, and selecting >Connect to hidden network. Click the drop down menu reading >new, and find and select your network from the list. Click the button >connect, and it should now connect.

          Once connected click >Menu>Settings>Settings Manager and navigate to and click on >Firewall Configuration. Enter your password when prompted and click >Authenticate. When Firewall opens, because we are running one off server instances, and running on ad hoc wifi, we are not going to go through the process of adding firewall rules, but rather simply set the incoming setting to >allow and close the firewall dialogue. Of course the Firewall in Linux Lite can be configured to special rules, but that is another tutorial, and really not particularly necessary for ad hoc wifi without DHCP with a server bound interface, and a range no farther than sixty feet. At this point it’s good praxis to log out and reboot your computer, so do it. After you log back in, open a terminal and type the command: sudo systemctl start ssh and then connect to your new hosted ad hoc wifi network.

          The laptop I’m using to connect to my Linux Lite 3.0 desktop SSH server is running the newest version of Solydx. I am not going to go through all the steps concerning its configuration other than to say that network manager has subtle, but not particularly difficult to sort out differences between distros. Firewalls have the same kind of subtle distro quirks as well. For the most part, network managers, and firewalls on Debian based systems, and Ubuntu based systems work essentially the same, and are capable of the same things in closely matched versions. Things vary of course with RHEL, Mint, and free BSD bases. All we are going to do with the laptop is set the firewall like our Linux Lite desktop is set, and make sure we can connect to its hosted wifi network. If it does not immediately connect, and in this case by default it used the wrong WEP setting we will just manually change what needs to be changed. The client side of ad hoc wifi connections can be manually IPv4 addressed, which is also the case for this laptop, and we entered 10.42.0.2 then 255.255.255.0 and 0.0.0.0 and connected quite nicely after the first attempt hung because of the wrong WEP setting. We simply right clicked on the tray icon, and selected edit connections, found it, and edited it.

          Once connected we opened Thunar on the Solydx laptop, backspaced out the URI address bar and typed - - sftp://10.42.0.1/home/Linux Lite user name/ and hit >enter, and I was prompted for user name and password, and entered my Linux Lite user name and password and the files on my Linux Lite 3.0 desktop computer loaded immediately to my Solydx laptop. When the two computers are close enough together the transfer speeds can be dazzling, not to me so much as I have business class broadband, but if you are suddenly running at 72mb/s after trudging along at 7 to 12 on your normal wifi connection you will appreciate another advantage of ad hoc wifi connections.

Good Luck All. Our next project will be a remote desktop on Linux to Linux ad hoc wifi

TC

*Read This Note - (As I noted in the last tutorial on Windows ad hoc wifi, after using the hostednetwork, you will have to re-enable DHCP for your Internet provider broadband wifi connection, something that can be done easily with the Windows network troubleshooter. I have been asked/criticized to elaborate a little bit as to why this must be a condition for Windows, and how it is essentially a part of the network and sharing troubleshooter software, and though it can be be reassigned, most ordinary windows users should not attempt to tamper with this unless they are very sure of what they are doing, because it will disable the auto-configure DHCP functionality in Windows network manager, and render the Windows network troubleshooter ineffective.
        Windows uses the APIPA (Automatic Private IP Addressing) Windows reserved range of IPv4 addresses (169.254.0.1 to 169.254.255.254) for its basic network manager auto-configure DHCP functionality. Basically these addresses are simply client fall back IP addresses included in Windows ARP to allow IP addresses to be assigned for connectivity when DHCP fails on a remote server, or for some reason on a Windows client. They are part of the Windows network troubleshooter, and are automatically assigned in instances of server DHCP failure to allow client side DHCP to continue to run and periodically check for returned DHCP functionality. This process is also one those manually invoked with the Windows network troubleshooter. So in essence we are waylaying the Windows network troubleshooter and putting it to work for us to allow private ad hoc wifi when we use these APIPA addresses.
          This particular method of auto-configuring recognition instances of DHCP in the Windows network manager is why we must use APIPA addresses to obtain ad hoc wifi in Windows in the first place. It is falsely recorded by some pseudo-technical advisories that using these addresses for private networking should not be done. As we are essentially only temporarily disabling DHCP auto-configure, and restoring it after use, it is just plain stupid to argue that IP addressing conflicts can arise. In fact IP addressing conflicts cannot occur when auto-configure DHCP is not running in Windows because connectivity to public addressing via DHCP is impossible in Windows under that condition, and if it wasn’t that way APIPA would not serve its intended redundant functions in Windows.
          We Linux users may wonder what in the world is the point of this redundant APIPA + ARP convention and auto-configure DHCP fall back protocol, unless of course we consider the Windows network troubleshooter and all the Windows GUI clicker friendly so called repair and fix tools, and the millions of users brought up on such devices, often experiencing their first computing in such environments. Certainly we Linux users can set up ad hoc wifi, and bind specific interfaces to our servers, virtual servers, and clients, and key and password them all, and run several kinds of packet encryption effectively. Finally we downloaded LinSSID in our last tutorial simply to provide a simple GUI radio signal scanner to correctly verify our Windows hostednetwork ad hoc wifi broadcast signal because Windows hostednetwork ad hoc wifi cannot be simply pinged, generally returning null replies.)

