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I suppose. But! It's completely removable or work-around-able, right? Obviously, Linux will be the only OS on it--after I get my hot little hands on it and wipe the drive of all things micro$oft. :evil: :laugh:I'm so out of the loop! All this EFI and rEFInd talk is foreign to me.
You'll probably learn the next time you buy a new PC...
How do I launch an EFI shell?
I installed kernel 3.10_am64 and got my drivers that way... tried 3.10.6 initially, but ended up breaking things, so I uninstalled and went for 3.10 instead and I am running on wifi now. DHCP (automatic didn't work out too well... setting a manual IP did, and that is fine by me.
For the record, I went to the repository Index of /~kernel-ppa/mainline, surfed to the folder I wanted, and downloaded to a folder (labeled /kernel 3.10) the following files:
linux-headers-3.10.0-031000_3.10.0-031000.201306301935_all.deb
linux-headers-3.10.0-031000-generic_3.10.0-031000.201306301935_amd64.deb
linux-image-3.10.0-031000-generic_3.10.0-031000.201306301935_amd64.deb
I then opened a terminal, typed in the following:
Code:cd Downloads cd "kernel 3.10" sudo dpkg -i *.deb sudo update-grub sudo reboot
After rebooting, I got a notification telling me wifi was available.
I finally found a book locally. Don't know how old it is, but it did mention the old Palm and Windows PDAs. Also Photoshop CS. It's called Ubuntu Hacks and at least it explains some of the commands. It's an O'reilly book.
The freaking shelves were full of how to use MS Office, etc. Macs and Windows for seniors - JC, how much fluff can they write?
Couldn't find a book on Curiosity Rover.
Found this website listed, any use for?: Anubis: Analyzing Unknown Binaries
I've used Anubis before, really cool. Probably only useful if you are doing some malware research though. Not something everyone needs. Still cool though.I finally found a book locally. Don't know how old it is, but it did mention the old Palm and Windows PDAs. Also Photoshop CS. It's called Ubuntu Hacks and at least it explains some of the commands. It's an O'reilly book.
The freaking shelves were full of how to use MS Office, etc. Macs and Windows for seniors - JC, how much fluff can they write?
Couldn't find a book on Curiosity Rover.
Found this website listed, any use for?: Anubis: Analyzing Unknown Binaries
I was going to say that there are a ton of great books available...but then I realized that what *I* consider perfectly usable may not strike a non-coder that way.I complained about a book I bought on Ubuntu when I first installed it. It was nothing but how to use the damn social programs, and other utilities. I can use those, usually with NO help. Any help with terminal commands was missing. It wasn't a For Dummies book.
The only other books available were for those who wished to code.
Keep in mind that DOS basically copied UNIX, but did it badly. :laugh: For example, they used the same concept of a root directory, from which all other directories sprang, so DOS had the same tree-like file structure *nix did. And a lot of DOS commands, such as cd, had the same basic purpose of their *nix counterparts but, again, imitated *nix badly. What I'm talking about is the vast difference in functionality between any DOS command and its UNIX lookalike. In *nix, that command might have 20, 30, 40 or more options, while the DOS version might have none or 3. With the *nix command, mixed with other *nix commands, and the ability to chain output (by piping, by using sed or grep, by redirecting, etc.), the *nix version would actually have infinite possibilities while the DOS version didn't. Also, the sheer difference in number of commands and their options was shocking--just compare an old DOS manual to a same-year UNIX manual and note the difference in thickness!This one was written in 2006, but at least they explain which command does what and why. Commands aren't strange to me, I started with DOS. The terms are different, and some work differently.
Oh, I hear you! I *SO* prefer a real book to any of those newfangled e-book things. There's nothing like holding a real book, thumbing through its pages, stopping here and there to read a little, and referring back to the same pages so often the book falls open effortlessly to those exact spots.I prefer printed. I can bookmark, dogear, or otherwise mark up the page and still find my content.
Let 'em rip! Your fellow Linux users are ready.The book I just bought was written in 2006. You will be getting questions as I work through it.
When I was living in Dallas, I'd wait for the lousy [winter] weather to start and then I'd work on crocheting things. Now that I'm back home in SoCal...well, let's just say there isn't a lot of lousy weather!When the weather starts getting lousy is usually when I mess with computers that need tweaking.
It did for me the last time I tried. Note that I'm using Kubuntu 12.04, but still.I have to see if Skype works on 12.04.
I'm sitting here nodding my head, laughing in a knowing sort of way, not a laughing at you sort of way. You know--been there, done that. (Not your specific issues, but tweaking, reading, trying, failing, that sort of stuff.)Skype pulled the same nonsense on Ubuntu as it did on Mint. No freaking sound. I spent the whole damn day reading and finally checked the physical speakers. I have a very good set, but they are circa 2000 and I guess newer Linux doesn't like them. I grabbed an el cheapo pair from another computer, messed with a few more things, and Skype works. I did the test call, got sound and my recording back.
The damn speakers work in XP on the same cards.
I also managed to get the Epson V300 perfection working. That took even more of the day.
I even got the old Gnome desktop.
What I can't do is install FX and TB ESR. They are tar.bz files. Used sudo and it tells me I don't have permission to do anything with the files. This desktop has the root terminal, can I use that?
Hi there, dkl1! Welcome to the club of happy Linux users.Hey Guys and Gals! Kind of a newbie with the Linux thing but I definitely like what I've experienced thus far!
Since I'm heavily biased--and make no bones about it!--I'd like to recommend giving Kubuntu a try. It's Ubuntu with KDE as its desktop environment. It's beautiful, and infinitely customizable. If you need more info just let us know.I'm running Ubuntu 12.x or is it 13.x - sorry can't remember at the moment...
I'm not familiar with this. Sorry.At any rate, I'm in need of a .jar launcher that I can use with a file needed for the one-click root method I will be doing shortly.
If no one responds with instructions/help, we can move on to plan B, which would be posting the links describing how to create one. Then we can put our heads together and figure it out!I have searched the web but can't find anything readily avail for Linux, rather links showing one how to CREATE one. That's all well and good, however, I'm not confident yet with how to work with commands etc. Any help with this will be greatly appreciated