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2010-08-04
, 15:15
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Posts: 30 |
Thanked: 23 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
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#2
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2010-08-04
, 15:16
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Posts: 5 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on Jul 2010
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#3
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2010-08-05
, 11:35
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Posts: 876 |
Thanked: 396 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#4
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2010-08-16
, 16:09
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Posts: 1 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
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#5
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2010-08-16
, 16:32
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Posts: 228 |
Thanked: 145 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#6
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Does anyone have details on how to do actually do this? Im a complete noob at this kinda thing but it pisses me off a lot when it wastes my internet usage.
gconftool -s --type int /apps/hildon/update-notifier/check_interval 4294967295
sudo gainroot
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2010-08-16
, 16:51
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Posts: 346 |
Thanked: 271 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
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#7
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2010-08-16
, 20:04
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Posts: 876 |
Thanked: 396 times |
Joined on Dec 2009
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#8
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2010-08-17
, 06:16
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Posts: 424 |
Thanked: 196 times |
Joined on Mar 2010
@ Sweden
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#9
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2010-08-17
, 09:19
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Posts: 1,637 |
Thanked: 4,424 times |
Joined on Apr 2009
@ Germany
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#10
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It seems whenever I connect to the internet, my N900 (apt?) automatically checks repositories for updates. This is great if I'm connected to a high-speed wifi connection, but on GPRS @ $2.05/MB, I "DO NOT WANT".
Every time I connect to a GPRS network, it uses at least a megabyte, which makes me hesitant to connect to the net at ALL. There's no setting in Application manager or the Settings menu, and after searching these forums I found something to change the check-update frequency but not disable it. In theory I could bump the UNIX time to a high value, but that's a hack.
Is there a way to disable update checking over GPRS, or at least temporarily disable it?