hmm I have an asus 900ha netbook running Ubuntu with 1.5 atom processor and a 260gig hard drive...... goes great for me :D, and unlike most full size laptops... netbooks have a great battery life!...
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hmm I have an asus 900ha netbook running Ubuntu with 1.5 atom processor and a 260gig hard drive...... goes great for me :D, and unlike most full size laptops... netbooks have a great battery life!...
the puppies and the kittens were hurt..... NOOOOOOOooooooooooooo
Also there's a lot of reasons why this is benificial to the Ubuntu and the Linux world
1. restricted or limited access to the internet such as slow download speeds, download limits (a lot of ISP's...
if they change it too much, they'd have to use their own name.... for example I could modify it a lot and sell, but I would have to use a different name such as... Prime Linux lol.... but I could...
Wow, cool.... I have uses for that myself.... thank you!
I'd say stick to Ubuntu LTS releases, which the latest is 12.04 the next one will be 14.04 which will be released this coming april
if you need 100% stable, stick to LTS rather than the interim releases... interim releases are for introducing features that are new.... whereas LTS releases are focused more on stability.
Tbh imo...
each non-lts version is now supported for 9 months, with lts versions being supported for 5 years now.... 12.04LTS, 13.04 non-lts, 13.10 non-lts, 14.04 will be lts
which means as far as support...
agreed I actually fixed mine by reinstalling the date time thingy, there's still a few bugs limping around
both 13.04 and 13.10 are interim releases.... so the question should be the longer supported more stable 12.04 or the shorter supported and more cutting edge (more features, more bugs) 13.10...
...
I ran
sudo apt-get --reinstall install indicator-datetime, tis working now thanks for putting me onto the proper package :D odd though that after a fresh install of the root partition that this...
[brad@lady:~ ] $ sudo apt-get install indicator datetime
[sudo] password for brad:
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree
Reading state information... Done
E: Unable to...
as you can see from the image below (click for bigger version) after I did a fresh install of my root partition I have no system clock.... help please...
I use openID login on other forums and I am getting back this message: The requested identifier did not return the proper information.
Ok I am not sure where else to post this... but I was logging into a few sites with Ubuntu's OpenID service... which doesn't seem to be working anymore.... was the URL changed from...
14.04 is a lot nicer user experience, but for me at least it was laggy as heck after about 1-2 hours and needed rebooting... so if you have nvidia graphics I'd say stick with 12.04 as I suspect that...
I dont know about word, though I have a 900ha which has 1g of ram and 1.5 atom processor and it runs the standard ubuntu fine
as said above if you need stable stick with LTS releases, the interim releases are for testing and refining concepts
well sounds like some broken packages to me.... I could be wrong.... but if you have synaptic installed open it up and run from the command fix broken packages.... if not use the terminal and run the...
thats why I use wget it has a good resume
tbh I usualy just use wget or firefox itself, when I had dial up I used to you managers all the time, not really anymore
I wouldn't call norton/symantic a good anti-virus product
I tried it for a few days with a fresh install, I have to say... its beautiful.... really really polished.... however I went back to 12.04 since the system was slow to the point of being ususable...
upgrade to 12.04 gnome desktop and you'll get the classic gnome option
yes and when yopu rensstall you can auto reistall all purchased apps, it goes by your ubuntu single sign on id