I have a feeling such a bug would be closed as "WON'TFIX". Canonical can't risk upsetting its Chinese partners.
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I have a feeling such a bug would be closed as "WON'TFIX". Canonical can't risk upsetting its Chinese partners.
Ubuntu Touch System Requirements:
CPU: 1 GHz ARM Cortex-A9 or Intel Atom
Memory: 512MB - 1GB RAM
Storage: 4-8 GB
Multi-touch Screen
Your iPAQ:
CPU: Intel XScale 312 MHz
Memory: 64 MB...
The agreement: Canonical agrees to silently kill Ubuntu Phone within the next twelve months. Meizu agrees not to let out this information until Canonical has already done it.
Er... why?
Control-L.
Oh, I had no idea everybody wanted to use Ubuntu but couldn't because it was missing five extremely minor features! I guess we'll get coding then, and by this time...
I did exactly this recently in Openshot. I dragged the audio file onto one of the audio tracks in Openshot and dragged the picture into the Video track, then lengthened the picture's duration to...
A few come to mind:
1. My X-Series Walkman. Awesome sound, a nice OLED screen and user interface for the time, high-quality noise cancelling headphones and solid build quality. I bought it in 2007...
The threat has been massively overstated - early media reports said that all Android phones were vulnerable (they don't use Bash so of course they are not vulnerable).
If you continued to use the...
Best not to wait. Canonical has a terrible track record of actually getting Ubuntu devices into the hands of consumers. Software is started in secret, then the software is announced, then the...
I tried installing a driver on Windows. Took me hours to figure it out.
It was the driver for USB debugging and bootloader communication on the Nexus 7. I tried plugging in the Nexus and Windows...
Look at the hardware specifications of your phone. Now look at the minimum system requirements of Ubuntu. I don't think I need to say more.
From the user perspective? Encryption is totally seamless. You log in as normal, your home directory appears as normal, but behind-the-scenes the data is encrypted as it goes onto the disk and...
They will appear at the very top of the screen, put your mouse pointer up to the bar on the top of the screen and you will see the menus.
When you copy files to another drive, they are not encrypted. That is normal.
To see if your /home is encrypted, boot a live CD or live USB and try to read the data on /home.
The router doesn't matter - it's most likely your wireless card in your computer that is causing the problem.
Can you please run this command in the terminal and give us the details?
lshw -C...
You're using the wrong CD. You need to use the Alternate CD, that contains the raw packages.
The Desktop CD (which is the one people normally download) does not contain packages, only their...
So did mine. Runs Unity quite happily. I don't know what's wrong with your i3 laptop, but my netbook is fairly good with it.
Wait - if this device uses an RT2870 chip, you don't need that driver. It is preinstalled on Ubuntu 12.04 and later.
Unlike Windows, when you plug in a USB device Linux doesn't make any noises or...
Unetbootin is only for making a bootable USB drive. It sounds like you have misunderstood its purpose, and told it to turn your internal hard disk into a USB flash drive.
Hence why your data is...
I agree there is too much bad information and too many people giving help with inapplicable or outdated advice. The only thing you can realistically do is try and increase the number of people who...
No. Install a theme.
1. All Linux software can be run on all Linux distros - nearly. But Ubuntu is so popular it's the de facto standard. It also has a very large selection of software available from the package manager....
14.10 has reached Feature Freeze!
Erm... what features?
Seriously though, what user-facing features have been added to 14.10? I haven't heard of anything apart from "new kernel, new GCC, we're...
Easier said than done, I'm afraid. I tried to install Unity on Mint and it just wouldn't appear at the login screen.
I don't know whether it's just a bug or if the Mint developers have broken it...
Your Mint system files will be removed. My understanding is that everything outside /home is deleted.
Install Ubuntu using the "Something Else" partitioning method. Don't elect to format any partitions, just click your / partition and choose Edit Partition, then set the mount point to /
Continue...