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  • Process emails with /etc/aliases

    - by Rodrigo Asensio
    I'm calling shell scripts inside /etc/smrsh to process incoming emails as commands for my system. As I'm seeing all incoming emails are not making it to /var/mail/spool/USER. Is there any way I can access to the content of the emails ? some variable $1 $2 comming with the content values ? If not, how do I access to the content of the emails received ? thanks guys

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  • Windows Process Activation Service won't Start "parameter is incorrect" (Visual Studio 2010 Profiler)

    - by user23596
    I've struggled with this one for a whole day, so here is both the problem & solution: After profiling an ASP.NET application on Windows 7 (x64), I exited Visual Studio (possibly a crash) and installed some updates which required a reboot. When I loaded back up the ASP.NET Web Application in my Visual Studio Solution was dimmed out, and the Web & WAS services turned out to be stopped. When I tried starting Windows Process Activation Service, I got the error "parameter is incorrect".

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  • The amount of memory used by each process

    - by tuxsmouf
    I have a mysql server running debian with 2GO of RAM. I would like to know the amount of memory used by each process. I thought ps -aux was the command and options for it. But I only see 90 MO used by several processes and free -m tells me that 1400 MO are used. Is there a way to have a better view with the processes and the memory used by them ?

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  • fft understanding

    - by maximus
    Can somebody give a good explanation of FFT image transform How the FFT transformed image and it's Re^2+Im^2 image can be analyzed? I just want to understand something when loiking to the image and it's frequency.

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  • jQuery galleria plugin with dynamically loaded images

    - by panas
    I'm using the Galleria plugin with jQuery to create my image gallery. I'm trying to get load images dynamically from the user's selection into the DOM and have the gallery auto-update to display those new images but it's not working. Firebug shows the images are successfully loading into the DOM but Galleria displays no thumbnails. I need a way to reload Galleria to display the new images. /* ---- Gallery Code ---- */ if ($(this).find('div').attr('title') == 'photogallery' && $('.galleria_container').length == 0) { $('.gallery').galleria( { history : false, clickNext : true, onImage : function(image,caption,thumb) { if(! ($.browser.mozilla && navigator.appVersion.indexOf("Win")!=-1) ) { image.css('display','none').fadeIn(1000); } var _li = thumb.parents('li'); caption.css('display','none').fadeIn(1000); _li.siblings().children('img.selected').fadeTo(500,0.3); thumb.fadeTo('fast',1).addClass('selected'); image.attr('title','Next image >>'); }, onThumb : function(thumb) { var _li = thumb.parents('li'); var _fadeTo = _li.is('.active') ? '1' : '0.3'; thumb.css({display:'none',opacity:_fadeTo}).fadeIn(1500); thumb.hover ( function() { thumb.fadeTo('fast',1); }, function() { _li.not('.active').children('img').fadeTo('fast',0.3); } // don't fade out if the parent is active ) } }); } /* ---- Gallery Selector ---- */ $(document).ready(function() { var galleryImages = new Object(); <?php echo $myGal; ?> function setImages(type) { var image = ''; for (var i = 0; i < galleryImages[type].length; i++) { image += '<li><img src="' + galleryImages[type][i] + '"></li>'; } $('ul.gallery').html(image); } $('ul.menu-horiz li ul li').click(function() { setImages($(this).attr('rel')); }); }); The PHP code you see just creates an array of images. So to summarise my question: How can I reload Galleria once the new images have been loaded into the DOM?

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  • C# or C++ game: many 16 color images loaded into RAM. Efficient solution?