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  alberto gorin
Posted by: gorin002 - 09-02-2016, 03:07 PM - Forum: Introductions - No Replies

toshiba nb 200
ssd kingston hyper X
hi all

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  Wireless can detect all networks but don't connect
Posted by: bogdan - 09-02-2016, 11:24 AM - Forum: Network - Replies (5)

Hello people!

I have installed Linux Lite 3.0 and I have a problem with the wireless. It can detect all the networks (even a hotspot on the smart phone), but after I give the password, does not do nothing. Have anyone an idea how to solve this? I have to mention that I've moved form Linux Mint 18, to Linux Lite 3.0 because of the fact that the driver for my nVidia recommended (the same for both distributions) it is not giving me the headaches like in LM-18. However my wireless worked flawless in LM-18.

The information about the system I have is:

Code:
System:    Host: Pandora Kernel: 4.4.0-36-generic x86_64 (64 bit) Desktop: Xfce 4.12.3
                Distro: Ubuntu 16.04 xenial
Machine:   System: TOSHIBA product: Satellite P100 v: PSPA6E-032029PT
               Mobo: TOSHIBA model: Satellite P100 Bios: TOSHIBA v: V4.20 date: 11/02/20072
CPU:        Dual core Intel Core2 T7400 (-MCP-) cache: 4096 KB
               clock speeds: max: 2167 MHz 1: 1000 MHz 2: 1667 MHz
Graphics:  Card: NVIDIA G73M [GeForce Go 7600]
               Display Server: X.Org 1.18.3 drivers: nvidia (unloaded: fbdev,vesa,nouveau)
               Resolution: [email protected], [email protected]
               GLX Renderer: GeForce Go 7600/PCIe/SSE2 GLX Version: 2.1.2 NVIDIA 304.131
Audio:     Card-1 Intel NM10/ICH7 Family High Definition Audio Controller driver: snd_hda_intel
               Card-2 Logitech Webcam C170 driver: USB Audio
               Sound: Advanced Linux Sound Architecture v: k4.4.0-36-generic
Network:  Card-1: Intel 82573L Gigabit Ethernet Controller driver: e1000e
              IF: enp2s0 state: up speed: 1000 Mbps duplex: full mac: 00:16:36:aa:c1:8d
              Card-2: Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABG [Golan] Network Connection driver: iwl3945
              IF: wlp3s0 state: down mac: 00:18:de:7d:05:74
Drives:    HDD Total Size: 100.0GB (50.2% used) ID-1: /dev/sda model: TOSHIBA_MK1032GS size: 100.0GB
Partition: ID-1: / size: 30G used: 7.3G (27%) fs: ext4 dev: /dev/sda2
               ID-2: /boot size: 504M used: 106M (23%) fs: ext2 dev: /dev/sda1
              ID-3: /home size: 59G used: 37G (66%) fs: ext4 dev: /dev/sda4
              ID-4: swap-1 size: 3.25GB used: 0.00GB (0%) fs: swap dev: /dev/sda3
RAID:     No RAID devices: /proc/mdstat, md_mod kernel module present
Sensors: System Temperatures: cpu: 56.0C mobo: N/A gpu: 73C
              Fan Speeds (in rpm): cpu: N/A
Info:      Processes: 199 Uptime: 1:08 Memory: 1375.8/3007.0MB Client: Shell (bash) inxi: 2.2.35

Thank you!

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  Request for a tutorial on how to safely clone an LL install onto another drive
Posted by: m654321 - 09-02-2016, 06:21 AM - Forum: Suggestions and Feedback - No Replies

Could we have a tutorial on how to safely make a cloned copy of an LL install onto a spare drive, as a backup just in case the original breaks.  It would be extremely useful as a lot of time can be wasted reinstalling LL set-ups following 'accidents'...

