Awhile back I installed Ubuntu 12.04 on my Macbook 1.1. It runs fine and all, but the system has gotten cluttered and I had poor protocols in place at the time so I'd like to go through with a fresh...
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Awhile back I installed Ubuntu 12.04 on my Macbook 1.1. It runs fine and all, but the system has gotten cluttered and I had poor protocols in place at the time so I'd like to go through with a fresh...
Awhile back I installed Ubuntu 12.04 on my Macbook 1.1. It runs fine and all, but the system has gotten cluttered and I had poor protocols in place at the time so I'd like to go through with a fresh...
oh and made another account, got the same path that my user account has, which is minus the sbin path
I'm also finding that applications are reinstalling themselves to, or are not fully removing themselves when they state they are. Take for example conky
if i do a purge, autoremove or remove...
just a quick note, unetbootin is a program made for creating bootable usb's not cd's.
Advice on shutting down unneeded applications. Try installing an application called htop which shows you the processes that are taking up the most resources, from this you might be able to decide...
Also if I look at my /etc/environment it tells me that /sbin is found within it. Doesn't this mean that sbin is included in my environment that is originally loaded at login?
...
neither of those commands result in anything, does this mean there's no difference?
Edit: after reading up on this command and doing a quick manual command I realize this is just showing there is...
I just looked into "bash" and came across this article about bash and the order it invokes.
.bashrc exsists, but .bash_profile doesn't. Is this the issue? If so, where is echo $PATH pulling from? ...
that grep results in nothing, big issue?
this wasn't a recent change so nothing that can be pulled from recent history, i'm not sure if you can find what you're looking for in there. But here's the outcome of your request
...
Thanks papibe for the quick reply,
unfortunately when i
source /etc/environment and then quit out of terminal and open a new one the same warning comes up.
While switching from KDE to XFCE i managed to mess up my $PATH (least I believe). When i enter
ifconfig into my terminal i get the error.
Command 'ifconfig' is available in '/sbin/ifconfig'...