ThatObviousUser
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Be careful with Chromium OS, I've tried it on three (Dell) laptops and none of them had wireless working. Which is, uh, kinda important.
I tried it's mail application once.
It wasn't very good...
Minimalist to the point of unusability :-/
It doesn't seem to bode well for the rest of it, although I haven't seen any of it...
I'm no expert on lightweight stuff, but here's a few options:First time poster here. I'm currently running Windows 7 Starter Edition on my netbook and it's gotten to be really bad at doing heavy internet browsing or watching flash videos above 240p. I'm considering installing a distro of Linux onto it, but I'm not sure what'd be the easiest/fastest for my shitty netbook. I'd also like to keep Windows 7 SE on my netbook to sync with my Windows Phone if it's possible. I'm not sure if that would entail me creating a new partition or not, and I'm not sure how to go about doing that.
I'm such a noob at this. Can someone help?
Moving away from Ubuntu-spins, I used Jolicloud on a crap netbook a few years ago, it worked fine but honestly I felt kind of limited in it's cloudy stuff. Might be worth checking out anyway.
We should have a show off your Linux Desktop picture thing again! I'll post mine later when I get back to it at the casa!
Is that Awesome?
Can you make it pretty? :3
Why does every tiling WM use the same ugly low-res monospace font? At least use Consolas or something.
Click for larger
http://yro.slashdot.org/story/12/09/22/1319216/ubuntu-will-now-have-amazon-ads-pre-installed/
Welp, Ubuntu had a good run.
Come on Gnome OS!
I'm sure Canonical has a contract for it across all.
Going on year three of using awesome. Considering how weird it felt the first time I used it I'm surprised how attached I've grown to it.
It was only a matter of time. Replacing affiliate links was just the first sign that they'd be doing this sort of monetization in the future. I'm curious to see if the derivatives strip it by default or leave it in.
Be careful with Chromium OS, I've tried it on three (Dell) laptops and none of them had wireless working. Which is, uh, kinda important.
Runs fine for me. Just ran a build made elsewhere that Google's suggested before.
http://chromeos.hexxeh.net/
If those don't work, try their Lime builds. I noticed them from some Google developer complimenting their work.
Anyways, does anyone have a few interesting distros I can try that aren't very common? I'd like to fool around with a few more interesting distros, and I have a spare laptop to try them on now. Haven't tried much, but I've used Android-x86, JoliOS, Ubuntu and UltimateOS before, as well as Chromium. Going to try gnome soon too.
Any other suggestions?
Gentoo and Arch aren't that 'common', I guess. Things that you can definitely fool around with.
You could also try fooling around with LFS, as well. (if that counts)
Just two monitors. TwinView which I believe is xrandr?Do you have three monitors or something?
Do you use xinerama or xrandr?
Is that One X shot of the lock screen...? What's with the half circle?
Alright. Question, and bare with my newness to this stuff. I currently have Windows 8 with nothing on it. I'm planning on just installing Linux over it, then installing other distros on partitions.
The questions I have are this, as I'm currently just booting from USB drives:
1) Which distro is best to start with? Fedora? Ubuntu?
2) How do I install to partitions? Whenever I end up getting to the custom install thing, it shows my partitions, but then I just get completely lost on what to do next.
3) When I do end up figuring out the partition thing, will GRUB handle the boot menu to choose the distro I want to boot to for me, or will I need to do something for them to all show up as options (a la the boot menu in Windows)?
If you guys have relevant links, that would work too.
Thanks!
I've been on 1920x1200/1080 on 15 inch monitors with Xubuntu (experimenting with other WMs/distros) for the last 4 years, and in my experience high DPI on linux comes down to basically 3 things:Out of curiosity, does anyone use a DE or a window manager with a high DPI display.
For example, this laptop: http://techreport.com/review/23631/how-windows-8-scaling-fails-on-high-ppi-displays
Does any DE/window manager handle high DPI displays well?
Does that Xorg DPI setting handle things well? (I haven't actually set this variable in a long time, so I don't even remember what X uses it for.)
By "handle things well", I mean mostly things like scaling text, but not scaling other things. (Not even sure if that's always a good idea, either.)
Some of this depends on your install media.
For partition-ing stuff, this will work with every media (through the terminal.)
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/handbook/handbook-x86.xml?chap=4&part=1
I'm not sure if your computer uses UEFI or BIOS.
If it uses UEFI, you might want to look farther down that article for the section about parted instead of fidsk.
For the GRUB question, I think it depends on the distro. I think the ubuntu one, when you install GRUB, it runs something that actually looks for other OSs. Haven't used Ubuntu in a long time. (I'm guessing it uses os-prober)
Otherwise, you have to manually add the other OSs yourself.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GRUB2#Dual-booting
This is how I did it.
1) Reinstall windows. This creates a System and a Windows partition.
2) Created a 100 GB partition for sharing.
3) Created a 2 GB partition for swap space (this creates an extended partition)
4) Created 5 50GB paritions for the distros
5) Ran ubuntu from a bootable USB and clicked the Other option when installing. Installed GRUB to sda and then picked the 2 GB as my swap space and picked the partition for the system files.
6) Installed the others
7) went into ubuntu and ran sudo update-grub in the terminal
This installed all of them and put all of them plus windows in the GRUB menu.
Regardless, I'd be surprised if high-DPI settings aren't in the pipeline for Gnome. Just hope they show up sooner rather than later.You can edit your font size pretty easily in Gnome 3, it's basic functionality that's always been part of the control center.
If you want to tweak the actual font that's used you can also do that, but you do it using a program called gnome-tweak-tool. That's also pretty easy. People complain because they want that specific setting in the basic control center, while Gnome follows the example of Windows, Android, iOS and Mac and uses a standard font (while still making it pretty easy to use that setting in the tweak tool).
Regardless, I'd be surprised if high-DPI settings aren't in the pipeline for Gnome. Just hope they show up sooner rather than later.
And speaking of Gnome, 3.6 is here. I'm waiting for the next Arch install media to arrive before bringing it onto my MBA, the newest kernels supposedly fix compatibility. Can't wait, workspace management in osx is crap.
Very inflexible, hehe. Well the basics are simple, go into an overview and create new desktops by clicking a button. But:What is workspace management in OS X like?
Man, Gnome 3. Man.
I WANT 3.6 DAMNIT!
When will it be updated on Ubuntu Software Center, anyone know?
You people and your dark themes. Dark theme for your desktop, your phone, your GAF browsing etc...
Light colored themes 4 Life!
It won't. You'll have to install "Ubuntu GNOME 12.10", also known as the ad-free version of Ubuntu.