Maybe because the OS requires some terminal commands to accomplish something
Type: Posts; User: pascua28; Keyword(s):
Maybe because the OS requires some terminal commands to accomplish something
Might be this one: https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Steam-Networking-Kernel-Woes
What's your gpu? It depends on the manufacturer. On windows I have amd radeon settings to overclock the gpu while on linux, it doesn't have such. I'm afraid you can't
You might wanna try Linux Deploy
Does your host support a rwsolution higher than 2560x1600?
There might be some performance degradation. Also, are you trying to run Ubuntu on a Windows guest or running Windows on a Linux guest? From my experience, running windows on a linux guest is faster...
Try other gui file managers
Seems like the dkms module doesn't compile with the new linux kernel. Similar to broadcomm drivers where newer kernels sometimes break dkms until it is patched
You may also try to create a fat32 partition on your hard drive. Give it about 4GB. And then open the iso file in windows and copy all the contents to the newly created fat32 partition. On hp, there...
Why not just dual boot?
Select check disc for defects (or similar) before installing. You might have a corrupted ISO and you need to re-download it again
What's the kernel version? And have you tried installing missing drivers?
It's odd. Never experienced such. Maybe try to leave both blank?