Now no longer an issue. I found the
Fedora-Workstation-25-x86-64.iso.torrent and got it with lftp last
night, so will try what appears to be the working version next.
On Thu, 29 Jun 2017, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2017 23:14:39
From: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Installing Fedora and other Linux systems
Should I be looking for an Everything fedora torrent? I found some of those
and didn't know what to make of them.
On Thu, 29 Jun 2017, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Date: Thu, 29 Jun 2017 23:03:05
From: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: Installing Fedora and other Linux systems
Well, if you're getting confused by the Talking Arch install, I would
recommend you stay away from Fedora for now.
Talking Arch is designed to be blind friendly. Fedora is not. So, save
Fedora for another day--for a day when you know more about Linux and how
to work with it.
Just my advice, which you're free to do with as you will, of course.
Janina
Linux for blind general discussion writes:
I use the Talking arch iso. I've tried installing it, but I always get
stuck on one part or another, like setting the clock, partitioning the
drive, such like that. What I plan to do is dualboot Windows and Linux, so
I can have Emacspeak and the Windows audio games and such as well. I'll
also try installing Linux, probably Arch this time, using a flash drive
which I am 100." sure that it'll work, as my old one didn't even work in
Windows, so I think it's gone rather bad.
Devin Prater
Assistive Technology Instructor in training at World Services for the
BLIND, JAWS certified
On Jun 29, 2017 9:21 AM, Linux for blind general discussion
<blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I don't understand why you have trouble installing Arch. Are you using
the especially adapted talking arch iso image? If installing arch, this
is the one you should be using.
https://talkingarch.tk
Installing Fedora is actually more difficult. Particularly tricky is the
stage of installation where you partition your drive--unless you're
happy to take Fedora's defaults. Personally, I don't support that
default simply because I find it wise to put /home on a separate
partition--but maybe you wouldn't care. That's certainly up to you.
As to what may have gone wrong in your Fedora installation, you've not
nearly enough info in your email. How do you know nothing went wrong in
the install? What messages did you see?
And, how do you know it's not booting? What is it you expect that isn't
happening? I'm presuming you're blind so aren't seeing screens. So, how
do you know what you think you know?
I'm not trying to be harsh. But your message really isn't explaining
anything useful for debugging.
PS: It will also be easier to follow your explanation if you can manage
to avoid run-on sentences.
Janina
Linux for blind general discussion writes:
Hi all. After using Windows for a month, after using Linux for two
months, I've noticed that everything that I do on Windows, I could do on
Windows, and with the Braille note Touch, I can get the Exchange emails
from the training center I'm attending, which mainly uses Windows. So,
while in Windows, I burned a USB drive with the latest Fedora image,
using Rufus, making it bootable. So, The installation went well, but
after the computer restarted, and the flash drive was taken out, no
system came up. I've never seen that happen before, and Googling didn't
give any answers, so I'm stuck between Vinux, and Arch. Vinux being okay
I suppose, but out of date, and Arch being hard for me to install,
without scripts although the ones I know of are broken, but Arch is what
I like, because it has anything I ask of it. So I tried installing
Fedora a few more times, formatting the drive, but no luck. Then I
accidentally pulled the flash drive out of the USB drive for a moment,
and wh
en I pus
hed
i
t back in, I couldq't load Orca when first starting up the installer,
so the data on that drive is probably corrupted. So, any ideas? Should I
just go with Vinux and deal with it? The last time I tried the
instructions for installing Arch, I got stuck on setting the clock and
such, because the results I got were not the results on the ge, so I'm
just not sure what to do.
Devin Prater
Assistive Technology Instructor in training at World Services for the
BLIND, JAWS certified
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Janina Sajka, Phone: +1.443.300.2200
sip:janina@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Email: janina@xxxxxxxxxxx
Linux Foundation Fellow
Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup: http://a11y.org
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
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