    - by user560639
    I am in the planning stages of creating a fighting game and am unsure how to handle one issue relating to memory. Background info: - Still debating whether to use C# (XNA) or C++. We do not want to commit to either until we have explored how to solve this problem in both languages. - Using a max of 256MB RAM would be great if possible. - Two characters will be present at a time, and these characters can only change between battles. There is time to load/free memory between battles, but the game needs to run at a constant 60 drawn frames per second during combat. Each frame is 16.67ms - The total number of images per character is in the low hundreds. Each image is roughly 200x400 pixels. Only one image from each character will be displayed at any given moment. Uncompressed, each image takes roughly 300kb from my calculations; upwards of 100MB for a whole character. This is pushing too close to the 256MB limit given that memory will be needed for some other resources as well. Since each image can be made with a total of 16 colors. Theoretically I should be able to use 1/8th the space if I can take advantage of this. I've looked around but haven't found any word of native support for paletted images. (Storing each pixel using fewer bits that each map to a 32-bit RGBa color) I was considering making my own file format with 4 bits per pixel (and some extra palette info), loading all the images of this new format into RAM before battle, and then when drawing any specific image, decompress only that image into a raw image so it can be rendered properly. I don't know if it's realistic to perform so many assignment operations (appx 200x400 for each character = 160k) each frame. It sounds very hacky to me. Does anyone have advice on whether my solution sounds reasonable, and if there is perhaps a better one available? Thanks so much! (I also attempted to use an image with only 1 channel, then use a shader to perform a series of if statements to translate various values into other colors. Unfortunately, there were too many lines of code for the shader. It is also rather hacky and does not scale well.)

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  • jQuery height() width()

    - by JamesBrownIsDead
    I have an image on the page: <img id="foobar" src="emptySpace.gif" /> The image has an absolute position of left: 0 and top: 0 in a .css file. When I try this in JavaScript onmouseover, the height and width don't change. What am I missing? var image = jQuery("#foobar"); image.height(500).width(500); What gives?

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  • .NET 2.0 Process Elevation for App Installation

    - by Brian Gillespie
    We have an application written in both C++ and .NET that installs for all users in the Program Files folder. This application downloads new versions of itself (as MSI installers) and spawns the new installer process to replace itself. The install process as it exists today: Copy an install manager app (C#, .NET 2.0) to the temp directory. Call this 'Manager' Manager is executed with elevated privs per this article. The original application exits. Manager spawns the MSI installer (with elevated privs, since the copy is elevated) Manager spawns the new version of the app. The bug: The newly installed app is running in an elevated state. This causes problems I won't enumerate here. Ideally, the launch of the newly installed app would be run with the permissions of the original user. I can't figure out how to demote the app back to being the standard user after elevation. An inelegant hack: (yeah, yeah, this whole process is inelegant anyway) Copy the install manager to the temp directory Run the install manager with standard user privs. Lets call this instance 'LowlyManager'. Original application exits. LowlyManager spawns the app again, this time with elevated privs. Let's name this instance 'UpperManagement' UpperManagement spawns the installer UpperManagement exits gracefully, returning the exit code of the installer. LowlyManager interprets the error code from UpperManagement, and spawns the newly installed application. This time as the original invoker. Is there a better way to do this? (I've left out a bunch of other details before and after these steps that make the process smoother for the user, but this should be enough to understand the core of the problem I'm trying to solve.) Other requirements: We can't install as a per-user app The user shouldn't be presented with an authentication dialog box if UAC would have simply asked "are you sure you want to allow this?". I think this might kill a solution using WindowsImpersonationContext, but I'm not sure. The system needs to work on XP, Vista, and Windows 7 (even if there is a separate process for XP).

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  • Good library to load images of different formats

    - by codymanix
    Hi Iam developing an image viewer application just like irfan-view or acdsee which should be capable to view lots of different image file formats (not just the standard ones which can be done with System.Drawing.Image). Iam currently using ImageMagick but it isn't very fast and seems to be unstable with some image files. Can anyone suggest a good imaging library, ideally with a .NET wrapper already present?

