You might try the fix described here.
Type: Posts; User: aheckler; Keyword(s):
You might try the fix described here.
jpv2: You might want to make a new thread for your problem. Nobody is going to see it in here.
Works for me! Just tested with 64-bit Karmic and the sound is perfect now, no freezes.
Search is your friend :-)
I tried installing libsdl1.2-pulseaudio but apparently the package isn't in my repos. Where did you get it from?
EDIT: Oh nevermind, I see it's libsdl1.2debian-pulseaudio.
Can you boot into safe graphics mode, or whatever it's called now?
Try following these steps and see if it helps.
I doubt it. He can ping stuff just fine, so his connectivity is working.
Can you paste the output of this as well:
cat /etc/hosts
Open up a Terminal and see if you can ping anything:
ping -c 3 google.com
Can you paste the output here?
Try running this in your shell:
sudo /etc/init.d/udev restart
You might try changing around some settings in System > Preferences > Sound and see if that helps. FWIW, my sound was muted directly after the install (which confused me for a bit), so you may want...
Try booting into "safe graphics mode" or whatever it's called (maybe "failsafe X" now?)
Why not just boot into Knoppix, save your personal data to your network drive, then do a fresh reinstall of 9.04? That what I would do, just to be as safe as possible with my files.
This should help you out.
What do you means it "shows" as a white nano? Do you mean the icon?
This might help.
Did you remember to jumper one of your drives as a slave so only one is set to master?
You could just boot to your Ubuntu LiveCD and use the Partition Editor to delete the Ubuntu install's partition.
I would just plug it in and do a reinstall of Ubuntu.
Try this:
sudo chown -R user:user /media/Storage
sudo chmod -R 755 /media/Storage
Replacing "user" with your username, of course.
Yep! Just use the USB Disk Creator (or something like that). It's in System > Administration.
This might help.
A more appropriate place for this suggestion might be Ubuntu Brainstorm.
Try going into the shell and typing these lines in terminal:
aptitude purge gnome-power-manager
aptitude install gnome-power-manager