thanx for responding my big issue now is xorg.conf so I can use PCI vide
see link
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...3&goto=newpost
thanx again
thanx for responding my big issue now is xorg.conf so I can use PCI vide
see link
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.p...3&goto=newpost
thanx again
in my experience these forums have always been helpful.
unfortunately if you have a more advanced/difficult problem then fewer people will be able to help.
"how do i minimise a window?" will get more responses than how do i write a driver for xyz?"
regarding your video card problems, that is probably on the harder end of the spectrum, and something fewer people will know how to solve, the only answer to that is to bump it if you havent had a reply in 24hrs.
regarding turning off xubuntu power saving, i am suprised there wasn't any replies to that, i don't use xubuntu so i cant say for sure but in ubuntu its with the screen saver settings, if thats a help.
Check out my little app. Tnote
I find that a lot, too. Either I get a bunch of answers asking for more information, then silence once everyone realizes how much I have broken something... or I get silence outright for the same reason. That's mostly because I ask really complicated, specialized questions due to how I use Ubuntu. Simpler problems and things that aren't technically problems (eg: "what's a good application for y," or "how can I do x") get really good answers here, from my encounters. It's kind of the nature of community based support when there are boatloads of threads. Giving a complex answer doesn't always feel 'worth it' since it ends up being buried under new threads, never to be seen again, within minutes.
The tutorials people post up here are great. They aren't usually in response to any particular questions, but really help. Having said that, there are many which should be on the Wiki but are not, and the Wiki really serves as a better way to organize these things to begin with. Searching for a tutorial on the discussion forum when we have a functioning wiki seems completely silly.
To be totally honest, I usually point new Ubuntu users to Launchpad Answers. It doesn't get as much attention as it deserves, but it's a great way to get and give help. (Things are organized as a bug / support tracker, as opposed to a strictly temporal forum). Most importantly, I think it serves as a good introduction to the open source movement as a whole, since questions get linked with bug reports and code branches pretty routinely; people can really experience how the process works. It's cool, unique, and a way to teach people more about this community without being obtrusive.
I, for one, would be among the people smiling if Ubuntu Forums underwent a massive pruning to fit within the array of Ubuntu web services, rather than as a sort of outlying (and occasionally redundant) entity.
Last edited by Mr. Picklesworth; July 26th, 2009 at 06:36 PM.
There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth...not going all the way, and not starting.
--Prince Gautama Siddharta
#ubuntuforums web interface
I agree entirely. It's particularly a good idea to make sure that people who are dissatisfied with the support they (can't) get at the forums know that there are other venues of community support as well.
Since you forgot to drop a link to the Ubuntu answer tracker at Launchpad, here it is:
http://answers.launchpad.net/ubuntu
Bookmarks