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  • Segment a CGImage

    - by mag725
    Hi, In iOS 4.0 and later is there a way to segment a CGImage without loading the entire image into memory? What I am attempting to do is * programmatically* segment an image for use in a CATiledLayer application using large images, but I don't want to take up the memory involved in loading the full image. Also, is there a way to load that (or any) segment at a particular resolution, so if we are zoomed out from the image we can load that tile at a low level of detail, thus saving memory. Thanks! -Matt

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  • Displaying images in webpage without src URL

    - by Babiker
    Recently i learned that i can display images in a web page without referencing an image URL as follows : <img class="disclosure" img src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAAkAAAAJCAYAAADgkQYQAAAAAXNSR0IArs4c6QAAAAlwSFlzAAALEwAACxMBAJqcGAAAAAd0SU1FB9oIGRQbOY8MjgMAAABVSURBVBjTfc6xDcAwCETRM0rt5nbA+49j70DDAqSLsGXyJQqkVxxwNOeMiEA+waW1VuT/inrvG7wikht8UETy2ygVMjO4O8YYTf6AqrZyUwYlygAAXo+QLmeF4c4uAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC"> I had another small bmp image that i wanted to display, so i opened it in vim and the img source looke like: When i paste this code where it needs to be pasted i only get "BM?" How to i convert/paste this code properly to be used as an image source?

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  • Why won't my images align properly?

    I'm trying to make a dynamically sizable title banner, using fairly simple image tricks. I place the banner image in a table cell, and set the background-image of the table row to a one-pixel-wide repeat of the banner's right-most pixel column. Thus, the banner image appears to stretch to fit the screen width without stretching the logo. The code below is my entire page so far, and the problem is shown in a red circle in the screenshot. This is the transition where the main image ends and the one-pixel-wide background image begins. It appears that the one-pixel-wide bar at the end is compressed by one pixel - making the tops align properly, while the bottoms are one pixel off. I should add that I have checked the images more than once to make cure they the image data is correct. They are %100 accurate as far as MSPaint is concerned. <%@ Page Language="C#" AutoEventWireup="true" CodeFile="Default.aspx.cs" Inherits="_Default" %> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head runat="server"> <title></title> </head> <body bgcolor="#000000"> <form id="form1" runat="server"> <div> <table style="width:100%; "> <tr style="background-image: url('Images/Banners/WebBannerWideBar.png')"> <!--WebBannerWideBar is 1x100 px--> <td> <img alt="Angry Octopus" src="Images/Banners/WebBannerWide.png" /> <!--WebBannerWide is 760x100 px--> </td> </tr> </table> </div> </form> </body> </html>

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  • Qt releasing memory occopied by unneeded images

    - by Gerhman
    I have a QML Flickable with 3 QML image elements that cycle through 8 image files. My problem is for each new image it loads into memory it does not release the the unused image. This is causing memory usage to become double what is necessary at times. I would like to know if there is some function I can use to force it to unload all the unused images? If it makes a difference, this is mainly for Symbian.

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  • Javascript or CSS hover not working in Safari and Chrome

