Posted on 04/05/2021 1:35:41 PM PDT by upchuck
Thanks for the help. I got cinnamon 20 installed and the only thing is that it defaults to windows if I don’t hit the escape key on boot up. I can live with that.
Rufus did it
I was running Cinnamon Mint on a 10 year old computer and it was ten times as fast as Windows. But the hinges were about to break and something was hitting the cooling fan so I just migrated over to a 4 year old computer.
Love the graphic. The vista guy should have one of those queer flags.
Just the opposite, I used it daily for work, as I was a network engineer for a cable internet company at the time.
Just the one lucky person, I guess.
Fantastic! :)
Please let me know if you run across any issues with the 20 so I am aware of these? I am having good luck with it so far, been several months now since installing it. The Celluloid video player has a few hang ups now and then, sometimes have to start the player twice to make it play a movie. But that is not the Linux it’s self. :)
Rufus was the only one I could get to successfully create a Persistent Live USB recently. Tried a couple of Linux solutions, Tried UUI and unetbootin for windows and none worked. Create a folder on the desktop, restart and the folder was gone. Even tried a few different Distros to no avail. Rufus came through.
I saw that the new Rufus will do that but haven’t tried it yet. good to know it does work... Thank you!
I have been making portable Linux OS sticks for about two years now. Sent a few out to other freepers. But these “think” they are the internal primary drive. I use Gparted to create the first volume as MBR and give it a mounting point.Then just do a full install of linux to it as if it was the internal primary drive.
Pretty cool, a portable PC with storage on a stick that just borrows the hardware of any machine you plug it into as long as it boots from the USB first. Even works on a MAC. Storage capacity depends on the size of the stick of course, but I use a 64 gig minimum. 128 gig preferred. That is plenty for a portable if you keep the files cleaned up or transferred. :)
I am a KDE guy. KDE give full control of the DE. Cinnamon (and Mate) are ok, but give no leeway.
I get it... A lot of folks were upset about losing the KDE.
And thank God for options, and Linux has much potential in the desktop area, and I would even like to create a custom Linux distro that others could use, though again for me there is no need to engage in the extensive time and exploration that it would take to get my own rig close to the functionality and customization that I employ. But I remain interested and watchful of development and thank you for your help.
Windows has no defined message id’s and descriptions located in a file that should be displayed when an OS error is encountered.
Instead some lame programmer issues their own messages on the fly. I’ve seen windows messages like, “You can’t do that”, or the “unexpected error” (as opposed to the expected error).
When you mistyped your password signing on to W10, it says something like “You can’t sign on now, Go to your Windows live account and...” If I can’t sign on how can you go to your account? How about “Invalid userid or password”.
I realize your extra time is limited but I would love to see you do that! I would be all in to help as much as possible!
But it is I who need to thank you... For having an open mind and going out of your way to give linux a try. It really does mean a lot. Thank you for not throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
And for sharing your very detailed knowledge, honest assessments, and experience as a superuser with others here and myself. You are in a unique class of your own in that right which deserves the upmost of respect. :)
Lol, that always bothered me too. But I think the worst for me is installing a Program/App that is made for windows yet it doesn’t work after installing it. Windows errors will not always tell you why. You have to go on a three day internet search investigation to find others who had the same issue and try six different cures until you “might” get it working.
I am now spoiled with Linux checking my system for any extra dependencies that are needed for an app before downloading and installing it, then going and also fetching those dependencies along with the app as one install procedure. It at least gives you a detailed error why and where the problem is if a program doesn’t work for some reason. That alone is HUGE.
Well, thanks be to God for anything good, though I do not think I am much of a "super" anything though we are all unique in some ways, and others chastise me for running 5 or 6 browsers concurrently with over 500 different colored tabs open and visible (though over 200 only use about 1.5'' of screen), and think I am some super nut, but it works best for me, thank God. Yet that part would be possible in Linux, and while there are other issues we have somewhat discussed, yes, I have an open mind to that class of OS if I ever needed it. Hope the issue about legal multimedia codecs is resolved, and thanks again for a heart to help.
I’ve been running linux at home for so long, I haven’t felt most of the pain that folks stuck with microsoft have experienced. One thing that I did think was funny though, is that one of the thing I have always loved about Linux is its stabilty. I reboot when I upgrade my kernel, and I do that maybe twice a year. I recall chatting right here on FR with folks claiming that their windows systems were every bit as stable as what I was describing.
Then it came out that there was a 56-day bug in MS-Windows, where any computer that had been up for that long would freeze after 56 days, no matter what. I’m thinking it was during the XP era, but I’m not positive. Anyway, this bug had apparently been around for several years, so every single person claiming more than 56 days of uptime under MS-Windows was a flat-out liar.
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