01:11:43 Jeff Jackson: I am having Linux printing issues...Also one Windows laptop doesn't print to an HP Officejet 8020 01:12:09 Grant T.: There will be a call for questions in a few minutes. Great question for then. 01:12:57 Jeff Jackson: oh ok 01:13:37 Grant T.: Reacted to "oh ok" with ๐Ÿ˜‰ 01:18:05 Jeff Jackson: I am not hearing anything... 01:18:16 Grant T.: Gary is talking. 01:18:18 Jeff Jackson: anyone else have the same problem? 01:19:34 Grant T.: Jeff if you want to type your problem / question, Iโ€™ll relay and we can try to help. 01:20:04 Jeff Jackson: ok well right now my problem is with Zoom 01:20:06 Grant T.: Jeff will you try to say something? 01:20:13 Grant T.: Zoom is a problem. 01:20:46 Jeff Jackson: I figured the audio issue 01:20:54 Jeff Jackson: I hear you all now 01:21:33 Ed H.: https://openprinting.github.io This site is the official site for CUPS all things Unix/Linux printing topics 01:24:03 Ed H.: I think he said it was a wireless printer not locally connected 01:24:20 Grant T.: Yep, you did. :-) 01:27:02 Ed H.: JeffJ try pointing your browser at the ip address you tried to ping and port 631 ; e.g. https://192.168.1.100:631/ 01:36:20 tonyc: lsblk 01:36:34 M ADEJOH: fdisk -l 01:37:06 M ADEJOH: Michael 01:37:43 Grant T.: I try to use peopleโ€™s preferred names as a form of respect. My ignorance of how to pronounce things is my problem. 01:38:55 M ADEJOH: Its Ok, I understand. 01:39:09 Grant T.: Reacted to "Its Ok, I understand..." with ๐Ÿ™‚ 01:46:59 M ADEJOH: the /u is really new to me first time seeing this, how useful is it. 02:05:20 Ed H.: IIRC, CP/M did not have subdirs until later versions possibly CP/M 86 or MP/M and Concurrant CP/m 02:06:05 Ed H.: Pretty certain that the 8080 version never had them. Happy to stand corrected, tho 02:58:36 Randy van heusden: that is from gparted 02:59:21 Ed H.: Great talk, Lee! Gotta run. Merry Xmas from us 02:59:37 Grant T.: Reacted to "Great talk, Lee! Got..." with ๐Ÿ‘‹๐Ÿป 03:08:01 Vincent Aune: Are there some situations in which it is preferable to use EXT3 instead of EXT4? 03:11:40 Ron BC: Does BTRFS still recommend against its use in some form(s?) of RAID? To avoid data corruption / loss... Forget the details 03:12:55 Ron BC: Usually "self healing" means read a block, check the check-sum, if it's wrong, get from a REDUNDANT copy (requires RAID). If copy is valid, use it and rewrite the bad block elsewhere then flag it bad. 03:13:06 Grant T.: BtrFS still recommends not using the RAID-5 integrated into BtrFS for stability reasons. 03:14:04 Vincent Aune: One reason to use EXT3 would be to reduce writing on an SSD; journaling would greatly increase writing. 03:25:42 Ron BC: Yup 03:26:34 Ron BC: And "Unix philosophy" is great, but not a universal law (speaking of controversial statements). So, "flattening the stack" like ZFS works great in times 03:29:32 Randy van heusden: top part to this chart 03:31:03 Ron BC: iSCSI or CEPH or Gluster for distributed storage? Then ZFS on top (or whichever) And, I might be off-topic / misunderstanding 03:35:19 Ron BC: Great, thanks 03:38:01 Eric Kaufmann: Used to be a Linux Admin and stuck in Windows. 03:38:03 NormanM: Leaving for the evening. Merry Christmas, everyone! 03:38:21 Eric Kaufmann: Yep 03:39:35 Jeff Jackson: I managed to print on Kubuntu