    - by PAZtech
    I have a problem with a script for a image gallery. The problem seems to only occur on Safari and Chrome, but if I refresh the page I get it to work correctly - weird! Correct function: The gallery has a top bar, which if you hover over it, it will display a caption. Below sits the main image. At the bottom there is another bar that is a reversal of the top bar. When you hover over it, it will display thumbnails of the gallery. The problem: In Safari and Chrome, the thumbnail holder will not display. In fact, it doesn't even show it as an active item (or a rollover). But oddly enough, if you manually refresh the page it begins to work correctly for the rest of the time you view the page. Once you have left the page and return the same error occurs again and you have to go through the same process. Here's one of the pages to look at: link text Here's the CSS: #ThumbsGutter { background: url(../Images/1x1.gif); background: url(/Images/1x1.gif); height: 105px; left: 0px; position: absolute; top: 0px; width: 754px; z-index: 2; } #ThumbsHolder { display: none; } #ThumbsTable { left: 1px; } #Thumbs { background-color: #000; width: 703px; } #Thumbs ul { list-style: none; margin: 0; padding: 0; } #Thumbs ul li { display: inline; } .Thumbs ul li a { border-right: 1px solid #fff; border-top: 1px solid #fff; float: left; left: 1px; } .Thumbs ul li a img { filter: alpha(opacity=50); height: 104px; opacity: .5; width: 140px; } .Thumbs ul li a img.Hot { filter: alpha(opacity=100); opacity: 1; } Here is the javascript: //Variables var globalPath = ""; var imgMain; var gutter; var holder; var thumbs; var loadingImage; var holderState; var imgCount; var imgLoaded; var captionHolder; var captionState = 0; var captionHideTimer; var captionHideTime = 500; var thumbsHideTimer; var thumbsHideTime = 500; $(document).ready(function() { //Load Variables imgMain = $("#MainImage"); captionHolder = $("#CaptionHolder"); gutter = $("#ThumbsGutter"); holder = $("#ThumbsHolder"); thumbs = $("#Thumbs"); loadingImage = $("#LoadingImageHolder"); //Position Loading Image loadingImage.centerOnObject(imgMain); //Caption Tab Event Handlers $("#CaptionTab").mouseover(function() { clearCaptionHideTimer(); showCaption(); }).mouseout(function() { setCaptionHideTimer(); }); //Caption Holder Event Handlers captionHolder.mouseenter(function() { clearCaptionHideTimer(); }).mouseleave(function() { setCaptionHideTimer(); }); //Position Gutter if (jQuery.browser.safari) { gutter.css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px").css("top", ((imgMain.offset().top + imgMain.height()) - 89) + "px"); } else { gutter.css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px").css("top", ((imgMain.offset().top + imgMain.height()) - 105) + "px"); } //gutter.css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px").css("top", ((imgMain.offset().top + imgMain.height()) - 105) + "px"); //gutter.css("left", imgMain.offset().left + "px").css("top", ((imgMain.offset().top + imgMain.height()) - gutter.height()) + "px"); //Thumb Tab Event Handlers $("#ThumbTab").mouseover(function() { clearThumbsHideTimer(); showThumbs(); }).mouseout(function() { setThumbsHideTimer(); }); //Gutter Event Handlers gutter.mouseenter(function() { //showThumbs(); clearThumbsHideTimer(); }).mouseleave(function() { //hideThumbs(); setThumbsHideTimer(); }); //Next/Prev Button Event Handlers $("#btnPrev").mouseover(function() { $(this).attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/GalleryLeftButtonHot.jpg"); }).mouseout(function() { $(this).attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/GalleryLeftButton.jpg"); }); $("#btnNext").mouseover(function() { $(this).attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/GalleryRightButtonHot.jpg"); }).mouseout(function() { $(this).attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/GalleryRightButton.jpg"); }); //Load Gallery //loadGallery(1); }); function loadGallery(galleryID) { //Hide Holder holderState = 0; holder.css("display", "none"); //Hide Empty Gallery Text $("#EmptyGalleryText").css("display", "none"); //Show Loading Message $("#LoadingGalleryOverlay").css("display", "inline").centerOnObject(imgMain); $("#LoadingGalleryText").css("display", "inline").centerOnObject(imgMain); //Load Thumbs thumbs.load(globalPath + "/GetGallery.aspx", { GID: galleryID }, function() { $("#TitleHolder").html($("#TitleContainer").html()); $("#DescriptionHolder").html($("#DescriptionContainer").html()); imgCount = $("#Thumbs img").length; imgLoaded = 0; if (imgCount == 