Such a tutorial would also be a very useful addition to the LL's Help Manual.

Many thanks
Mike

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  Is it too late to do a fresh install of win7?
Posted by: m654321 - 09-02-2016, 01:45 AM - Forum: Off Topic - Replies (16)

As some of you may remember, I had some problems with LL hanging at boot up in  Win8.1/LL2.8 i.e. with laptop1 in signature. This occurred either with a GPT formatted SSD (with UEFI) or an MSDOS (MBR) formatted SSD (without UEFI installed). I got the impression from someone on the forum that this problem didn't occur with a win7 or 10 dual-boot.

To test this I would therefore like to set up a win7/LL2.8 dual boot on an SSD. I have the win7 installation disk but are the updates still available? I ask this because the other day I tried a fresh install of win7 and was connected to the internet (300Mb/s) for several hours for initial updating & patching with little success - I thought updates were available until April 2019, as with LL2.8 ...

Mike

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  Installing Ramme
Posted by: diskrod - 09-01-2016, 10:23 PM - Forum: Off Topic - No Replies

Hi!  I'm new to Linux.  I've been trying to install Ramme which deals with Instagram. Unfortunately I don't have Linux background since I'm a newbie. Below is what I'm trying to figure out but with no success.  Any help is appreciated...TIA.


To add a shortcut to the app, create a file in ~/.local/share/applications called ramme.desktop with the following contents:

[Desktop Entry]
Name=Ramme
Exec=/full/path/to/folder/Ramme
Terminal=false
Type=Application
Icon=/full/path/to/folder/Ramme/resources/app/static/Icon.png

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  LL3.0: "couldn't fetch the package cache information lists"
Posted by: m654321 - 09-01-2016, 07:51 AM - Forum: Other - Replies (8)

I'm now unable to use 'Install Updates' or 'Lite Software' from the Menu, as I get this message popping up on screen whenever I make an attempt: "couldn't fetch the package cache information lists". How do I fix this?

It seemed to follow download of Virtualbox 5.1.4 r110228 (Qt5.5.1) and its Extension package, from the Oracle website, though don't know if the two are related.

The log from the location /var/log/lite-software.log is given below:

Code:
[08/31/16 15:22:55] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[08/31/16 15:23:36] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: ubuntu-restricted-extras libavcodec-extra skype-bin skype
[08/31/16 15:44:54] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 17:38:22] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[08/31/16 17:39:52] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[08/31/16 17:40:04] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: guvcview
[08/31/16 17:40:13] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 17:40:21] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: audacity
[08/31/16 17:41:02] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 17:41:13] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: aisleriot gnome-mahjongg gnome-mines gnome-hearts
[08/31/16 17:41:47] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 17:42:04] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: clementine
[08/31/16 17:42:31] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 17:42:51] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: openshot blender imagemagick
[08/31/16 17:46:20] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 20:16:46] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[08/31/16 20:17:26] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: playonlinux
[08/31/16 20:29:35] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 20:55:27] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[08/31/16 21:00:48] INFO: Installation of packages initiated: virtualbox
[08/31/16 21:02:36] INFO: Installation was a success.
[08/31/16 21:38:22] INFO: Software sources were updated.
[09/01/16 08:28:37] ERROR: Updating sources has failed.
[09/01/16 08:31:14] ERROR: Updating sources has failed.
[09/01/16 08:34:22] ERROR: Updating sources has failed.

Mike

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  How to use displayport on HP t5740
Posted by: bitfikler - 08-31-2016, 06:11 PM - Forum: Video Cards - Replies (3)

I would like to ask for some advice regarding video output on a HP t5740 ThinClient. 

I’m using this box as media server running Kodi on Linux Lite 3.0 to my TV set .

There are two video output ports on the box both VGA and Display port.  Linux Lite 3.0 uses the VGA port – it seems as default - but how do I change the video output to the DisplayPort?  As can be seen on the attached System Report regarding “Graphics Chip Information” Display 1 is unclaimed and this may be a clue?

I have tried googling this with no luck and hope that someone has a solution for this.  Maybe it's just that simple?



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  Firefox 49 for Linux Will Let You Watch Netflix Without Plugins
Posted by: torreydale - 08-31-2016, 02:57 PM - Forum: Off Topic - Replies (3)

Hopefully this will accommodate 32-bit versions of Firefox on Linux, too.  If not, I suppose Opera is an option for those running 32-bit Linux and Netflix.
http://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2016/08/firef...devine-cdm

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