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hdparm scsi

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yag
Posted: Tue Apr 24, 2007 6:10 am
Guest
Since the last Ubuntu upgrade all my drives are treated as SCSI ones, and are listed as
/dev/sdx in fstab. The trouble is that I don't seem to be able to configure them with
hdparm. Sdparm utility does not help to set multicount, acoustic management and so on
either. Could anyone tell me what can be done?

Thanks
 
yag
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 1:44 pm
Guest
darkness and amazement. Satan has a vast advantage in
such cases to ply them with various temptations, which he is not wont to
neglect: in such a case, persons very much need a guide to lead them to
an understanding of what we are taught in the word of God concerning the
nature of grace, and to help them to apply it to themselves.

I have been much blamed and censured by many, that I should make it my
practice, when I have been satisfied concerning persons' good estate, to
signify it to them. This has been greatly misrepresented abroad, as
innumerable other things concerning us, to prejudice the country against
the whole affair. But let it be noted, that what I have undertaken to
judge of, has rather been qualifications, and declared experiences, than
persons. Not but that I have thought it my duty, as a pastor, to assist
and instruct persons in applying Scripture-rules and characters to their
own case (in which, I think, many greatly need a guide); and I have,
where the case appeared plain, used freedom in signifying my hope of
them to others. But I have been far from doing this concerning all that
I have had some hopes of; and I believe have used much more caution than
many have supposed. Yet I should account it a great calamity to be
deprived of the comfort of rejoicing with those of my flock who have
been in great distres
 
yag
Posted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 3:28 pm
Guest
are some who never had such a
special sense of the certainty of divine things impressed upon them,
with such inward evidence and strength, but who yet have very clear
exercises of grace; i.e. of love to God, repentance, and holiness. And
if they be more particularly examined, they appear plainly to have an
inward firm persuasion of the reality of divine things, such as they did
not use to have before their conversion. And those who have the most
clear discoveries of divine truth in the manner that has been mentioned,
cannot have this always in view. When the sense and relish of the divine
excellency of these things fades, on a withdrawment of the Spirit of
God, they have not the medium of the conviction of their truth at
command. In a dull frame, they cannot recall the idea and inward sense
they had, perfectly to mind; things appear very dim to what they did
before. And though there still remains an habitual strong persuasion;
yet not so as to exclude temptations to unbelief, and all possibility of
doubting. But then, at particular times, by God's help, the same sense
of things revives again, like fire that lay hid in ashes. I suppose the
grounds of such a conviction of the truth of divine things to be just
and rational; but yet, in some, God makes use of their own reason much
more sensibly than in others. Oftentimes persons have (so far as could
be judged) received the first saving conviction from reasoning which
they have heard from the pulpit; and often in the course of reasoning
they are led into in their own meditations.

The arguments are the same that they have heard hundreds of times; but
the force
 
 
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