It seems to be a permissions issue. Have you changed something regarding permissions?
Type: Posts; User: CelticWarrior; Keyword(s):
It seems to be a permissions issue. Have you changed something regarding permissions?
At the login screen you should be able to select which session you want.
I haven't used Unity for years now, can't help you with the settings there but I suspect it's under the sound effects tab.
Do you really have Ubuntu 20.04?
Not really. Errors happen and tend to be corrected with updates.
There are logs you can check but that dialog also should have some dropdown menu that when expanded should at least inform which...
I meant the system sounds as sounds from apps that are not reproducing media are system sounds.
Of course, this is in the system settings > sound, not at any particular software.
As above.
Regarding yes, that's exactly what is supposed to happen. But this isn't a Windows forum and certainly not Windows customer support. If you need to install a different Windows version...
Again,
You may use a live session to troubleshoot a problem of an installed system and we often ask people to do just that and Boot Repair to create a summary info but this is a very specific usage...
Yes, it can be font rendering, size, font type, scaling...
Or it can be that you're doing different things for different periods of time or it may boil down to an unconscious confirmation bias due...
It seems there are lots of problems running Linux in that device: https://bbs.minisforum.com/threads/cannot-boot-linux.1249/
But even there some users reported success. Now, those with problems...
Have you checked and adjusted systems sounds to your preference?
By default, it's muted.
it's "acpi", not "apci", therefore the option to try is "noacpi".
isn't a problem either. It likely happened due to an abrupt shutdown. Please keep in mind that even without a GUI the OS is working. If you do CTRL+ALT+F1 (maybe others like F2, etc.) you'll likely...
It is case sensitive.
Indeed. Those should just work. I've installed dozens of Intel based miniPCs, mostly Celerons like yours, and never had an issue whatsoever.
Are you using HDMI or the old VGA?
Although it shouldn't...
According to xrand help this are the valid flags:
The good news is there's no problem with the installation.
/dev/mmcblk1p2: clean, 213093/3784704 files, 2388749/15136256 blocks
is NOT an error, it's a normal system boot process message.
...
It means to run a live session (Try...) as you've been doing.
Then follow the instructions of the 2nd option in Boot Repair's page. It's just a matter of copying and pasting commands in the terminal.
If you installed the ffmpeg snap then make sure to give it all the required permissions. The easy way is to open the snap store, the standard app store Ubuntu comes with, search for ffmpeg and click...
"Legacy" (whatever you mean by that) -> NOT a filesystem
AHCI -> NOT a file system. It's a hardware feature.
NTFS and FAT32 are filesystems but neither is typical of Linux. FAT32 is the typical...
Have you disabled Secure Boot in UEFI settings? You should otherwise unsigned drivers like the Nvidia ones won't load. Unsure why it worked with Mint before but worth to check anyway.
Both 5.4.0-64 and 5.4.0-42 are kernels shipped with Ubuntu 20.04. It's correct.
And the "Adding boot menu entry for UEFI Firmware Settings" shows it's correctly installed in UEFI mode. Have you...
After a correct installation in UEFI mode and by correct I mean no error reported in the end, check UEFI settings again. In the Boot menu there are two settings that must be correctly selected - they...
No, you didn't. You haven't had the time to try it so, please, if you want help the bare minimum required is honesty about your efforts regarding our suggestions here. Whining and posting ridiculous...
Now this is getting ridiculous.
Your processor is 64-bit. You installed a 32-bit OS but that doesn't change the CPU in any way. That's why a 64-bit OS works and is the ONLY logical option. It...