Linux can read/write NTFS, so no problem there. You can also format the drive to whatever file system you choose. If it is exclusively for Linux I would use EXT4. Otherwise, if you need to read data...
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Linux can read/write NTFS, so no problem there. You can also format the drive to whatever file system you choose. If it is exclusively for Linux I would use EXT4. Otherwise, if you need to read data...
I'm running a clean install of 12.04 and that feature works. Why don't you list your hardware specs,especially video card and driver; maybe someone can get an idea through that. Did you do an upgrade...
I, too, am not a fan of paid apps in the software center. At least I'd like the ability to turn that feature off. As far as the labeling of Ubuntu is concerned it doesn't really bother me. The more...
Rhythmbox will keep playing and minimize if you already have something playing when you click on the "X". You have to go to the menu and close it or stop the sound file first.
You just need to google for how to restore the Windows 7 MBR. Once that's done you can go into Windows and restore your partitions, or failing that boot into the LiveCD of Ubuntu and using Gparted do...
Windows ME
Are these music files? If so, what format are they in? In Banshee I just drag and drop albums from Banshee to the iPod. I believe Rhythmbox is the same.
Have a look here: http://www.ubuntu.com/download/help/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows
And here: http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/
Two alternate methods.
Arch, hands down, although the new Magiea 2 is quite nice, worth a look. It runs very fast and stable for me. But if you're interested in what's going on under the hood without compiling from source...
I second that. For some reason Lubuntu always runs more sluggishly for me than Xubuntu. Let us know how you come out!
Go for 64-bit if your box supports it and it sounds like it does. I can see no reason not to use 64-bit at this point. The few problems that existed a few years ago have entirely disappeared. There...
1. no
2. yes
Either update or better yet, install 12.04 fresh. Probably take less time, otherwise you go 10.10-11.04-11.10-12.04.
Just boot from a LiveCD of some sort, can really be any Linux distro and copy your files to a USB. You won't need a password.
Does the BIOS see the drive? Can you boot from a LiveCD of some sort?
OK, I'm a little lost. Was this an upgrade from 10.04 or a clean install?
Did the drive work in your previous OS?
How did you burn the install disk? Did you do it in Windows and burn the .iso?
Have a look here: http://askubuntu.com/questions/30334/what-application-indicators-are-available
I use the one called "ClassicMenu Indicator" It adds a little Ubuntu icon on the top panel with a...
Three hard drives, one with Arch and KDE, one with openSUSE and KDE, one with Arch and XFCE 4.10, Ubuntu 12.04 and Fedora 16, all 64 bit. I also had Sabayon 8 on the last drive but got tired of...
I found this; http://askubuntu.com/questions/130210/how-to-turn-off-the-pop-up-notification-in-12-04
Google is your friend. :P
That upgrade path isn't supported: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UpgradeNotes
You'd have needed to go 10.10 to 11.04 to 11.10 to 12.04. Personally, I can't see the point. With that much to go...
Sure thing, let us know how you come out. I've been running Linux a long time so I'm used to it, but it's sometimes confusing making the transition from Windows. You're used to scouring the Internet...
With those specs I'd try Xubuntu and Lubuntu. For some reason Xubuntu seems faster to me. I'd burn a CD and boot from it, try it out, see how it feels. Just bear in mind the CD will run considerably...
Do you have the root account enabled?
I run Linux on three hard drives, openSUSE 12.1, Ubuntu 12.04, Fedora 16, Sabayon 8. and Arch with KDE and Gnome shell. I run a copy of Windows XP in VM so I can update my Garmin gps. Otherwise I'd...