0) { $("#LoadingGalleryText").css("display", "none"); $("#EmptyGalleryText").css("display", "inline").centerOnObject(imgMain); } else { $("#Thumbs img").load(function() { imgLoaded++; if (imgLoaded == imgCount) { holder.css("display", "inline"); //Carousel Thumbs thumbs.jCarouselLite({ btnNext: "#btnNext", btnPrev: "#btnPrev", mouseWheel: true, scroll: 1, visible: 5 }); //Small Image Event Handlers $("#Thumbs img").each(function(i) { $(this).mouseover(function() { $(this).addClass("Hot"); }).mouseout(function() { $(this).removeClass("Hot"); }).click(function() { //Load Big Image setImage($(this)); }); }); holder.css("display", "none"); //Load First Image var img = new Image(); img.onload = function() { imgMain.attr("src", img.src); setCaption($("#Image1").attr("alt")); //Hide Loading Message $("#LoadingGalleryText").css("display", "none"); $("#LoadingGalleryOverlay").css("display", "none"); } img.src = $("#Image1").attr("bigimg"); } }); } }); } function showCaption() { if (captionState == 0) { $("#CaptionTab").attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/CaptionTabHot.jpg"); captionHolder.css("display", "inline").css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px").css("top", imgMain.position().top + "px").css("width", imgMain.width() + "px").effect("slide", { "direction": "up" }, 500, function() { captionState = 1; }); } } function hideCaption() { if (captionState == 1) { captionHolder.toggle("slide", { "direction": "up" }, 500, function() { $("#CaptionTab").attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/CaptionTab.jpg"); captionState = 0; }); } } function setCaptionHideTimer() { captionHideTimer = window.setTimeout(hideCaption,captionHideTime); } function clearCaptionHideTimer() { if(captionHideTimer) { window.clearTimeout(captionHideTimer); captionHideTimer = null; } } function showThumbs() { if (holderState == 0) { $("#ThumbTab").attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/ThumbTabHot.jpg"); holder.effect("slide", { "direction": "down" }, 500, function() { holderState = 1; }); } } function hideThumbs() { if (holderState == 1) { if (jQuery.browser.safari) { holder.css("display", "none"); $("#ThumbTab").attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/ThumbTab.jpg"); holderState = 0; } else { holder.toggle("slide", { "direction": "down" }, 500, function() { $("#ThumbTab").attr("src", globalPath + "/Images/ThumbTab.jpg"); holderState = 0; }); } } } function setThumbsHideTimer() { thumbsHideTimer = window.setTimeout(hideThumbs,thumbsHideTime); } function clearThumbsHideTimer() { if(thumbsHideTimer) { window.clearTimeout(thumbsHideTimer); thumbsHideTimer = null; } } function setImage(image) { //Show Loading Image loadingImage.css("display", "inline"); var img = new Image(); img.onload = function() { //imgMain.css("background","url(" + img.src + ")").css("display","none").fadeIn(250); imgMain.attr("src", img.src).css("display", "none").fadeIn(250); setCaption(image.attr("alt")); //Hide Loading Image loadingImage.css("display", "none"); }; img.src = image.attr("bigimg"); } function setCaption(caption) { $("#CaptionText").html(caption); //alert($("#CaptionText").html()); /* if (caption.length 0) { $("#CaptionText") .css("display", "inline") .css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px") .css("top", imgMain.position().top + "px") .css("width", imgMain.width() + "px") .html(caption); $("#CaptionOverlay").css("display", "inline") .css("height", $("#CaptionText").height() + 36 + "px") .css("left", imgMain.position().left + "px") .css("top", imgMain.position().top + "px") .css("width", imgMain.width() + "px"); } else { $("#CaptionText").css("display", "none"); $("#CaptionOverlay").css("display", "none"); } */ } Please if anyone could help, it would be greatly appreciated! Thanks in advance. Justin

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  • Preparing for Those ‘Requests for Tech Help’ Ahead of Time Can Pay Off [Humorous Image]

    - by Asian Angel
    We have all been there…waiting for the inevitable ‘repeat request’ for help, but ‘sometimes’ you can save the day ahead of time with a little bit of preparation! Then there are the times when it is just best to admit defeat… Found this today while working on a clients completely hosed PC… [Reddit IIIIIIITTTTTTTTTTTT] [via Fail Desk] How To Use USB Drives With the Nexus 7 and Other Android Devices Why Does 64-Bit Windows Need a Separate “Program Files (x86)” Folder? Why Your Android Phone Isn’t Getting Operating System Updates and What You Can Do About It

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