[05:36] <amilai> http://linkis.com/www.jta.org/2016/09/WDOMz
[05:36] <amilai> On his website, he accuses Jews of controlling the government and the media, and quotes “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,” a notorious anti-Semitic screed that purports to describe a Jewish plan for world domination.
[05:37] <Unit193> amilai: Not the channel for that stuff.  Please leave
[05:39] <amilai> Unit193, This is mainstream news.
[05:39] <amilai> Christopher Bollyn was one of the first to promote conspiracy theories linking 9/11 terrorism with Jews and Israel, the Anti-Defamation League said. (YouTube)
[05:39] <Unit193> amilai: This isn't a news channel.
[05:39] <amilai> Unit193, You got op privileges in here?
[13:45] <toothe> I'm using Xubuntu. To resize the window, I have to move my mouse EXACTLY on the edge of a Window, which is hard. Is there a way to make that size larger?
[13:48] <knome> toothe, you might want to read http://xubuntu.org/news/window-resizing-in-xubuntu-and-xfce/
[13:48] <knome> toothe, (the answer to your question exactly is yes, if you change the window manager theme)
[13:49] <toothe> :)
[13:49] <toothe> thank you.
[13:50] <toothe> hm...I see where you resize the colors, not the size or anything of that sort?
[13:51] <knome> settings -> window manager -> tab 'style'
[13:52] <toothe> A) I appreciate it. B) I don't see where the resize is.
[13:53] <knome> different themes have different size window borders, so either more or less area to hit
[13:53] <toothe> ohh....
[13:53] <knome> the article i linked you to covers some alternatives to windows resizing, and i actually would recommend some of those methods instead of dragging the border
[13:54] <knome> (well, you can drag a top border too, if you need to do it mouse-only)
[13:54] <toothe> thank you!
[14:12] <MrTulias> Hi. Where/when gets pulseaudio the nice level value? He gets value -11 when the max is 0
[14:22] <MrTulias> in the syslog I see this line machine rtkit-daemon[2862]: Successfully made thread 2861 of process 2861 (n/a) owned by '108' high priority at nice level -11.
[14:23] <MrTulias> and then a lot of those: Successfully made thread 2880 of process 2861 (n/a) owned by '108' RT at priority 5
[17:41] <MelRay> I installed 16.04 from USB. When it tries to boot it goes to boot rescue saying a file is missing. I chose to use LVM. When I re-insert the USB stick it will let it boot to the installation but gives a print to screen saying something has not yet been activated?
[18:22] <xubuntu981> Hi there. How can I configure a remote desktop access in xubuntu 14.04, (as a server, to be connected)
[18:23] <knome> depends a lot on how you want to connect to the system
[18:48] <tmsbrg> knome, somewhat curious myself. What's good software for it? Like if I want to control my PC with my laptop when I'm somewhere else
[18:48] <knome> control your pc in what way?
[18:49] <tmsbrg> knome, like I would if I was there, controlling input and seeing the screen output?
[18:49] <tmsbrg> so I could for example browse the internet with it
[18:49] <knome> i use x11vnc for that
[18:50] <tmsbrg> alright, thanks for the tip
[18:50] <knome> but depending on the purpose, 'ssh host -X application_to_run' might work for you too
[18:50] <knome> (obviously need ssh server for the latter)
[18:51] <knome> x11vnc is the server software for the former, any vnc viewer should go
[18:51] <tmsbrg> knome, X forwarding doesn't always work well, does it? I never did it but I heard something like it being problematic
[18:52] <tmsbrg> with SSH that is
[18:52] <knome> that's why i said "depending on the purpose"
[18:52] <knome> for some purposes vnc might not be the ideal solution either
[18:53] <knome> to begin with, transferring the desktop can take a lot of bandwidth
[18:53] <knome> doing it with a secure connection like ssh means even more bandwidth...
[18:54] <tmsbrg> I can imagine
[18:54] <tmsbrg> I guess you could lower the resolution when connecting from remote
[18:54] <knome> so usually it doesn't really make sense to connect to some other PC to be able to browse the web
[18:55] <knome> because in order to do that, you need a decent web connection anyway
[18:55] <knome> that, and there are other tweaks you can add in, but it still is relatibely heavy
[18:55] <knome> *relatively
[18:55] <tmsbrg> a friend of mine did it once to circumvent internet censorship, when he didn't have a proxy server or anything else
[18:56] <knome> right, in that case you might want to look at serious/real proxy server stuff rather than vnc or other x forwarding
[18:57] <tmsbrg> well it was just an example really, I was just curious
[18:57] <knome> sure; just proving that it really depends on the purpose you have
[18:57] <tmsbrg> true
[18:58] <knome> and obviously you only want to expose as little of you system to the web as you can
[18:58] <knome> *your
[18:59] <knome> or "have to" really...
[21:25] <rch44> testing
[22:02] <rchan44> hello
[22:43] <xubuntu97w> Hola?
[22:44] <xangua> Hi
[22:44] <xubuntu97w> emmm i need help...
[22:44] <xangua> I need money...
[22:44] <xangua> No tengo dinero, ni nada que dar 🎶
[22:45] <xubuntu97w> mmm ok...
[22:48] <xubuntu97w> bye
[23:01] <Spass> I guess your joke wasn't funny for him