This was a bit of a bear, but I’ve inhereted a generic looking USB EVDO stick at the office. After some research and elbow grease, I’ve managed to get it working. In this post, I’ll detail EVDO configuration under SLED 10. I’ll leave out most of the gory technical details as others have covered that for me. I’ll link to the appropriate reference where necessary.
Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category
Registering your shiny new HP Mini-Note 2133
February 6th, 2009 by Christopher HobbsSo you just got an HP Mini-Note 2133 pre-loaded with SLED 10? Great, right?
Well… It’s not been so great for a lot of people. It seems that HP simply put this laptop together, half-assed a SLED load and sent it out into the wild. I’ve had a ton of problems with it, the two major ones being that I couldn’t register the machine with the Novell Customer Center (not even with my site license) it ships with a non-working wireless card.
My wifi fix was simple, buy a new usb wifi dongle… Registration, however, was a little easier to fix (after some wailing, gnashing of teeth, and chat in #opensuse-GNOME… thanks captiain_magnus!).
If you attempt to use YaST to register you copy of SLED on the 2133, you’ll be re-directed to a “special” Novell Customer Center login. It’s a little different than the normal one in that it wants an HP license, not any other SLED license you may have. The biggest difference, however, is that it’s broke. It simply refreshes the page when you click submit and sends nothing to Novell.
They’re pretty sneaky about hiding your license number as well. It happens to be on your restore DVD. It’s located on the right hand side below the HP logo and the “2133” text. It’s in a series something like NNNNNN-XNN, where N’s are numbers and X is some letter.
To get around the registration bug, have your license number handy and fire up your terminal. Use ‘sudo’ or just ‘su to root and issue the following command:
suse_register -n -a serial-hp=NNNNNN-XNN
Where “NNNNNN-XNN” is your registration code. Sit back and wait, it took almost 20 minutes for this command to finish for me and you’ll receive absolutely no indication that it’s functioning. Once it’s done, you’ll simply be returned to your prompt. Fire up YaST or your favorite terminal emulator and check your repositories. You should now have a Novell repository added.
Enjoy!
openSUSE-GNOME Team Meeting Today (Timeshift) – 05 FEB 2009 2200 UTC
February 5th, 2009 by Christopher HobbsPlease join us for the GNOME Team meeting in #openSUSE-GNOME on
irc.freenode.net.
The current agenda can be found here:
http://en.opensuse.org/GNOME/Meetings/20090205
For time conversions, please see:
http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?day=22&month=1&year=2009&hour=22&min=0&sec=0&p1=0
Thanks!
Automatic Import Calendar news.opensuse.org > KOrganizer
January 24th, 2009 by Sascha MannsI’m very happy. Regularly i’m checkin the Calendar from news.opensuse.org for my work in OpenSUSE Weekly News. It is possible to Download the actual Calendar as *.ics File. But as i understand this, this is a Snapshot. The Calendar not updated himself regularly. So i tried this:
First of all we go to the KOrganizer. Click on the green Cross, left from the Calendararea. Add Calendar. Then we find an Menu similar this:
Then we klicking on “Filecalendar from Remote Computer” (I had translated this on the fly, i’m not shure, that it called so in english). After them we see the next Field:
In this Field i edited :”http://news.opensuse.org/?ec3_ical”. I choosed regularly updating, but no Saving on the Remote Computer.
Now we have the Community Entrys in our Calendar. We see:
If i have understood all right, we have an automatic Calendar. Have fun…
Novell Teaming on SLES
January 21st, 2009 by Christopher HobbsAs per the request of Andrew Wafaa, I thought I’d set up a quick guide to how I got teaming running on SLES. The documentation for Teaming on the administrative end was relatively sparse, but the installation guide was sufficient for most purposes.
Read on to learn more about Teaming and SLES…
Using Ruby for system scripts
January 14th, 2009 by Christopher HobbsWhat’s green, red, and awesome all over?
January 10th, 2009 by Christopher HobbsopenSUSE/SLES and Ruby!
Considering that my blog no-longer exists and I’ve got a couple of topics floating around in my head, I thought I’d make use of my Lizards account and contribute something useful for once.
openSUSE has quickly become my favorite development platform and Ruby is my language of choice these days. The two together make an excellent combination and it couldn’t be easier to get started. In the next few posts, I’ll cover how I use the Ruby scripting language with SUSE on a daily basis.
That being said, lets start with installation…
Howto – Adobe Flashplayer for X86_64
January 3rd, 2009 by Sascha MannsUnfortunaltely no Flashplayer for x86_64 exists. So far. Now the Adobe Labs released the libflashplayer for x86_64. It is very easy to run it on openSUSE.
First of all, you must download it. Go to http://labs.adobe.com/downloads/flashplayer10.html.
Then go to the bottom of the page, and klick on “Download 64-Bit Plugin for Linux”. Now you will see an Dialogbox. At this place you can download the tar.gz File to an Place, you wish.
After them, you go to your shell, and go into the Directory, that you have specified in the Dialogbox. Now you type: “tar xvfz libflashplayer-{insert your Version].tar.gz”. After unpacking you will see an file called “libflashplayer.so”.
Now you have two alternatives:
1.) If you are the only one on your Computer, you can move the file to: ~/.mozilla/plugins.
2.) If you have more Persons at the computer, you move the file to: /usr/lib64/mozilla/plugins/
After an Restart from Firefox you can use this new plugin.
From the Developers Side the Plugin is in unstable Status. But it works for me very fine. If you would like, try it out. …
Blog Themes
November 30th, 2008 by Sascha MannsHello Folks,
now i changed all. In my old Blog i haved a themed Blog- The Themes was: “Saschas Insights”, a Theme with my personal thoughts about the world, the economy, the health and many more.
The second Theme was “Saschas Backtrace”, in this Blog i write about an newly or interesting Software, and how to work with it.
The last Theme was “Sascha and SuSI”. In Germany the Name SuSI is a Shortform for Susanne. But this part of my Blog not written to a new girlfriend. This Theme is for my experience with openSUSE.
And so i’m pleased to announce, that the Themes “Saschas Backtrace” and “Sascha & SuSI” moved to this Blog.
Have a lot of fun 🙂
cu Sascha
Test Post
November 27th, 2008 by Sascha MannsHello, my Name is Sascha Manns from Germany. Now i try to post in lizards.