Lots of options but yeah. You get the idea.
Type: Posts; User: ActionParsnip; Keyword(s):
Lots of options but yeah. You get the idea.
Ah the apt cacher doesn't manage the updates or which servers update etc. I'd use ansible for that. You could have a script for updating all dev boxes that runs apt update apt upgrade on certain...
+1 for apt cacher. Especially if you are running lots of Ubuntu systems on a network. Saves them all calling out to the Web for updates. Also makes minimal ISO installs very appealing as it can...
Try:
sudo apt install digikam
I suggest you test your RAM health as a good first step. Also check settings in BIOS and make sure that is up to date too
If this is a home PC, have you tried rebooting your router?
What do you see instead of the "welcome screen"?
Use absolute paths to commands and use cron, much much easier
Just use the OS. Most likely the same way you learned how to use Windows....yes? Do that
+1 for freedos
Make sure your backups are up to date if you want to avoid data loss. Make a final FULL backup then you know your data is safe.
Why are you restarting network manager so much? What is the use case here
Please remember to mark as solved if the issue is sorted
Use TAB to autocomplete the module names. Stop after 'rtc' and press TAB to see what is available
The installer doesn't care how the storage is connected. It's a disk. Just partition as you would on an internal drive. It doesn't make any difference. Just remember to put GRUB on destination USB...
Can you please copy and paste the text rather than screenshot. A forum is a text based thing... So why use an image? It makes no sense
If it's not dual boot, why use UEFI ?
Please mark as solved if this is no longer an issue
Could make a script then have the launcher run the script
Can you ping the default gateway IP (your router's internal IP)?
Can you ping 8.8.8.8?
Can you ping bbc.co.uk?
Have you rebooted your router?
Open case and swap with a known good PSU. Also make sure that you have the latest BIOS.
what is the output of:
ls /etc/apt/sources.list.d/* | grep -i chr
Thanks
You can use dd to wipe the disk and start again
Please mark as solved if the issue is sorted
If its a single boot, set to legacy and install. Much simpler.